It's a woman's world, and we're not safer
A discussion on how the feminization of Europe is weakening its moral, political, cultural and social foundations.
POLITICS
Jota
10/17/20254 min read


Hello everyone, welcome to the blog.
Today I want to talk about something that I think most people can see, especially if you live in Europe — but not only in Europe. The world is changing, and not necessarily for the better. Especially if you are a man, you probably sense it deep down. The qualities that used to be appreciated, valued, and nurtured in the Western world are now considered flaws, even sins. Strength, decisiveness, courage, and conviction — all of these things that once built our civilization — are now met with suspicion, mockery, or punishment.
What used to be expected of men fifty years ago is now despised. Despite all this endless talk about patriarchy, I honestly believe that Europe is no longer patriarchal at all. It is a matriarchy — not in the sense of women literally running everything, but in the sense that feminine values and priorities dominate every sphere of our culture. The things that shape our politics, our laws, our education, and our social norms are no longer truth, duty, and order, but emotion, inclusion, and empathy. And this is not to say that matriarchy is inherently bad, but without balance and out of its place, it becomes unnatural. Any society ruled primarily by emotional imperatives — and yes, that includes societies ruled by women — will eventually self-destruct. That is exactly what is happening in Europe, and I don’t think it is accidental.
All around us, truth is being replaced by something else. Justice is being replaced by something else. And the irony, of course, is that this new, feminized world is supposed to make us safer — yet it has done the opposite. We’ve been told for years that this softer, more compassionate Europe would be a better place. That men should adopt more feminine virtues and traits. That by replacing authority with empathy and judgement with understanding, we would create harmony and safety. But what we’ve created instead is confusion. What we’ve built is a culture where feelings override facts, where moral conviction is treated as cruelty, and where the worst thing you can do is hurt someone’s feelings — even if what you’re saying is true. We now live in a world where we can be punished for words more harshly than others are punished for crimes. Where silent prayer near an abortion clinic is considered a criminal offense. Where people are prosecuted for tweets while those who celebrate the deaths of others face no real consequences. The new moral order doesn’t punish evil; it punishes dissent.
And then we look at our justice system. Years of grooming gang scandals across Britain showed us what happens when a nation is governed by fear rather than truth. For decades, thousands of young girls were systematically abused by men from cultural backgrounds that treat women as inferior, and yet the authorities said nothing. They knew, but they were afraid — afraid of being called racist, afraid of being labeled xenophobic, afraid of looking “unkind.” This is what happens in a feminized society. The truth becomes secondary to how it makes people feel. Justice is silenced for the sake of appearances. In today’s moral climate, telling the truth is more dangerous than committing the crime. The people in charge are more afraid of being called bigots, racist or xenophobes than they are of the harm done to their own citizens. Police stay quiet. Journalists soften their language. Politicians apologize to “communities” rather than to victims. We have replaced courage with cowardice and disguised it as compassion.
This is what I call the virtue trap — a society obsessed with looking good instead of doing good. Our leaders, pundits, and commentators are far more concerned with appearing moral than with fixing anything. They care more about their public image than the real suffering of their people. The performance of virtue has replaced virtue itself. Everyone wants to be seen as kind, as tolerant, as progressive. But no one wants to confront evil, because confrontation requires strength, and strength has been declared a sin.
Empathy, when grounded in truth, is a noble thing. But empathy without responsibility is indulgence. It is moral vanity — the feeling of being good without actually doing good. Many people, especially women, are naturally inclined to care for the downtrodden, and that’s beautiful on a personal and familial level. But when that instinct becomes the foundation of national policy, it turns suicidal and dangerous. Criminals, illegal migrants, and radicals are rebranded as “the oppressed.” Their crimes are explained away, their actions excused, their accountability erased. But being a criminal is not an identity — it’s a choice. And when a society forgets that, it stops protecting the innocent and starts protecting the guilty. We now live in a Europe that feels pity for rapists, compassion for murderers, and outrage toward anyone who dares to tell the truth about them. That’s not moral progress. That’s decay disguised as empathy.
The result of all this is not greater safety or justice — it’s chaos. Women and children are more vulnerable than ever. Law-abiding citizens live in fear of saying the wrong thing, while actual criminals walk free. Culture is eroding, traditions are being dismantled, and even faith itself is being criminalized. In the United Kingdom, people have been arrested for silently praying — for standing still and thinking. Think about that. A society that punishes prayer but excuses sexual predators is a society that has lost its soul.
Europe doesn’t need to return to cruelty or tyranny. It needs God. Mercy must exist alongside truth. Compassion must stand with justice. Feelings cannot rule over facts. A civilization built on sentiment cannot survive because feelings change, but truth does not. The Europe we live in today — feminized, sentimental, terrified of its own shadow — is not safer. It is weaker, confused, and collapsing from within. And until we have the courage to value truth above emotion, to call things by their real names again, and to stop being afraid of being “offensive,” no amount of empathy will save us. What we are witnessing now is not just a cultural decline—it’s divine consequence. This is God allowing Europe to reap what it has sown. For generations, it has enjoyed peace and prosperity, and in that comfort, it forgot its roots. As faith faded, so did clarity. The throne that once belonged to God is now empty, and a thousand false ideologies are fighting to take His place. Where it once was “God, king, and country,” now there is only confusion. We no longer know what a man is, what a woman is, what a nation is, or even what good and evil mean. And until we fill that vacuum with truth again—with God again—Europe will continue to drift deeper into the darkness it chose for itself. God bless and see you on the next post!