🚨 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
@Dating_Dynamics Women are supposed to live in the camp while the men are out to hunt. They are supposed to watch the kids and prepare the food for the winter. They are supposed to work hard. This is basic evolution. They were never supposed to be coddled.
Op de VU liep ik elke dag langs het beeld van Abraham Kuyper. Op mijn laatste dag maakte ik even een foto met de goede man.
Eén citaat van hem is me altijd bijgebleven (want na drie jaar besluit een student de man pas even te googlen) en ik begrijp 'm nu pas echt:
"Als beginselen die ingaan tegen je diepste overtuiging de overhand beginnen te krijgen, dan is strijd je roeping, en is vrede zonde geworden; dan moet je, ten koste van de dierbaarste rust, je overtuiging blootleggen voor vriend en vijand, met heel het vuur van je geloof."
Jarenlang heb ik gezwegen. Ik was apolitiek. Tot ik besefte dat die 'vrede' niet langer onschuldig was.
Want kijk om je heen. Een land dat in één generatie onherkenbaar verandert, zonder dat het ons ooit is gevraagd. Een volk dat te horen krijgt dat het niet bestaat, een vlag die verdacht is, een geschiedenis waar je je voor moet schamen.
En iedereen die het benoemt wordt monddood gemaakt met één woord.
Daar ga ik niet meer in mee. Nederland is het waard om voor op te staan. Niet met haat. Met overtuiging.
Dus ik ga mij laten horen. Voor vriend en vijand. Met heel het vuur dat ik heb.
Ik hoop dat jij het ook doet. Strijd is je roeping.
Voor Nederland. 🇳🇱 Voor ons vaderland.
@TheCelticLass Civilians in Dresden weren’t slaughtered, they were burned alive. A true holocaust. Yet nobody cares. Because when airplanes burn people alive it doesn’t count or something.
Ovens? Horrible! Airplanes? That’s just war bro.
One of the rarest and most lethal skills a person can master is REFUSING TO DIE
As you grow in age you’ll see how everyone dies around you
The “gangster” you knew in high school dies and becomes a barber
The trust fund kid dies, unable to 10x his dads networth, lapped by random people he never knew existed back in the day
The tall pretty boy that girls were naturally drawn to dies and becomes mortal, cucked by some bitch
The guy who was cool, a threat when he was 20 dies and becomes some worm at 30 - couldn’t sustain the same energy for decades
Most people “die” as they age and face real problems. The key is to remain retarded forever and to refuse to die - no matter what happens.
Winning long term depends on your ability to stubbornly retain childlike traits like foolish optimism, playfulness, relentless risk-taking and refusal to become jaded or “realistic” in a defeatist sense.
Namaste.
On a weekend trip with old friends one of the activities was to enter a cave and crawl underground through narrow tunnels. I laughed at them and said: I’m nog going in, see you when you get out. They tried the: “you’re scared” shtick. I just laughed in their faces. 2 other guys joined me with some sort of excuse (1st: I have already done this once, 2nd: I always stay with the group, and now this is a group as well) The three of us sat down in the sun and had a great lunch while the rest was crawling underground. Many guys told me later that it sucked and that they’d rather have stayed with me.
Always be prepared to say no and laugh in someone’s face. Always stay true to yourself.
@_Sosthene_ They forgot 2 crucial things.
1. the cannon: a charge would only happen after a heavy cannon attack.
2. the smoke. After the first volley the smoke would be so thick that you couldn’t see the enemy.
You forget to mention that this man used to be a man with presence and leadership. Until his woman found his weak spot, his one insecurity, and started to push it every single day. Until his confidence was completely eroded and there was nothing left of the man he used to be.
And now you’re telling him it’s his fault lol. It’s his fault for letting his woman find out his weak spot.
If women had the mighty Achilles as their man, they would poison drip him until his heel is shattered.
This is the single greatest joy of women. To bring a powerful man to his knees.
"Until death, all defeat is psychological." - Marcus Aurelius
Refuse everything that would lead most people to give up.
Refuse it.
Rise from the dead 1000 times.
Commit to never stay down & never give up.
Everything you want is on the other side of struggle.
A narcissist typically cannot (or will not) take accountability for:
— Harmful actions – lying, cheating, stealing, emotional or physical abuse.
— Mistakes and failures – anything that threatens their image of competence.
— Broken promises – they shift blame or rewrite history rather than admit they didn’t keep their word.
— Consequences of their choices – they externalize blame (“You made me do it,” “It’s the system’s fault”).
— Patterns of behavior – even if caught repeatedly, they insist each event is isolated.
— Hurting others’ feelings – they’ll deny, minimize, or mock the idea that they caused pain.
— Disrespect & boundary-breaking – they frame it as the other person’s fault for having “unreasonable” boundaries.
— Lack of empathy – they often blame the victim for being “too sensitive.”
— Gaslighting and manipulation – reframed as “just joking,” “teaching a lesson,” or “misunderstood.”
— Emotional immaturity – they portray it as strength or as a reaction to someone else’s behavior.
— Envy and resentment – denied or projected onto others (“You’re just jealous”).
— Withholding affection or attention – portrayed as a deserved punishment.
— Projecting their flaws onto others – they rarely acknowledge projection itself.
— Ignorance or lack of knowledge – they often feign expertise rather than admit they don’t know.
— Weakness or vulnerability – they see it as shameful rather than human.
— Fear, insecurity, or shame – masked as arrogance or anger.
— Need for validation – framed as deserved admiration.
— Addictions or compulsions – blamed on stress, upbringing, or other people.
— Mental health issues – often denied or ridiculed in others as a projection of their own.
— Parenting failures – they’ll blame the other parent, the child, or “society.”
— Partner/relationship problems – reframed as the partner’s fault for being “too needy” or “crazy.”
— Workplace conflicts or failures – blamed on colleagues, bosses, or the system.
— Friendship betrayals or neglect – minimized or rationalized.
— Leadership or community role failures – reframed as being sabotaged or unappreciated.
— Hypocrisy – often denied even when caught red-handed.
— Exploitation of others – justified as “survival of the fittest” or “business as usual”
— Discrimination or prejudice – reframed as “telling it like it is.”
— Dishonesty and manipulation – reframed as being clever, strategic, or “practical.”
— Betrayal of trust – excused as a response to being “driven to it.”
— Aging and mortality – often triggers intense denial or compensatory behaviors.
— Physical or cognitive limitations – they’ll lash out or hide these.
— The effects of time, effort, and cause-and-effect – they expect shortcuts or magical results.
— The existence of objective facts – when facts conflict with their narrative, they deny the facts.
— The autonomy of others – they resist accepting that others have their own needs, desires, and choices.
— Past abuse they committed – reframed as discipline, love, or victim-blaming.
— Failures in prior jobs, relationships, or ventures – reframed as someone else sabotaging them.
— Their own privilege or unfair advantages – denied or minimized.
— Patterns of conflict with others – reframed as being chronically “misunderstood” or “targeted.”
🤭