Have you seen the whole interview?While it's fair to look at someone who has experience, I'm inclined to think that a divorce lawyer will have a biased selection: his professional experience will be with divorces - not happy marriages. This can easily lead to becoming jaded and cynical. In my opinion, this is unhelpful.
Yes, he might have some nuance in there. I haven't seen all of it, but my personal takeaway is that he is mostly jaded and cynical about marriage. As an example, he says this near the end at 58 minutes:Have you seen the whole interview?
He talks a lot about love, the burden of routine, how small things matter, how to not let a marriage fail, how people behave when they start to check out, etc, etc.
Q: How many marriages are genuinely happy - how many married couples?
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A: Here's what I'll tell you. I know a lot of people and I think I know one couple that has like a genuinely happy marriage.
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Marriage is like the lottery you are probably not going to win.
...
I've met hundreds if not thousands of couples, and I've met one that is legitimately happy. ... Buy the ticket I guess, but don't make that your retirement plan.
Is he wrong?Yes, he might have some nuance in there. I haven't seen all of it, but my personal takeaway is that he is mostly jaded and cynical about marriage. As an example, he says this near the end at 58 minutes:
I haven’t watched the whole video yet but about that, the social context is what matters. If there’s any kind of social or religious promotion of stable marriages, that usually improves the odds drastically. Whereas if she can just go file for divorce, get an absurdly generous settlement, and get moral support from her friend group for her decision (Sex and the City style) then there is little incentive for her to stay if she gets even a bit unhappy.Is he wrong?
Are you really saying that getting legally married (especially without an enforceable prenup, like most guys do) is a good idea for a man in 2023?
Which is basically how the western society works today...Whereas if she can just go file for divorce, get an absurdly generous settlement, and get moral support from her friend group for her decision (Sex and the City style) then there is little incentive for her to stay if she gets even a bit unhappy.
I think you have to watch the whole video for context, the dude is actually no jaded... I gave it to my main to watch due to the positive aspects on the video, there are some things in there on relationships dynamics that I found positive and valuable. She thought it was red pill Tate stuff cause she didn't watch the whole thing... watch the whole video...Yes, he might have some nuance in there. I haven't seen all of it, but my personal takeaway is that he is mostly jaded and cynical about marriage. As an example, he says this near the end at 58 minutes:
He gives a somewhat masculine viewpoint...yet very balanced and fair to both sidesI think you have to watch the whole video for context, the dude is actually no jaded... I gave it to my main to watch due to the positive aspects on the video, there are some things in there on relationships dynamics that I found positive and valuable. She thought it was red pill Tate stuff cause she didn't watch the whole thing... watch the whole video...
No she just watched a portion which is my point...most people didn't watch the whole thing...she ain't Disney...He gives a somewhat masculine viewpoint...yet very balanced and fair to both sides
Even said at some point that he was not a good husband....but is a great ex-husband lol
Although that kind of honest talk is kinda of a front assault on women's Disney tbh
Maybe this is why your girl didn't like it
He's been doing it 20 years. I've been teaching pickup 20 plus and when I meet people new to it they don't know a thing. People teaching it 10 years can't sit and coherently talk about it like this guy for an hour. They'll struggle to fill a 10 minutes podcast interview. He doesn't seem angry (jaded or cynical) in any form, he has really coherent insights he can articulate well. Counter points are fairly childish in comparison.While it's fair to look at someone who has experience, I'm inclined to think that a divorce lawyer will have a biased selection: his professional experience will be with divorces - not happy marriages. This can easily lead to becoming jaded and cynical. In my opinion, this is unhelpful.
Yes, he might have some nuance in there. I haven't seen all of it, but my personal takeaway is that he is mostly jaded and cynical about marriage. As an example, he says this near the end at 58 minutes:
Please doI didn't watch much of the video so I can't comment on the rest,
This is irrelevant tbhbut I noticed he's doing the rounds on the red-pill side of youtube.
Marriage was never about happiness, or success vs fail, or personal fulfillment
G-zus if guys still believe it
It's a contract about raising a family while you are (mostly) sure the kids are yours
And in our modern days, if you are not careful, it's a contract that can be voided an raped by the government 100% IN HER FAVOR
If you don't want to raise a family, you don't need to be married
Heck, you are probably better off staying single forever if you don't want kids
Simple as that
NopeDivorce happens because of the the inability to lead people.
Except it goes wrongAnd most guys are utterly useless at leading or influencing anybody (least of all themselves). That's why, for most people, society needs to provide a harness for them that makes it very difficult for anything to go wrong.
Look at gun's commentThat's the thing, the large majority of people want to be parents and have kids. So I don't believe that much of the reason why marriages fail is due to people getting married out of ignorance that it's unnecessary.
Red pill has the right diagnostic....but the wrong medicationThat's why the red pill nonsense about 'spinning plates' forever and dumping her the first time she looks at you the wrong way is ultimately useless, it's only good if you want to be one of those guys that opt out of the race, and those guys are very much in the minority.
I don't think soSo the marriage problem is one the large majority of guys actively want to solve.
I think the overall number is north of 70%And considering that 50% of all first marriages don't end in divorce, I think it's pretty off the mark to go around saying that marriage is a lottery that you probably won't win.
Fair enoughI watched part of the video and wasn't too impressed, I'd probably rather watch someone who has coached a lot of marriages to success rather than someone whose wage is made when they fail. Nothing personal but he's not the guy I would pick as my coach.
Nope
Divorce happens because of biology (and it can be maximized by external factors)
Men and women were never meant to be long-term monogamous
You can lead your woman all you want...if she wants to cheat, she will...if she wants to go, she will... leading just prevents it will happen suddenly, but the risk is always there. Your own cat comment contradicts that statement.
Now add kids, routine, family, apps and government interventions into the mix and you have a recipe for disaster
Personally, I think it's sad really, because the fairy tale is really beautiful....but that's just reality
Except it goes wrong
All the time
I don't think so
If that was true, guys would just stop getting married until the system is fixed
The raw number is partly misleading as it’s just the ratio of new marriages to new divorces and there are demographic changes happening. Per capita rate is normal for Europe.Divorce rates in Portugal are 94%.