Francis W. Porretto

says it for a lot of us men
Does it apply to all women? Of course not. But – in terms of influence – to a significant number. And should one of that number ever attempt to knee me in the balls, I’ll help her. By stepping back, taking hold of her knee and assisting it in its upward trajectory. Concussion and/or a dislocated knee should provide her with sufficient evidence that not all of us are cowed girly-men.

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22 Responses to Francis W. Porretto

  1. Findalis says:

    Of course we women are not your equal. That means we would have to lower ourselves to your level.

    These idiot women haven’t realized that fact yet.

    • KG says:

      Pffft…please don’t channel morons, Findalis.

      • Findalis says:

        When a man can take care of a handful of toddlers, do laundry and cook dinner all at the same time, then you will be considered equal. I haven’t found one yet that can do that and more.

        But we do love your dangly bits, the way you open jars, and the way you kill those pesky spiders.

        • KG says:

          Oh, bollocks, Findalis. A man can do those things easily, and much, much more besides. In half the bloody time, what’s more, because they don’t regard them as earth-shatteringly important–or punctuate the tasks with long babbling girly sessions on the ‘phone.
          When women can create great symphonies, put a man on the moon, design and build a space shuttle, great sailing ships, railways and locomotives, invent the transistor and the silicon chip, be world leaders in brain surgery, industrial design and dozens of other fields…
          When women can do that, I’ll regard them as the equals of men.
          Meantime, go back to herding brats and grinding nuts and seeds by the campfire, willya? :evil: Because without the contributions of men, that’s what women would still be doing.

          • Findalis says:

            Boy I guess I should have used the Satire key before I wrote the above.

            BTW I have seen men turn green when they had to change a poopy diaper. And a woman turn green trying to clean out a rain gutter.

            BTW none of those men would have been able to do any of that if their mothers didn’t raise them to be strong men. It takes a strong woman to raise a strong man.

            • KG says:

              “satire” eh….the usual excuse of somebody who’s just had their head handed to them…
              And for your information, it takes a man to raise a strong man. Women, alone, tend to raise (if that’s the right term for what they do) whiny little girly-men.

            • Wombat says:

              “It takes a strong woman to raise a strong man.”

              Why would anyone think that a part-time man would trump a full-time man when it comes to tutoring aspiring men?

              It takes a strong MAN to raise a strong man. Anything else is a compromise.

        • Wombat says:

          I played Mr Mum for two years, and did a damn good job. Honestly, it was the easiest two years of my adult life.

          Not for my wife though. After two years of full time work she cut back to part time due to stress and I went back to work. http://falfn.com/CrusaderRabbit/wp-content/plugins/wp-monalisa/icons/wpml_unsure.gif

          • D.T. says:

            I was Mr Mum for four years while the missus worked.I looked after my son , cleaned , washed , cooked etc.I quite enjoyed it as I found it a bit of a bludge to tell the truth.Now that the missus is finding it difficult to find a job she has told me she HATES housework and by the way I do the job a shit load better than her. So…suck it up feminazis.
            D.T.

  2. Mathew says:

    Not sure if the link is right, it goes to a page with a pic on it saying a few nice words can get you oral sex from a woman.

    Liberal woman can’t be that stupid can they. If it’s true, well the man will say what he needs to say to get you-know-what, then he’ll be off, so long dumbass! So where does that leave the woman, feeling empowered or something? Yeah, you keep telling yourself that dear.

    • KG says:

      Yeah, the link is right. Mr. Francis’ comments clarify things concerning that illustration.
      The card also says a few wrong words can get you a kick in the nuts…

      • Wombat says:

        Does he know if a woman created that meme? The way I read it, a man would just as likely have typed it up.

  3. Darin says:

    My father taught me how to be a Man.My Mother taught me how to be a better Man.
    It’s the way it’s been done for thousands of years,ain’t nothing new under the Sun and it’s time these dingbat women and the so called “child rearing experts” realise it.

  4. rivoniaboy says:

    “From the wild Irish slums of the 19th-century Eastern seaboard, to the riot-torn suburbs of Los Angeles, there is one unmistakable lesson in American history: a community that allows large numbers of young men to grow up in broken families, dominated by women, never acquiring any stable relationship to male authority, never acquiring any set of rational expectations about the future–that community asks for and gets chaos. Crime, violence, unrest, disorder. . .are not only to be expected, they are very near to inevitable. And they are richly deserved.”
    Patrick Daniel Moynihan.
    Not much that you can add to that really.

    • Wombat says:

      “Allowing” folks to do as they please isn’t the issue. Shielding them from the consequences of their actions and in fact encouraging them to do stupid things is the root of the problem.

      Welfare is the name of the beast. No father? No problem. Just keep voting welfare and The Man’ll be your baby-daddy.

      Cash for kids? Make sure you list the father as “unknkown”. The more the merrier. The state pays enough to raise your kid well, so if you feed them shit and plant them in front of the TV all day you can skim enough to keep you in booze and smokes. And why not? After all, you’re a victim of society, so it’s all owed to you anyway… :|

  5. Oswald Bastable says:

    I have always laughed at the concept of household laundry being considered ‘work’. It was back when the copper had to be boiled (once the wood was chopped), clothes scrubbed with bar soap on a washboard and then wrung out by hand. Now it’s tip in a scoop of powder and push a button. One hour later, transfer to the drier.

    (I worked in a commercial laundry prior to joining the army- that was work- I had arms like Popeye!)

    • KG says:

      There may come day, Os–and not too far hence–when the washboard and bar of home-made soap will make a comeback. One EMP would do it. :twisted:

      • The Gantt Guy says:

        How many would be able to figure out where to find the On switch on a washboard, I wonder?

        • KG says:

          I suspect not very many… :lol:

          • Wombat says:

            Let her work the washboard for a month before hooking up the old washer crankshaft to a bicycle hub.

            THEN you’d see the very definition of gratitutde. :mrgreen: