It’s Still Wonderful

The other day I was thinking about the film It’s A Wonderful Life. It’s an old black & white film from the 1940’s starring Donna Reed and Jimmy Stewart. The film takes place in a small town, probably somewhere in one of those fly-over states. And because the climax of the movie takes place on Christmas Day, it’s usually shown on TV on Christmas Eve.

It’s a wholesome, family film with a simple and moral message: Everybody makes a difference in somebody else’s life.

But, there’s sad news: I may never see It’s A Wonderful Life on TV again. And I want to say something before it disappears.

Why will it disappear, you ask?

It seems that some feminists are pissed off about this film. They say it’s sexist. Apparently, they don’t like Donna Reed’s feminine, happily married, stay-at-home-mom character. And, not only is she a stay at home mom, but she has five kids. Wow! Nobody would ever think to have that many kids today. Don’t you know the carbon footprint of all those children are contributing to global warming? Hurry! we gotta depopulate the world to save the polar bears! I guess they didn’t get the memo that birth rates have dropped below replacement level. At least, in the West.

According to the Center for Disease Control the birth rate in the U.S. is the lowest it has been in 30 years. Of course, their explanation doesn’t include how feminists have brainwashed women into thinking they must put off marriage to join the work force and go to college. Feminists wrongly let women think they have all the time in the world to get married and have babies. When, in fact, women actually have a small window of time to find a husband and have babies. Her “sexual market value” and “peak fertility” is from the age of 18 up to 29. And each year past 29 years of age, her fertility and husband prospect begins to slowly decline until one day she wakes up at the age of 45 with no husband, no babies, and a dozen cats.

The feminists say the men in the movie are misogynists. You see, the town slut is shunned and ostracized. In the film, Stewart’s character feels sorry for the town slut. He gives her train fare to get out of town and maybe she can clean up her act and start over someplace else. Hey! That’s sexist! Being a slut is what sexual liberation looks like! After all, the feminists proclaim, “it’s my body” and “I can do what I like with it.” Unfortunately, good men don’t marry sluts. I’ve said this before, and I’ll say it again: Promiscuity ruins a girls life. Studies have shown that the younger a girl starts having sex, and the number of men she screws, the less likelihood she will get married. Or, if she does get married, she won’t stay married (70% of divorces are initiated by the wife). Numerous sex partners ruins a woman’s chance of bonding with a man.

In the clip below, Jimmy Stewart is with his guardian angel, Clarence, who shows him what the world would be like if he was never born. And, of course, Donna Reed would never have met Jimmy Stewart and all she would have had in life was her career. The feminists ask: What’s wrong with being a librarian? A working woman can be fulfilled without a husband and a bunch of kids. I suppose so, if when laying in your death bed, and instead of being surrounded by loved ones, like children and grandchildren, you could always choke on your last breath and say “Well, at least, I kept the books in alphabetical order.”

Actually, I always envied the Donna Reed’s happy housewife character.

And, I always thought It’s A Wonderful Life was about Good versus Evil (Jimmy Stewart’s struggle against the mean and greedy Big Banker).

If the feminists don’t like this film it’s probably because they’re rooting for evil.