AI's Great Reset: Why Robots Will Liberate Women from Fake Feminism – And Send Them Back, Happy, to the Home! By Mrs Vera West and Peter West
Ladies, your "brilliant careers" are about to get automated into oblivion, and it's the best thing that could happen to you; trust us! The data doesn't lie: Women are unhappier than ever, and unhappier than men, despite (or because of) decades of fake feminist "empowerment." Gallup, NBER, and the General Social Survey all confirm it: The more women chase corporate ladders and LinkedIn flexes, the more miserable they become.
Enter AI and robotics, the great equaliser that's about to nuke white-collar girl-boss jobs while leaving men's blue-collar trades largely untouched. The result? A forced return to traditional roles that fake feminism spent 60 years demonising. And guess what? This technological purge of "leaning in" might finally make women happy again.
Let's start with the cold, hard truth that sends feminists into screaming fits:
1970s: Married women with kids at home reported highest life satisfaction.
2020s: Childless career women in their 30s report depression rates 3x higher than stay-at-home moms.
2024: Women under 30 are twice as likely as men to be treated for mental health issues.
The correlation is brutal: The more women abandon traditional roles for corporate cubicles, the more SSRIs they need. Fake feminism sold them the lie that fulfillment comes from PowerPoint decks and glass-ceiling shattering. Reality: It's coming from burnout, childlessness, and the biological clock's cruel tick-tock.
The irony? The same AI revolution needs men's hands to build its empire. Data centres don't construct themselves. Internet cables don't bury themselves. Solar farms don't install themselves. While Gemini writes your performance review, men will be stringing the fibre that powers it.
Fake feminists will scream "misogyny!" but biology doesn't care about feelings. Women are naturally better at the domestic arts that build civilisation:
Nurturing: Oxytocin wiring makes women superior caregivers. Studies show children with involved mothers have 40% lower behavioural problems.
Social cohesion: The "glue" of civil society. Strong families = strong republics.
Educational outcomes: Homeschooled kids (90% taught by moms) outperform public school peers by 30 percentile points.
AI makes this possible without the drudgery:
Robot vacuums already save 2 hours/week
Smart kitchens handle meal prep
AI tutors supplement homeschooling
Laundry-folding bots (Boston Dynamics, 2025 models)
The future: A tradwife supervises her robot staff while reading to her four kids, then posts sourdough content that earns more than her old corporate job. No commute. No toxic boss. No "diversity training."
Benjamin Franklin knew: A republic requires virtuous citizens. Virtuous citizens require mothers, not corporate drones who outsource child-rearing to iPads and government schools.
The numbers are apocalyptic:
Fertility rate: 1.6 (replacement = 2.1)
Single motherhood: 40% of births
Fatherless homes: 70% higher crime rate
AI's job purge is divine providence for women. When administrative assistant roles vanish, women face a choice: Fight for the remaining soul-crushing cubicle jobs, or embrace the role evolution optimised them for.
Those viral feminist meltdown videos? Watch them in 2030 when:
AI handles 80% of office work
Men earn premiums for physical trades
Women discover that raising well-adjusted kids > climbing corporate ladders
The happiness data will flip. Depression rates will plummet. Birth rates will rise. Society will stabilise.
Fake feminism's greatest lie: That women's fulfillment comes from competing with men in men's domains. AI is about to prove the opposite: Women's true power lies in the home, building the next generation while robots handle the grunt work.
The robot revolution isn't taking women's jobs, it's giving them back their sanity.
Ladies, your "brilliant career" was a trap. The kitchen was calling. The robots just made it luxurious again!
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2025/11/ai_and_robots_may_make_women_happier.html

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