🚨 PSYCHIATRIST SAYS "WOMEN ARE DESTROYING THIS COUNTRY" — AND THE INTERNET IS MELTING DOWN
Psychiatrist Dr. Mark McDonald is going viral after appearing on The Edit Alaverdyan Podcast and making what many people are calling one of the most controversial statements of the year.
His claim?
“Women are disproportionately destroying this country.”
But that's only the beginning.
According to McDonald:
• America has become afraid to criticize women
• society constantly calls out male flaws but ignores female ones
• weak men are enabling the problem
• fathers are failing to step up
• and what he calls “toxic femininity” is driving some of the most destructive cultural trends in the country
McDonald argues that many of America's biggest problems aren't political at all...
They're symptoms of a deeper imbalance between masculine and feminine influence.
The comments immediately exploded:
• “This man just said what millions are thinking.”
• “This is one of the most controversial takes I've heard all year.”
• “He's identifying a real problem nobody wants to discuss.”
• “Blaming women for society's problems is insane.”
Now the internet is completely divided over whether Dr. McDonald is:
• exposing a real societal problem
• wildly oversimplifying complex issues
• or saying something most public figures are afraid to say
Be honest... who do you think is doing more damage to society right now: toxic men or toxic women?
📹: TikTok/edit_alaverdyan
🚨And before someone says, “What about Trump?”… stop. 🚨
This is not about Trump. My wife and I were not asking Trump for land in Buffalo. We were not asking Trump to process paperwork in Buffalo. We were not asking Trump to help us turn vacant lots into recovery spaces. We were asking the Democrat-run City of Buffalo, and they gave us nothing but the runaround.
Honest question.
Do you live in a Democrat-run city? Do you have family in one?
If you do, you should pay close attention to what you’re about to see because our experience in Buffalo may not be unique.
Several years ago, my wife and I became tired of watching addiction destroy lives while hearing endless discussions about solutions. Rather than complain, we decided to invest our own money and our own labor into building tiny homes that could provide a stable environment for recovery. We weren’t asking the City of Buffalo to build them for us. We weren’t asking taxpayers to fund them. We were prepared to take the financial risk ourselves because we believed people’s lives were worth the effort.
What surprised us was how little support we received from a city government that constantly speaks about helping vulnerable people. Buffalo has thousands of vacant lots scattered throughout its neighborhoods. We weren’t asking for a gift. We wanted the opportunity to purchase land and put it to productive use. We wanted to create places where people battling addiction could rebuild their lives.
Yet despite years of talking about revitalization, recovery, and equity, the city did not help us with so much as a blade of grass. We offered to buy property with our own money. We offered to invest our own resources.
Instead, we encountered attitude, delays, roadblocks, and endless runaround. It often felt as though the city simply did not want a recovery project in its neighborhoods, regardless of who was paying for it.
Thankfully, others stepped forward. The Erie County Opiates Task Force supported the vision. They stood with us. Friends I have worked alongside since 2015 in the fight against overdoses stood beside us that we developed. My friend Brooks opened his manufacturing facility and helped make possible something truly innovative and cutting-edge. While the city offered mouth, excuses, these people offered solutions.
That is why these homes exist today. They were built through faith, perseverance, sacrifice, and the support of people who cared more about saving lives than protecting bureaucracy. This video is not about political arguments.
It is about a simple question every citizen should ask: if private citizens are willing to spend their own money and devote years of their lives to helping people recover from addiction, why would a city with several thousands of vacant lots make that mission harder instead of easier?
What you are about to see is the result of ordinary people refusing to quit. The homes are real. The need is real. The recovery is real. And with God’s help, we intend to keep going.
We will not lose. We can’t lose.
#SilentMajoritySpeaks #AStoneGroove
Another day, another ridiculous battle to destroy our farmers and their farmland.
New York’s decision to craft their own lax standards for ���prime farmland’ to fast-track solar developments is a direct attack on American agriculture. In 2020, the exact year they stood up their Office of Renewable Energy Siting, they worked with @Cornell to downgrade soils that were long considered prime. This wasn’t an accident. It was engineered to fast-track solar projects on our best farmland.
For our farmers and ranchers, land is far more than acreage on a map. It is the ground that holds a family’s history. It is a generational heritage and legacy.
Our great ranchers and farmers feed this nation — we cannot allow prime soils to be paved over for unreliable energy that displaces our producers. Farm security is national security. @USDA stands with American agriculture, not green new deal mandates that sacrifice our farmland.
Thanks @johnrich for bringing this to our attention! We are on it.
There's a 911 in Upstate New York!! Ain't that right @GovKathyHochul ?? Kathy, why do you hate Upstate farmers so much? Let's see what America has to say about this, shall we? If you stand with American Farmers, hit REPOST. Volume UP!👇
This woman was feeling a little embarrassed to show where she lives… but once you hear the full picture, it’s actually something she should feel proud of.
She bought her small 1972 single-wide trailer over 20 years ago for just $1,500. It’s completely paid off, and her property taxes for the entire year are only about $17. Because of that simple choice, she’s been able to stay home with her boys their whole lives.
While so many people are stretched thin with big mortgages and high property taxes, she’s living with real freedom and very little financial pressure.
There’s nothing to be embarrassed about when your home has given you that kind of peace and time with your family. She’s actually ahead in ways a lot of people aren’t.
Have you ever felt self-conscious about something that, when you really look at it, turned out to be one of your biggest blessings?
Something All Must Witness To Believe
For those of you itching to see Puddles the Clown combine The Who’s “Pinball Wizard” with Johnny Cash’s “Folsom Prison Blues,” this is for you.
Enjoy. Or hate. It’s a free country.
Well, relatively, anyway.
Cosmopolitan Magazine published this INSANELY dangerous piece this week suggesting if the “abortion pill” of mifepristone is banned, you should just take the second pill misoprostol all by itself and it will still “end your pregnancy.”
Misoprostol will dilate your cervix and cause you to go into labor, ending a pregnancy, but will help your body deliver a LIVING BABY.
What happens after you give birth in your bathroom for this type of “abortion?” I can’t even think about it.
IF YOU ARE A M¥SLIM THAT IS EASILY OFFEND & HAS NOOOO SENSE OF HUMOUR HAHA LOOK AWAY NOW LOOK AT THIS 👉🏼
And am i really sorry about offending anyone here in certain communities & groups when i say the girl has some real valid points 🤔
And all jokes aside here I’ll reiterate once again it’s GREAT BRITISH PEOPLE FIRST FOR ME & IF YOU DON’T LIKEY GO F+CK OFF 👊🏼🇬🇧
I am the Chairman and CEO of Vornado Realty Trust. Eighty-four years old. Seven buildings in Midtown Manhattan. I said what I said.
I said "tax the rich" is the equivalent of a racial slur. I said it at REBNY. Into the microphone. Eight hundred people. Median net worth in that room was north of $240 million, I know because our CFO ran the guest list through a Bloomberg terminal as a joke, and then it wasn't a joke. And when I said it, twelve people applauded. The rest nodded. One woman in the third row mouthed, "Finally." I saw her.
Sharon, my communications advisor, Columbia, $430,000 a year, very bright, Sharon wants me to walk it back. She drafted something. "Mr. Roth's comments were intended to highlight the emotional impact of political rhetoric on business communities." I read it. I put it in the trash can on my desk. Not the recycling. The trash. Here's my clarification: I understated it.
"Tax the rich" is worse than a slur. A slur is just a word. It doesn't come with a CBO score. Nobody is introducing a bill called the Racial Slur Implementation Act of 2026. But there are seventeen active proposals in Congress, I had Sharon count them, seventeen proposals designed to take more of my money. My money. Mine. Money I acquired by being better at acquiring Manhattan commercial real estate than anyone alive for four consecutive decades. That is not a crime. That is a record.
I pay property taxes on $18.2 billion in assessed assets. $412 million a year. Say it again: four hundred and twelve million. I carry that number. It's the first thing I think about when I see a protest sign. I think: I pay more in property tax than the entire annual budget of the city of Fort Lauderdale. I looked this up. Fort Lauderdale: $408 million. Steve Roth: $412 million. I am a small city. And the city doesn't get screamed at.
My effective tax rate last year was 11.4 percent. I say this because I believe in transparency and because I'm not ashamed of it. The rate reflects the legal structure of real estate investment trusts, depreciation schedules Congress established in 1986, and carried interest provisions that both parties have voted to preserve for forty years. I did not write these laws. I organized my entire financial existence around them with the help of nine full-time tax professionals who have offices on the 38th floor of 888 Seventh Avenue, which I also own. Their office is in my building. Their work protects my buildings. This is not a loophole. Sharon calls it a loophole. I've told her: a structure maintained by nine attorneys across four decades is not a loophole. A loophole is something you slip through once. This is architecture. This is the foundation. This is the building.
Last Tuesday, same as every Tuesday, I walked past 1290 Sixth Avenue. My building. And there was a man. Same man as last week. Same sign: "Billionaires Pay Your Fair Share." He was standing on my sidewalk. My literal sidewalk — my company owns the ground lease. He was maybe thirty. He was wearing a jacket I would estimate cost $60. My lunch that day was $114. For one. I am telling you this not to boast but because these are facts. He has decided I'm his enemy. Based on a number he saw on a Forbes list. He doesn't know what I pay. He doesn't know what my buildings cost this city in construction jobs and lease revenue and foot traffic. He knows one number. He has made one judgment.
I see him every Tuesday. I've started to notice things. He brings coffee from the cart, not the Starbucks. He has a backpack that looks heavy. He doesn't look unhealthy. He looks like he probably works somewhere, but not on Tuesdays. I've wondered: does he have a job? Does he have a building? Does he have anything that depends on him the way 4,200 employees depend on me? I suspect not. And yet he has opinions about my tax rate.
I gave $22 million to charity last year. The Met. NYU Langone. Mount Sinai. I gave a building to NYU. Not money for a building — a building. The Steven Roth Residence Hall. It houses 400 students. That man with the sign has never housed 400 students. He hasn't housed one. He gives cardboard. I give structures. This is not a comparison I'm making to flatter myself. It's just arithmetic.
When I said what I said at REBNY, I was saying what every person in that room believes and none of them will say publicly because they have communications advisors and the communications advisors all went to Columbia and they all say "unhelpful." I'm eighty-four. I'm too old for helpful. I'm too old to perform restraint for people who hate me for something I can't change.
I didn't choose to be rich. I chose to be good at one thing for a very long time, and this is what happened. You don't punish someone for that. You don't legislate against someone for that.
My net worth fluctuates between $3.8 and $4.1 billion depending on the quarter. I fluctuate more in a fiscal week than that man on my sidewalk will earn in his life. Both of these are facts. Only one of them is considered polite to say.
They want me to apologize.
I'll be dead in ten years. Twenty if I'm lucky. And they'll still be renting my buildings.
It costs $0 to support Elon :)
While the world throws hate, the least we can do is like, repost, and stand with the guy fighting for multi-planetary life and free speech 🫶