Quote: (04-05-2015 04:52 AM)Dat ass Wrote:
Some said the problem is aussi guys are intelligent, handsome and ripped semi-gods, who actually approached a lot. While most of the girls are chubby and masculine, letting the elite decently cute with astronomical bitch shields and expectations.
But seriously, the deal is basically this: I always got the feeling in Australia that there was always more men than women. Sometimes I would go to a bar and there would be a 20-to-1 ratio. Whether this is because of the actual numbers, or the difference between men and women leaving their house, I don't know. But it was significant and always noticeable. I feel especially bad for the Asians in Australia. There are certain clubs which attract a disproportionate number of Asians, and on the occasion where I have visited, the ratio was no joke around 30 to 1. Basically a sea of Asian men, oddly taller than average, standing there and looking around hopefully, and a handful of girls - all closely attached to their boyfriend.
In Australia, the sportsman is king. If you want to know how sexually attractive a man is, you simply gauge how similar he is to a sportsman. He will be large, tall and muscular, he will be extremely cocky, make a lot of noise with little meaning, will be popular with everyone (birds of a feather), and he will be quite stupid. For reference, the chief sports here are rugby league (union is too complicated), and AFL (which is basically a further dumbing-down of the 'oval ball and goal posts' theme). The more international sports of Cricket and Tennis come next, and the 'world game' of football (soccer) has a negligible following.
I heard on more than one occasion that women will basically fight over getting banged by a known sportsman. I heard in mainstream news once that women are very 'aggressive' about getting banged by a sports star, and will compete over 'who they have been banged by' (obviously the news didn't term it like that). If you are in this category in Australia, I assume you can just walk into a bar, tap a girl on the shoulder, and then immediately walk into a bathroom stall. You are basically the Australian equivalent of the rock-star.
Some people I've talked to overseas think I am being offensive when I mention the intelligence aspect. However this is not the case. Intelligence is simply not viewed as a value. In fact I barely hear of people talking about wealth as a value. Athleticism is a value. I have, on more than one occasion, been mocked or laughed at in Australia for accidentally saying intelligent things. One common experience (more so with 'bogans') was when I would start a longer-than normal sentence - you can see their attention start to wane in their facial expression after about 6 or so words (oh he's saying something non-trivial), and after around 10 words they look away in dismissal and move their attention elsewhere, often starting talking themselves over the top. On dates I've always had to be careful not to mention anything too intellectual sounding, or go into any details about my job or interests, and I still made mistakes. One girl even mocked me on a date because I accidentally used a word longer than three syllables. Intelligence is simply viewed as something to look down on, something unimportant or trite. Given that it is viewed liked this, it actually feels complementary, not insulting, to say 'Australians tend not to be intelligent'. In fact I got so used to viewing intelligence like this that when I went overseas, I had to readjust my language, after seeing so many shocked expressions. In the rest of the world, apparently intelligence is a virtue, and lack of it a vice.
One of the most pleasant experiences I have ever felt was the first time I went on a date, and after accidentally letting slip something intelligent, I saw the girls face light up instead of scowl or grin. It was like a breath of fresh-air, like a weight had been lifted off my shoulders. Was this because I had found a diamond in the rough in Australia? Nope, I was in Japan.
I invite anyone who visits Australia to take up the following challenge: join a conversation with a group of local men, be it at a bar or whatever. Stay there for 3 hours. At the end of those three hours, write down one thing insightful that was said. That's it. In fact you get half points if you can remember any
thing that was said at all. And based on experience - this will apply even if
professors are present and participating.
So that's the men and women's-preference side of the equation. As for the other side, there are plenty of good looking girls in Australia. They don't age well, but whilst they are 20, there are plenty of hotties. Unfortunately the vast majority have empty skulls. I've heard a few guys, including Roosh, mention women using smartphones in an attention-deficit manner, but I've seen girls using phones in Australia that would make any of those girls look like chess-masters. Zoning out mid-sentence to spontaneously selfie with their friend - multiple times, and making 'woo' noises during the selfie. Literal zero attention spans - I'm surprised some of them manage to catch a bus. Sure they're empty-headed, you say, who cares as long as you can bang them? Well it matters - not only does it make them tedious to be around, it means they are pretty poor at detecting (and thus valuing) any other male traits. Hence why they go for the sportsman type - you can't fail to detect 6'4 and swole. It takes a split second and you don't need to think or pay any attention whatsoever. If you're intelligent, intelligent girls are much easier to lay than Australian girls.
I don't accept the claims that 'Australian girls are generally fat or ugly', which I've heard once or twice here. What is true though, is that there are a lot in that category. Far more than I see in East Asia. In Japan, a whale is something that you harpoon for research purposes, it is not something that commonly walks down the street. The 20% that are untouchable in Australia simply swing the odds further away from the men, who as many Australians who have gone overseas know, are actually pretty high up on the SMV ladder.
I apologize to any Australian members here if they take offense to anything I've said. I am an Australian citizen myself. I don't consider any Australians who frequent this forum to be in the same category as the general population. This is only for informational and cautionary purposes for the general membership and forum visitors.