Queen Victoria
Okay I can give her somewhere in the top 150.
Queen Victoria
Okay I can give her somewhere in the top 150.
Wu-Zetian, the first and only empress of ancient China.
Look her up.
Thanks for the information. This is the first one I haven't heard of. Kim Jong Un's sister seems pretty alpha as well.
Feminists don't talk about her because she was pure evil and ruthless as hell, but she brought China a lot of peace and economic success. It was really under her reign that China began to be recognized as a global power. Said ruthlessness led to her being a swift decision maker in the imperial court and it's also led to her getting so much done in 4 decades. But as I said, a monster in human skin.
A true leader usually needs to use cruelty to gain fealty and control. Then it is their responsibility to return peace to the now reasonably cleansed and controlled lands.
The problem with women in leadership roles is they always undergo the Cleopatra effect: all matriarchies devolve inevitably into a compassionless whore state where young girls become pawns for the powerful men pulling strings behind the scenes and young boys become feminized to the point where they kill themselves in droves, become sex objects like in Rome and never amount to anything beyond having a powerful father who hands them the keys to his enterprise, only to watch it crumble before him due to his incompetence.
There's no reason to have a woman in charge. Women are either mothers or supplements to strong men. We're fooling ourselves if we think they can capture the true essence of the masculinity that leadership demands.
Boudicca. She's one of the few people to have beaten the Romans for any length of time, and there's a monumental bronze statue of her standing in a city she is primarily famous for burning to the fucking ground.
Just read about her. Pretty interesting.
Joan of Arc, Marie Curie
So a psychotic and mentally ill feminist teenager and a crazy woman who played with radioactive elements are the 2 candidates?
It's the only ones i can think of off the top of my head. In terms of a female leader who came close to the breadth of scale of impact of even the top 10 men, i cant think of any. I was gonna say lizard lady Janet Yellen from the Federal Reserve, but that bitch needs to die in a firery hell of a thousand suns
Yes. I think you should add Elizabeth Báthory too! Makes Pol Pot look like an amateur!
The first name that popped into my head was Catherine the Great of Russia. Maybe Mary the 1st of England.
Cleopatra
There's plenty, dude. Feminists never talk about them because they fuck with the whole victimization narrative thing.
Women that end up in leadership roles usually do just fine, even if they are a bit bloodthirsty, because they're the exceptional ones. It's normal women voting that's the disaster.
True. I have several badass lady friends and I feel bad when I go on a women rant. It gets tiring doing the "yo I'm not talking about YOU"
We should figure out better nomenclature. That might push our ideas forward faster
Queen Amanirenas is the only one I can think of and I had to look her name up.
Cleopatra? She managed to manipulate Alexander the Great and kept her kingdom a separate and sovereign nation until she died.
By killing herself since men were coming to kill her. You're confused there too because her lover was Mark Antony.
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