Masculinity Appreciation Thread

what about a motorized knife?

Motorized ROCKET KNIFE!!!!!
rocket_powered_chainsaw.jpg
 
A fridge that launches beer directly to you by remote control is incredibly manly.
 
Is pesticide manly then? Cancer? Or I guess it's more manly not to give a darn?
1. 'Inorganic' food is cleaned of pesticides and there's no evidence it causes more cancer than 'organic' food
2. No proof 'organic' food is better for people
3. It's all hyped up by health-crazed housewives. If you want to be healthy then become a vegetarian and eat nuts (manly) and berries (not manly) all day. If you want to be a man then eat a nice big steak.
 
I have to disagree about the berries. Bears eat berries and bears are more or less manly.
 
Perhaps a place to start
:goodjob::goodjob::goodjob: excellent!

Poetry -- Not manly :vomit:
On this forum you have exhibited few characteristics of being a true man, and it takes being a true adult to recognize what is actually manly. Poetry is manly, the values in the above poem are truly manly. Poetry can also be feminine as well, depending less on the content of the poem and more on the soul of the author.

Ok, but actually working in a factory isn't manly. Well maybe for a year or so while you're on your way to becoming a real man. Working in a factory your whole life isn't manly. Real men develop skills that have wide applicability, real men are jacks of many trades, real men cannot be replaced by a WigetMaster3000.
Now here's where I come in with a little nuance. Working in a factory isn't manly or unmanly. If a guy is working in the factory to be a part of something bigger than himself, or is shouldering such work to provide for his family, than he is a man. If a guy is working in a factory because it's a job and he's just occupying his time, perhaps for money to go "live" on, he might not be a real man. With regards to the jack of all trades--agreed insofar as a real man is open to learning and embraces skills. However I think it is particularly manly to specialize to advance society, or one's own family, or however grand the scope should be given the circumstances of a man's life. This is why in my earlier examples I had things like the Chrysler building, which I believe had no deaths in construction unlike the Empire State building, which took the fierce specialize and expertise of the architects, the laborers, the foremen, and really everyone legitimately involved. It is why I showed the 9th Symphony (and could have shown a painting or a play or a book), which took the expertise of a master composer who dedicated his life to music. In fact I might go so far as to say that a super general cross-sectional skillset is a more feminine trait.

Narz said:
Ultimately industrialism was about maximizing gain & profit & creating a more utopiastic society which is definitely manly but it hasn't worked out as well as planned (also manly :undecide: ).
Definitely about advancing civilization, the maximizing profit part, well that sort of depends. I don't find capitalism particularly manly (or unmanly, it's just an "is"), and profit maximizing is a trait of the capitalist, not the industrialist. The industrialist has visions of economy, not finance, and production, not products. But yes it's about maximizing gain, or bounty, which is manly as we both agree.


That's not the only reward. You get to appreciate their beauty & stroke them, kind of like with women.
Narz said:
Men who don't like ***** are not manly.
That's false, as even some of the fiercest warrior cultures felt that gay men were the manliest of men, too manly to be distracted or tarnished by women. Sparta, the obvious example, but also late-feudal Japan. I believe there are others. I myself see the issue as moot.

NObody has mentioned brotherhood yet. Brotherhood is manly as hell.
This is true, though the very unmanly and boyish behavior of so many fraternity brothers--including my own, made me forget this truth. True brotherhood is super manly.

I have to disagree about the berries. Bears eat berries and bears are more or less manly.
I think we agree on a lot of things in this later portion of the thread!
 
1. 'Inorganic' food is cleaned of pesticides and there's no evidence it causes more cancer than 'organic' food
2. No proof 'organic' food is better for people
3. It's all hyped up by health-crazed housewives. If you want to be healthy then become a vegetarian and eat nuts (manly) and berries (not manly) all day. If you want to be a man then eat a nice big steak.
Pesticides that disrupt your hormones and mimic estrogen are not manly. Literally.

Also, you're incorrect, search "organic agriculture" under tags for more information.

http://www.google.com/search?q=pesticides+estrogen+mimicking
 
Now here's where I come in with a little nuance. Working in a factory isn't manly or unmanly. If a guy is working in the factory to be a part of something bigger than himself, or is shouldering such work to provide for his family, than he is a man. If a guy is working in a factory because it's a job and he's just occupying his time, perhaps for money to go "live" on, he might not be a real man. With regards to the jack of all trades--agreed insofar as a real man is open to learning and embraces skills. However I think it is particularly manly to specialize to advance society, or one's own family, or however grand the scope should be given the circumstances of a man's life.
As long as your skills cannot be replaced by a machine someday. Over specialization in archaic & defunct knowledge is not manly. That's why The Last Samurai was a terrible movie.

Not to say knowing how to start a fire without matches & other primitive skills are not manly, they clearly are, but you should also know how to survive in the modern world since that's where you live.

This is why in my earlier examples I had things like the Chrysler building, which I believe had no deaths in construction unlike the Empire State building, which took the fierce specialize and expertise of the architects, the laborers, the foremen, and really everyone legitimately involved. It is why I showed the 9th Symphony (and could have shown a painting or a play or a book), which took the expertise of a master composer who dedicated his life to music. In fact I might go so far as to say that a super general cross-sectional skillset is a more feminine trait.
I agree your example is manly but don't agree a general cross-sectional skillset is a feminine trait. A handyman who can do many things is manly, just as a group of men with specialties working together is manly. True a mother with a vast number of skills & ways to respond to situations is womanly. I think have a wide variety of skills & high adaptability is part of what makes an ideal human being in general.

Definitely about advancing civilization, the maximizing profit part, well that sort of depends. I don't find capitalism particularly manly (or unmanly, it's just an "is"),
People who fashion themselves as uber-capitalists generally strike me as boyish.

That's false, as even some of the fiercest warrior cultures felt that gay men were the manliest of men, too manly to be distracted or tarnished by women. Sparta, the obvious example, but also late-feudal Japan. I believe there are others. I myself see the issue as moot.
Fair enough. I concede. I agree that resisting the temptations of women (or men if you're gay) is manly. On the flip-side being p-whipped is totally emasculating.
 
Manly things:

1. High fat foods
2. Gas-guzzling cars
3. Guns that you'll never use
4. Red meat
5. Oppressing women/misogyny
6. Wastefulness
7. Belligerence
8. Pretentiousness
9. Homo-erotic sports
10. ALL CAPS
11. Doing nasty stuff to anger women
12. Uneducated opinions
13. 'uhMERcan Flags
 
Cats are also inherently manly, what male doesn't like *****? If a male loudly proclaims he doesn't like cats he's probably intimidated by creatures who don't offer him constant reassurance & blind loyalty no matter how inadequate he is.
Or prefers intact furniture.
 
Poetry -- Not manly :vomit:

Obviously, you've never actually been a man.

Rudyard Kipling = a manly, manly man. He's one of my favorite poets/authors.

The old ideal of a warrior poet is one I try and follow in my manliness, and being able to write and appreciate good, masculine poetry is essential for manhood.

Consider Homer, who wrote epic poems about war and battle, or David, who wrote over half of the poems in the psaltery. Look at some of the modern day soldiers who write poetry.

And watch this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lnom0VBG0Mk

You are now schooled in manliness.
 
Obviously, you've never actually been a man.

Rudyard Kipling = a manly, manly man. He's one of my favorite poets/authors.

The old ideal of a warrior poet is one I try and follow in my manliness, and being able to write and appreciate good, masculine poetry is essential for manhood.

Consider Homer, who wrote epic poems about war and battle, or David, who wrote over half of the poems in the psaltery. Look at some of the modern day soldiers who write poetry..
What about Rupert Brooke? :mischief:
 
Manly things:

9. Homo-erotic sports

Just cause they're tights are well...tight, doesn't mean it's homo-erotic.
Just cause it turns you on, doesn't mean all the other men are turned on.
 
Just cause they're tights are well...tight, doesn't mean it's homo-erotic.
Just cause it turns you on, doesn't mean all the other men are turned on.
Maybe you're right. Maybe all the sexual tension between players is just my imagination...
Spoiler :
rex.jpg
 
Maybe you're right. Maybe all the sexual tension between players is just my imagination...
But it's the Bears. They get anally raped every game.

Also American football is masculine :D
 
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