RUSH: Here's David, Detroit, Michigan. I'm glad you called, sir. Welcome to the EIB Network. Hello.
CALLER: Hi, Rush. You know, I used to be one of these blue pilled liberals who believed that women were all wonderful, and I wanted to tell you about the thing that really opened my eyes to --
RUSH: Hey, David --
CALLER: -- and that's the fact that I was a victim.
RUSH: David, David, hang on. What is a blue pill liberal?
CALLER: Someone who just accepts the story they're told, you know, doesn't ask questions, believes what the media and the mainstream tells them.
RUSH: Oh, you're off-shooting the matrix, blue pill, red pill. I thought you might meant Viagra.
CALLER: (laughing) No. But, anyways, I had married this girl that I met at church, and a little bit after that found out that she had been cheating on me. I found some texts on her phone, other guys, and when I approached her about this her response was to start hitting me and hitting me in the face. And when she realized, 'cause, you know, I was a good boy, I was just gonna stand there and take it, and she realized it wasn't doing enough damage. She went and got a knife and I had to pin her on the ground, call 911.
As soon as the police showed up she started claiming that I was raping her. And when I bring this story up to women, the first thing that they say is, "Oh, well, you probably deserved it." And when I bring up that she started making these claims, they said, "Well, you probably had been raping her and you didn't even know it." And it astounds me these double standards that they'll put on men. Ray Rice was a victim of domestic violence as well, but no one talks about that. So I just want to thank you, Rush.
RUSH: Well, you know, it's interesting you say that. Years ago when I was -- ah, it's still somewhat prevalent. The stories I would hear from men who were going through divorces and in child custody battles, the lies their wives told about them being predators, that they had fondled or abused the children, and these guys didn't know what to do. It wasn't true. They had no idea how to combat it. And I said, "A large part of this is modern feminism. You've gotta understand it."
David here, his story, what it illustrates is that the modern era of feminism relies on a lot of accepted premises. The biggest one is that men are predators, that they're mean. In their natural state they are brutes, bullies, and that women are endangered at the slightest bit of temper or anger. This has been a tenet of feminism. It's like I asked earlier in the program, we've got this infobabe at ESPNW, which is their women's section of their website, suggesting that we need to reprogram the way we raise men. We need to reprogram men, little boys, as we raise them. Have you noticed that it's never, ever suggested that we reprogram women?