This analysis effectively dismantles the ahistorical "lazy woman" trope by restoring the reality of women as primary economic pillars in ancestral societies. It reveals that modern domestic stereotypes are often just a failure of historical literacy regarding the essential "sword and shield" partnership.
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Deep Dive
Women are just lazyAdded:
This guy has pissed off so many people on the internet. So, the stay-at-home dad is has been going viral and uh he's pissed off a lot of people because what happened is he lost his job. He became a stay-at-home dad and he said, "Yo, this is the easiest job ever." He was like he was like, "Staying at home and taking care of the house is the easiest [ __ ] job ever. I love it." And like it pissed off a lot of women. So, let's watch it.
>> Stay at home dad chronicles. If a stay-at-home mom tries to convince you that her job is hard, no it isn't. I'm a stay-at-home dad of five children, all seven years old and under, and my life is a vacation. In addition, my kids are homeschooled, so they're here 24/7. I also do all the man work, all the house and car maintenance, taking out the trash, etc., etc. I'm almost 37 years old and I've had almost every single job there is. culinary industry, construction, destruction, white collar, warehouse jobs, delivery jobs. I worked at a poultry plant one time and my job was to stand there for 10 or 12 hours on an assembly line cutting chicken.
You have any idea how boring that is?
Compared to every single one of these jobs, my life now is a vacation. I have a list of things I want to get done that day.
>> Yeah, keep [ __ ] that chicken. You know, do do you guys know keep [ __ ] that chicken? This guy right here >> looking on Fox 5 Sky Guardian and then check that sevenday to make your weekend plans.
>> Takes a tough man to make a tender forecast. Nick, >> I guess that's me.
>> Keep [ __ ] that chicken.
>> Okay, I'll do that.
>> All right, we continue.
>> What?
>> Keep [ __ ] that chicken.
>> They're like trying to play it off.
>> Even this like a classic. Just want to say I misspoke during last night's newscast. I apologize for my remarks to anyone who may have been offended.
>> Who cares, man? Who gives a [ __ ] All right. Anyway, uh let's let's keep uh let's keep watching this here.
>> Besides that, I get to do whatever the [ __ ] I want. I don't understand how some of these women have one, two, maybe three kids who more often than not have been gone at public school most of the day. Chuck their kids like their cornhole bean bags at their overworked husbands as soon as they walk in the door or tell them to do [ __ ] >> That is true. cuz they send kids to public school generally >> get around the house. What the [ __ ] have you been doing all day, bro? Some men like to do all that when they come home and that's cool, but you got to understand when you're being taken advantage of. Then on top of that, they won't even let them crack most of the time. And that right there is just plain unacceptable.
>> Wait, what is crack? Like, what what does that mean? I don't know slang. What does that mean? What is crack?
Wait, wait. Is that Wait, what? When did this happen? When did when did crack mean sex? When is that? 1980. It's like old. What the [ __ ] Yeah, I didn't I didn't know that. I don't >> Hold on real quick. I want you guys to listen to something.
>> Nice. That looks like a good turkey. I'm not going to lie, dude.
>> If your turkey doesn't sound like that or it's not this juicy, you didn't do it right. Ladies, just do your job.
>> I don't even like turkey and it looks really good.
>> Leave that man alone and let him crack.
It's that easy. No need to over complicate things. hurry and get me to 50K before my balls start clacking against my ankles.
>> So, actually, this is an interesting uh this is very interesting, actually.
There's a recent episode of Base Camp. I know I've talked about it already, an episode of Base Camp from I believe it's this week. I believe this week it came out. Um and um I'm just going to um actually first why don't we watch let's watch the counter the counter uh the counter argument first cuz there's like so there's some drama. um where people were very mad at him, you know, like women obviously uh very mad. Women with nose rings were very very angry at this guy. So, let's uh let's see.
>> Stay at home Dad Chronicles. No need to over complicate things.
>> I know we don't know each other, but um I'm Kendall and I'm here to your day right up.
>> Oo.
>> See, I'm not a mom, so I have no idea what it's like to be a mother.
>> Excuse my [ __ ] pardon. What did you say? Apple cider vinegar. Over 85% of consumer purchases are driven by women, specifically stay-at-home moms.
>> And who's buying >> Wait, is that Hold on. I don't think that's the own that you think it is.
Hold on. I I don't think that's the own you think it is. Say like women spend all the money. Wait, hold on. Yeah, women be shopping. Yeah, I don't I don't know if that's I don't know if that's an own man. That seems like a cell phone >> little cooker cell.
>> I went through your profile and took notes about every single consumer brand that you have worked with and have sent.
>> Oh, here we go. Here we go, guys. It's time to contact all the sponsors and [ __ ] about it until like they get removed.
>> The messages letting them know that one of the >> They always have this look to like this smug like this [ __ ] like uh psycho eyes, you know what I mean? like all the time.
>> Influencers that they work with just came online to [ __ ] all over their most valuable audience.
>> [ __ ] just the ones that were taking advantage soy sauce.
>> And I would also encourage my audience to go ahead and tag all of those consumer brands in the comments of this video.
>> There it is. Let's brigade every Let's have everybody brigade the dude >> over and over and over again just so we can make sure that they're aware of the kind of piece of [ __ ] influencer they are associating their brand name with.
>> Okay, guys. First off, okay, Ninja's really good. I I'll admit Ninja's really good. I don't know about Hexclad, though. I don't know about that one.
>> That sounds illegal. Is it illegal? Go to Jang Paste. So, to summarize so far, my video, which had [ __ ] all to do with you. You have no credited authority, no experience. You're not a parent of >> Yeah. And and she said that she's not a parent, right? Emu, thank you so much for the prime. Thank you. ended you and now you're trying to starve my five children and or cause instability in their home. Yeah. Even though you make yourself out to be such a humanitarian >> every [ __ ] time.
>> I especially want to make sure that everyone tags both Hexclad and Ninja because those are the two most prominent brands that have tied their brand with yours.
>> I've never been affiliated with Ninja. I did two gifting videos for Hexclad and I got my gifts.
>> Ninja's pretty good. Looks like you're an expert in jack [ __ ] Onion powder.
>> I like how he's just like casually cooking. Like >> But something tells me it's not going to take very long, buddy, before they won't be doing that any longer.
>> Just the smuggness, dude. The smugness.
>> It's not going to take very long, buddy, before be doing that any longer.
>> Just the smuggness, man. The nose ring smuggness. I know.
>> Don't tell me, buddy.
>> Any longer? You didn't do anything.
Molasses, you literally just made me more money on Tik Tok. My turkey video was tapped out at about 600,000 views.
What's it at now? Like 2 million garlic powder.
>> Have the day you deserve, [ __ ] >> Oh god, not the day I deserve anything but that.
>> Korean barbecue go jang seasoning. Turn the heat on low and melt that together.
The recipe will be in the comments.
Ooh, it's like a >> Don't you have enough to deal with [ __ ] up your husband's military career? Stupid brown sugar. You can't cancel me, Kendall. You can't cancel somebody who doesn't care. You really said I'm not a mother. Got in front of a camera and proceeded to [ __ ] about something you know nothing about.
>> Dude, this guy's more of a mother than she is. How do you get that owned? How do you get that owned? Like, what in the [ __ ] You know, >> holy insufferable.
You had no argument, no rebuttal, just tried to cancel me and starve my children, and you only made me stronger.
Shout out to my man Trisha Zed and King T on YouTube. They both have W takes on this. Go show them some love and support.
>> Nice. Um, but yeah, so Hexclad and Ninja Kitchen, this guy is a gem. You should continue to work with him, sign, dude.
So true. So true, man. Female aggression manifests through indirect relational social tactics, gossip, innuendo, reputation destruction rather than physical confrontation. This form of aggression is designed to socially ostracize rivals. Okay guys, you guys know what would be equality though. What do you think of this equality? If you participate in female aggression, you should be subject to male aggression. I feel like I feel like that's uh that's fair, right? That's fair. Yeah. Equal rights. Yeah. Uh but anyway, so an interesting thing about this entire case, right, which is, you know, we'll we'll we'll wrap it up with here and then we'll we'll play some uh Windows.
But over on Base Camp, one of my favorite channels. Um you guys already know this. I already talked about it. I I freaking love Malcolm and Simone. But uh they did a they did a video. It's a very interesting video. Maybe we'll watch it, but right here, this video right here, man, >> how women trick men into doing all the work while still playing the victim.
forbidden history. Scop. Did you guys know about this? It's really interesting. Malcolm and Simone both go into a lot of the history behind this.
And it's quite interesting. So, the story basically is that the idea that women just stayed in the house and took care of the kids is actually not historically true. It was never historically true. It was only recently.
It is a very very recent thing that that happened. In fact, um if you look through um I guess uh what was it like the the um like the history if you look through the history of it women were actually the farmers more than men were.
Did you guys know that men only started farming and it still actually exists in other countries? Um to this day um and you know even more recent history um men only started farming when the plow was invented. Did you guys know that?
because the because the plow was efficient and required strength. It was the only reason that um that only reason that men started becoming the farmers before women were the farmers because historically um and okay, you have to think a little bit about like human biology for for this to make sense, right? So, first off, women biologically are more valuable than men. I'm not trying to say like a I'm not trying to make like an [ __ ] statement. I'm I'm talking strictly biologically. And the reason why is because one man can like [ __ ] a bunch of women and get them pregnant.
But like the women, one woman needs to exist in order to get pregnant, right?
And so what happened because of that is that men undertook more uh risky maneuvers and like more more they undertook more risk historically. I'm not making a value proposition as far as like humanity. I'm making a value like it's it's a biological reality just by numbers. So what happened was women because of this took they they they took on safe tasks. So so lowrisk lowreward big grind is basically what women did and that's what kind of like what women's bodies are built for. So farming um and gathering and um and and hunt and like small game hunting were actually what women did back in the like historically if you look into the historical record. And um the reason for that is women were taking care of the household. Like when it comes to like actually putting food on the table, it wasn't historically the man who like put all of the food on the table, right? So like that wasn't actually men's job historically was to like put food on the table and like they they there's like they crafted like this entire [ __ ] vision of like women at home like in the hut talking with each other taking care of the kids and that's it. And then the men like go out and bring back like all of the food and like the giant like I don't know whatever the mammoth or whatever they bring it back and then they all eat it. That's not actually what happened is is historically women provided almost all of the caloric intake of of like a civilization, right?
But see what see but I'm not saying that men aren't valuable, right? So this is what men did historically. Men's job was to increase the uh was two things. One, well actually no, it's actually one thing if you think about it. men's job was to protect the social standing the of the tribe or the family was to protect the social standing and increase the social standing. So like if you think about this right historically what did men do? They learned to fight. They went for high-risk things like, you know, hunting a giant animal that would that would be like, oh man, like like he brought back all this food. That's crazy, right? Like all this fur that we have, all of this [ __ ] that we have like to um that we could give to, you know, whoever the leader is for like the purposes of war. Um and um men also was the thing. So the the uh the crazy hunting war war was the other thing. uh men had to go to war to increase the social standing of like their family.
Oh, Vikings, they raided people for again the social the social standing because you would raid people and you would get [ __ ] But it's a high risk high-risk activity cuz you can die, right? But they would go out, they would, you know, go raid people, steal a bunch of [ __ ] right? So anyway, the the point is here is um historically the the dynamic between men and women is that women took care of the household and men were out there hustling in order to increase the value of everybody socially. Does that make sense? Uh Burns and Chest, thank you so much for the sub. So it's basically they they were they were doing high risk, high reward things. So again, I'm not saying that men were absolutely useless historically, but the idea that women didn't work was just [ __ ] So all the tradtorically it's fake. It's more recent. It's it's it's more recent that like the tradife thing happened like where women basically were like, "Oh, I just like at home and I don't do anything." It's actually not historically accurate for like almost everywhere in history. In fact, you still see people nowadays, you still see that women do um a lot of work. especially in like lower tech societies like you have um and the example that that Malcolm brought up was that if you go to like you know South America or like Africa into like the middle of [ __ ] Egypt, you see women that are carrying [ __ ] all the time like women carrying giant [ __ ] like like pots of water on their head and like carrying like big backpacks full of [ __ ] Like you see like women doing this kind of grueling labor in those in those places as well, right? So yeah, basically the idea that that women only take care of kid and that's it is is more of a modern um it's more recent historically. And again, I'm not saying that that men did nothing. Sure, men actually um it's a symbiotic relationship. Like I'm not saying that that the men are useless in these situations. What I mean by men being expendable, I mean is biologically, right? But like there still was a lot of value that men brought to families, right? like going to war for instance, right? All of the men in a society wouldn't be focused on things like farming, you know, if it was low low um low efficiency, right? The plow and the plow and technology being invented requiring strength, the reason why men started farming is because it became more efficient, right? Because one man with a plow could take care of more farming than like a bunch of women, right? So then they became more more more valuable. But anyway, so like I in situations like back in the day where there was war, the men had to train for war, right? Like think about like how war was back in the day, like the the pre like the the men of prestige had to had to go to war and train for war and if they didn't train for war, they died, right? So it was ultra devastating for men to not train for war. Best example would be Sparta. Yeah. Sparta. So women go out and pick the berries, fruit, hunting, vegetables. Men do the protection and hunting. No, women also hunted. Actually, um women women hunted um actually there's an interesting study. Do you guys want to hear a really interesting study? So, Malcolm talks about this study like in this video and the study is that did you guys know that birds are more afraid of women than men?
Did you guys know about that? It's really interesting. Birds are hard birds have a genetic like a genetic hard wiring in their in their their DNA that they're afraid of women more than men.
And the reason why is cuz women [ __ ] killed them like like for ye for it's killed them forever. Anecdotally proven they did a study there there was there's a study there's a study that like men are able to appro approach birds more than women that that I think it was like it was pretty big too. I think it was like 3.5 m or something like that. like men were able to get 3.5 meters like clo like let let me look up the exact number but the number doesn't matter but there was like a significant distance that men were able to get closer to birds than women it was 1 meter says precruncher 1 meter is still a lot though that's still a lot 1 to 1.5 meters okay so it's a little bit less than I said but it's still a lot but basically uh in the study uh men approaching birds and women approaching birds the birds flew faster than flew flew faster when it was a woman. And you know, of course, they controlled for like, you know, speed and all of that stuff, right? They they controlled for all that. Um, and the thing is is like what it shows is that there is a genetic reason, like a genetic hard wiring for birds, like an instinct, right, for them to flee when there was women. And it was because women actually hunted a lot of small game back in the day. Men mostly hunted big game. And like there were there were other historical accounts too like where a lot of women died in the forest like historically historically which doesn't make sense if you if you if you cons if you were to make a a case that women just stayed at home and took care of kids then like why did so many women historically die in the woods right where like they would be doing some activity in the woods and then they would die and it's because they like women are also doing the hunting and it makes sense too like it's another point that was brought up by Malcolm is it makes sense that women would uh I mean like why wouldn't a woman like hunt a rabbit when they could? It doesn't make sense. Like why wouldn't you, right?
Like if you were like picking berries and you saw a rabbit, why would you not kill it to bring home food, right? Uh and some some more interesting stuff about this is like there's um other historical uh notes on this where um they would set up houses in like medieval um medieval times. They had their houses set up so that [ __ ] birds would like nest in the house so the woman could just walk outside and grab them. So, it's it's it's it's kind of interesting. There's a lot of like uh interesting historical uh information around this. Yeah. They would specifically bait like uh they would make like a spot like uh outside the house right outside like the the um the upstairs the upstairs they would they would make a little thing where it's an optimal nesting spot so that the birds could nest there and then the women could steal the eggs. How does it explain the fact that women have lesser spatial awareness? Lesser spatial awareness. Women have lesser spatial awareness compared to women.
>> Menches on Ela the prairies. Women corner chickens in alleys. Yeah.
Basically, men do the active hunting and women set traps. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Women did a lot of trapping and stuff like that. Yeah. It's great to know that women have helped so much. Yeah. So, like anyway, the point like kind of to loop back to what I was talking about is like the idea that that like the the idea of like a woman that is like I am the table, I'm everything. Um I don't provide any value to you except for I have kids and I take care of them at home. you do everything else is a modern invention which is like really interesting to think about, right? Like it kind of flips everything when you think of it that way. But and then and then um sorry and it goes even further cuz like people will say well what about like the era where of business right because like you had uh commerce like the social technology of commerce happened right where people started to run businesses right so like even in the cases of businesses like there's historical um uh there is um historical uh what's the word there's history behind this that take care of the craft whereas women would take care of relationships and for in terms of like businesses like they would handle like a lot of the books and stuff like that.
Like women would do would still help their husband in like the business. It wasn't like the woman didn't do anything for the business. Like like the man would be like a butcher and he would like butcher and then do like you know um you know uh product like like relationships with other businesses and then like sell the stuff and then do all the um the the the bookkeeping for it.
And then the woman would like literally do nothing and like she would just take care of the kids and then like gossip with other women. like that was not really the case. Women would also help with the business, but behind the scenes obviously, right? They would they would take care of the stuff. They they would be like a supplemental uh they they would supplement the business rather than um doing nothing. Women are support class to the man's specialized career.
Yeah. Exactly. The way that uh uh the way it's been described is a sword and shield relationship where uh women are more defensive as far as like women take care of the basics and they make sure the basics are fulfilled and the men try to elevate the entire status of the family by going for high-risisk high reward scenarios which will elevate the social standing of everybody in the family. Anyway, I I I thought that was a very very interesting look. And if you want to watch this, I mean, this is like a long This is a 1-hour episode on the whole thing here. See, bird study, why birds fear women, evolutionary biology, plows, sword and shield relationship.
Like, it's all in here. And it's actually Oh, yeah. Hose, by the way.
It's why women were called hose, by the way, cuz they're far. They did the farming. They're called hose. You guys are cool, but their videos are too long.
Isn't that interesting that the modern the modern depiction of like woman being like I don't do anything and all I do is take care of baby and then you do everything else is not even accurate historically. What do I like to cook?
Everything. I can cook stuff from all over the world. I'm kind of crazy honestly.
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