正在加载视频...

视频加载失败

It's not that the question is impossible to answer, it's that he is so triggering and the very act of asking the question is trauma-inducing. Of course, she walked out, wouldn't you?

4,691,982 次观看 • 2 年前 •via X (Twitter)

9 条评论

My Opinion 的头像
My Opinion2 年前

It's a buzz word she doesn't know the meaning to, and instead of being embarrassed because she has no idea what she's talking about, she acts hurt and traumatized and plays the victim. Typical feminist attitude.

Shannon 的头像
Shannon2 年前

She’s not triggered. She’s embarrassed because she didn’t know the answer to his simple question. She just knows that’s a term the left calls men. She’s such a fake.

Aquavious 'Fred' Dump 的头像
Aquavious 'Fred' Dump2 年前

My grandfather had a desk made out of misogyny.

Dr. Jebra Faushay 的头像
Dr. Jebra Faushay2 年前

It was a very popular material back in the day.

Laurie Gehlert 的头像
Laurie Gehlert2 年前

Clearly she doesn’t actually know the meaning. She’s embarrassed not triggered.

Jousi 的头像
Jousi2 年前

Leftists may have killed comedy but they still give us plenty to laugh at. 😄

🏴 KᗩᔕᕼᗰIᖇ 🏴 的头像
🏴 KᗩᔕᕼᗰIᖇ 🏴2 年前

She is crying because she cant define, nor articulate her beliefs or big words. She's embarrassed and trapped.

henrypillsbury 的头像
henrypillsbury2 年前

Knows to use a key word for defense but doesn’t really know what she is saying/meaning. Not uncommon at all today.

Anti-Ghetto Advocate 的头像
Anti-Ghetto Advocate2 年前

The weak link. Man imagine a man acting like that to get out of answering a question lol.

相关视频

Great balance of showing compassion while sharing truth as Wes Huff responds to the question of why a good God would allow evil: "Well, that is arguably the hardest and most pressing apologetic question there is, because ultimately, the very tidy philosophical and theological answer isn't the right answer sometimes. You know, sometimes the right answer to the wrong question is the wrong answer, because I've encountered situations where someone has brought up a variation of the problem of evil to me, and I've just felt uneasy about maybe the tenor that they're coming at with the question...and asking them, 'You know, that's a great question. Why are you asking that question in particular?' and finding out once again (like the previous question related to it), they're personally hurting. And so, in that sense, I could give a tidy answer about if you're positing that something is good, you're positing that there's an objective good and evil, and if there's an objective good and evil, then you're positing an objective law, and objective law needs an objective lawgiver. So where do we find the groundwork for an objective lawgiver to begin with? Otherwise, you may not like certain things, but to say they ought not to happen is actually an ethical leap to an objective reality that you may or may not have groundwork for. But if that person is struggling because a family member of theirs has cancer, then that particular, maybe tidy, tied-up-in-a-nice-bow answer is not going to speak to them whatsoever. And so that's why that's the hardest question because there are actually very good answers to it, but often it doesn't speak to the person in front of you, because questions have questioners that sit behind them. And one of the pitfalls of my chosen field of ministry apologetics is that sometimes we give answers where we talk at people rather than with people. And there's a danger to that because the Christian faith isn't just an intellectual assent, right? It's a personal relationship. And that should also be played out in the answers that we give..."

Melissa the Hopeful🏠Homemaker

115,694 次观看 • 2 个月前