Chapter 395. Everything requires money
Fang Zhou asked him to sit down and inquired everyone else in turn, receiving answers that were mostly similar.
"Now we’ll start the second lesson—analyzing the failures of male rights organizations throughout history and what the new generation of male rights organizations should do!"
After writing this sentence on the blackboard, Fang Zhou said, "I’ll get straight to the conclusion: the primary reason for the failure of historical male rights organizations is that their base was too small, meaning there were too few people!"
Throughout the entire Cultivation World, the ratio of male cultivators is less than one in ten. Without real data, judgments can only be made through observation. For example, in the Heavenly Sword Sect, the ratio of ten to one is conservative. That means among ten female disciples, there isn’t even one male disciple.
This leads to an interesting phenomenon where the consumption of cucumbers and eggplants in all sects far exceeds that of other vegetables.
A small base and few people mean insufficient power to change the status quo, unless all male cultivators in the Cultivation World unite wholeheartedly.
But this is impossible, and rather than expect something impossible, it would be more realistic to develop a poison that only kills women.
Although Shen Hao’s answers were crude, they also reflected the core of the problem: there are too many enemies, facing attacks from all sides, yet too few friends, with many traitors among them.
The True Mother God Sect’s decades of exploiting and harvesting a large number of excellent ’crops’ exacerbated the imbalance of power between us and our enemies.
"The reason for the failure of male rights organizations throughout history lies in their small base and inability to unify the majority. Because of this, we cannot always focus solely on the male group. Relying solely on men is already futile."
Fang Zhou rattled on, and everyone below listened intently, almost ready to take out pens and notebooks to jot down Fang Zhou’s words.
