I finally finished Mayans MC (spin-off of Sons of Anarchy) and in the second to last episode the main character has an accident and Jax Teller’s ex is the one to give him a ride to get help. In the car she says that men have it so easy because they can beat their chests and act like kids well into adulthood but women are the ones who really have it rough. Of course the main character offered no pushback. But hey I’m sure all the construction workers, miners, sewer workers, military, police, first responders, firefighters, farmers, etc. can rest easy knowing they have it easy.
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I've been watching through the mid-'90s revival of The Outer Limits. I'm on season 5 I think. The first few seasons were mostly just cheesy low-budget sci-fi except for one in season one that was specifically "men are bad and preventing women from reaching their magical potential" garbage.
I'd estimate that half of the episodes in this season have had either an abusive father/husband that's a character in the story or mentioned in the story. In some cases, it has no actual bearing on the story. There have been zero abusive mothers/wives (except for a robot ... sort of). There have been multiple stories with alien/human contact where the overreacting men end up starting a war over the objections of the brave, understanding woman.
One S5 episode had a post-apocalyptic commune where all men had been wiped out by a virus, and a military dude gets out of cryogenic storage and arrives at the commune. 10 minutes in I wanted to bail because I figured "this is just an entire men bad" episode, but there were multiple potential story threads (women were jealous of each other over his attention, another commune forces rationing and taking food, he's shown to be helpful to the commune despite the old cunt's admonitions of "women create, men only destroy!", etc.) but at the end none of those get resolved. The other commune attacks him because he's trying to restore power to his commune. He defends himself (and accidentally kills his allies in the process because of course) and then has to be put back in cryogenic storage because "man bad."
I did bail on two of like the last 3 episodes I started: the first was about a woman (abusive father, husband was revealed to be abusive and also impotent because of course) in a fertility clinic who was given a clone of Jesus to carry. I bailed when the female fertility doctor started lecturing the (abusive) male pastor/geneticist (yep!) about how she now had proof that Jesus was just a telekinetic dude (stupid Christian, you're worshipping a genetic freak, not the son of god! Ha!) Two episodes later opened in a WW2 concentration camp with the evil Nazis gleefully killing their prisoners, and then cut to the present where some dude appears to be hunting down said Nazis. I bailed there because I'm not interested in watching Jewish revenge porn in my sci fi.
This shit has been going on for decades. Back in the early/mid '90s I always just thought to myself, "well the bad guy has to be a white man because everybody else would throw a fit about negative stereotypes and besides, men are pretty abusive, right?" But no, it's actual malice towards specifically white people and even more specifically white men, and no, men are not significantly different than women when it comes to abuse.
Telekinesis was never a power I noticed attributed to Jesus. The closest thing I remember is the rock on Jesus' tomb moving, but I always figured that was attributed to God, at that point, to the extent that that distinction matters. God definitely has telekinesis attributed to him at various points in the Bible. Though, since he's not corporeal, we probably don't think about it like that.
The story (spoilers!) was basically that some sort of telekinetic ability was allowing the unborn Jesus clone to manipulate objects around his mom, and that it was somehow genetic (that nobody outside of Jesus had before or since ... writers really don't understand evolution), therefore not supernatural/god.
Ignoring the fact that telekinesis would be a supernatural ability to begin with, which could have just as easily been granted by a god. And yeah, it really doesn't make much sense because Jesus wasn't moving things around with his mind in the Bible to my knowledge.
I really thought the spoilers were going to be for the biblical account, lol