Matt Walsh and 21 Savage Are Allies In The War Against Feminism
When Matt Walsh and 21 Savage are on the same side of an issue, you know something has gone awry. What's gone wrong is that our society, which used to cherish traditional masculine and working-class norms, now attacks those same values. As feminism and globalism continue to uproot American society and threaten to make cultural and literal slaves of everyone, men on all sides must forge unconventional alliances.
Matt Walsh, a conservative commentator employed by The Daily Wire, recently sparred with conservative-ish commentator Megyn Kelly over the behavior of modern women who are attracted to traditional men. 21 Savage, a Grammy Award-winning rapper, expressed his displeasure with the sexual depravity of modern women.
In a series of tweets on X (formerly known as Twitter), Walsh and Kelly had a back-and-forth over a video where a young feminist enjoyed her date with a confident, masculine man.
"I'm on this date with this guy. And the thing about a guy's guy is he's putting his card down. He's paying for EVERYTHING," said the young woman. "It sort of activated something feral in me. I'm not gonna lie!" She joked that it might be time to get away from those liberal snowflakes.
Homegirl reverted back to factory settings in the presence of masculinity.
— MERICA MEMED (@Mericamemed) December 20, 2023
6 years of “women and gender studies” down the drain. 😂😂😂 pic.twitter.com/Y5sbIk6i2l
Walsh quote tweeted his response, "She's impressed that the guy paid, which is fine. Women are naturally attracted to providers. But if she likes this aspect of traditional masculinity, she has to accept the rest of it and be willing to play her part and be traditionally feminine. That's where things usually break down for feminists."
Megyn Kelly is a product of the current feminist establishment. As Morpheus told Neo in the film The Matrix, "Most of these people are not ready to be unplugged. And many of them are so inured, so hopelessly dependent on the system, that they will fight to protect it." Megyn did precisely that, fight to protect the system that has been good to her.
"Actually, no she doesn't," Kelly replied to Walsh. "She can find a man who pays and also gets completely hot for a working wife who doesn't cook or behave like any sort of traditional wife."
Matt Walsh replied with this mic drop moment. "Why should the man play the traditionally masculine role of paying for the meals if the woman is not going to play the traditionally feminine role in return? This shouldn't even be controversial. A woman who accepts gender roles when she can get a free meal out of it, but then rejects them in every other context, is being self centered and inconsistent. And that's to put it gently."
Kelly continued arguing some mumbo jumbo about wanting fire and excitement in a relationship and some other irrelevant points.
Women who desire traditional masculinity must accept it in its entirety. They cannot cherrypick aspects of conventional manliness and discard the others. Nor can they continue to cling to their snowflake feminist liberalism when confronted with the harsh truth.
21 Savage expelled a harsh truth in a recent interview with Rolling Stone magazine. When asked why men in R&B do not serenade women as they did in previous eras, the London-born, Atlanta-raised rapper replied,
"Y'all bitches some hoes now. Nobody singing to y'all. Everybody sell pussy. Ain't nobody to sing for."
As profane as his response was, his analysis is correct. When musical acts like Earth Wind and Fire and Luther Vandross dominated, women were at least somewhat more traditional. Their feminine beauty and lady-like demeanor warranted the love ballads written to them. Today, sexual liberation encourages women to sell their bodies like red-light district prostitutes. I can't imagine Luther Vandross singing "Never Too Much" to a woman who looks and acts like Sexyy Red. The less a woman reveals and the less she has slept around, the more desirable she is. It is a truth that has and will continue to stand the test of time.
The most important takeaway is that two men from different walks of life who would never share the same air are allies on the same battlefield. Unhinged feminism will devour all men, whether you are a plaid shirt-wearing white guy in Nashville or a tattooed-face black guy in Atlanta. Identity politics has obscured reality so much that it has created enemies out of compadres. Matt Walsh and 21 Savage are both fighting the same enemy.
In a similar vein, MAGA Republican voters and working-class black Americans are teammates. Both groups seek jobs, homes, safe neighborhoods, economic mobility, and a government with their best interest in mind, not nations halfway across the world.
Working-class black Americans are MAGA. They have more in common with Donald Trump than Barack Obama, Tucker Carlson than Jay-Z. The blind attachment to skin color and a political party keep black Americans and white Trump supporters from realizing they are brothers and sisters-in-arms against the country's oppressive government.
21 Savage will never like a Matt Walsh tweet. Matt Walsh will never listen to a 21 Savage song. Nevertheless, a coalition of people with a common enemy is just what this country needs right now.
"A Lot."