I've been working on two articles: one about the myths of the male sex and the other about individuality. You may see one or both of them someday... but we'll see. Before that, I want to talk about some things which may actually help you - if you let them.
At first, you'll likely find that what I'm about to present disturbing or some other deference. Recognize that your objections are just deferrals and that you are masking the real reasons for which you are objecting to the material, this is because your mind is too puny to want to face what is being presented. Much like a heavy weight, it could be hard to handle unless you are experienced at doing such things. Also: like the heavy weight it may leave you sore and feeling beat up, after which time you recover, you will become stronger and more resilient.
Don't suck: do.
Go to: metanoia-films.org and watch the documentary film "The Power Principle". It is, in it's entirety, five-ish hours long. I suppose some may say it's long: deal with it.
Many people will have shallow objections, such as myself: "I think Noam Chomsky is a communist" etc. My objection is irrelevant and he is only a small part of the film. The film could even be called 'leftist' perhaps. If you watch their film 'Psywar' you'll notice such discriminations are in fact manufactured, complete with requisite emotionality, to control how you perceive your world; an old Nazi technique. Don't fall in the trap - in Zen we recognize the simple fact that despite what we 'think', reality is already perfect and your criticisms are just illusions. It is, after all, only information.
I want you, reader, to absorb said information because it may enable you to recognize some of the ideas I have been presenting on this blog more readily because, put simply, most of you can't comprehend what you read to an extent that will enable the cognition demanded by the style in which I write. My 'fault' I'm sure.
Further to that I want you to read, or listen to, Robert Heinlein's 'Stranger in a Strange Land' so that you may file the information away for review and eventually: grok it in fullness.
I can offer some respite to the animalism exhibited by mankind in the film: humans who act in these ways are weak and that makes them afraid. When a person acts from a place of fear-weakness-fear (not a typo) they are what is called 'xenophobic', lashing out at any and all things possibly threatening. For instance: the most vicious animal is an injured one and the sad and bizarre reality is that it is likely these people were sexually abused as children. A more likely scenario than most would be willing to admit: some audits present the alarming fact that far from being abnormal; one in four children are raped. Given this disturbing fact it is likely that, to some extent, this accounts for where we get military personnel, police, politicians, drunks and drugs addicts from. Worse, due to a trauma control mechanism implanted deep within the mental apparatus of the human organism, very early childhood traumas are usually completely or at least almost irretrievably suppressed.
The even more shocking fact is that from the people I have spoken with about this topic in person, it would seem that the number is much closer to one in two. My guess would be that the extreme examples cited above were the more extreme cases of abuse. Of course it all depends on how a persons innate and self developed coping mechanisms allow them to deal with traumatic events. But I have strayed off topic as I usually do.
Don't think, don't judge: just do. Then, with acceptance: grok.