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Chivalry Is Dead But Was It Ever Really Alive?

76 Views • 06/04/22
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Thinking_Ape
Thinking_Ape
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A recent incident in an NYC subway has provoked a multitude of responses, some of which involved chastising men for not intervening to save an unknown woman: unfortunately none of the commentary exhorting men to do this takes into account certain rather obvious facts... <br> <br>Paypal <br> <br>https://paypal.me/thinkingape <br> <br>Patreon <br> <br>http://www.patreon.com/user?u=257125 <br> <br>Backup Channel: <br> <br>https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCQQITAnXolax6-4Zo

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2 years ago

Chivalry, in the modern sense, arose from Edwardian Era. The U.K. and U.S. in particular. What arose was the Social Contract which was made possible by the spreading of wealth via industrialization. Common Men now had the means to court a woman of quality and show her that he wasn't a common boor like his peers. Also.... women still didn't have feminism and voting rights yet so, they HAD to step up and make themselves attractive to men who had potential. Potential that was easier to achieve thanks to the abundance of wealth creation and distribution. Indeed, a man COULD work harder and be rewarded in many ways. The bar for success was a bit lower, more reasonable, and the reward was worth the risk. Thus, men were incentivized to give women special treatment.

Seriously, wouldn't any normal man be motivated to try for THIS if all he had to do was apply himself of the means available to him? Plenty of pics of Edwardian Era life but, one is sufficient.

https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-lO6....4s_aNfhs/UG8aXmNON5I

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WMHarrison94
WMHarrison94
2 years ago

Oh chivalry is much older than that. But, you should concentrate on the Victorian Age... all that female sexual energy contained up like a pressuring cooker building up steam imminent th o spontaneous bursting... bet that was some fun times to live in as a wealthy aristocrat. Oh, and they wrote Peter Pan too, the forever boy.

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2 years ago

@WMHarrison94: That's why I claimed the MODERN form of chivalry arose from the Edwardian era. The Victorian era was nowhere nearly as expressive as the flamboyant Edwardian era. You're right about the tight social norms though. Unlike the Victoria era, chivalry came out as a choice for common men to show off their civility. That was important since commoner women wanted to take on the trappings of upper class ladies. IN ANY CASE, all of that is long gone now. ZOG has destroyed the West and there's nothing worth saving.

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WMHarrison94
WMHarrison94
2 years ago

Interesting history on knights. I am more of a Classical Greco- Roman historian I guess.

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Heavyhand
Heavyhand
2 years ago

Great video sir.

Thank you for your work.

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