Uptight Feminist College Professors

GuitarWind21

Other Christian
Did you guys have an Anal, uptight, feminist College professor when you went to College? I know I did, when I went to community college. It was an english teacher, and she was obviously in debate mode when she made us write a controversial essay topic on which gender who we think are better in the workplace? Men or women? Needless to say, I was young and had less of a backbone so I complied with her BS just to get a B. Anyone face similar crap like this in College or growing up? How did it go and how can we combat this?
 
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Not sure this is totally relatable but when I was in college back in the 90s, I took a communication class. Still remember the very first day. A man walked in, wrote his name on the chalkboard, and said, "I'm a liberal. And if you have a problem with that, you just leave the class now."

I wish I would've taken him up on his offer, called him a commie on the way out, while giving him the finger. Oh the regrets...
 
College was my first exposure to women who hate men. They were all ugly and of two body types: (1) fat and dumpy and (2) stout and just overweight. Type 2 were the real awful ones who were in the college bureaucracy and just loved the power of being in a hierarchy where other man-hating professors were hired to teach man-hating feminist curriculum from absurd, misandrist communist textbooks.

I had no idea what was going on with the man-hating, but the overall college experience was such an obvious scam monetarily that after a couple of years I dropped out and found a good job.
 
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I believe many college lecturers tend to exhibit authoritarian behavior and engage in power trips. In Westernized countries, this often manifests through ideological posturing—some adopt insufferably rigid stances as leftists, liberals, or feminists, using their academic platform to assert personal beliefs rather than foster open dialogue.

In my local context, the power dynamic plays out differently. Lecturers often demand respect through formalities, such as insisting students write out their full academic titles and claiming that they worked hard for their credentials, so they deserve respect. They may arbitrarily lower grades or score tests without valid justification, make themselves difficult to reach for thesis consultations, or revise undergraduate thesis drafts without clear reasons—even when students have followed their prior instructions to the letter.

Moreover, many lecturers seem to treat the university less as a place for teaching or knowledge-sharing and more as a stage for personal gain. Some use their position to promote their private businesses, expand their professional networks, or gain access to students as a source of cheap—or even unpaid—labor, particularly in internships.​
 
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