“Millions of women have bought into the lies Feminism told them about who they are and the true meaning of life. Exposing this movement is a remarkable, time-consuming task, but to save the American family, it is necessary. This just might be the most controversial piece of our time.”
The founding father of the 40’s Sexual Revolution, also known as the (second) Sexual Revolution, was Dr. Alfred Charles Kinsey- an American biologist, zoologist, and America’s first sexologist. Kinsey was the product of a complicated family background, which was one of the driving forces behind his changed attitude towards marriage, family, religion, morality, and of course, sex. Kinsey’s troubled past and his time at Harvard made him renounce his Christian faith, turn to science, and aim to recreate men and women in his image. To successfully challenge a conservative nation’s ideas about sex and morality at the time, Kinsey knew it wouldn’t be easy. Just before the turn of the 20th Century, he recruited other men and women who, too, believed sex was not solely for marital and reproductive purposes as the Christian faith promoted them to be; and morality should not be imposed on a people by the church or government. Kinsey and his comrades began conducting experiments on adults and our nation’s most precious group, children( as young as two months old), to prove we are orgasmic from birth. Since this is the case, sexual repression is unnatural and dangerous to the human condition, and people should be allowed to express their desires, no matter how inappropriate or perverse society thought they were. His disturbing and falsified data, known as The Kinsey Reports, changed American law and society forever.
The attack on traditional values in our country did not end with Alfred C. Kinsey’s death in the 50s. The Sexual Revolution was not a short period in our beloved country that came and went. The movement continued on into the 60s and grew to sweep every major aspect of American society because of new leaders like Lawrence Lader and Dr. Bernard Nathanson-The Fathers of Abortion. Lader and Nathanson appeared on the social and political scene as things were changing rapidly for women in The American West. Both men, once devoutly religious themselves, believed sex without the responsibility of husbands and children was what women needed to be equal to men. They specifically aimed to “liberate” women by giving them total control over their reproductive outcomes using abortion on demand. Their connections to Margaret Sanger, the mother of contraception, helped them to develop their belief that men should have no say so in family planning and sizes; and without family distractions, women could be free to pursue higher education and careers as they saw fit. Lader and Nathanson became master propagandists by falsifying data about the number of women dying from illegal and underworld abortions. Later, they would become instrumental in passing Roe V. Wade, a 1973 landmark decision that established a woman’s constitutional right to an abortion. First, to boost their power and popularity amongst American women, and drive their message about true sexual liberation, women’s liberation, and abortion, they recruited the feminists; an intelligent move as the 60s Women’s Movement had already gathered millions of supporters. To do this, Lader used his relationship with the mother of the Feminist Movement and his fellow Harvard alumnus, Betty Friedan. Although Friedan openly opposed The Sexual Revolution, Lader courted her until she was convinced to insert abortion into The Women’s Bill of Rights, which the feminists came together to vote on at their second national conference in November 1967. This decision divided the feminist movement into two groups (mainstream/liberal/pro choice and pro-life/pro family/conservative), hyper fueled female hypersexuality and career idolatry, and was the beginning of the end of the American marriage and family.
“1967 At its second national conference, NOW adopts passage of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), the repeal of all abortion laws, and publicly-funded child care among its goals in a “Bill of Rights for Women.” NOW is the first national organization to endorse the legalization of abortion.” – This passage was taken from NOW’s official website, www.now.org.
NOW’s second national conference represented the official union between two forces that once opposed one another: The Women’s Movement and The Sexual Revolution. By the 70s, there was a hard push for singlehood and hookup culture. America had its first birth control pill and support for abortion on demand. The “new” woman had arrived to trade in domestic life for higher education and the workforce. Marriage and family, as Americans knew them to be, were officially under attack. Consequently, marriage and birth replacement rates declined while divorce and single parenthood rates have gone the other way. The partnership between the movement that wanted to erase our traditional values, The Sexual Revolution, and the one that desired women’s liberation at all costs, The Women’s Movement, created generations of women who valued sex with no strings attached, careers, and independence over marriage and family.
I have five sons. It scares me to look up and see the world changing. I raised them to have traditional values, but they have a hard time running into women who are the same. They want my sons to take care of them because that's the "right way", but they have nothing to offer a man. There is an extreme imbalance taking place in the dating industry. I feel bad for my boys. It wasn't this hard for me growing up.
I wasn't born in the US. I came here for medical school, excited. Obviously one of the reasons would be to find my wife, but I have been overwhelmingly disappointed. Don't get me wrong, the women here are beautiful, but I do miss the gentleness and willingness of the women back home. I'm African so there are cultural differences I'm ready to adjust to, but things seem to be much harder as far as the relationship dynamics here. Like there is some guard up with women. Everyone has bad intentions.
I'm an ex-feminist and former lesbian. I definitely support this research and book to expose the feminist movement because I know what's underneath the hood of it. Man hating and bashing, all women-loving children are bad and need to get lives. Being a feminist in college was fun. It's actually where I became a lesbian too. On my college campus in LA. The organizations I joined were exciting and radical, but they all admitted the goal was to destroy the patriarchy and the family. Feminists hate the nuclear family. No strong men and families meant women could rule and no longer submit.
Keli Pitts, 2X conservative author, sociologist, feminist theorist, family advocate, and internet entrepreneur, has always been fascinated with healing others, but never in her wildest dreams did she think, after spending countless hours in a freezing biology lab, sheʼd be curing women in the area of femininity (something feminism has greatly attacked). Still, somewhere between storing away her MCAT study books and sharing intimate details with thousands of women in her online community about her upbringing, she found her purpose in life-femininity. She believes, in a way, the challenges she faced growing up with parents who were healing from their own childhood trauma was a blessing in disguise. While navigating that environment stole her identity at a young age, she was able to embark on a long and rewarding healing journey at eighteen; and now sheʼs truly a trusted voice for her generation. Keli says, “Not being taught how to find yourself by two people who were still searching for themselves brought me extremely close to Jesus beginning as a teenager. Through submission to Him, He showed me who I was and why I am here. I know any woman who wants his way can find herself and purpose even if she has suffered pain. The healing is in Him.ˮ Who knew that what started out as an emotional prayer for healing one night in her sophomore dorm would lead to such a special purpose. After so much overcoming and becoming, sheʼs guiding a swiftly growing female community of 97,000 back to themselves, joy, and femininity.