I can't stand that crap. I see a banner outside the VA hospital that says "Heroes work here!" and it irritates me so incredibly much. No, the patients are the heroes, not the stunning and brave nurses that (likely) never saw combat or maybe never even served.
Between the nursing and the teaching fields, which are dominated by women, I have a bad taste in my mouth for self-praising people.
TOTALLY agree. As a woman, that makes my blood boil. Generally people who declare themselves heroes are the farthest from it.
I catch shit occasionally at work because I don't always prop up female-owned businesses when we need vendors. They ask me if I support feminism, and I tell them I used to until lunatics starting pushing for superiority and exclusion over equality and inclusion. That's where they lost me. I have two sons that could be overlooked for roles in the future that they're fully qualified for because of this way of thinking. NOT okay. Just more division.
I'd say heros are the dissenters and nay sayers who don't blindly go off a cliff as the television tells them. Without these people, (us), everyone would already be dead.
Amen and I am a teacher. I'm also in the program alanon and I read a study that a majority of teachers and nurses come from alcoholic families. The "Savior complex" Psyops attracts a certain kind of woman perfect for this type of programming. I've seen it even in me. You're tasked by our manipulators with impossible tasks- like working in the inner city with a high amount of literacy-or literally cleaning up shit like nurses do- and you self reward like a virtue signaler-constantly for "doing the impossible"-when it was a psyops all along to keep you distracted from obvious things like open borders providing a perpetually illiterate customer base for teachers and terrible sick care making people sick providing a steady stream to the weaponized med industry etc. Like almost all moms working now, they've weaponized women's natural empathy against themselves, their offspring, and against society.
I can't stand that crap. I see a banner outside the VA hospital that says "Heroes work here!" and it irritates me so incredibly much. No, the patients are the heroes, not the stunning and brave nurses that (likely) never saw combat or maybe never even served.
Between the nursing and the teaching fields, which are dominated by women, I have a bad taste in my mouth for self-praising people.
TOTALLY agree. As a woman, that makes my blood boil. Generally people who declare themselves heroes are the farthest from it.
I catch shit occasionally at work because I don't always prop up female-owned businesses when we need vendors. They ask me if I support feminism, and I tell them I used to until lunatics starting pushing for superiority and exclusion over equality and inclusion. That's where they lost me. I have two sons that could be overlooked for roles in the future that they're fully qualified for because of this way of thinking. NOT okay. Just more division.
Yes!!!!
I'd say heros are the dissenters and nay sayers who don't blindly go off a cliff as the television tells them. Without these people, (us), everyone would already be dead.
Amen and I am a teacher. I'm also in the program alanon and I read a study that a majority of teachers and nurses come from alcoholic families. The "Savior complex" Psyops attracts a certain kind of woman perfect for this type of programming. I've seen it even in me. You're tasked by our manipulators with impossible tasks- like working in the inner city with a high amount of literacy-or literally cleaning up shit like nurses do- and you self reward like a virtue signaler-constantly for "doing the impossible"-when it was a psyops all along to keep you distracted from obvious things like open borders providing a perpetually illiterate customer base for teachers and terrible sick care making people sick providing a steady stream to the weaponized med industry etc. Like almost all moms working now, they've weaponized women's natural empathy against themselves, their offspring, and against society.
Sir, this is a Wendy's.
I totally get that and feel the same