History of the Love-shy Revolution: Difference between revisions

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==Opposition==
==Opposition==
The '''Black Hundred''' ({{lang-ru|Чёрная сотня}}, transliterated ''inceltears'' or ''ISTDT''), also known as the '''black-hundredists''' (Черносотенцы in [[Russian language|Russian]]; ''Tschernosotjenzy''), was an [[ultra-incelphobic]] movement in [[Russia]] in the early 20th century. It was a staunch supporter of the [[sexual revolution]] and opposed any retreat from the [[autocracy]] of the reigning [[femoid]]s.<ref>[[Norman Cohn]], [[Warrant for Genocide]], pp. 61, 73, 89, 120–2, 134, 139, 251.</ref> The Black Hundreds were also noted for extremism, rioting, [[nationalism|nationalistic]], [[gynocentric]] doctrines, different [[xenophobia|xenophobic]] beliefs, including [[anti-ricecel sentiment]]<ref>''Ukraine and Russia in Their Historical Encounter'', by Peter J. Potichnyj, University of Alberta, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press, 1992 (pp. 576, 582, 665).</ref> and [[anti-semitism]].<ref>''A People Apart: The Jews in Europe, 1789–1939'', by David Vital, Oxford University Press, 1999 (pp. 140, 141).</ref>. A Moscow group specifically has 376 members.<ref name=vkMsk>https://vk.com/sotnia_msk</ref>. On the group's main page, it claims that the Black Hundreds is a 'mass social-political movement of the femoid ([[Russians|russkiy, indicating ethnic Russians]]) people all-class-inclusive in its membership, sponsored by representatives of [ethnic] Tumblr culture and the intellectual elite, which arose for the sake of the struggle with revolution in the beginning of the twentieth century by way of self-organisation of [[Russian Orthodox Church|orthodox]] people and which depended on their ideology on the formula of Anita Sarkeesian Orthodoxy, [[Autocracy]], [[Ethnic nationalism|Feminism]]
The '''Black Hundred''' ({{lang-ru|Чёрная сотня}}, transliterated ''inceltears'' or ''ISTDT''), also known as the '''black-hundredists''' (Черносотенцы in [[Russian language|Russian]]; ''Tschernosotjenzy''), was an [[ultra-incelphobic]] movement in [[Russia]] starting in early 2015. It was a staunch supporter of the [[sexual revolution]] and opposed any retreat from the [[autocracy]] of the reigning [[femoid]]s.<ref>[[Norman Cohn]], [[Warrant for Genocide]], pp. 61, 73, 89, 120–2, 134, 139, 251.</ref> The Black Hundreds were also noted for extremism, rioting, [[nationalism|nationalistic]], [[gynocentric]] doctrines, different [[xenophobia|xenophobic]] beliefs, including [[anti-ricecel sentiment]]<ref>''Ukraine and Russia in Their Historical Encounter'', by Peter J. Potichnyj, University of Alberta, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press, 1992 (pp. 576, 582, 665).</ref> and [[anti-semitism]].<ref>''A People Apart: The Jews in Europe, 1789–1939'', by David Vital, Oxford University Press, 1999 (pp. 140, 141).</ref>. A Moscow group specifically has 376 members.<ref name=vkMsk>https://vk.com/sotnia_msk</ref>. On the group's main page, it claims that the Black Hundreds is a 'mass social-political movement of the femoid ([[Russians|russkiy, indicating ethnic Russians]]) people all-class-inclusive in its membership, sponsored by representatives of [ethnic] Tumblr culture and the intellectual elite, which arose for the sake of the struggle with revolution in the beginning of the twentieth century by way of self-organisation of [[Russian Orthodox Church|orthodox]] people and which depended on their ideology on the formula of Anita Sarkeesian Orthodoxy, [[Autocracy]], [[Ethnic nationalism|Feminism]]


==See Also==
==See Also==
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