Feminist take great and serious umbrage if you should ever even hint that they are homewreckers. Or should we say that they are marriage wreckers? But still, ever since feminism entered the American cultural bloodstream, around five decades ago, they have broken a considerable number of marriages.
Strong, empowered women, motivated by the absurdly unrealistic idea that men and women should have precisely the same division of tasks at home, have produced a raft of divorces. At of now, America leads the world in broken homes. America leads the world in fatherless homes. Don’t we all understand that this exertion of female power has damaged children?
So, now we have Gisele Bundchen the fashion model wife of football great Tom Brady taking her grievances public. She is “quiet quitting” her marriage. She has had enough of bringing up children and making a home. Now that her youngest child has reached the ripe age of 9, she has decided to abandon home and hearth, the better to go out and save the planet.
As for the details, apparently Gisele had been pestering her husband for quite some time, trying to get him to retire from football. And she seems to have succeeded, when he announced his retirement in February. But then, he changed his mind, decided to play for just one more season. Gisele lost her mind over it.
But then he came to his senses and changed his mind. The notion that her husband could defy her will and not ply his talent to the feminist life plan was too much for Gisele. After all, the Amazon was calling and her environmental activism was more important than her family.
Is Gisele a feminist? We do not know. Is she involved in therapy, and has some feminist therapist fed her these lines? We suspect that she is, but we do not know for certain. But it would not surprise me if we discovered that Gisele’s mind had been taken over by a feminist therapist.
And, of course, Gisele is a role model for feminist scolds, women who show how strong and powerful they are by wrecking their marriages.
So, feminists are homewreckers, openly and honestly and unabashedly. And it is men's fault-- being an ideologue means never being wrong.
Post reporter Maurice has oodles of empathy for poor, put-upon Gisele. It drips from her keyboard, or some such:
Now, don’t you feel sorry for Gisele? Don’t you feel her pain? Serious feminist thinkers feel great empathy for Gisele. After all, she only has some $400 million in the bank, and surely she must feel that her resources are dwindling.
The fault, as always in the feminist mindset, is men. The fault lies with husbands who do not do sufficient housework. Of course, as it happens, if husbands do more housework, their wives complain that they are not making enough money. And wives always complain that husbands make lousy housekeepers.
Many professional working mothers with husbands unwilling to take on the demands of the household “have a tough choice,” writes author Lara Bazelon in her book, “Ambitious Like a Mother.”
Tough choice, my @#$$#. The notion of having a duty to be a good wife never enters the feminist equation. The consequences of having mothers abandon home and hearth, all the while blaming it on their husbands, does not enter either.
So, Gisele decided to go public with her grievances. She went to Elle magazine to explain the pain and the torment of her life as a wife and mother:
For most of her kids’ lives, Bündchen has purposely downshifted her fashion career. She spent the 2010s living in Boston with her husband, the unstoppable quarterback Tom Brady (formerly of the New England Patriots), and limited herself to only a few advertising campaigns and magazine covers a year. She likens the shift from the full-throttle pace of her twenties to the quiet family routines of her thirties to summiting a mountaintop and then descending into a valley. Bündchen happily made the switch. “I’m so grateful to have been there in those moments that were really shaping who they are as people,” she says of her children’s early years.
Now that her kids are older, however, Bündchen is ready to start climbing mountains again. So what’s a supermodel to do after conquering the world and growing a family? Her peers typically turn their global names into product lines after their initial runway years, launching skin care brands or lingerie collections. Bündchen dabbled in that stuff years ago, and it doesn’t interest her right now.
As I noted, her youngest daughter is 9. Her boys are in their early teens. To think that they will do just fine as their mother tries to blame everything on their father is absurd. To think that they are going to take her side is even more absurd.
In any case, Gisele is going to abandon home and hearth in order to save the biome, whatever that is:
To mark her 42nd birthday in July, she launched a new initiative to fund seven organizations working to restore Brazil’s biomes. Next, she wants to bring attention to her country’s ecosystems by producing a travel series. As Bündchen starts to tell me more about how she envisions the series and its potential impact, and how she wants kids to understand what’s happening to their planet, she stops herself. “There are so many things I’m working on, I’ll be here the entire day talking about it,” she says.
Has Gisele been pestering her husband to quite football for yo these many years.
Although she and her husband have joked about his potential retirement for years, Bündchen is often depicted by the media as desperate for Brady to call it quits. I tell her the characterization seems sexist to me, and she agrees. “I think this is the system we’ve been living in. That’s what society has accepted and what society hasn’t accepted.” Ultimately, she wants him to be happy and she knows better than anyone how much he loves the sport.
He needs to follow his joy. Unless he does something that I do not want him to do, in which case I will abandon my marriage and my children. That’s the message. Feminists are all for it. They do not care about broken homes and wrecked marriages. It makes them feel strong and empowered.
Good post, Stuart. But quiet quitting? She's having a tantrum from one end of the hemisphere to the other. We all hear it loud and clear. I give their marriage 2 more years max.
ReplyDeleteWhen those of us who toil in the real world hear, "I'm working on so many projects", it means she isn't doing any work but rather enjoying lending her name and believing she is an important leader.
ReplyDeleteHow many wives would be upset that their husband decided to keep working at a job that earns him $15 million a year?
ReplyDeleteOf course, when he finally hangs up his spikes and shoulder pads, he's got a $37.5M/yr contract waiting for him at Fox Sports.
Confirms the saying....."No matter how pretty a girl is, there is ALWAYS some guy who is tired of her sheet"
ReplyDeleteI don't know... I mean she could have some valid concerns:
ReplyDeleteAt his age Brady is more likely to suffer a serious and debilitating injury, and she wants to prevent that, especially the possibility of CTE. As his boys are teens they need his guidance as a father more acutely. They may have made prior agreements between them as to when his career would end, and she is trying to enforce those agreements between them.
I don't get the sense that she wants their relationship to end, but that she's upset that he committed to retiring from football and then changed his mind without adequately consulting and getting buy in from her.
Marriage is a partnership and both parties need to be contributing to it. Aside from money, which is not an issue, what is Tom bringing to the family right now? I think that's the big issue.
I say this as a HUGE Pats fan, and huge TB12 (the GOAT) fan. I just want his career as a father and husband to be as successful as his playing career.
So, she's teaching her kids that marriage is only a temporary arrangement, that women are unable to keep the marriage oath. If her sons decide to never get married in the future or embrace the 'red pill' praxeology as an explanation for her behavior, she has no basis to complain. She sets the archetype for women for them.
ReplyDelete