The nature of women – “As Good as it Gets” (1997)

I’ve been working on my speech for the coming online ICMI, titled, “Pandering to Women’s Demands is Destroying Western Civilisation”. Whilst working on one section about the deeply ingrained nature of women, a couple of lines spoken by Jack Nicholson, playing a “misanthropic, bigoted and obsessive-compulsive novelist” (Wikipedia) to an excited female fan in As Good as It Gets (1997) came to mind. I may include the exchange in my speech:

She: “How do you write women so well?”

He: “I think of a man. And I take away reason and accountability.”

The clip is here (19s).

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One thought on “The nature of women – “As Good as it Gets” (1997)

  1. Very true in the context of Labour’s plan to introduce special courts for rape and sexual assaults. The introduction being because Juries apply a bit of reason and make distinctions between a predatory assault and situations where two people get drunk then go and have sex after a party. The feminist myth being that inebriation has no effect on males and they remain always fully in command of their reason and fully accountable while females lose all faculties and cannot be held accountable at all, yet curiously despite this complete incapacity their account has to be taken as the truth! Amazingly Juries often seem to believe this an unlikely description of reality and therefore find “reasonable doubt”. It would seem in fact juries are very reasonable, hence feminists want them done away with.

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