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How men are attracted to curvy ladies, while feminists love 'players'

Let us look at how men prefer curvy women who have no clothing on and why feminists are the willing victims of male players, promiscuous men.

The sexy Lydia Jazmine

Are you ready? Okay, let’s go.

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Most men have no problem with a brain-free Bimbo who feels she’s surrounded by the enemy when she suddenly finds herself in the middle of a library.

Indeed, the light bulb never switches on in her head unless she is looking for the best ways to beef up the bosomy blessings of her body, but she moves men. Not only to the bedroom or through the raging seas of the wettest dream, but over the hills and everywhere…as the Christian song goes.

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Since her cleavage hits a man right between the eyes and elevates his person to a quasi-spiritual realm where he can ogle brain-challenged ladies who are wearing nothing but lingerie.

That realm is a place where the theme song of lovemaking between a man and a woman is the sound of straining bedsprings, all day and all night long.

In the end, we men love our eye candy and the sweet sexual gratification which comes with it.

I know the feminists will shout about this shallowness and objectification of women. And they would be right.

However, can these ladies explain why so many successful women are attracted to men who are misogynists and philanderers?

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Katie Roiphe discusses this in her book, "The Power Notebooks”.

It is written in a series of notebook entries as Roiphe shares her personal experiences with divorce, single motherhood, and relationships with insights into the lives and loves of famous writers such as Sylvia Plath and Simone de Beauvoir.

She also delves into the way powerful women have subjugated their own power to the very men whose cheating ways they seemingly oppose.

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Jean Paul Sartre, the writer, activist, philosopher, had an intense relationship with feminist Simone de Beauvoir. If you don’t know her, well, you must know her impact on society in general and womankind in particular.

It is huge.

She was responsible for shaping the post-war minds of France and the world. Her book “The Second Sex” has frequently been considered the engine that drove the modern feminist movement of the 1960s.

Still, de Beauvoir declared that her greatest achievement in life was her relationship with Sartre - philosopher, playwright and philanderer!

“A man’s brain in a woman’s body,” Sartre liked to say about her—and she lapped it all up even as he, Sartre, settled for one airheaded bimbo after another, while cheating on her all the time.

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All in all, one could say that a feminist's Kryptonite is a ruthless player, while a man’s weakness is a shapely lady dressed in less.

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