Very good review Meraki, thanks (still working on those quotes btw ...)
That's why this book is good, because (only two quotes to start) :
In our matriarchal (mid-ranking) society, the HR level is getting smaller and smaller all the
time. This is why a matriarchal society encourages people to get married later in life. Girls are raised
not to respect men because the dominant mid-ranking females don’t want attractive, young, potentially
high-ranking females to have access to the mature, established males.
If I understood correctly, Great Female Con centers MAINLY/ONLY around women's manipulations, kinda like Esther's Manipulated Man (ie MR's ways of domination) ?
If that's the case, I won't read it. Because MR's not the level I'm interested with ... and Vilar and Chinweizu already covered it perfectly.
The leader’s function is, of course, to lead, to make decisions, which
means that he alone has immunity from female manipulation. He has complete, total, and
unconditional self-confidence, which is why he has no need to display excessive aggression or showoff. He also has no need to advertise himself. He tends not to assert himself unnecessarily. On the
contrary, he’s careful, and he only displays direct aggression when he absolutely has to – that is,
whenever anyone questions his status as leader. If a woman sexually rejects him, he assumes there’s
something wrong with her. It never even occurs to him that an adequate female could refuse him. A
leader never doubts himself, never worries about other people’s opinions, and never feels guilty for
anything. He cares about his own comfort and health. He is decisive, focused, and persistent.
Kinda like Scarf's quotes (on Great Female Con Thread nonetheless) :
http://www.naturalfreedom.info/viewtopi ... 410#p12410
Your own personal power is the goal of all this. What you are focusing on now is low level game. There are more truths to uncover, so read the stuff and move on.
And on page 3
Just note that you can only play the game at the level that you're at.
HR level it is. And it always was.
That's why I love the book. And this forum. Not too much focus on unimportant stuff, but just enough for the drive to 'build it up'.