I spent most of my day getting my affairs in order after nearly three weeks of work. As such, I normally like to play a movie or have a podcast playing in the background. Well, I thought to play the movie Chicago and boy was it a good idea.
For those of you who do not know about Chicago, it is a movie based on the musical. The story is about a woman, Roxie, in 1920's Chicago who kills her lover in a fit of passionate rage and is sent to death row. Once in jail, she squires Billy Flynn, the best criminal attorney in Chicago, to help her on her case.
Now, I don't want to ruin the ending of the musical, but instead I wish to point out that this musical highlights several themes both Men's Rights Advocates and MGTOWs repeat about society.
-Roxie Hart: The hypergamous wife who only goal in life is to become famous.
-Velma: A star who denounces those around her when she has power but begs for attention the moment she realizes she is not the center of attention.
-Matron Morton: The head of the jail. She represents the state's willingness to support female vanity and female injustice in exchange for monetary favors.
-Amos Hart: Roxie's Beta-Male husband who is willing to help his wife avoid her deserved death sentence despite Roxie cheating on him with an Alpha-Male. Amos is also a White Knight in the sense that he is willing to spend $5000 on a lawyer just to save his manipulative wife.
-Billy Flynn: The Alpha-Male lawyer who is able to manipulate the incarcerated women and the press to his very whims. He can even be described as Red Pill since his role in the song "We Both Reached For The Gun" is the puppet master in a world full of marionettes.
Anyway, this is my take on the musical after applying some Red Pill rationality, but it seems to make sense. Let me know what you think and until next time.
-T
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