News You Can Use: How to Avoid Becoming the P-Word

Pajama Boy

Searching my memory bank, I’m sure that the first place I ever heard the use of the term “pusillanimous” was from Sylvester the Cat on Looney Tunes cartoons. Pusillanimous is a $5 word which our parents and grandparents grew up understanding because their education was focused on vocabulary lessons, not intersectional gender ideology. I will admit that while I heard Sylvester say pusillanimous as a child, it wast until I was in Junior High that I learned the true definition; that is to be fearful, cowardly, weak, or afraid to take risks. 

In 21st century America, after decades of destruction of our education system and the acceptance of think-speak, I’m willing to bet money that the majority of those masquerading as adults believe the use of the term “pussy” is a reference to the slang term for the female sex organ. Those who still have a grasp on the English language understand that the P-word is actually the slang usage for a person who behaves in a pusillanimous manner or who displays pusillanimous qualities. 

3 Methods to Keep Your Son from Becoming a Pussy

When I first wrote the piece, “3 Methods to Prevent Your Son from Becoming a Pussy”, I had no idea what was to come and the psychological trauma and damage that would be deliberately done to our children through the government-endorsed and sponsored, media-driven non-stop fear campaign that was, and continues to be, the COVID worldwide psyop.

Unsurprisingly, numerous studies are emerging that detail the long-lasting psychological trauma and damage that has been done to our children thanks to the continuous fear campaign that we subjected them to over a period of years. What’s most insidious is that mental health experts knew what was going to happen based on history, but we did it anyway.

The original intent of the piece was to address the dangerous societal pattern of weakening our sons, who are supposed to be our future leaders, by coddling them, attempting to remove any and all difficulties and disappointments from their lives, and generally feminizing boys. Holy cow…look where we are today. Helping our sons to grow into strong, confident young men is even more critical a topic than it was even a short decade ago. 

Using Kindle

What we at Student the Gun have undertaken is a strategy to offer our decades of informational and educational content and make it easily and inexpensively available to a wide audience. The tools we are using is Amazon Kindle and the KindleUnlimited program which allows subscribers to access a nearly incalculable amount of printed works for one monthly fee. 

We are calling this series of Kindle Short works “The Tactical Thesis” and at press time there are two pieces live, with many more to come. As these words are being typed, “The Science of Sight: Using Red Dots and Iron Sights Day and Night” is currently the #1 New Release in the Amazon “Sport Shooting” category. 

If you have KindleUnlimited, you can download and read these “shorts” for free. If you don’t, they will set you back all of 99¢.   

 

Paul G. Markel is a combat decorated United States Marine veteran. He is also the founder of Student the Gun University and has been teaching Small Arms & Tactics to military personnel, police officers, and citizens for over three decades.   

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9 thoughts on “News You Can Use: How to Avoid Becoming the P-Word”

  1. “little boys are made up of snips and snails and puppy dogs’ tails. The little girls are made up of sugar and spice, but everyone is nice.”

    The above is not how I heard it 70 or so years ago(I am 82).
    My mother used to say: boys are made of snails and puppy dog tails and little girls are made of sugar and spice and Everything Nice.

    Snips was not in the quote nor was EVERYONE!

      1. Peegee's Ghost

        Hey, the only way I can even get a comment to display nowadays is to use a different name than the one I’ve used for ten years, and use a different email. Pretty much be a different person for the WordPress goblins. I’ve found the hard way that the content of my posts doesn’t seem to matter as much as I used to think it did.

    1. “Aggressive boys are toxic.”

      And that is driving them to us on election day.

      So we must encourage them to keep doing just that…

  2. I have used the term “wuss puss” for years. My children all knew what it meant. Kids today are so intent on being what in their mind is “radical”, that they don’t examine all the facts, just the ones that make them mad.

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