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http://www.theabsolute.net/minefield/j3.html
Guest: Suzanne Hindmarsh
Hosts: Kevin Solway & David Quinn
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David: Welcome to The Hour of Judgement. I'm David Quinn, and
along side me is Kevin Solway. This is part of a series of
programs which are dedicated to those of you out there who love
to think and uncover great truths. Tonight we are going to pick
up where we left off last week and delve even more deeply into
the subject of women. As I've said in the past, the subject of
women is an incredibly important one to come to grips with, for
not only does it go to the very heart of human psychology, but
it goes to the very heart of the spiritual path itself.
Admittedly, it is a very difficult subject. It is profound, and
requires years of dedicated, honest thinking to make any headway
in it. I would say, if pushed, that the subject of woman is even
more difficult to understand than understanding the nature of
Reality itself. This probably explains why virtually everybody I
meet has such fantastical delusions about women. I'd say that
there would be very, very few people who have come to a thorough
understanding of the subject - perhaps only half a dozen in all
history - and all of these have been men. Which is no
coincidence, since the understanding of women requires the
masculine powers of penetrative analysis, honed and sharpened to
a high degree, combined with a burning desire for Truth. So,
tonight, Kevin and I are going to harness our own tremendous
powers of reason upon this subject, and we'll be helped by a
friend of ours, someone whom we've both known for years now, and
who herself is capable of genuine thought - Suzanne Hindmarsh.
Hello Sue.
Sue: Good evening.
David: And Kevin, hello to you.
Kevin: Hello.
David: Right. Sue, you were a feminist in a past life, in your
earlier years. Can you tell us a little about that?
Sue: Yes. I think it is better to begin by telling you why I
became a feminist in the first place. It was mainly due to
boredom. I was bored with the normal female roles I had lived or
had encountered, and so I joined a women's group at about the
age of twenty-three. I remember thinking at the time that being
a feminist had to be the highest a woman could go. It said to
the world that you were: political, direct, difficult,
boundary-pushing, passionate, strong, purposeful and courageous.
But after two years of doing the rounds of rallies, forums,
journal writing, petitions, lobbying governments and so on, I
left. By then I knew that none of my ideas about feminism were
correct.
David: You were part of a group, weren't you?
Sue: Yes, W.I.L.P.F.
David: And what's that?
Sue: Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
David: Right.
Sue: It was mainly a peace group but it had feminist ideals
behind it, backing it - backing up their dogma.
David: And while you were there you fostered the normal feminist
lines, I suppose?
Sue: Oh, yes.
David: You believed that feminists were making sense?
Sue: Definitely. I believed that women were better, that they
were good, that they were the ones who had to take care of
things. I really believed that they were responsible human
beings. I believed that they had to take more of a place in
history, of which they hadn't been given an opportunity before.
So I went in there very idealistic. The only trouble was it
became very obvious to me in a very short period of time that
really nobody else there cared. Nobody else was really
interested in any of the higher ideals which I had - which were
not just about saving the world but about changing the basic
principles in the world. Call me naive, which I was, but I
really believed these things. I believed that the women involved
with the group had the same passion that I had. I left because I
realized that that wasn't the case. More importantly, I left
because my enthusiasm was getting drained by these women.
David: Can you describe a bit more about these women? What
motivated them, do you think?
Sue: What motivated them? Well, like I said, what motivated me
initially was boredom, and what motivated them was also boredom.
It offers a different lifestyle. We all know how women love to
change their clothes; well, women also love to change their
lifestyles - either to match their clothes or as a new
accessory. I was like that. I wanted something better. The only
problem was that once I had attained what I thought was the
highest - namely, feminism - then there was nowhere else for me
to go. After all, I'd been everywhere else - I'd been a "wife",
a "mother", a "girlfriend", a "worker", a "career-minded
person", an "educated person" - I'd been everywhere else and so
I thought feminism was it.
Kevin: Sue, feminism is changing all the time; it's in a
constant state of evolution. Even today there are many thousands
of different kinds of independent feminisms. I am constantly
being told that "there is no one feminism". So don't you think
that perhaps feminism has evolved since the days you were
involved in it? Obviously, it has grown up. It's become more
mature. It knows what it is a lot more now than when you were
involved in it.
Sue: Ah well - no. Not at all. It's absolutely impossible for
feminism to evolve in the way that you speak. If something is to
evolve, it means it has to be attached to something in the first
place. You have to actually value something.
David: Have a goal, I suppose.
Sue: Yes, have a goal, a purpose, some purposefulness. Feminism
has no purpose. It has no goals. What you're seeing is a
variation on the same old theme. What you've observed, Kevin,
are simply new faces in feminism - new colours, new designs, new
patterns, new fashions.
Kevin: But isn't it the goal of feminism - correct me if I'm
wrong - to do anything you like and be respected for it? I mean,
I've tried for many years to come to a determination of what
feminism is and that is what it appears to me to be.
David: This is what Naomi Wolf says, isn't it: that the highest
virtue of the Third Wave of feminism - which is basically just
modern feminism - is that it is continually changing.
Kevin: And that this is it's goal, to continually change. Which
is just another way of saying that feminism is all about doing
whatever you jolly well want to do, and being respected for it.
But I ask, is this a goal? Could this be accurately described as
a goal?
David: Well, it certainly couldn't be called evolution, because
men have always known all along - all throughout the centuries -
that women love to change their minds. I mean, women have always
valued the right to change their opinions from day to day. There
was a cartoon I saw the other day which said something like,
"I'm sorry, we're not ready yet. The wife's upstairs changing
her mind." And yet now we have the feminists praising this type
of behaviour! It's what they've always had all their lives, and
all throughout the centuries, and now they're saying that this
is the highest of the feminism - changing your mind.
Kevin: Okay, but what's wrong with this? Is there anything wrong
with changing your mind everyday?
Sue: Well, there are a lot of things wrong with changing your
mind everyday, especially if you are actually a person who
values something. You know, I don't say to people nowadays that
I'm an ex-feminist; I say that I'm the only feminist. I am the
only female feminist on the planet. This is because I say that
women do need to evolve - it's true - but that they can't keep
going along the same track they're on now. They can't keep on
doing the same things they're doing now. So it's not as if I
don't actually think about women and want them to change - but
under the circumstances, the way they are now, it's impossible
for them to change. So when you talk about change in terms of
ordinary, everyday women on the streets - whether they be
feminist or not - I tell you that they're not changing and that
they never have changed.
Kevin: Oh yes, but why do they need to change? Isn't it the case
that it is men who are the ones who should change? Isn't it the
case that the rest of the world should change? Women have been
oppressed for thousands of years; they've been done many, many
injustices. Shouldn't the world have to change and women just
remain the way they are?
Sue: Well, first off, maybe we should clear up whether or not
women have been oppressed. Let's look at the psychology of
women. Don't you think that's a good place to start?
Kevin: It's a good start, yes.
Sue: Okay. We look at what women are and we look at what men
are. Firstly, women are submissive. We all know this, and we
know that men are conquerors - they conquer and dominate. Now
women, through their submission, have a form of conquering, but
it's more hidden. This is one of the most important things to
remember - that it's hidden. With men, it's direct. You can see
it, and this is why people point fingers at men. Now the point
is, because women's will to conquer and dominate is hidden, we
call them innocent. In this way, they're protected. Men aren't.
David: Well, that's right. I just can't believe that men think
that they've been the oppressors, that women have been oppressed
throughout the centuries. It's just a complete load of bunkum,
because when you look at it, ninety-nine percent of women have
been reasonably happy with their roles. I mean, we've evolved as
a species - men and women together - and each sex have had their
own roles and each has been relatively happy with their roles.
It's just only in the last century or two that women have
suddenly decided, "Well, we want something else!" And men have
gone, " Oh, okay", and have totally accommodated them. They
immediately went about changing the laws for them. Through the
whole of this century, we've changed the whole of society to
accommodate these new wishes of women.
Kevin: Yes, but I have a nagging doubt about all of this. It
sounds very reasonable, but - concerning this idea that women
conquer by means of their submissiveness and their passivity - I
don't know if I've ever met a woman who actually intelligently
goes about doing this. I get the impression that women are
basically victims of circumstance. They behave in the same way
they've been bought up by their parents. So they're innocent,
aren't they? Aren't they purely innocent in everything they do?
Should we expect women to be responsible for their actions?
David: Well, it depends if they're actually conscious, doesn't
it.
Sue: Yes, that's right.
David: Are women conscious? Is this what you're getting at?
Kevin: Exactly.
David: We expect men to be responsible achievers. When anything
goes wrong we say that men are to blame. Are you saying that we
should treat women in the same way? Is this what you're asking?
Kevin: Yes. Well--
David: Are women and men intrinsically the same in this way or
are they fundamentally different in this way?
Kevin: Yes, that's right. I think most women would claim they're
not responsible for what they do. They are victims, they would
claim, and because they are not responsible we shouldn't treat
them as responsible. And anyway, they tend to think that
responsibility has no ultimate value; responsibility is just a
male, egotistic vanity. Everybody should be the way women are -
totally irresponsible, or responsibly irresponsible. You know
what I mean? Why should we strive to be anything more than what
women are?
David: I think the world would fall apart, wouldn't it? Women
can be who they are - unconscious, irresponsible, very much like
a child - because men have built the framework around them.
There is a saying somewhere, "Men create the spaces for women to
flow". If there was none of this framework, the flowing would
drift off into a complete equilibrium or nothingness. So we need
at least some people to actually be conscious, forward thinking
and rational.
Sue: Yes. Men create the spaces, as you say, for women to exist.
It comes down to just this: How do women exist? What are they?
Now I've thought of it in this way. If you take everything that
a women holds dear away from her: the kids, the husband, her
clothes, her home, everything.
David: Her career.
Sue: Her career, yes, that's right, and her education. If you
take all these things away from her, what have you got? Nothing.
If you do the same to a man; if you take away his career, his
car, whatever, he's still a man. There is still a man there. So
it comes down to what it is exactly that you are looking at.
When you look at a woman, what is she? Is there something inside
there, like a personality, a character? Or is she just the stuff
she lives through, like the husband and the kids and her
lifestyle and career and whatever it may be? So when we're
talking about whether women can change or develop - really, it's
a non-question.
Kevin: I'm trying to look at things from the point of view of
women - if you'll forgive me - who make up more than fifty
percent of the population. I don't think women do see anything
special in men. As far as most women are concerned, if men lose
their job, for example, or if they lose their women, then the
man becomes nothing. The man is a non-entity as far as women are
concerned if he doesn't have these things. This is obviously the
way women think, and they assume that men are the same as them.
Also, regarding this idea that women don't have consciousness .
. . you know, I think a lot of women would disagree on that, and
the fact that they disagree would at least tend to imply that
they do have some degree of consciousness - just by the fact
that they're able to disagree with something.
David: It comes down to defining what consciousness is. What do
you mean by consciousness?
Kevin: Let's talk about consciousness. If it's the case that
women don't have consciousness, and men do, then obviously there
is no possible way for women to recognize the existence of
consciousness in men. They can't do this if they don't have it
themselves. So let's examine what consciousness actually is.
David: Or this "difference", as you were saying, Sue, between
man and woman, that woman is nothing if everything is taken away
from her whereas the man has something more. This is what we're
getting down to, isn't it.
Kevin: What is this something more? What is it? Any ideas?
David: What do you think, Sue?
Sue: Yes. I think that it's a striving, a valuing, a sense of
himself. He comes into the world and automatically he has to
start making a way for himself. He doesn't just come into the
world with his role set out for him; he actually has to strive
to make a life for himself - he has to make himself. So he is
forced to actually value things. He has a rigorous life. He has
to be certain about what he wants in life. He has to make sure
that when he takes on a wife or responsibilities, he's
responsible for these to the end. If he wins something, he wins
and succeeds; if he fails, he dies. For a woman, success and
failure doesn't matter, even if she be a top politician - it
doesn't matter because at bottom she's still woman. Therefore,
she doesn't lay her life on the line. She doesn't risk anything.
At no time does a woman risk losing herself because she's woman.
She is everything. She is all over the place.
David: You wouldn't say this about Margaret Thatcher or someone
like that, would you?
Sue: I would say this about any woman.
David: Oh, she's a man, surely!
Kevin: If any woman can be a man, she would be - apart from
yourself, of course, Sue. What about Margaret Thatcher? What
percentage of her is male? I'm famous for saying that men are on
average about seventy percent male and thirty percent female (*
That was when I was much more liberal with my use of the term
"masculine". Today I would say that a man is only about 5%
masculine - KS), and women are ninety-seven percent female and
three percent male. What would the break-down be do you think
for Margaret Thatcher? Would you think that she was fifty
percent male?
Sue: No, no, I'd still say that she'd be in the lower reaches of
two, maybe three, because--
Kevin: Oh! Come, surely five!
Sue: Oh, well, alright. What does it matter, really?
Kevin: Okay, very low.
Sue: But also, what does it matter? Because what you're seeing
there isn't masculinity; what you're seeing there is femininity
aping a few masculine traits - very few indeed and not very well
done either. The story is this: a women can use anything at her
disposal, and she has everything at her disposal. A man can't do
this, because he'd get picked on and be told, "I beg your
pardon, you can't do that". But a woman can use anything and get
away with it. Margaret Thatcher does it beautifully - she looks
like everybody's mother or aunt - and she is also capable of
speaking in a masculine way. But what's behind it? What does she
really risk? She ruined a whole country and she still got away
with it. There's something wrong there.
Kevin: Yes, I'm trying to picture that if a real man did behave
the way Margaret Thatcher did, and dressed the way that she did,
well, he wouldn't be regarded as a great man, would he?
David: Or if Margaret Thatcher was more manly, she would never
have made it to the top of the Tory party.
Sue: That's an important point.
David: You seem to be saying, Sue, that even if women appear to
be masculine, and if they conquer the world in a masculine way,
the essential difference still remains. Even if the actions of
men and women seem identical on the surface, there's some sort
of difference and that is an inner . . . ?
Sue: An inner life.
David: Yes.
Sue: This is the consciousness we were talking about before.
Kevin: So women are living their lives, basically, without true
consciousness of what they're doing. So even when women are
being masculine, or appearing to be masculine, they're actually
not conscious. They're not fully responsible for what they're
doing, and so they feel no need to be consistent in their
behaviour. They can be masculine one moment, and feminine the
next, for example, and all the while having no conscience about
changing in this way. So, in other words, masculinity is just a
fashion, or perhaps something to attract men's attention.
Sue: Very much so. A new dress.
David: It was Otto Weininger who said that if a woman does
anything scientific, or masculine, it's because she's out to
please a man - like her father, husband, or son. There is no
pure motivation for knowledge in a woman.
Kevin: I know, personally, that if there is nothing masculine in
a woman, then there is nothing atttractive about her. It's
difficult justifying being attracted to a woman if they have no
noble, masculine characteristics. So those women who can put on
the appearance of some form of nobility, or masculinity, can
give a man a justification to approach her.
David: That's an interesting point, actually. Think of the way
that men and women interact, such as the man courting the woman.
If men really did have true respect for women, if they really
saw them as their true soul-mates, then it would be
inconceivable that these men would treat women the way they
currently do: buy them flowers--
Kevin: Have sex with them.
David: And compliment them all the time about their attire - all
that sort of stuff. It's a form of actual disrespect. It's
saying, "Woman, you are nothing, and so I can treat you in this
fashion".
Kevin: Yes, the men are really saying, "The fact that you are so
easily flattered by my compliments means that you have no real
substance."
Sue: No integrity.
Kevin: If a man met another man whom he respected he would never
tell him, "I love the way you've done your hair today". It would
never occur to a man to treat another man like that.
David: Or to pursuade by flowers.
Kevin: It's funny that the very times when women feel honoured
and feel that they're being respected by men are the very times
that men are treating with the utmost disrespect.
David: And vice-versa. Women do the same to men in their own
way. When they're stroking the male ego, it is just a form of
disrespect, and it is the same with all the games between the
sexes which everybody loves to be involved in. I'm told that one
of the faults of modern feminism is that it's lacking in the
sexual side of things, that we should discover our sexual
natures, because taking part in these sexual games is thrilling.
But this sort of behaviour has a lot of consequences, not least
of which it doesn't encourage anything noble in either sex.
Kevin: Speaking about nobility, perhaps we can move on to the
subject of genius. Now, Otto Weininger, one of the greatest
heros of all time whom very few people have ever heard of --
David: This is a German fellow about the end of last century.
Kevin: Yes, he was a German philosopher who committed suicide at
the age of only twenty-three, and who wrote a marvelous book
called Sex and Character. In his book he breaks down the human
character into male and female components and talks about how
different individuals are composed of these different male and
female components. He argues that masculinity is one and the
same thing as genius. So a person is a genius to the degree that
they are masculine. This doesn't necessarily mean that all men
are geniuses. There is a certain threshold of masculinity above
which a person can rightly call themselves a genius.
David: Or a man.
Kevin: Or a true man. And he says that it is impossible for
there to ever be a female genius. This is not to say that a
woman can never be a genius, but that a woman can never be
female and a genius at the same time. And he also says that
there can never be a scientific genius. So genius is not
anything to do with the pettiness of ordinary human knowledge,
of ordinary scientific knowledge, or of emotions and feelings -
these are things that everybody can do. But rather the genius,
the ultimate genius, has the whole of the universe inside
himself. He exists as a conscious, individual entity, as an
"atom" in the universe, fully aware of himself and his own
separateness, but - at the same time as being entirely remotely
separate from the entire universe - he contains the whole
universe within himself, and therefore he knows everything about
the entire universe for all time. Though not in a scientific
way.
David: This would count out Einstein. Wasn't it Weininger who
said that no scientific person can become a genius?
Kevin: Exactly.
David: So that would count out Einstein.
Kevin: Yes, because Einstein never actually went beyond the
finiteness of scientific concepts.
David: Yes, Einstein was very disappointing because he had a
great brain, no doubt about it - discovering these theories
about relativity and so on. But what a foolish waste of life!
Pursuing physics!
Kevin: And quarrelling with his wife.
David: Instead of trying to understand the nature of reality
itself - which is the philosophic goal - he wasted his life on
this temporary, imperfect knowledge of science.
Sue: I think it was actually to impress his wife, and to impress
his women followers and the public in general.
David: That's right. As soon as you become a serious thinker and
want this ultimate knowledge, then the first people who will run
away from you and won't have anything to do with you are women.
So it is a real test of your love of thought, that you can
withstand this and yet continue on pursuing Truth - all the
while having women and men everywhere despise you for having
this conscience. This is what faith is. This is what Jesus and
other people mean by faith - that you continue to chase this
knowledge in spite of all these worldly sufferings.
Kevin: This is a very important subject, the subject of genius.
It relates to philosophy, and it is interesting that there have
never been any female philosophers - never - although I often
hear people saying that the "mothers of the Catholic Church" are
philosophers. I think this is a very important topic to discuss.
David: We might have some music first, shall we?
Kevin: We'll have some music.
America
is famous for producing philosophers. We played some Bob Dylan a
couple of weeks ago and this evening we've got Edie Brickell,
who ideally characterizes female philosophy.
[ MUSIC BREAK - "What I am", by Edie Brickell ]
I'm not aware of too many things
I know what I know if you know what I mean
I'm not aware of too many things
I know what I know if you know what I mean
Philosophy is the talk on the cereal box
Religion is the smile on a dog
I'm not aware of too many things
I know what I know if you know what I mean
Choke me in the shallow water before I get too deep
What I am is what I am
You what you are or what?
What I am is what I am
You what you are oh . . .
I'm not aware of too many things
I know what I know if you know what I mean
Philosophy is a walk on slippery rocks
Religion is a light in the fog
I'm not aware of too many things
I know what I know if you know what I mean
Choke me in the shallow water before I get to deep
Choke me in the shallow water before I get too deep
What I am is what I am
You what you are or what?
What I am is what I am
You what you are oh . . .
I say I say I say I do
David: I think we've had enough of that song. Thanks Edie. Can
there be a female genius?
Sue: Absolutely impossible.
David: And why is that?
Sue: Well, to start with, you're talking about a creature who is
female and, as we have already ascertained, females are not
conscious. You have to be conscious; it's a prerequisite of
genius. You have to be aware of the consequences of your
actions. You have to understand that if you are passionate and
longing for something, then you have to work towards it, and
that you have to curtail parts of your life. So you have to know
what you're doing and how you're doing it. The thing is, women
can't do this because, as far as they're concerned, there are no
consequences to anything they do. If you're not conscious, then
that means you don't recognize anything that you do; you don't
recognize the long term consequences of what you do.
Kevin: You know, women always say that the special thing about
being a woman is, in fact, that they are aware of the
interrelationships between things in nature. Yet we're saying
that they don't have this awareness of interrelationships. So
which is right? Is it the case that a woman's awareness of
interrelations is unconscious and therefore not real? Is that
what we're saying?
Sue: Things arise and they respond. Well, you really couldn't
even say it's responding; it's really just drifting.
Kevin: So it's just the same as what animals do.
Sue: That's right.
Kevin: Animals are aware of the interrelationships in nature. As
we mentioned on a previous program, wombats have a close
connection with the earth, but it doesn't mean that they are
philosophers.
David: Weininger says that women have "henids". Whereas men have
thoughts, women have henids.
Kevin: What exactly are henids, David?
David: Well, there a sort of pre-thought. A henid lacks the
clarity and penetration of an actual thought. It's more of a
vague feeling or sensation, not a clear cut concept. When I look
at women, they seem so spontaneous and free and happy--
Sue: They're already geniuses, aren't they.
David: That's right, they're already wise. They're seemingly
closer to Buddhahood, which is the state of perfection. So, in
other words, women are in a sense only a finger snap away from
perfection, but because they aren't able to have real thoughts -
only henids - there might as well be an infinite gap.
Kevin: There is an infinite gap.
David: And men - who are more cumbersome, more hesitant and
doubtful, more watchful and so forth - are nearer to perfection
precisely because they're able to clarify their thoughts.
Kevin: This would explain why all the religious traditions say
that women are incapable of becoming enlightened. Take Jesus,
for example. Not only was Jesus himself a man, but he chose for
his main representatives twelve men. There wasn't a single woman
among them. So here he was, a supposed prince of compassion, and
he didn't even choose a single woman amongst his twelve
apostles! And in Buddhism, it is said that it's absolutely
impossible for a woman to become enlightened.
David: Nicheren - was that his name? - Nicheren says that it is
more difficult for a woman to become a Buddha than for a dried
up seed sprout.
Kevin: That's right, and it's not very easy for a dried up seed
sprout to become a Buddha, is it? But they do say, though - I
mean, I don't want to totally discourage women from any form of
thinking - that if a woman becomes reborn as a man then she can
advance along the path of Truth.
David: So does Jesus in the Gospel of Thomas. You know that wise
old Gospel which was rejected by those political compilers of
the New Testament? A disciple said to Jesus, "Look what are
these women doing here? They are not worthy of life!" And Jesus
said, "No, I will teach this woman to become a man, because it
is only by becoming a man that one can enter the Kingdom of Heaven". So yes, there is very much a
consensus on this issue.
Kevin: This "rebirth" doesn't literally mean getting another
body, obviously. From the fact that Jesus says he can teach a
woman to become a man, we can see that rebirth really means a
change of mind. A different outlook on the world is actually the
same as a rebirth.
David: It's about different values, isn't it. Valuing Truth.
Sue: Or just simply valuing. And this goes for both men and
women. It's not only women out there who are valueless. There
are also a lot of men out there who have such a strong female
component or, more importantly, who are under the influence of
women to such a high degree, that they can't even begin to think
about any of this sort of stuff. So the whole point of starting
to think means that you have to really separate yourself . . .
you have to actually know what woman is and then start to
separate yourself from it. That's a difficult thing - an
extremely difficult thing - because woman is absolutely
everywhere. She is in everything you do - from your job to your
home life, to the very way that you wear your clothes and clean
your teeth.
Kevin: Sue, you personally must find it very difficult being a
woman in our society, which is probably the most ignorant and
foolish society that there has ever been in all of history.
People like to think that we're advancing, but personally I
think that the quality of education in universities is lower
than it has ever been. You're a woman in this society who is
saying that the masculine way is the only noble way to go. This
must cause a lot of conflict in your own self?
Sue: Yes. I'm constantly battling the feminine in my own self.
I'm not just talking of external matters here; I'm talking about
inside me. Inside me there is woman, and every day I have to say
to myself, "No, I'm not going to let myself get dragged down
into her. I'm not going to be passive and go into the dreamland
that woman is." I mean, woman is a wonderful place. Everybody
has experienced it - I just happen to have it right there
constantly on the tip of my mind saying, "Come on, just ignore
everything. Be happy. Go along with everything. Go shopping.
You'll be alright". I tell you if I fall into that trap, I'm
dead. You see, this is the difference between me and other
females. I know if I fall into woman - I don't think it's
possible at the moment, but I suppose anything is possible in
the future - but at the moment I feel strong, so that I'm going
to stick with it. I want to live. My goal is to live.
Kevin: What about all the men, though, who don't have an awful
lot of femininity in them - maybe only thirty percent - and yet
you wouldn't want to know them. I'm talking about the sort of
people who go to the pub, who talk a load of absolute rubbish,
get drunk, beat their wives up . . . what can you say? These men
hardly deserve to live. They're not a very good example of
manliness, are they?
Sue: Ah, but there is still potential in these men. This is the
whole point. Within every man there is more possibility of
wisdom than there is with any woman.
Kevin: So you're saying there is a possibility for these men to
"see the light", so to speak, and within a few months they can
be transformed into quite upstanding individuals?
David: Oh well, not so much that, but they may pass on the
masculine traits of striving and idealism to their children,
perhaps.
Kevin: At least, they're expressing some sort of principle. Even
though the principle might only be that of going to the pub and
getting drunk, at least it is a principle. They have consciously
arrived at that particular philosophy.
David: It's similar to the argument that men have created all
the wars and all the environmental destruction, so obviously
being a man is a bad thing. But I'd say that this is not the
case. Even though men are doing these bad things, they are also
capable of doing good things. Indeed, just the fact that they
are doing bad things means they're capable of doing good things.
Kevin: That's right. The consciousness of badness, in a sense,
automatically creates the consciousness of goodness as well. If
the one exists, then the other also exists. Women, on the other
hand, have no conscious knowledge of either goodness or badness,
and so live in a nether-world of dreaminess.
David: Yes, this is interesting, as I think it goes to the core
of our evolution. The sexes are bipolarized and very much
complement one another. Women - even in our enlightened times of
1995 - are brought up to be basically childlike, soft,
non-doers, and passive, while men are still brought up to be the
opposite. Men are brought up to believe that they are evil
creatures and oppressors.
Sue: Bad to the bone.
David: Yes. So, in this way, men have evolved to be wilder.
They're more able to do things, but at the same time they're
tethered. They're continually under the spell of certain
concepts which say that they are more evil than women, that
women are purer, more moral.
Kevin: I think a good example of this would be the writer,
Demidenko? What's her first name?
Sue: Helen.
Kevin: Yes, Helen Darville, or whatever.
David: We'll assume that for the moment.
Kevin: I mean, men are often called liars. Men tell lies. And
it's a true enough thing to say. But, the thing is, men
consciously tell lies. They are always conscious of the fact
that they're telling a lie. A man's consciousness, you see, is
extremely complex. There are many, many different levels, and so
there are many, many different levels of lies. However, the fact
still remains that these lies are conscious. But when women lie
it's not the same thing, because women really believe in what
they're saying. A good example is this writer, Helen Darville:
the only way she was able to perpetrate a lie was to actually
believe in it herself. So, in a sense, she was still able to
maintain the illusion of purity and innocence. Because women
live unconsciously in this fashion, they always escape the
responsibility through their femininity.
Sue: That's right. Her whole life is a lie.
Kevin: Every woman's is.
David: In what sense? If they're not conscious, how can they
lie?
Sue: Their whole life is a lie. I'm not speaking about the
individual woman here. By no means does an individual woman lie.
David: What do you mean by "lie", then?
Kevin: It's something which appears to be something but isn't. A
deception or an illusion. I think in Hinduism they call women
Avidya, which means "the embodiment of illusion". This is
precisely what woman is, and it ties in perfectly with what
we're saying now. Women appear to be everything which they are
not.
David: Yes, I think we should actually stress the point that
what we are saying here isn't original. It has all been said by
all the various wise men throughout the ages, such as
Kierkegaard and Nietzsche and the Buddhas and Jesus and so
forth. All these people who are universally regarded as great
geniuses, who possess the greatest minds in history, and all of
them to a tee have come down on woman and on femininity. Now
it's often argued that this is merely due to conditioning. These
men, people argue - great as they were - weren't able to escape
the conditioning of their times. But, I mean, we're talking
about the greatest geniuses here, men who have uncovered what is
ultimately real and who have more or less liberated their minds
from delusion. So it doesn't sound convincing to me that they
somehow remained trapped by women.
Kevin: How would you respond to women who say, "Oh sure, there's
all these great wise men like the Buddha and Lao Tzu and so on,
but what they've experienced is only a masculine enlightenment.
It's the enlightenment of the male mind and therefore not the
same thing as the enlightenment of the female mind"? Men are in
fact very, very foolish because of all the men who have ever
existed there's only been a few of them who have actually
achieved this male enlightenment. But in the case of female
enlightenment, virtually every woman experiences this. So who's
got the best idea? Surely, the women are the smarter ones?
Sue: What's this female enlightenment? What is it?
David: . . . um . . do you want to have a crack at that one Sue?
Sue: Sorry, I'm lost there.
Kevin: Yeah, I'm lost as well. But then, maybe that's the idea.
It's just trying to somehow confuse us, isn't it?
David: Well, they probably mean some sort of child-like state of
mind.
Kevin: I think they mean a total unconsciousness. A total
unconsciousness is regarded by women to be a form of
enlightenment. It's a going back into the womb. This is what
most feminism strives for--
David: Oh come on! Not so far back! Infancy.
Kevin: Okay, not so far back as the womb - thank you for
correcting me. Infancy is what feminism strives for. Whereas men
want to go forward as far away from the womb as possible. They
want to go away from the mother's apron strings, to go on and
conquer death itself. They want to go beyond death and achieve
immortality.
David: Ideally, you mean. Some men. The real men.
Kevin: Yes - to the degree that they're masculine.
David: This is the disappointing thing with most men. They are
persuaded to keep their gaze towards their infancy. The whole
thing about getting involved in a relationship, with all its
comforts and mediocrity, is really a crawling back to childhood.
They're not brought up nowadays to do something significant with
their lives. No one is encouraging them to actually go out and
conquer death. No one believes in that sort of stuff anymore;
it's regarded as something out of the Middle Ages. And this is
part of the whole feminization of our society: it's all heading
towards this childhood experience. The mystical experience, for
example, is now regarded as the highest state open to humanity
and it's falling right into hands of woman.
Kevin: Perhaps we should have a concrete example. We've been
talking about this difference between men being conscious, on
the one hand, and women being unconscious, on the other, but how
does this actually manifest in real life? Perhaps we should look
at the example of love. Now love is the thing which most people
value more than anything else in the world and, without which, a
woman's life is nothing. Men can live without love because they
have their computers and their money and their four wheel drives
and so on, but a woman's life is love and children and family.
What is the relationship between love and genius, for example?
Is there a relationship between love and intelligence? What does
intelligence make of love? Is love real? Is it only for women?
Is it possible for a man to love? Is a woman's love and a man's
love the same thing? Any ideas on this?
Sue: Well. First, it is absolutely impossible for women to love,
because the only way they can exist is through other people. So
when they "love" a child, or "love" a husband, or "love" their
mother or father, what's actually happening is that they're
using those other people for their existence. It is only through
those relationships do they actually exist. So when a woman says
that she has unconditional love for her child, don't believe
her! What's actually happening is that she's using that child as
she would a new bangle - a way to enhance her position on the
planet.
Kevin: This is why women spend so much time gossiping on the
phone, because they wouldn't exist without that social contact.
Children just provide another form of social contact.
Sue: Children are just another thing to talk about. Women love
to talk, as we all know, and as you say it's their connection
with the world - it makes them alive.
Kevin: It's impossible for a woman to have a mental connection;
everything with woman has to be physical. This is why women
value their bodies so much.
David: They value touching, don't they.
Kevin: Yes, they value touching a whole lot more than men. Women
feel violated a lot more with respect to their bodies than men
do, whereas men feel violated when their mind has been violated.
David: An example of this is, of course, the issue of what women
wear. We were out on the town last night, weren't we, and--
Kevin: I remember well!
David: And there were mini skirts and cleavage everywhere. Now
this, in my view, is a form of rape. It is a form of abuse, of
harassment, because although I try to avoid it, it still manages
to invade my mind. So, by presenting themselves the way they do,
women are violating what I consider to be most precious - my
mind. Women say that their most precious thing is their vagina.
They say that being raped is something more significant than
being bashed up because their vaginas have been violated. Men,
on the other hand, are being violated every day through this
constant sexual invasion of their mental processes.
Kevin: I don't think women can even conceive of a mind being
violated. They have no conception that a man's mind can be
violated by what they do, and I think it is because they have no
conception of mind. They have no conception that man actually
has a mind, because they assume that men are the same as
themselves. So, everyday, they're out there raping men by the
way they behave and the way they dress and the flashes of the
eyes and the smiles. They're constantly raping and they have no
conception of what they're doing.
David: No, and in fact they actually praise people like Madonna
who does this sort of thing for a living - and it is easy to see
that someone like Madonna hasn't thought about anything in her
whole life. She doesn't give a damn about the consequences of
how she lives and this is the icon of the feminist movement at
the moment - Madonna.
Sue: And it is the purpose in all women's lives to achieve the
best body, to wear the most fashionable clothes - all the
magazines are full of it, all the gossip columns are full of it.
Her every thought is concentrated on just this - fashion. And
yeah, there are no consequences to it. If somebody hasn't a mind
then there definitely isn't going to be any thought of
consequences. So all she does is just drift in and out of
whatever the fashion happens to be.
Kevin: It makes me laugh that we have all these different types
of feminism today and they are all totally incompatible with
each other. You have feminists changing their minds from week to
week - if not week to week, then at least month to month. When
they're questioned as to how it is that they believed "that"
last month and now "this" this month, they say, "Oh well, we've
progressed from there! We've advanced! You see, feminism is only
a very new thing; it's only been around for a few years." And
this is in fact a load of rubbish, because feminism is as old as
the hills. It rears its head for a few years, then the fashion
dies out and so it goes away again. And this has happened
periodically for thousands of years - this feminism we're
experiencing at the moment is nothing new whatsoever. Now the
fact that the feminist's view on life is changing from month to
month means that we can't respect anything - and I mean anything
- feminists say.
David: It's funny, isn't it. They praise this changing outlook
as a great virtue and then the very next moment they're saying
to men, "What part of 'No' don't you understand?" - as if they
really believe that women stick to their "No" over two
consecutive moments! Surely, one would think, it must be the
only thing that doesn't change within their minds, this idea of
No! However, men know that women are changing all the time.
Kevin: Yes, a woman does actually mean "No" at the time she says
it - but that only lasts for one moment.
Sue: And then the next moment it can mean "Yes".
Kevin: And then the very next moment a "Yes" can mean "No" . . .
David: Each moment becomes a whole new ball game.
Kevin: My head is spinning just thinking about it! It makes life
very difficult for those men who don't understand women. I must
say that as I was growing up I foolishly imagined that all human
beings were basically the same. I mean, I knew that I was a
human being and so I thought that other people were more or less
the same as me. I could not believe that women didn't have a
consciousness; I could not believe that women were not
intelligent - it probably took me a good ten years of hard
thinking, with many hours of thinking every day, as well as
having it proven to me through hard experience. It took ten
years to know with certainty what I had suspected when I was ten
years old. Just from watching the women in my life - my mother
and friends and so on - I saw very early the fact that women
simply do not think . . . in the way that men think.
David: I think it is very important to keep stressing this. It
could be construed that we're out to be harsh with women, that
we want to hurt them, but this is not the case. The whole point
of this discussion is to articulate the philosophic path. I
mean, we live in a world were the philosophic path is totally
meaningless to people; it no longer even exists, and the biggest
reason for this is the worship of the feminine. The reason why
people don't search for Truth is because they're obsessed with
Woman. Both men and women are obsessed with Woman - it's at the
centre of everybody's existence.
Kevin: Yes, I'd like to say, on top of what I said previously,
that I'm not blaming women. I don't think any of us are blaming
women for what they are. There are causes for everything that
happens on earth; there are causes for women being what they
are, and one of the main causes for women being what they are is
men. Men constitute the molding force which creates women, and
women allow themselves to be shaped by men - genetically and
psychologically. So if women are going to improve - and I regard
women as being like my daughters, so I am speaking now as a
father - if women are going to be helped, then men have to start
treating women with respect, and that means expecting women to
be rational. It means not loving them, for example - not loving
them in the emotional way. Sure, love women intellectually;
respect them as the human beings that they may possibly become -
human in the sense of being consciously reasoning human beings.
And then, and only then, can we expect women to become more
masculine. But until men actually change the way they're
treating women, it's not going to happen.
Sue: That's right. Men have to be strong and consistent every
day and in this way they can set an example for women.
Kevin: But when you have the men of today with their ponytails
and their shaved faces which make them look more and more like
women--
David: And the earrings.
Kevin: --and the earrings, and the pink shirts, and so on.
David: And the smiles.
Kevin: And the smiles, and the gossip, and the mobile phones,
you can't . . . women look at all this and they think there is
no such thing as masculinity. It is hardly a good example men
are setting for women.
David: Anyway, we are nearing the end of the program but, before
we go, we'd like to share a few quotes which we came up with the
other day. Kevin and I had a spare afternoon, so--
Kevin: We were saying before how a man should never love a
woman, and even more than that he should certainly never marry.
David: Yes, so we came up with The Book Of Wife, which is going
to be one of our epic productions, and I'll just read out a few
words from it:
"What is the best teacher? Wife itself."
"Wisdom is gained through the experience of wife."
"We must strive to give our wives meaning!"
"He was a good man, full of wife."
"Despair comes to those who think about wife."
"Happy is a man who leads a charmed wife."
"Marriage is a matter of wife and death."
"I'm a man of principle, whatever I do I do for wife."
"He sacrificed his wife for truth."
"The important thing is not to take wife seriously."
"The brave man laughs wife in the face."
Kevin: David, these aren't funny! These are very, very serious!
Sue: Terrifyingly so!
Kevin: I'm breaking out in a sweat!
David:
"Having children was the highest point of my wife."
"The most evil thing a man can do is the taking of wife."
"The chances of there being intelligent wife on other planets
are exceedingly slim based on current data available."
"Money is the essential ingredient for the enjoyment of wife."
"A bachelor is a man who is afraid of real wife."
"A bunch of flowers can provide a new lease on wife."
"I have sought the higher wife in vain."
Kevin: What do you make of those, Sue? You didn't write any of
those, did you?
Sue: I wish I had!
David: There is certainly an endless, rich seam there. I think
we can come up with a good book. But we'll have to go, I
suppose.
Kevin: If people want a copy of The Book Of Wife, they can write
to our address which is:
P.O. Box
207,
St. Lucia, 4067, or if you just
want to write to us about any subject at all.
David: Yes, just get to know us if you want. We are here. Okay,
thanks, Sue, it was a pleasure talking with you.
Sue: Thank you.
David: Yes, it was a very interesting conversation. And we'll be
back next week. See you later.
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