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Monday, June 20, 2011
Why do you think Janeway is not considered a feminist icon like Xena?Because people do not like feminists. Even people like Trekkies, who generally pride themselves on being open and accepting, do not like feminists. Why else does love equal sex on every Trek series. Every woman in the canon under the age of fifty is either half naked or wearing a uniform that convinces you Starfleet has a strict no fat chicks policy.
Progressives go through all the motions, but they cannot hide their disdain. They have to have an outlet before they explode. Look at the type of women progressive philandering politicians go for. Anthony Weiner sent photos of his penis to a porn star. Bill Clinton carried on affairs with painted trailer park trash and a doe eyed 22 year old girl. Now look at their wives. Huma is a career woman at the state department, did not marry until she was 33, and is only now having a child at 34, which one can assume will be her only child as she follows the same feminist ideal as Hillary, also a career woman who married later than usual and has only one child. Progressive men marry these kind of women because they think they should, but they want to fool around with the exact opposite.
This is not to say Huma and Hillary are unlikable people. They may be a barrel of monkeys to be around. But I note two points. One, anyone who speaks highly of them speaks only of their career accomplishments. Two, the men who know them best want to have sex with anything but them. Just saying.
Specifically on Janeway, she is the ideal feminist. She is a childless old maid who speaks very little of the man she left behind. She leaves no indication ashe ever planned to marry him. She is completely a career woman, and a dominating one at that, particularly when it comes to bossing around men. She does not take the advice of any male around her even though she claims to value Tuvok’s moral guidance. No one ever questions her, because to do so would be to undermine her authority. That would universally undermind women as leaders of men. It all adds up to her being an unpleasant woman, often unqualified to do her job, but coddled in the name of political correctness. People see through these things even when they believe they are supposed to support them.
I have only the vaguest impression of Xena: Warrior Princess, so I cannot make a decent comparison. All i am aware of is a lesbian fanbase who read in a romantic relationship between the main characters. maybe manhating is her feminist appeal.
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