"A follow up to my article “There’s something queer about Andrew Tate” published in The American Spectator"
Did you see Tate's music video where he's wearing super short shorts and he's walking very, very feminine? Anyway, male contact sports have always been homo-erotic. And then you've got his conversion to Islam which is a highly gender-segregated religion. The most gender-segregated of all religions. In many Muslim majority countries there is a high amount of physical affection displayed between men. They often walk together in streets holding hands. Foreigners often interpret this as "gay" but it's not (except in cases where it is, but it remains undetected because it's just part of the culture). When you segregate the sexes to that extent, the outlet for flirting and physical affection turns toward the same sex, without it crossing over into actual sex (except in cases where it does).
As macho as Islam is, it's also, in a way, quite queer. Muslims could use that to their advantage in getting more converts, actually.
"Interesting how the Christian belief in the Incarnation and in charity as the highest of virtues is so incomprehensible to both the mainstream left and right."
Charity is one of the 5 Pillars of Islam. Interesting to note that when Sneako (Tate's virtual media baby son, prodigy and fanboy who recently converted to Islam in submission to his daddy) recently converted to Islam and he was asked in a podcast to name the 5 Pillars, the 1 he "couldn't remember" was charity.
These guys converted to Islam because they see it as compatible with their long held macho beliefs about male superiority and right to multiple women. That's it. While one of them might remain Muslim for the rest of his life, I guarantee you both of them won't. And statistically it is unlikely either of them will. Islam has one of the highest turnover rates amongst converts. But Muslims don't like to publicly talk about that. With the rise of ex-muslims voicing their apostacy on social media recently, it can no longer be brushed under Aladin's magic carpet. There's an "Islamic Revolution" happening, alright. It's a revolution away from Islam, not toward it.
"A follow up to my article “There’s something queer about Andrew Tate” published in The American Spectator"
Did you see Tate's music video where he's wearing super short shorts and he's walking very, very feminine? Anyway, male contact sports have always been homo-erotic. And then you've got his conversion to Islam which is a highly gender-segregated religion. The most gender-segregated of all religions. In many Muslim majority countries there is a high amount of physical affection displayed between men. They often walk together in streets holding hands. Foreigners often interpret this as "gay" but it's not (except in cases where it is, but it remains undetected because it's just part of the culture). When you segregate the sexes to that extent, the outlet for flirting and physical affection turns toward the same sex, without it crossing over into actual sex (except in cases where it does).
As macho as Islam is, it's also, in a way, quite queer. Muslims could use that to their advantage in getting more converts, actually.
"Interesting how the Christian belief in the Incarnation and in charity as the highest of virtues is so incomprehensible to both the mainstream left and right."
Charity is one of the 5 Pillars of Islam. Interesting to note that when Sneako (Tate's virtual media baby son, prodigy and fanboy who recently converted to Islam in submission to his daddy) recently converted to Islam and he was asked in a podcast to name the 5 Pillars, the 1 he "couldn't remember" was charity.
These guys converted to Islam because they see it as compatible with their long held macho beliefs about male superiority and right to multiple women. That's it. While one of them might remain Muslim for the rest of his life, I guarantee you both of them won't. And statistically it is unlikely either of them will. Islam has one of the highest turnover rates amongst converts. But Muslims don't like to publicly talk about that. With the rise of ex-muslims voicing their apostacy on social media recently, it can no longer be brushed under Aladin's magic carpet. There's an "Islamic Revolution" happening, alright. It's a revolution away from Islam, not toward it.