Talk:Tradcon

From Incel Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Tradcon Stuff[edit source]

The famous MRA Warren Farrell argued that in humans sexual dimorphism could lead to a fisherian runaway and extinction of the species if females continue to select for, "killer-hunter", type men with the advent of nuclear technology.

Mikey (talk) 02:10, 23 November 2019 (UTC)

This has nothing to do with tradconism (in itself). He's simply saying that a female preference for these traits is strong enough to possibly be deleterious to human survival. Simply stating women's mate choices can be maladaptive isn't necessarily promoting a tradcon point of view. Altmark22 (talk) 02:22, 23 November 2019 (UTC)

Saving an invisible comment[edit source]

From here:

Too wordy, complicated, hard-to-read, or not coherent vis-a-vis section header...
Many millennial Japanese women are in the workforce, and there is a large male failure-to-meet societal gender roles, leaving the men without a future approved by Japanese society.
The Japanese government has invested at least 30 million dollars annually[1] into arranging monogamous relationships through arranged parties for young people[2], government-controlled online matchmaking services,[3] and government arranged "marriage-hunting" events[4] to little success. They have recently invested 18 billion dollars into childcare subsidies to spark fertility rates during 2017. One successful venture in the Japanese town of Nagicho that increased fertility rates were giving new Moms $2,785 in cash and giving the citizens numerous special welfare benefits.[5] This shows that monogamous marriage may need to be extremely financially subsidized by the government rather than relying on gender roles in highly technological countries if the country does not want to engage in universal forced marriage. Japan's gender inequality index (which measures life expectancy and labor/school outcomes, not cultural gender roles) is lower to that of the U.S. (0.099 vs 0.182).[6][7]

Bujok (talk) 18:32, 1 September 2021 (UTC)