

“Harry Styles is plenty manly, because manly is whatever you want it to be,” said Jamil. “Lord of the Rings” star Elijah Wood responded that “Masculinity alone does not make a man,” later adding, “In fact, it’s got nothing to do with it.” His words echo similar responses arguing that Owens’ idea of manliness is based on cultural expectations created over time, not anything inherent to manhood. Several celebrities, such as Olivia Wilde, Zach Braff and Jameela Jamil, also chimed in. On Monday, fans quickly defended Styles and his decision to express himself through clothing, making the topic trend on Twitter. In the west, the steady feminization of our men at the same time that Marxism is being taught to our children is not a coincidence. There is no society that can survive without strong men. “There is no society that can survive without strong men,” Owens tweeted. In her post on Saturday, Owens quote tweeted Vogue Magazine’s photos from Harry Styles’ cover shoot to voice concern over the feminization of men.

It seems like I can’t even open Twitter without seeing a slobbering media reporter breaking news of a massive book deal for a political D-lister who I can’t even imagine having five minutes’ worth of questions for, much less 300 pages’ worth of interest in.Celebrities and fans alike rallied to defend Harry Styles on Monday in response to a negative tweet about the artist from conservative author Candace Owens. Did you hear that Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett is writing a book? Have you preordered Kellyanne Conway’s memoir? Does your book club have Mike Pence’s forthcoming title on its calendar yet? How about the highly anticipated insight into Big Tech, from Senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri-born undergraduate history major who has never worked in big tech, but was, for a span, a lawyer who specialized in defending religious liberty? What if I told you that the book will almost certainly contain a chapter whining about how people are always trying to cancel him?Ĭould any of these books possibly compare to what has come before, the giants of the genre? Like, say, the Twain-esque turns of phrase in the written work of America’s sweetheart Sarah Huckabee Sanders? What about the instant classic that Omarosa wrote? Could anything match the thrills and chills of The Room Where It Happened, wherein John Bolton took 592 pages to observe that Donald Trump was a bad president? It’s a surprise he didn’t borrow the title Infinite Jest instead.
