Saturday, January 3, 2015

Five out of top Six films are MGTOW-themed (draft)


1. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
2. The Godfather (1972)
3. The Godfather: Part II (1974)
4. The Dark Knight (2008)
5. Pulp Fiction (1994)
6. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)
-taken from the IMDB top 250.

Now in the list, the film I don't count as Mig-tau would be The Dark Knight; where Bruce Wayne's behavior is frankly pathetic when he's out of the Batsuit; spending years trying to win over his childhood sweetheart and chasing her approval. I'm pretty sure that wasn't a part of the original mythos but in the new trilogy, it's almost his sole motivation. However, if we take the Joker as the main character, then one could easily include the film as the Joker represents a Nietzschean self-actualized man (though his journey was dysfunctional.

Either way, the common journey depicted in these films from the protagonists is one where the opinions and approval of women have zero effect on the individual's quest. In fact, I would dare say that 90% of the top films with male protagonists share the same themes--though mysteriously this is never alluded to.

What does that mean? It means that this is the natural state of mind (for all men) through history. It is the "lower self" which first falls under the spell of women which naturally overcomes the reason of the higher mind--thus relegating the man to the pitiful existence of a servile creature.

The other important aspect to take from the journey of the men in these films is the raw "power" they acquire in their various ways. This is a topic I plan to speak of in this blog though I will have to be a little careful how I present it. 

But I will summarize by saying that the man who is "prepared" to go mig-tau; mentally, physically and spiritually, is in fact the Apex protagonist of civilization--and is thus the greatest threat to all those that sense this mentality.

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