Deadlier than the male
American Thinker,
by
Bob Weir
Original Article
Posted By: Hazymac,
5/31/2026 7:11:14 AM
We often hear and read about men brutalizing women, and it is a national disgrace that so many women live their lives in terror. I’ve written many times about the battering situations I came across as a police officer in NYC.
But there’s another type of battering I’ve witnessed, albeit not nearly as often: women brutalizing men.
While working a tour in Brooklyn one night, my partner and I were summoned to an apartment to handle an assault in progress. When we arrived and climbed a few flights of stairs, we heard moaning sounds coming from behind an open door of one of the rooms. Other occupants
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Reply 1 - Posted by:
Lazyman 5/31/2026 7:22:49 AM (No. 2110810)
Good thing it worked out all right because in NYC they jail the cop if it goes sideways and the "taxpayer' gets hurt.
7 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
privateer 5/31/2026 8:02:56 AM (No. 2110829)
Should have blasted the beast. Jeez Sarge,. she was coming at me with that stuff, I had to shoot her! If the Libs put him on trial, put the damaged man on the stand.
7 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
Highlander 5/31/2026 8:14:35 AM (No. 2110835)
There’s a reason for that expression, “Deadlier than the male.” There’s something truly perverse about certain females who exceed even the most brutal males in their violence. We know about the female camp guards in WWII.
9 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
Hazymac 5/31/2026 8:26:45 AM (No. 2110841)
La Madrina aka the Godmother, Griselda Blanco of the Medellin Cartel, was one of the chief players in the cocaine 'Eighties. Yes, any of the big coke dealers would kill for any reason. Griselda would kill because she enjoyed killing. The others in the cocaine business feared her more than anyone else. She had no limits, and she loved to see the terror in their eyes just before they were murdered. Somehow, she managed to get out of prison, deported back to Colombia. When she was 69, two young fellows came by on a motorbike and shot her to death. The bloody Griselda had it coming. (If you can believe it, her fourth son, Michael Corleone Blanco, the only one of her sons not murdered, is an inspiring Christian. May the Lord protect him.)
8 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
Bassman1911 5/31/2026 8:31:03 AM (No. 2110845)
There is a segment of our population (13%) that is not evolved enough yet to join civilized society. Send them back.
11 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
groover 5/31/2026 8:57:48 AM (No. 2110856)
To paraphrase Shakespeare,
He’ll hath no fury like a psycho woman. Women never forget and sooner or later, you have to sleep. 😏
7 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
zephyrgirl 5/31/2026 9:23:28 AM (No. 2110870)
I have a friend whose sister tried to strangle her many years ago. Her father tried to get her to reconcile with her sister many times. My friend understandably refused every time including when the sister was dying with cancer. She's never regretted it and to this day struggles with PTSD from the experience. Some people aren't worth the air they breathe.
7 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
LC Chihuahua 5/31/2026 9:38:16 AM (No. 2110875)
Not all women are nurturing. There are monsters among us. Some more obvious than others.
7 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
Sunhan65 5/31/2026 10:34:44 AM (No. 2110912)
OP is a gent, and I really try to be. I was raised you don't hit girls. I had two sisters growing up, and had some trouble with this, because they were very often hitting and kicking me. That didn't seem fair, since one of them was 2 years older and bigger and kicked hard. With that in mind....
Some years back, a football player was filmed in an elevator knocking his girlfriend out. It was treated as egregious abuse. What I saw was a crazy woman haranguing him inside the elevator and then coming at him with intent to strike. What I saw was a guy open hand slapping her in self-defense, knocking her cold. The fact that she fell and lay unconscious across the open door of the elevator while it kept closing on her repeatedly, made me laugh.
She was fine, and he was fined. After she regained consciousness, she recovered her composure and did everything in her power to explain that it wasn't his fault. It didn't matter.
I get it. We are generally stronger, and men are by nature designed to inflict and endure damage in ways that women often are not. However, it is a double standard, and there are far too many women who get to spend their lives acting like children, saying and doing things in public that would get me punched out. When they finally do push the wrong man's buttons the wrong way, he's the one who gets in trouble.
Reverse the roles in this story, and the man is dead on the floor of the apartment a few seconds after he doesn't put down the dangerous item he's holding, and the woman holding her face on the floor is in the emergency room getting the treatment she desperately need. That's what should have happened here. One less dumb destructive dangerous female feral running around wild, and a poor victim gets medical help sooner.
6 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
DVC 5/31/2026 10:51:24 AM (No. 2110924)
It's a shame that they didn't shoot her.
7 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
Hazymac 5/31/2026 10:51:54 AM (No. 2110926)
Re #9: I agree with everything you wrote. If life's vicissitudes led me to have to shoot a woman to save my own life, that necessity would haunt me forever, even if I was 100% in the right. Years ago, I told a policeman friend that if one of the FBI's top ten wanted broke down my front door and came after me with the intention to kill me--and I killed him, whether by baseball bat or pistol--my self defense would leave a permanent scar on my soul. No decent person wants to kill another person. To have to do so is almost as bad for the defender as it was for the deceased assailant.
6 people like this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
Sunhan65 5/31/2026 11:10:22 AM (No. 2110933)
Not to divert into chatting, #11, but I've wrestled with the same thing ever since I got my first concealed carry permit (yes, also signed by Charles A. Bronson).
When I lived in South Africa, this was not a theoretical possibility. Murderous crime was a daily reality. I had a weapon in my apartment and carried it with me whenever I was outside. What it came down to for me, was this, there were imminently foreseeable circumstances where the only thing that would keep me and those I care about alive was killing somebody else.
So I did everything in my power to avoid those circumstances. Steel cage on the stairways leading up to my apartment; tempered steel plating on the wooden elevator door that opened into the foyer. Avoided certain areas after dark, and other areas all together.
The reason I imposed that self discipline was the same reason you gave with two added concerns. By carrying a firearm, I had assumed the moral responsibility to use it, and kill or die, rather than surrender it to a killer. That was an absolute for me. I made a conscious and emphatic decision that I would never arm someone who would harm others.
The second concern worried me even more. If I was forced to kill someone, there were two possibilities. It would either haunt me for the rest of my life in a way that would make everything I did less happy from that day forward.
Or it wouldn't.
And I honestly wasn't sure which it would be, or which would be worse.
7 people like this.
Reply 13 - Posted by:
mc squared 5/31/2026 1:15:16 PM (No. 2110978)
Anyone whose watched even a few cop videos knows that certain women will stop at nothing while yelling: 'I ain't restistin. "I'm pregnant. I can't breave...... Some men, but 90% of the trouble is women. usually requiring 3 sets of cuffs.
3 people like this.
Reply 14 - Posted by:
DVC 5/31/2026 1:35:48 PM (No. 2110985)
I used to shoot with a guy who was a Belgian soldier when he was 19 and 20, many hears before. He fought in the "Belgian Congo". I asked about his experiences over dinner a few times. He had a few harrowing stories but one comment has stuck with me he said "We learned to shoot the women first".
My younger, more naive self was surprised at this ("don't hit girls" being deeply ingrained). I asked why shoot women first?
He said, "We hesitated at first and lost a few troopers. Eventually we learned to shoot the women first. They were the most vicious. We learned that they were the torturers of prisoners."
I have never been in combat, hope to go to my grave never having shot anyone, but I am armed and I try to read and listen to those who "have been there and done that" to learn. I'd probably hesitate a bit on shooting a woman, even though I realize that this could be a serious error.
I hope it is not something that I ever have to do. But I do carry a gun and intend to defend myself if forced into it. Clearly, some women are extremely vicious.
6 people like this.
Reply 15 - Posted by:
nelsonted1 5/31/2026 2:11:36 PM (No. 2111002)
An associate was in a precarious situation with full-on violence. He stayed four years because of their child. Things were so outrageous a psychologist he'd never met called him two or more times a week to talk him into leaving. Finally, one day he called the psychologist and said she was going to kill him that night after work. He said to go to the police which he did.
After leaving he went to a psychologist for years. One day he walked and said the newest statement says it all: I'm lucky I was born a girl. I couldn't get away with half the things I do if I were a man!".
The psychologist she'd been trying to understand her bizarre behavior from the start. She said she was a game player! Except the game escalates until someone is a tragedy.
3 people like this.
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