Read up ancient Greek philosophers and you will see what they say were very Red Pill as well. Even ancient tales and stories were very dark and gritty and filled with Red Pill lessons. Take Illiad for example. It is a tale of how female beauty can cause men to go fully retarded and destroy themselves in the tens of thousands. Or the Epic of Gilgamesh where the Goddess Ishtar tries to tempt Gilgamesh from his tasks (this same theme is present in Herakles).

Even fairy tales during the Middle Ages were somewhat like that. The original tale of Hunchback of Notre Dame where there was no happy endings. Or in the original Little Mermaid where there was no happy feel-good ending. Or even Peter Pan where J.M. Barrie talks about how women in Europe at the time had hots and were wet for Napoleon who was the big boy thug emperor of his time. If you doubt me pick up an original unabridged copy of the Peter Pan. If you can, try to get hold of the original unabridged version of Grimm's Fairy Tales and see how dark and unforgiving its stories are.

It just goes to show how the ancients, despite their lack of knowledge compared to us, were far more honest and upfront about what they actually knew...Unlike us today, where we know a lot, but censor it out of fear of causing offence or something stupid like that...

Consciously, or unconsciously, directly or indirectly by one, two, three, or more degrees of separation of true purpose - the attainment of women is the reason why there are pyramids, a polio vaccine, a flag on the moon, Navier-Stokes equations, silicon doping, twist-off caps, Petronas towers, and vulcanised rubber. After securing shelter, air, water, and food, this is the reason why men 'do'. This primeval link is often buried in the psyche - obfuscated by our belief systems, culture and language but this is why we do more. Otherwise, most of us would do with living in a figurative cardboard box.