4.8 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 20 October 2021
⏱️ 59 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Patrick Bet-David sits down with Dr. Warren Farrell. He is an American political scientist, activist, and author of seven books on men's and women's issues. Farrell has been described as the "father of the men's movement."
Watch the full interview: https://youtu.be/dwW1fs9wpSM
Recommended videos: Jordan Peterson Emotional Interview with Patrick Bet-David: https://youtu.be/vdHJjbHwR38
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0:00.0 | My guest today is Dr. Warren Farrell, who is a New York time best-selling author, |
0:04.4 | written many different books. He's been on many different TV shows. I'm talking Oprah Winfrey, |
0:08.5 | Phil Donahue, wrote a book called The Myth of Male Power, as well as Boy the Boy Crisis. |
0:14.8 | He's got millions of views online, and he's very comfortable making others uncomfortable. |
0:20.7 | And I would even take it as far as he's very comfortable, sometimes unintentionally or intentionally |
0:27.4 | pissing other people off. So with that being said, Doc, thank you so much for being a guest on |
0:31.2 | value teaming. Thank you very much. Yes, speaking input medically about boys and men, does it |
0:37.5 | apparently make some people uncomfortable? Why do you think that is, by the way? Why do you think, |
0:42.4 | I mean, even an open-ended question with that, why do you think some people get uncomfortable when |
0:46.0 | you talk about, you know, I don't know what university was you were speaking at, people will |
0:51.1 | write against you, protesting against you, they were not happy about you speaking. Some people |
0:55.6 | just wanted to hear your argument, but they tried to silence your message. Why do you think this |
1:00.1 | message of the boy crisis? You know, some people have a hard time listening to. |
1:06.0 | Well to answer that question we have to go deep quickly, which is that historically and biologically |
1:12.4 | men were programmed to be disposable, and we were programmed to be disposable to be able to |
1:19.3 | save the lives of women. So every generation had its war, and every generation had some version of |
1:25.5 | Uncle Sam saying we need you, and we all knew as males that Uncle Joe who was in the Marines was |
1:34.1 | the respected person in the family, and we wanted to be, we were being criticized by our parents, |
1:39.3 | we wanted to be respected. So we accept the social bribe, but I call the social bribe of being |
1:44.4 | called hero, to get that type of respect, and women learn to own love with the officer and the |
1:50.8 | gentleman, not the private and the pacifist. So we knew we would be, if we were willing to risk our |
1:56.2 | lives to save women, to save children, to save other men, save the country, that we would be |
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