Modern feminism made women less happy while telling them they’re oppressed. Female happiness has declined since the 1970s (General Social Survey data). Prioritizing career over family in peak fertility years, then wondering why dating markets are broken and fertility is crashing, isn’t “empowerment” it’s civilizational self-harm sold as liberation.
This post is now a portal.
Quote it with any random video or picture you want to share.
No explanations needed.
Just vibes.
Let’s see what everyone’s watching 👀
This post is now a portal.
Quote it with any random video or picture you want to share.
No explanations needed.
Just vibes.
Let’s see what everyone’s watching 👀
Trans ideology is the new lobotomy medically shocking kids for a social contagion. Rapid-onset gender dysphoria, desistance rates, European countries pulling back on youth transitions, and the Cass Review aren’t “hate.” They’re evidence. Affirming every confused teen with hormones and surgery is experimental ethics abuse dressed as compassion.
So they say
Guns aren’t the problem; fatherless young men are. Switzerland, Czechia, and plenty of places have high gun ownership and low homicide. America’s worst violence clusters in specific zip codes with sky-high single motherhood and gang culture. Banning guns won’t fix the 70%+ nonmarital birth rate in some communities or the cultural glorification of thug life.
42. Blade Runner (1982)
In a rain-soaked, neon-drenched Los Angeles of 2019, Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford) hunts rogue replicants bioengineered beings almost indistinguishable from humans.
What begins as a gritty detective story becomes a haunting meditation on humanity, memory, mortality, and what it means to be alive. Ridley Scott’s masterpiece is a visual feast of cyberpunk atmosphere, with Rutger Hauer’s unforgettable Roy Batty delivering one of cinema’s most poetic monologues.
Tears in rain. A timeless sci-fi noir that only grows more relevant. 🌧️🔦
43. Gone with the Wind (1939)
In the burning South of the Civil War, headstrong Scarlett O’Hara (Vivien Leigh) fights for survival, love, and the only home she’s ever knownwhile the roguish Rhett Butler (Clark Gable) watches with equal parts amusement and desire.
An epic of sweeping romance, towering ambition, devastating loss, and unyielding resilience. Victor Fleming’s masterpiece remains one of the most ambitious, beautiful, and culturally significant films ever made four hours of Technicolor grandeur that still takes your breath away.
“Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.” A legend for the ages. 🌬️🔥
Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet deliver their most vulnerable, brilliant performances in this wildly inventive romance from Michel Gondry and Charlie Kaufman. A man fights to preserve memories of the woman he loves as they’re being erased from his brain. Surreal, poetic, funny, and devastatingly romantic Eternal Sunshine explores love, loss, and memory like no other film. A modern masterpiece that stays with you long after the credits.
45. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
What if you could erase someone from your memory forever?
After a painful breakup, Joel (Jim Carrey) discovers Clementine (Kate Winslet) has had him wiped from her mind. Desperate to hold on, he dives into his own subconscious as technicians erase her racing through melting memories, hidden moments, and the beautiful chaos of their love. Michel Gondry’s mind-bending romance is visually inventive, achingly human, and profoundly wise about why we remember the ones who hurt us most.
A heartbreaking, hilarious, unforgettable trip inside the heart. 🧠💔
THE LAST MILE
My father drove a truck for 31 years.
I used to be ashamed of that.
Then I found his logbook after he died, and I understood I had it backwards the whole time.
Growing up in Ohio, “my dad’s a trucker” wasn’t a cool thing to say at school.
Other kids’ dads wore suits. Mine wore the same flannel for three days at a time and smelled like diesel and gas station coffee.
Parasite (2019, directed by Bong Joon-ho)
Summary review: Parasite follows a poor South Korean family who ingeniously infiltrates the lives and lavish home of a wealthy family. It starts as a sharp, darkly funny satire on class inequality and morphs into a tense thriller with shocking twists and social commentary.
Bong Joon-ho delivers a tonal masterpiece wickedly funny, roaringly furious, and brilliantly layered. It won the Palme d’Or and became the first non-English film to win Best Picture at the Oscars (plus three more). Roger Ebert’s site and others call it one of the best films of its year and decade, an urgent look at greed and structural inequity.
Verdict: 5/5 stars (or A+) a perfect blend of comedy, thriller, and biting satire that’s both entertaining and thought-provoking.
Hey mutuals! 🇺🇸⚽
Random thought while scrolling today: With everything going on for America’s big 250th, can we talk about how the USMNT is straight-up balling in the World Cup right now? Co-hosting on home soil and advancing strong through the group stage – that’s the kind of energy that reminds me why this country stays undefeated in comebacks.
Feels good to see the squad repping those stars and stripes on the pitch while the whole nation’s buzzing. Who else is hyped for more US soccer magic this summer? Drop your predictions or favorite player below 👇
(And stay cool out there in this heat – America’s too hot to handle literally and figuratively rn 😂)
What’s one thing you’re loving about being American this weekend? Let’s keep it positive! ❤️🤍💙
Rob Reiner’s hilarious, heartfelt, and endlessly rewatchable fairy tale masterpiece.
Cary Elwes and Robin Wright sparkle as Westley and Buttercup, surrounded by an all-star cast delivering iconic lines and unforgettable characters. Adventure, romance, comedy, and swordplay all wrapped in warm nostalgia.
A film that makes you believe in true love, miracles, and the power of storytelling. Simply the best. “As you wish.”
46. The Princess Bride (1987)
A fairy tale for anyone who’s ever loved, laughed, or needed rescuing.
When young Buttercup’s true love Westley (Cary Elwes) is presumed dead, she finds herself promised to a wicked prince. Enter a revenge-seeking Spaniard, a gentle giant, a clever miracle worker, and the most quotable dialogue in cinema history. Rob Reiner’s timeless gem is packed with sword fights, rodents of unusual size, true love, and the grandfather who reads it all to his sick grandson.
Inconceivably perfect. As you wish. ⚔️❤️
46. The Princess Bride (1987)
A fairy tale for anyone who’s ever loved, laughed, or needed rescuing.
When young Buttercup’s true love Westley (Cary Elwes) is presumed dead, she finds herself promised to a wicked prince. Enter a revenge-seeking Spaniard, a gentle giant, a clever miracle worker, and the most quotable dialogue in cinema history. Rob Reiner’s timeless gem is packed with sword fights, rodents of unusual size, true love, and the grandfather who reads it all to his sick grandson.
Inconceivably perfect. As you wish. ⚔️❤️
🎆🇺🇸🏳️🌈 Happy 4th of July to every beautiful soul in the American LGBTQ+ community!
Today we celebrate the freedom to love who we love, to be exactly who we are, and to keep building a country where EVERYONE belongs.
Your joy is revolutionary. Your love is powerful. Your existence is a celebration of the American promise of liberty and justice for all.
Whether you’re waving the Stars & Stripes, the Pride flag, or both you make this nation brighter, kinder, and more free.
Drop a ❤️ if you’re proud to be American AND queer today!
Tell us in the comments how you’re celebrating with your chosen family 👇
We are here. We are proud. We are unstoppable.
Russell Crowe delivers a powerhouse performance as John Nash in this gripping, deeply moving biography. From groundbreaking game theory to his private struggle with schizophrenia, the film balances intellectual brilliance with raw emotional honesty. Jennifer Connelly shines as his devoted wife. Inspirational, heartbreaking, and ultimately hopeful A Beautiful Mind reminds us that the greatest victories are often the quietest ones. Oscar-worthy in every sense.
47. A Beautiful Mind (2001)
The brilliant mind of mathematician John Nash (Russell Crowe) unlocks the secrets of the universe… but slowly unravels under the weight of invisible battles only he can see.
A soaring story of genius, love, and resilience, as Nash navigates paranoia, heartbreak, and triumph with the unwavering support of his wife Alicia (Jennifer Connelly). Ron Howard’s Oscar-winning film is both an intimate portrait of mental illness and a triumphant celebration of the human spirit.
Beauty and brilliance, even when reality fractures. 🧠❤️