BeforeItsNews only exists through ads. We ask all patriots who appreciate the evil we expose and want to
help us savage the NWO with more Truth to disable your ad-blocker on our site only so we can grow and expose more evil! Funding
gives us more weapons! Thank you patriots! Oh and If you disable the Ad-blocker - on your deathbed you will receive total
consciousness. So you got that going for you...which is nice!
% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.
While women are not technically a minority, the Illuminati
have convinced them that they are oppressed. Thus many
have become useful tools in the overthrow of heterosexuality
and the construction of the Masonic Jew World Order.
Men are under attack in the west. In Canada, half of Cabinet positions have been reserved for women, regardless of their ability. The government propaganda service (the CBC) is staffed by women who narrowly focus on
globalist shibboleths like gun confiscation and white dispossession. Drowning in a sea of estrogen, people are imagining a world without men. I present trailers from two funny mockumentaries that envisage the all-woman future and an article about the damage to a society (Norway) when women have too much power. One in six women, and one in four men, in Norway have no children at 45 years old, an increase of 67% for women, and 79% for men since 1985.Source
“Angry men are a big concern in Norway, a rich country now ruled by women
‘The challenge in the Scandinavian countries is not to end up with a large group
of young men who have no purpose in life, no hope for a job’
Political power in Norway is dominated by women. They hold the office of the prime minister, the finance minister, the foreign minister and the speaker of parliament.
“It’s not a female conspiracy,” says Prime Minister Erna Solberg.
Even by Scandinavian chart-topping standards for gender equality, Norway stands out when it comes to the political landscape (they’re not quite as good in corporate Norway). So what gender issues do these politicians worry about?
“The challenge in the Scandinavian countries is not to end up with a large group of young men who have no purpose in life, no hope for a job,” Solberg said in an interview in Oslo.
(Erna Solberg, Norway’s prime minister (center) Ine Eriksen, Norway’s foreign minister (right) and Tone Troen, Norway’s speaker of parliament ( left) following an interview in Oslo, Norway, on March 21, 2018.)
It’s a demographic that needs careful political attention to avoid a dangerous backlash, the prime minister said. At the University of Oslo, about 57 percent of all Ph.D. students last year were women. The risk of men falling behind also makes them more vulnerable to losing their jobs to automation.
“That’s what we see in the angry white men who not only don’t like Muslims and immigrants but absolutely not women either, at least if they can’t keep the woman to themselves,” Solberg said.
Foreign Minister Ine Eriksen Soreide says, “the problem Erna is pointing to is a massive problem, globally. A lot of very vulnerable countries have enormous youth unemployment, and most of them are men.”
Tone Troen, Norway’s newly minted speaker of parliament, says she’s confident the next generation will do better. But “it’s important that boys and girls make non-traditional choices when it comes to education,” she said.
Men do wield some power in Norway. They hold most of the executive positions in listed companies, run the central bank and the country’s $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund (the world’s biggest). And while Norway is beaten only by Denmark when it comes to equal pay, men still get about 7 percent more than women, on average.
Like the rest of the world, Norway was shaken by the #MeToo movement, which revealed a series of misconduct cases in both politics and business, including in Solberg’s own Conservative Party. The deputy leader of the biggest opposition party even resigned amid allegations of misconduct.
“The threshold for what’s acceptable has been moved,” Eriksen Soreide said. “That’s probably one of the most important wins.” But reaching total equality will take “a terribly long time,” she said. Solberg quipped we might need to wait until “2072.”
Before becoming foreign minister, Eriksen Soreide was defense minister, following in the footsteps of a long line of women leading that department. She used to get asked by young girls whether men were even allowed to run the defense ministry in Norway.
“It says something about the perspectives,” she said.