@Panda:
Yeah, while I don't know that I'd go so far as to say I hate it, and I obviously am not qualified to give any sort of sociological analysis of it, I'd definitely say that, as is so often the case with these things, that's just as bad as the thing it's trying to take a stand against.
I mean, it's not without merit; it raises valid points, like the absurdity of feeling bitter about never being asked out when you never tried asking the person out yourself. But then, at other parts, it starts to read as more of an indictment against guys who happen to be more reserved, have 'nerdier' interests, or simply choose to live their life at a slower pace. Not intentionally, perhaps, but that is how it comes across nonetheless. Not to even touch where it gets into the nonsense about the continuing propagation of our species, and attacking the guy for trying to move away from his 'natural instincts' to impregnate women. That part's especially painful to read given the recent Supreme Court hearing on the issue of gay marriage, where I believe the representation for the side against made what amounts to the very same argument for why it should not be legalized.
So yeah, while I'm sure it was written with good intentions, in the end, it just missteps as much as anything else.
I'm not gonna bother to read her entire wall of text again (the person with neat hair in the image), but basically all I've taken it as when seeing it in the past is a display that girls can see through nice guys, assholes are just mislabeled and adventurous and stand their ground and girls like that. I never noticed it went off on those weird tangents of PROCREATION and you better spend your time like ~this~ if you hope to get laid. Still, getting out there and making mistakes and learning from them is of course valuable.
I get the same amount of enjoyment out of my nerdy hobbies as my non-nerdy ones. Although the nerdy ones hopelessly outnumber then non-"nerdy"!