When Men Stand on Business: Why Certain Segments Turn Feral and Misandrist
Standards, Respect, and the Double Standard Circus
Let’s get one thing straight: having standards as a heterosexual man is not an act of aggression. It’s a basic human right. Yet, the moment men start drawing boundaries or—heaven forbid—voicing their standards, certain segments of society (you know who you are 👀) start frothing at the mouth like a 2003 internet forum caught in a flame war. Why? Because some people have been conditioned to see men as providers, protectors, and silent sacrificers—but not decision-makers.
Well, newsflash: men are allowed to have standards too.
Standards Are Not Misogyny
Let’s address the big elephant in the room: having standards ≠ hating women. If a man decides he wants:
A partner who values loyalty,
Someone who prioritizes emotional maturity over Instagram likes,
Or just someone who doesn’t treat their relationship like a TikTok content generator,
...why does that spark an apocalypse of rage and accusations of being controlling, toxic, or—everyone’s favorite buzzword—misogynistic?
Ask yourself this: if it’s empowering for women to demand “a man who makes six figures, is 6’4”, emotionally intelligent, great in bed, and can recite poetry while doing a backflip,” why does it suddenly become "oppression" when a man wants a partner who doesn’t treat commitment like an afterthought?
The Misandry Playbook
Here’s where it gets spicy: when men dare to stand on business, certain segments of the crowd will hit you with:
Gaslighting 101: “Wow, you’re so insecure if you care about stuff like that.”
Shame Grenades: “Only a weak man feels the need to have standards. A real man accepts anything.”
Projection Olympics: “You just want a submissive maid, don’t you?”
**Name-Calling: "When logic is refuted or falls on intellectually deaf ears, insults become the tool of the emotional, hysterical, and emotionally unstable."
The irony? These are often the same people who post things like, “Know your worth, sis,” on social media while belittling anyone else for doing the same.
Why It's Time to Dish It Back
Here’s the truth: you can’t play defense forever. If certain people feel emboldened to call men trash for expressing their preferences, then it’s time for men to:
Be unapologetic. You don’t owe anyone an explanation for your boundaries.
Dish it back—tastefully but firmly. Call out the hypocrisy. Example: “So if you wouldn’t date someone broke, why is it wrong for me to avoid drama queens, 304's, and independent feminists?”
Stop pandering. Being agreeable at all costs isn’t “nice,” it’s self-destructive, and diminishes a man's status among other men.
Respect should go both ways, and if someone’s going feral over the idea of mutual standards, that’s their problem, not yours.
Let’s Not Pretend This is Fair
The moment you flip the script, watch how the conversation devolves:
"Who hurt you?"
"Not all women are like that!"
"You just hate women because you can’t get one!"
Oh, the classic ad hominem Olympics. These are tactics used to derail a conversation instead of addressing the real issue: standards are universal.
Final Truth Bomb
The simple truth is, a man who knows what he wants and sets boundaries isn’t toxic—he’s dangerous. Dangerous to the status quo, dangerous to complacency, and dangerous to the idea that men should just shut up and take whatever comes their way. So to those turning feral at the mere thought of men holding themselves to a standard, here’s a revolutionary concept: respect goes both ways.
Like, share, or watch me get cancelled for saying this: Certain people (you know who you are) will weaponize this truth bomb faster than you can say 'misandry.' They'll screenshot, twist, and predictably call me toxic—proving my point in real-time. Don't let 'em win.








