Article Publishing
~ restoration 356 movie
A vulnerable man that is going through very rough times in his life, is not employed, has an illness (schizophrenia). He is skilled at working on cars and is very interested in mechanical projects. One of his family members finds a paid project for him from a friend: she has an old porsche 356 that needs its engine rebuilt, and many other issues addressed.

He finds out that the woman wants to pay him by sex, and she even has one of her girlfriends come over to hint at the fact that 2 girls could be payment for his work. He needs money and they want to use him as a tool to restore the porsche 356 and renovate the house; an intellectual whore. He is not interested as he needs money, not to be taken advantage of, which he has been all his life. They play upon his illness and mess with his head, since he refuses to indulge in their sexual fantasies. He sees that they want to use him without paying him, and take advantage of his masculine side. He insists that he needs payment in monetary funds, not payment in sex. They do not say it outright that they will pay him in sex, but make several hints. His first few jobs he does not get payment, and they make excuses, and they are in debt so claim they do not have much, if any money, to pay.

He starts to figure out that she wants him to move in, and use him to do house repairs and car restoration, as her boyfriend, with sex favors for his work. She does not have much money, and has a large mortgage to pay, and he is very vulnerable for a place to live, as he is going through very hard times.

He eventually decides a female-male relationship built on this foundation could not last, so he opts out after a while of thinking about what his family member got him into, which he learns is untrustworthy. The girls he has met before in his younger years, but he forgot, as it was 12 years ago when he was around 19 years old, and one went to his school but was older than him. He does get money and meals from them to continue the work, but that is not what they want: they want him as a tool, no payment, and they have fun in bed while he gets to work on their items that need repair. He figures it is simply not a fair deal: why couldn't a man do this if he needed repairs done on his house and car, and pay a woman in sex for her to fix his items that need repair?

He has strange activities occur that make him very suspicious of their motives and nature - they stalk him and follow his car some times, which triggers his illness (paranoia).

He gets himself out of the situation and ends up writing a book called flip x with y. The book makes him good money. It is about how many men are used as utilities and tools, and that if you swap in a woman for a man in a situation, the man could never get away with what the woman gets away with, in contrast to feminism which says men are at an advantage.

His book simply states the problem as follows: take any situation wher man is Y, and woman is X, and swap them: i.e. if a man needed his oil changed, could he call up a woman, have her change the oil, and pay her by sex? Not a chance, and he would even possibly be arrested for such creepy behavior, especially if he touched her, in his house, to try to get her interested... Yet if a woman does exactly the same thing and invites a guy over to change her oil, and touches him in her house, the police would laugh at him and ask him why he did not take up the oppurtunity... So a man gets arrested for doing this, while a woman is congratulated for doing the same thing. What is acceptable for a woman to do, is not acceptable for a man to do? Why, if we are "equal". When a man stalks a woman it is illegal and creepy, but when a woman stalks a man it is "wow you have some romantic interest, good for you".

Why when x is swapped with y, it is not equal at all? He boils it down to almost a simple mathematical logical equation. Indeed there are cases where a man can get away with something, say burping in public, where a woman may be scorned.
Copyright © War Strategists, M.G. Consequences 2009-2017    Help! Edit Page