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Evil Woman
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 1,092
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Women racist when ovulating
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The first study, conducted by Michigan State University researchers and published in the journal Psychological Science, found that ovulating women are in fact hornier. But they’re only hot for guys in familiar racial and social groups, which is why your girlfriend is really into you and possibly your best friend, too. At the same time, women are more suspicious of—and feel more threatened by—men from different racial and social groups. Built into her DNA, explain the researchers, is coding that protects her from being coerced into having sex with men she doesn’t know—and who may not stick around to help raise the mistake.
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http://news.menshealth.com/new-resea...on/2011/06/29/
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“Stereotypes about the particular out-group being prone to violence may also play a role, so, at least in American society, cultural transmission works alongside evolutionary biology in promoting racism.”
And then there’s the inconvenient fact that, in the U.S., black men rape women a lot.
I’d rather be “racist” than raped.
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http://www.fivefeetoffury.com/2011/0...yre-ovulating/
Could the birth control pill increase race-mixing? Women on it do not ovulate.
http://www.1flesh.org/9-reasons-ovulat/
Other interesting facts about ovulation:
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Women become more beautiful when ovulating.
That’s right:
According to findings published in the current Royal Society Biology Letters, lips become slightly bigger and brighter, pupils dilate, and women’s ears, fingers, breasts and other soft tissue areas become more symmetrical, to the point that men and women rated fertile women to be more beautiful than infertile women approximately 51-59 percent of the time.
Similarly, scientists at the University of Texas found that women’s “waists shrank by about half an inch, giving them a more curvaceous and shapely silhouette.”
Times Magazine reported that “One surprising study published last October in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior showed that strippers who are ovulating average $70 in tips per hour; those who are menstruating make $35; those who are not ovulating or menstruating make $50.”
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A study by psychologists at the University of Toronto and Tufts University showed women pictures of 80 men, 40 self-proclaimed as homosexual, 40 self-proclaimed as heterosexual. The nearer women were to peak ovulation, the more accurate they were at judging each male’s sexual orientation. During ovulation, a woman gets brilliant at discriminating between men that are a good match for her and men who aren’t.
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Higher voice: Men find a higher voice attractive in women, and for the purpose of attracting that man, women’s hormonal cycles give them that voice.
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The closer a woman is to ovulating, the better she smells to men. Or rather, the better she smells to men who have the potential to make a healthy baby with her.
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Now this part of ovulating is interesting. Women’s self-esteem takes a dip when they’re ovulating — they’re much more aware of guys looking at them. To compensate for this slightly lower self-esteem, women dress, well, sexier. They naturally want to look great and show more skin. Similarly, it has been shown that ovulating women are far more likely to swing their hips when they walk than non-ovulating women.
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Ovulating women have an increased ability to spot and avoid danger. That’s right kids, spidey sense is real — and your mom’s the one who’s got it.
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The birth control pill was invented by Jews Gregory Goodwin Pincus and Carl Djerassi. It stops womens hormonal cycles (which make women women) and influences their choice of mate. They will choose to sleep with, start relationships with, and marry men that they WOULD NOT CHOOSE were they not ingesting these drugs. White nationalist women need to start seeing birth control pills as mind altering substances with the worst possible consequences.
http://www.catholicintl.com/index.php/latest-news/941
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Much of the attraction between the sexes is chemistry. New studies suggest that when women use hormonal contraceptives, such as birth-control pills, it disrupts some of these chemical signals, affecting their attractiveness to men and women's own preferences for romantic partners.
The type of man a woman is drawn to is known to change during her monthly cycle—when a woman is fertile, for instance, she might look for a man with more masculine features. Taking the pill or another type of hormonal contraceptive upends this natural dynamic, making less-masculine men seem more attractive, according to a small but growing body of evidence. The findings have led researchers to wonder about the implications for partner choice, relationship quality and even the health of the children produced by these partnerships
Both men's and women's preferences in mates shift when a woman is ovulating, the period when she is fertile, research has shown. Some studies have tracked women's responses to photos of different men, while other studies have interviewed women about their feelings for men over several weeks. Among the conclusions: When women are ovulating, they tend to be drawn to men with greater facial symmetry and more signals of masculinity, such as muscle tone, a more masculine voice and dominant behaviors.
Women on the pill no longer experience a greater desire for traditionally masculine men during ovulation. Their preference for partners who carry different immunities than they do also disappears. And men no longer exhibit shifting interest for women based on their menstrual cycle, perhaps because those cues signaling ovulation are no longer present, scientists say.
Some women using birth-control pills have long reported changes to their libido and mood. Research is still in the early stages to explore the implications of taking hormonal contraceptives for women's choice of mates and for fidelity in relationships. Researchers speculate that women with less-masculine partners may become less interested in their partner when they come off birth control, contributing to relationship dissatisfaction.
Psychologist Steven Gangestad and his team at the University of New Mexico showed in a 2010 study that women with less-masculine partners reported an increased attraction for other men during their fertile phase. Women partnered with traditionally masculine partners didn't have such urges, according to the study of 60 couples.
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