Quoted By:
>With all of this on the table, can you imagine destroying the progress you made? How many years of evolution and revolution could be lost if you ever truly cared about it in the first place? When the ones in charge of the Women’s Revolution are the most vocal personalities criticizing your management of both the movement and the future of women’s wrestling in the US, you should rethink how to expose wrestling fans to the best female wrestlers in the world without falling into stupid trends.
>You should reflect on your influence regarding how we treat women’s wrestling as a whole if you have the chance because these recent months have proved what I’m saying here: there’s no interest in protecting women in this industry. I’m not talking about wrestling at this point. It’s really hard for me to concentrate on the wrestling part when I see a storyline dealing with the same issues listed in a LAWSUIT against the company. And I know there will be people saying I’m mixing everything up to prove a point, but if you don’t see the importance of WWE treating Janel Grant as a joke everyone will forget in the discussion then you never cared about respecting women in the industry. Because of course, when you talk about the Women’s Revolution, you should start talking about how women have been treated in wrestling as workers, but then you’ll enter a territory of questioning how society has never given women what they deserve and what they should get. At the end of the day, this is like a domino in which pieces fall to reveal the real reason behind the death of such a movement.
>The answer is always misogyny.