I agree that the hipster dress is generally feminine, but skinny jeans are not feminine. Just look at masculine George Washington or a bull fighter
My point is that form fitting clothing is not necessary feminine and that showing off the form of one's body can actually be considered more masculine than feminine since usually it's only the males in the animal Kingdom that have sex ornaments, human males being no different.
Some folks have posted some great money books like Millionaire Fastlane. Here are some other great money books:
Your Money or Your Life by Joe Dominiguez and Vicki Robin - great book on exactly what we give up to earn money and why we should not waste it. You don't have to follow the investment advice.
Cashing in on the American Dream: How to Retire at 35 by Paul Terhorst - an older classic about getting out of the rat race.
Early Retirement Extreme: A philosophical and practical guide to financial independence by Jacob Lund Fisker - very analytical book on exactly how to become independently wealthy as soon as possible. He also has a blog.
An archive should the thought police ever remove the original page
Create Space will charge about $20 per book. We can get a far higher quality product at a much lower price if we use a Chinese supplier like Alibaba. As for the sales Red Pill School has to be included somehow so he can move the project along and give it official Red Pill backing.
On the topic of distributed editing, maybe we can use a Git repository system to propose and accept changes. I found this site in a cursory look last night, looks like it could work. https://www.gitbook.com/
http://www.wikiwand.com/en/Naturalistic_fallacy
You can let women follow their nature to be happy. But I don't concern myself with the decisions of others, I am here to make my own good decisions, not to make sure that others make theirs.
The funny part in philosophy is when you understand that "objectivity" is a cultural concept.
For a little head spin, I recommand Robert Pirsig's cultural classics "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" and "Lila". One is a deconstruction of objective and subjective concepts, the other a reconstruction of a Moral Ontology with a Zen-like concept at its core. Both are written as philosophical novels, and a fun read.
In his framework, "objective morality" is shortspeak for "best morality we can think of", and not necessarily "truth".
Thinking Strategically by Dixit and Nalebuff - Game Theory lite.
Games People Play by Eric Berne - Transactional analysis in human interaction.
And, if you've got a taste for the High Fantasy genre of fiction, I can not recommend enough the Prince of Nothing series by R. Scott Bakker. It is so bursting with Red Pill that for the last few years I've been privately thinking of them as my bible.
I know exactly what you're talking about. Especially with regards to, "You're wrong, you know you're wrong, I know you're wrong, and you know I know you're wrong." I've stopped arguing with people for this very reason. Now I make a statement that implicitly communicates all of this and I leave it at that. This amuses me and secretly infuriates everyone else.
On a related note, this happened after I read How To Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie. I'm sure you've read it, so you'll know what I mean when I say that I think that book is the most cleverly disguised and expertly manufactured pill for Powertalk...perhaps ever. I didn't even realize it until just now, almost two years after reading it for the first time and then reading Gervais Principle and then reading you before finally piecing it all together.
God damn. I'm going to go read it for the third time.
Some more to add to the reading list:
Fifty Shades of Grey, E.L. James - Provides some great perspective on female attraction and female writing as a style and how they humanize ( alter) male characters to give them an excuse for their dark triad behavior.
How to Win Friends and Influence People, Dale Carnegie - Totally essential for any man.
The Power of Now, Eckhart Tolle - An icebreaker on removing your ego and living in the present.
A New Earth, Eckhart Tolle - Tolle's follow-up to the previous novel.
The Way of the Superior Man, David Deida - Slightly preachy but contains some good ways of thinking of oneself as the fantasy man and not the provider husband to a woman.
Think and Grow Rich, Napoleon Hill - A study in some of the greatest men in the past 2 centuries and how their drive towards some personal goal led them to "riches" whatever that may be.
Tao Te Ching, Lao Tsu - The ramblings of an old man after having lived a lifetime as the master of archives for the Chinese emperor. Sometimes incomprehensible and other times full of wisdom.
The Birth of the West, Paul Collins - A study of history in the 10th Century and the birthing of the concept of 'Europe.' Provides some unique excerpts about how women and men got along in that time - especially with how accessible it was. Far more focused on the political, but interesting as hell if you like medieval history.