Morph turns gay in xmen 97 episode 3
(fandompulse.com)
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Women have never and can never understand male heterosexual friendships. They view the world through the politics of sex and "brotherhood" doesn't factor into that. Gay men, having been adopted fully into our gynocentric society, who accept all its feminized presuppositions, act largely the same way as a woman. They are slaves to their desires and fully inhabit an existence predicated on sexual politics.
It's no wonder why neither group can write male friendships: relationships built on true equality, fellowship, and loyalty are as foreign to them as not fucking something.
Bret Easton Ellis being gay also explains why he couldn't write Patrick Bateman as having any male friends. Bateman isn't the one who is friendless: the author's self-insert is.
American Psycho was a fictitious autobiography and an insightful look into the mind of a narcissistic, upper-class homosexual.
But there was also a very obvious homosexual character in the book who got dunked on by the character Patrick Bateman and the rest of his colleagues/adversaries. It would seem to me that the gay character would be more a self-insert than Patrick Bateman, lol.
What's up with the glowie nickname, by the way?
I saw it on twitter and thought it was funny
I was just recently talking with someone about this -- how today's media cannot show and will not show a loving brotherhood between two men as friends. That used to be a strong cornerstone of media for about half a century, up until recently, where brotherhood and true friendships have been completely tossed out the window and now everybody is gay.
That was one of the things that I really did enjoy about the original Gears of War trilogy, it's one of the few trilogies that was focused entirely on brotherhood and the importance of sacrifice for one's brother for the greater good. At its heart, it's a story about the pains and tribulations of being a man: everything is hard, and nothing is easy, but working through it with friends can make you bear the pain just a little bit more than if you had done it alone.
I can't think of any films, shows or media post Gears of War (the original trilogy) that really focuses heavily on the importance and necessity of overcoming hardships through brotherhood? It was like after 2012 the idea of strong friendships became verboten in media, which seems to track with everything becoming lame and gay spearheaded by the globohomo agenda.