Women have so many problems in our society. When complaining about the problems these angels face, it’s difficult to even know where to begin, so deep and wide are their significant troubles.
Men just have no idea how hard it is to deal with these problems. It is so much easier to be a man, where you just go through life as a breeze and never have a single challenge.
Here’s a few problems women face on a daily basis that men will never understand:
- The gender pay gap
- Slut shaming
- Fat shaming
- Sexism
- Mansplaining
- Unfairness
- People expecting you to look pretty all the time
- Sometimes have a hard time finding a place to get a partial birth abortion on a Sunday in Louisiana
- Guys literally only want one thing and it’s disgusting
- Unrealistic standards of beauty in advertisement
- The coronavirus
- Creepy guys staring
- Guys manspreading
- Guys just want to play games and don’t text back
- Fathers Acting Overly Protective Of Their Daughters
- Men Insisting On Carrying Things For You, Even When You Don’t Want Their Help
- Men Opening Doors For You When You’re Obviously Not Into It
- Acting Like Someone Is Crazy For “Going Dutch” On Dates
- Feeling Like You Shouldn’t Buy Your Own Condoms
- Subtle Sexism Through Microaggressions
- People judging you
To put a cherry on top of this quadruple scoop of total oppression, if a woman wants to relieve a bit of stress by getting gangbanged by a pack of blacks, she has to get all dressed up and go out and find the blacks on the streets or hanging out at a council estate.
Well, one woman has found a solution to this problem: if you can’t go to the gangbang, bring the gangbang to you.
A young British woman has become mum to a staggering 14 Tanzanian children she met after volunteering in an orphanage on her gap year.
Letty McMaster, 26, was just 18 years old when a month-long trip volunteering at an orphanage in Africa changed her life forever.
She ended up staying for three years to support the children she had met, and when the orphanage shut down, Letty took in nine youngsters who would have been left homeless.
Seven years on, she lives with the children after becoming legal guardian to them all – as well as five more kids she met on the streets or at a safe house she runs.
“These children are my whole life. I raise them all on my own and they keep me going through the long hours of juggling everything,” she said.
“I’d always had in mind that I wanted to help street children so my family and friends weren’t surprised, but I never expected to end up doing all this.
“I am the parental figure in the house – some of the little boys who never had a parent view me as their mum but most see me more as a big sister as I’m not that much older than some of them.
“I’m just like any mum raising teenagers – I made a commitment to them and I just feel so blessed to have two families.”
Letty had just finished high school in 2013 when she flew to Tanzania with the plan of volunteering at an orphanage for a month before returning home for university.
But she said she soon realised the children were being physically and mentally abused, claiming staff only fed them once a day and instead pocketed the cash donated by tourists for schooling.
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“I couldn’t leave them in that situation so my new goal was to get them a family home.”
When the orphanage was closed by the council in 2016, Letty fought for the right to open her own home, in Iringa, for the nine children left homeless.
She founded Street Children Iringa as a UK registered charity and has taken another five children into her home after meeting them on the streets and through the safe house that she runs.
None of the children were attending school and lived in between the streets and the orphanage when she first met them but their lives have changed immensely since moving into Letty’s home.
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She added: “I decided I wanted to create a place for these children to call home where they would be safe, stable and loved and no longer treated as if they were in a zoo.
“I wanted them to have a normal family life and the charity has helped to pay for running the home and food costs as well as medical and educational needs.”
She lives in Iringa with the children nine months of the year, coming to the UK for the rest of the year to fundraise through sponsored events and an annual charity ball.
She often works long days but still managed to graduate with a degree in development studies from the University of SOAS, London.
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Letty also runs a safe house, which she opens three days a week, to give street children a safe place where they can access shelter, food and resources.
Accompanied by the eldest boys in her home, she takes to the street at night to find homeless children in need.
Letty said: “There are always more children who need help out here in Tanzania.
“The most challenging part in what I do is securing the funding to support all of this.
“Over the next five years, my plan is to help as many children off the streets as possible.
“If these children are not guided on a path, they very often get caught up in gangs, drug violence and criminal activities with the risk of jail or even ending up dead.
“The more donations the charity is able to get, the more children and young adults that are supported in a life off the streets.”
After reading about Letty’s incredible and empowering lifestyle of bringing the gangbang home with her, the Daily Stormer contacted her and asked for a statement about her life.
This is how she responded to our email:
Look, I need a hard hitter, need a deep stroker
Need a Henny drinker, need a weed smoker
Not a garter snake, I need a king cobra
With a hook in it, hope it lean over
He got some money, then that’s where I’m headed
Pussy A1 just like his credit
He got a beard, well, I’m tryna wet it
I let him taste it, now he diabetic
I don’t wanna spit, I wanna gulp
I wanna gag, I wanna choke
I want you to touch that lil’ dangly thing that swing in the back of my throat
My head game is fire, punani Dasani
It’s goin’ in dry and it’s comin’ out soggy
I ride on that thing like the cops is behind me (Yeah, ah)
I spit on his mic and now he tryna sign me, woo
You go gurrrrrrl.
It’s all about the WAP.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you fuckin’ with some wet-ass pussy.
Bring a bucket and a mop for this wet-ass pussy.
Give me everything you got for this wet-ass pussy.
Women are struggling every day with things like the pay gap and white patriarchal men trying to carry things for them. They need a chance for that WAP.
What true Aryan Princesses want is to get that WAP slammed by an entire football team worth of young bucks who can make that pussy cream.
If white nationalists truly want to get women involved in the movement, they need to offer something to women. Sexists like Andrew Anglin don’t understand that women will never get involved in the movement unless the movement offers them a lot of black dick.