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>He knows he’s being misogynistic and he knows wrestling culture will allow that to happen because there are current employees in the company that have not paid for what they did. The Women’s Revolution is dead, and it’s because it just lived as some boost to women’s wrestling in weekly programming, rather than a door to explore what more you could do with them. After all, the culture never changed, therefore fans’ perception of women’s wrestling didn’t change either. That‘s why we’re having a storm of viral posts of female wrestlers in slowed-down videos that have a lot of creeps expressing their fantasies like it’s okay to do because for WWE it is. They’re encouraging it because that’s the only way they know how to make women’s wrestling popular. And this goes for AEW, too. If you call yourself a women’s wrestling supporter, you’ll recognize the red flags both companies have concerning their divisions, and you’ll be able to criticize and reclaim a better treatment for your favorites and your favorites’ contemporaries, too. I wish for a better industry for women as a whole, but I admit that seems impossible for many reasons I have already discussed and many more that we as wrestling fans have to discuss. I don’t want to hear about fans leaving the wrestling fandom or having bad experiences in live shows. I don’t want to read the most disgusting and specific tweets about how a female wrestler shouldn’t complain about a guy taking a picture of her without her consent because “she’s allowing it,” and I don’t want to see any of the Twitter accounts that just do AI pics of female wrestlers.