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Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?
#1

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

I'm new to the grounds of this war and I had never heard of SJW's or even knew that feminism was really a thing until I joined RVF. So I can't be sure whether right now it is worse than ever, or if it has kind of always been like that. However, gamergate and the recent events involving RSD staff really got me thinking.

Imagine you had a clean slate on teh internets until now, but like many of us here, you also have some wisdom to share. Naturally, that wisdom is sexist as fuck, at times disgusting and overall just does not make for a great bedtime story.

Would you, today, publish such content with your real name attached to it?

If yes:

1- what do you expect to get out of it? (money? personal reasons?)
2- how old are you? (20, 25, 30 etc.)
3- do you have what is considered a normal career that you wish to keep pursuing for 10 or more years?


The pros:

- Liberation. Knowing its out there and not needing to hide.
- Money. Maybe.
- Doing the right thing. Being a man.
- Lots of fun.


The cons:

- Becoming a target for idiots.
- Seeing your latest blog-post about destroying pussy in Eastern Europe printed out next to your resume at the next job interview you have.



Of course you can always publish anonymously, but its very hard to impossible to turn a profit that way (in Germany anyway). Maybe some of you have a heart of gold, but I don't. No way I'm giving up my writings for free.

What are your thoughts?


Take care everyone.

Michael
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#2

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Oh, yeah:

Personally, I always thought I would, but now I'm thinking no. I have a career that I love dearly, and if something I post today were to bite me in my career-ass 5 years from now, I would go postal. No one would live.

HR is mostly ugly and bitter cunts. I wouldn't even be invited to an interview after a google search.
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#3

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

I share my views on Facebook all the time, but then again, I keep my Facebook feed off limits to non-friends. I'm not sure for the time being about actually going public with it.
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#4

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

No. I'm 17, got a lot of future in front of me, and there is no money in dissent. I will vocalize opinions, but I don't write down shit online that could draw too much attention.

If there was considerable money to be made, I would probably do it under a psuedonym.

Additionally, whenever I argue with SJW types they always have no rational basis in their arguments and just create straw man after straw man and don't allow for me to actually make good points, and instead I get to spend my half of the talking explaining that I'm not a rapist. So I no longer feel the need to argue with them because I get upset and angry and I don't like feeling that way.

Founding Member of TEAM DOUBLE WRAPPED CONDOMS
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#5

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

I wouldn't do it. While it won't destroy your life if you have the right stance about it (i.e. unapologetic, slamming your opponents back), it will still make it very difficult in some regards. Some of the feminist/white knight/SJW crowd is really crazy, as in medically insane. You never know what could happen or how unlucky you could be. I say it's not worth the risk if you can avoid it.

I've had crazy guys threaten to beat me up for "not respecting women" just or mentioning that I wouldn't want to be in a relationship with some girl who was known for cheating. Imagine the stuff that could come to pass if your name was out in the open and the SJW media invited everyone to harass you as a mob, so they'd feel safe and unrestrained from making more severe threats or going through with them.

"Imagine" by HCE | Hitler reacts to Battle of Montreal | An alternative use for squid that has never crossed your mind before
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#6

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

People offline know where I stand. I've gotten into plenty of debates and arguments for speaking my mind. What I like about that is you are not tied to that (no physical evidence).

Writing anonymously online has its perks, hence why so many of us do it. If my real info got out there, or if I dropped my username, these nut jobs would go straight to my employer. I work in a very liberal institution, and they'd probably throw a victory party for showing a straight white male the boot and ruining my income temporarily.

If it ever actually gets that far, great! Now I can go the way of Roosh, McQueen, and Forney. Put my picture up and tear em a new asshole.

Chicago Tribe.

My podcast with H3ltrsk3ltr and Cobra.

Snowplow is uber deep cover as an alpha dark triad player red pill awoken gorilla minded narc cop. -Kaotic
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#7

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Never. I do speak my mind all the time in conversation, all my good friends male and female are pretty "red-pill" anyway, but having things under your own name whether it's on a blog or on social media etc. just isn't worth the potential risk in my opinion, unless you're your own boss.

Is posting about feminism to your Facebook friends really worth the risk? I know a couple people who've missed out on jobs because their Facebook photos (that they thought only their friends could see) were deemed too debaucherous. Now imagine how a HR department would react if found out you shared a link to "5 Reasons To Date A Girl With An Eating Disorder".
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#8

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

I've seen people tearing apart ROK articles on my Facebook news feed. I'm talking forty comments of pissed off future feminists and their mothers. Your only allowed your own opinion if it's their opinion. If you want to be a martyr I respect that but I wouldn't recommend it.
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#9

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Mark Twain didn't.

I'm the King of Beijing!
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#10

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Quote: (11-16-2014 10:13 AM)Suits Wrote:  

Mark Twain didn't.

Mark Twain is a pen name.

Team Nachos
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#11

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

If you have to ask this question then you already know the answer.

I'll be very blunt in saying that some of my posts here are purposely misleading to who I actually am. When I provide data on a location, I will not lie. I actually went and did the things I said I did. Do I sometimes forget the month I went? Yes. Do I sometimes have amnesia about the places I visit and not write about them at all? Yes.

Point is, unless you had a working knowledge of who I am and went back and mapped out each of my 1500 posts, it's unlikely you'd figure out the real me. Hell, you'd probably end up more confused if you tried to figure out my exact identity based off my posts.
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#12

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Fox News

WIA
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#13

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

I do it all the time. Yeah you can get fired or something, but I don't really care that much. People just get used to it once they know that's how you are. I think using a pseudonym long term, you run the risk of people eventually "outing" you, which would have more of a scandalous impact than if you'd just been using your name from day one.
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#14

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Someone whom knew me well would be able to figure out who I am from how I post on the forum but those are a select few. I always leave room for plausible deniability.

"Until the day when God shall deign to reveal the future to man, all human wisdom is summed up in these two words,— 'Wait and hope'."- Alexander Dumas, "The Count of Monte Cristo"

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#15

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Even if you're your own boss I don't think it's a good idea to be vocal and connect it with your true identity.

These days customers make less of a distinction between the product and the people behind the product. Unless your business benefits from you being the red pill front man behind that business then you're going to run into problems when people find out what you're really all about.

If you really care to see your red pill views to be spread then you have to make sure that your capacity as a messenger isn't compromised.

You can make a difference writing anonymously and lending your support to guys like Roosh who have already been outed publicly.
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#16

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

It's definitely a bad idea to let worlds collide. I've run a dating site for a few years, and I've almost certainly lost job opportunities because HR/other blue pill takers think it's a bit weird.

The funny thing is I've learnt more from building my site than from any other job I've ever done. But that's too much for blue pill people to take in.

So now I maintain my "respectable" LinkedIn, FB is off limits to anyone I don't know well, and I have my other personas for Rooshv/dating site/other stuff.

One other issue I've had to deal with is trolling by people who don't agree with my beliefs. I got trolled hard while I was living abroad, and that scared the hell out of me given I was living in a country where people regularly "disappear". For that reason I'd be incredibly careful revealing my true identity on a forum.
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#17

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Maybe my mind is too narrow on this subject, but I don't see the chance of making a lot of money by going against the tide unless you're making your $$$ from something Manoshpere- Red Pill related.

In my mind, Twitter is the most destructive tool in the world today. Anyone can fire a tweet at one of your sponsors and boom you're done in this Brave New World!! Speaking of it, where is Mcqueen??? Been a minute since I read something from him
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#18

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

No. I want a job in middle management where I could be downsized any day. Also, I want to wear khaki pants at a corporate office mall and get Starbucks as the 3 pm slump hits.

I'll hide and repress who I really am because then I'll be able to live a life full of regrets.
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#19

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Yes. Have you seen the women who reply to that? Assuming they don't rip off my facial piercings when we meet up or attempt to eat me

WB
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#20

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

In a word: No.

Times change faster than you can repair your career.

There are two exceptions;
1) You're the type of person who lives for conflict, who couldn't live with himself if he'd stay silent.
2) You've got fuck-you money.

There's no sense in being a martyr. Stay away from politics, religion & people who bother with politics & religion. It's not worth the price.
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#21

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

I'll be dropping my anonymity as I've said to others on the forum soon. I don't really care what people who I don't give a shit about think of me.

Don't forget to check out my latest post on Return of Kings - 6 Things Indian Guys Need To Understand About Game

Desi Casanova
The 3 Bromigos
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#22

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Quote: (11-16-2014 10:32 AM)Parlay44 Wrote:  

Quote: (11-16-2014 10:13 AM)Suits Wrote:  

Mark Twain didn't.

Mark Twain is a pen name.

Exactly.

I'm the King of Beijing!
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#23

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

I'd rather not be SWATted and have a bunch of psychotic assholes hounding me and, more importantly, my family.

I like my privacy.

"Men willingly believe what they wish." - Julius Caesar, De Bello Gallico, Book III, Ch. 18
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#24

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Not right now.

To be honest you saying the "truth" in your personal, rather than professional, life will have a lot less impact on you than you think it will. The stories of people being fired for un-PC views make the news because there are dramatic consequences. In real life there are usually no, or limited, consequences to people expressing their opinions. People either don't care what some random person thinks, or do care but are preoccupied with their own problems and don't have the time to persecute anyone.

Look, everything is cyclical. The social norms of today change tomorrow. Either become more or less "liberal" and so on. People on both the left and right often think, at different times obviously, that their views have become entrenched and nothing can change them. But they are wrong. In fact the view that your position will prevail for a very long time is basically an admission to fascism, because brute force and oppression is the about the only way any single viewpoint can prevail for a very long time. Your own personal "Thousand Year Reich". In nature it just can't happen. When things swing one way this very fact creates the conditions for the eventual swing in the opposite direction.

So... That being said their is an advantage to position yourself now for the swing away from "feminism", "war on women" and so on. But as with investing timing is everything. You have to be at the leading edge, because taking a position when many others already have it gives you no additional benefits. But if you are too far ahead of the pack you are isolated and likely to be picked off. It's obviously difficult to balance. If it wasn't there would be no benefits if you got it right...
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#25

Publishing controversial content under you real name - would you?

Funny enough, a friend of mine is the former starting Point Guard for Vanderbilt University and now he is going on to professional basketball and he is releasing a non-fiction tell-all book about the sexcapades, drugs, and generally absurd perks that elite college athletes get as a result of their ridiculous status on campus.
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