
No one should be turning to the neo-Nazi online tabloid The Daily Stormer for dating advice, but on the off chance that you are, I have to warn you that they don’t know what they’re talking about.
I mean, they don’t know what they’re talking about when it comes to pretty much everything, but in this case their ignorance involves what actually went on in the supposed 1950s cultural paradise they want to return us to, forcibly if necessary.
In a post with the sarcastic title “Dating Advice: The Key to Good Relationships is Cheating on Your Boyfriends,” regular Daily Stormer contributor “Zeiger” takes aim at a “fat Paki skag” dating expert who has the temerity to argue that women searching for “the One” should date a bunch of guys casually before committing to one of them.
I know, shocking.
Well, it is to Zeiger.
Not so long ago, women didn’t feel like they needed dating advice. After all, they just had to stand around somewhere until a man came to them and took care of everything for them.
All they had to worry about was serving him beer and cooking his food right so he didn’t dump their ungrateful asses.
Zeiger illustrates this point with a magazine illustration from the 1950s depicting happy teenage girls learning to bake a cake, so it’s pretty clear what romanticized past Zeiger is harking back to.
Alas, we have fallen so far from this imaginary paradise!
But in the era of NUMALE faggots and Jew feminism, women are confused. They think it’s somehow their job to understand relationships. This is already a completely insane concept.
But it gets worse.
These days, they’re getting their relationship advice from insane Paki sluts.
The “Paki slut” in question is a “relationship coach” named Sami Wunder who was recently featured in the British tabloid The Express. Despite Zeiger’s headline, Wunder does not actually suggest that women cheat on their boyfriends. Rather, she recommends that women looking for a husband date multiple men, non-exclusively, holding off on serious committment until one of them pops the question.
Whatever you think of this advice, it’s hardly “cheating” to date more than one person when you’re not in an exclusive relationship, presuming everyone is on the up and up on this.
Zeiger is outraged by the very idea.
I guarantee that no real man would “put a ring” on the finger of some hoe who cheated on him with a bunch of other guys. A “man” so pussy-whipped would more appropriately be called a “humanoid slug.” …
What this shows is the urgent need women have for stable, healthy relationships. And that is something that can only be provided by WHITE SHARIA – not fat Paki whore dating advice.
Zeiger’s anger here seems to stem from the same mix of entitlement and insecurity that drives the alt-right obsession with “cucks” and “cucking.” These are men who, on some level, feel entitled to any attractive woman who wanders into their field of vision, and feel betrayed — even “cucked” — when any of these women date or marry or just have sex with some guy other than them.
But we’re not just entitlement we’re dealing with here. More than a few alt-rightist dudes — and manosphere dudes generally — fetishize nubile young virgins, not just because they’re creepy dudes who are way too into women and girls far too young for them, but because virgins have no way to compare their sexual prowess with other men. Many manosphere dudes are quite open about this anxiety, complaining that women who’ve been with more than one guy will endlessly compare them with their earlier partners.
These are the same guys who go around boasting about what “alphas” they are.
But there’s another giant irony in Zeiger’s piece: dating in the 1950s, at least at the start of the decade, looked a lot more like Wunder’s world than Zeigers in some crucial respects.
In the 40s and early 50s, teenagers were encouraged to “play the field,” casually dating an assortment of not-quite-steady partners rather than committing to a single person.
It wasn’t until later in the decade that teens began to shift en masse to the more familiar (to us, that is) strategy of “going steady.” And far from welcoming this new monogamy, many parents were horrified. Magazines at the time were filled with alarming articles on the supposedly grave dangers of going steady.
Here’s one from 1960 warning teens that going steady might be “too dangerous” for them.
Here’s one from 1957 examining the potential “immorality” of going steady.
And here’s a graphic from a pamphlet or magazine article from the era wondering when it was “too early” for teens to go steady.
And parents actually had some legitimate reasons to worry. On the one hand, they worried that teens who “went steady” without dating around first would settle down with the first person of the opposite sex who was nice to them, not realizing they could have done better.
On the other hand, they worried that teens who “went steady” would also end up going further sexually — which could lead, as sex often does, to pregnancy and too-early marriage. Indeed, the age of first marriage dropped precipitously in the 1950s as more teens married, helping to contribute to the spiraling divorce rates of the 1960s and 1970s as these too-hasty marriages fell apart.
It was kind of a screwed-up decade; happily, the sexual revolution of the 1960s convinced a hefty chunk of Americans young and old that 1) sex isn’t the end of the world and 2) it isn’t always such a great idea for teens to settle down forever with the very first person they have sex with.
The weird thing is that the 1950s parents, for all their faults, were more interested in girls and young women having choices than are the alt-rightists of today.
Parents in the 1950s worried that their daughters would end up getting too seriously involved with the wrong guys because they had no good basis for comparison.
Alt-rightists and manosphere dudes today are apparently afraid that no women will settle for them if they realize there are other men out there who aren’t, you know, reactionary racists who think women shouldn’t really be allowed to make their own decisions about anything.
I’m thinking they’re probably right to worry about this. And I’m glad.





@GrumpyOldSocialJusticeMangina:
I learned some Boolean logic as a kid from a 1984 game called Rocky’s Boots, still available online if anyone’s interested.
@Arctic Ape
Also very cool, thank you.
I’m a big fan of the ‘Mortal Engines’ series of books, and I’ve always lived the first sentence:
‘It was a dark, blustery afternoon in spring, and the city of London was chasing a small mining town across the dried up bed of the old North Sea’. Municipal Darwinism requires another glacial period, it seems!
@WWTH
That crow’s cute! I think she’s just dancing.
Ducks, now, they’re shifty. They can walk AND fly AND swim – they’ve mastered three of the four elements. Should they become fireproof, they will be essentially unstoppable. Then we’ll all be quaking at the quacking!
If ducks become fireproof then we won’t be able to roast them, leading to a severe drop-off in the number of things in the world which are most delicious. This is an alarming possibility.
A duck once told me I had beautiful eyes. I said “Waiter, I ordered aromatic duck”.
@EJ : fireproof isn’t heatproof. I don’t fear fireproofness.
@Franscesca Torpedo
Who says that accounting can’t be creative? Some of the ways that accountants can help rich scum launder money and avoid tax are very creative indeed 🙂
@Mooncustafer, I probably misremembered then – I just remember that there was discussion of the date as calculated from the stars, which is so wonderfully “nice and accurate” (in the Agnes Nutter Good Omens sense 🙂 )
@ opposablethumbs
A quick internet search tells me Agnes Nutter is a fictional witch. I wonder if she was based on Alice Nutter (see memorial below). She was one of the women condemned in the Pendle Witch Trials.
Having scanned a synopsis of Good Omens (which I really want to read now) there does seem to be a coincidence of names which makes me think the Pendle Witches were the inspiration for some of the characters.
http://strangedaze.doomby.com/medias/images/list-5.jpg
Ducks aren’t terribly scary, but that may be my view after 10 years living in a home in a HOA community with no grass but hardscaping lakes and streams and what have you, so we’ve got a year round population of them. Geese – now they are terrible. Always with the honk-a-honking, in the wee hours of the morning and all darn day. We’ve had a couple pair try to establish our lakes and streams as home but luckily there are enough ducks willing to go all “sharks vs jets” on them so they haven’t built any nests…if they have goslings here at some point the battle will be lost and we’ll be stuck with geese, possibly with a mass exodus of most of our ducks. Duck change-of-address activity depends on whether the nearby college fills its lake again, it’s been drained and dry as part of some extensive earthquake retrofitting of the campus. SoCal seems to be an ideal year round place for ducks, provided that we continue to pretend droughts aren’t a thing so all of the man-made water features can remain full.
Yay for France saying NO to Le Pen the Facist. She seems too chummy with Putin anyway, and Putin is a bad bad man. Evil on the inside should have to show on the outside. (With Putin…it kind of does. Just look at pictures of him making ‘serious face’.)
@Alan Robertshaw
You’ll enjoy ‘Good Omens’.
“The ducks in St James’s Park are so used to being fed bread by secret agents meeting clandestinely that they have developed their own Pavlovian reaction. Put a St James’s Park duck in a laboratory cage and show it a picture of two men — one usually wearing a coat with a fur collar, the other something sombre with a scarf — and it’ll look up expectantly.”
(Not gonna lie – I’m quite pleased with myself for managing to combine Good Omens and ducks in one quote!)
@ dan
And apostrophe ‘S’s!
Agnes in Good Omens seems to also have features of Old Mother Shipton. For more details on her I’ll leave it to my favourite Philosopher, Philomena Cunk.
The parallels and names will be absolutely intentional, Allan – Good Omens being a Gaiman-Pratchett collaboration. And yes, I suspect you will love it (and may very possibly look askance and frankly wonder at your life to date, that it has not hitherto included the reading of this book. It is so far up your street that you probably live next door).
@ opposablethumbs
I love that; it’s so Douglas Adamsesque.
I’ve breached my usual rule about only buying from small book shops and downloaded a copy though iBooks. I foolishly had a quick glance. Now I’m in ‘just one more page then must get back to work’ mode.
:-))))) and it just gets better (imo). Plus it kind of has hints of Just William here and there. So much to enjoy 🙂
I was once reading my copy in a public place, and someone asked me if it was something religious (obviously assuming my answer would be a demure affirmative. Well, with a title like Good Omens it sounds like something a JhWitness would read I suppose). They looked a bit shocked when I laughed rather loudly as I explained that no, it wasn’t.
Good Omens is very definitely a religious book. It’s basically fanfic of the Bible, and one can’t get more religious than that.
@EJ
But what kind of religion?
“…the quiet, personal kind, that involves doing good deeds and living a better life…”;
“…the kind that involves putting on a suit and ringing’ people’s doorbells…”;
or “the kind that involves having your own TV network and getting people to send you money.”
Oh, look! I’m using …herbs again, for extra potency!
!!!
Could you make a response to Lauren Southern “what all girls need to hear” Video? I don’t disagree with all she said but so feel like she is way to oversimplifying reality and cherry picks studies.
re: Khan academy – I would be down for updating people on our achievements! I do better when I have some sort of social support on things.
I’m into fractions, and I realised the best part about staring at grade 3! I did all of my math in French, which means that I don’t always know all the English terms for things.
Though I refuse to say ‘ten to the power of two’ when I could just say ‘ten to the two’ like a reasonable person. Why do I need two extra words? 😉
Also I don’t want to put commas between my numbers… I wonder if there’s a setting I can toggle that will let me do the questions in english, but write the answers in the french numerical style?
@Alan
The short answer is yes. There’s a lot of those references in the Lanc[ashi]re Witches parts of Pratchett’s Discworld books as well.
@opposablethumbs
I’ve had a kind of inverse of that experience. Christopher Moore’s Lamb: The Gospel According to Christ’s Childhood Pal Biff comes in a special faux-leather bound edition made to look like a bible. I once saw someone reading this edition at an event, and commented that it was a very good book. They smirked and said it wasn’t what I thought, and I had to explain that it was exactly what I thought, I had the same edition at home.
@Rhuu
It’s also acceptable in English to say ‘ten to the second’ (or third, or whatever)
I read Moby Dick the first time when I was so young I thought it was about whaling.
Second time, decades later, I got a lot more out of it.
Still want to give War and Peace another try. I swear, there’s not a wasted word in that book.
@Dalillama: Thank you! Good to know.
Re: Moby Dick – when I finally read it (in my early 30s I think) I was mostly struck by how funny it was and what a sly sense of humor Melville had.
Re: Moby Dick
The passages about clam chowder always make me hungry for clam chowder.
Lamb is one of my favorite books of all time.
Amen.