Facts…why men rush to social media to bash Klay Thompson and Russell Wilson. pic.twitter.com/7O3U0642rm — Fck_Yaya🎧✍️🏾 (@FckYaya) November 20, 20
Facts…why men rush to social media to bash Klay Thompson and Russell Wilson. pic.twitter.com/7O3U0642rm
— Fck_Yaya🎧✍️🏾 (@FckYaya) November 20, 2025
He’s calling out a truth many of us have watched for years:
Far too many men don’t learn how to be good men from good men.
They learn from the loudest, angriest voices in the room — the ones who mock kindness, belittle emotional maturity, and turn respect into something to be ashamed of.
Instead of honoring men like Klay Thompson or Russell Wilson — men who show up with steadiness, loyalty, generosity, emotional presence, and responsibility — some men rush online to label them “simps,” “soft,” or “weak.”
And that’s the point he’s making:
Calling good men “simps” is a tactic.
It’s a way to box women in…
to limit our choices…
to destroy positive examples…
and to leave us surrounded by only the men who benefit from chaos.
When good men are publicly shamed, minimized, or mocked, it does two things:
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It punishes men who treat women well.
It tells them: “If you love openly, support your partner, or respect boundaries — you will be ridiculed.” -
It cuts off women’s access to healthy men.
It keeps us in an ecosystem where the worst behavior is normalized and the best behavior is attacked.
This behavior isn’t random — it’s strategic.
It protects harmful men from accountability.
It keeps women unsure of what’s possible.
And it tries to convince the world that “good men don’t exist” because the men who do show up get targeted first.
This is emotional control.
This is social conditioning.
This is grooming healthy relationships out of existence.
And the truth is this:
A man who respects women threatens the entire hierarchy that harmful men depend on.
A man who shows tenderness, commitment, and integrity exposes what is possible — and what other men refuse to do.
So instead of learning from good men, insecure men destroy the example.
They tear down what they cannot live up to.
The goal is simple:
If women only see harmful men modeled, harmful men remain the only option.
But we are not fooled.
We know what true partnership looks like.
We know what love feels like when it’s not mixed with manipulation.
We know good men exist — and some of them are raising the bar in broad daylight.
