China: Feminists Whine Over “Sexualized” College Ads

“Let me be part of your youth”

China needs to be careful. When I say that, I mean: they need to be very, very careful.

If feminism is allowed to creep in, it will rot the entire country from the inside.

I know that some of this stuff seems harmless, and it is easy to say “oh well, no need to upset women.” But here’s the thing: they are not really upset. They use pretending to be upset as a way to grab power.

I’ve been monitoring the situation in China, and am seeing more and more capitulation to women who are pretending to be upset.

Here’s the latest case.

SCMP:

One of the top universities in China is under fire for using women to lure applicants in a sexually suggestive online advertisement, with critics saying the college is objectifying women.

Nanjing University (NJU) posted the advertisement on Weibo on Monday, the first day of the gaokao exams, China’s national college entrance tests.

The advertisement featured six photos of current students holding up signs in front of different parts of the campus.

Two of the photos attracted the most criticism. One included a pretty woman holding up a sign that read, “Do you want to live at the library with me, from morning till night?” and the other said, “Do you want me to become part of your youth?”

“Do you want to live at the library with me, from morning till night?”

The other photos, especially when men held up the signs, did not feature the seemingly suggestive text. For example, one man was pictured holding a sign that said, “Do you want to become an honest, diligent and ambitious NJU student?”

The ads became controversial online almost immediately.

“The problem with this photo is that it treats women as if they should be someone’s belonging. These women made it to NJU, but now they are ‘part of someone else’s youth’? That is ridiculous,” one comment said on Weibo.

Another wrote: “As a top university, you should recruit based on your resources and quality of your academics, instead of using hot guys and pretty women to lure people.”

NJU deleted the ads after they were bombarded online. The school did not respond to the South China Morning Post’s request for comment.

Some people, however, questioned whether the criticism was an overreaction, saying the advertisement did not need to result in a deep conversation about gender equality.

One commenter said: “There is no need to be all serious in the ads, they can surely write this way to attract young people. No need to be picky,” one said.

Chengyusan, an NGO that fights gender-based violence, wrote: “In our culture, people are acquiescent about objectifying women, and even if these women express discomfort and anger, they are often labelled as ‘overreacting’. We refuse adverts that do not respect women’s independence or regard women’s equal rights as a joke.”

Why are NGOs with subversive agendas even allowed to operate in China?

Well, for one thing, China is a more free country than America, so they don’t necessarily crack down on organizations that are more or less fundamentally opposed to the core values of the nation in the way that the US government cracks down on organizations that say things like “white people don’t deserve to die.”

But the other thing is that China, in its innocence, doesn’t suspect these agendas. If the NGO says “we’re against beating up women,” they take that at face value. However, Chengyusan has exposed itself here, yet again, in commenting on these ads: what do the ads have to do with “violence”? Clearly, nothing – but to women, “violence” is anything they don’t like. They will always make the claim that “speech is violence.”

The South China Morning Post is a subversive feminist Hong Kong newspaper. This article is written by one Phoebe Zhang, who is fat, has been pumping out these anti-male propaganda articles.

(Seriously – go look at her catalog of articles. She also promotes gay stuff.)

She used the opportunity of this university ad “controversy” to bring up something that really bothered the sluts last month.

Last month, NetEase Games apologised after a human resources staff said they would drug female workers in a recruitment ad.

In the ad, the staff posted a photo of the entire team on WeChat moments and said, “Recruiting. If you like any of my female coworkers, I’ll try and get a date”.

Then in the comments, the staff member wrote, “Give me a resume, I can even help drug them”.

After the ad sparked concerns online, the human resources department of NetEase Games said in a notice that they had fired the staff member and apologised for such inappropriate behaviour.

That was really funny. And that’s obviously what it was – a joke. It’s an edgy joke, and I could see people taking issue with the promotion of a “causal sex” workplace, but firing the guy after complaints of “sexism” is the exact sort of thing that would happen in America. Agreeing to fire someone because of women’s feelings is a huge win for women, and they will use that to gain more power.

Women having power is always a net negative for society. The more power women have, the weaker society is, because they will only ever use that power to destroy.

The key issue is this: the better off society gets materially, the more aggressive women will get in their power grabs.

The Chinese must learn these obvious facts, or their civilization will go the way of the West.