National Feminism

National Feminism, also known as Feminazi(sm), is a totalitarian, far-right ideology that has characteristics from National Socialism, such as anti-Semitism and ethnic cleansing of the "Untermensch". However, it is operated under the rule of women. They persecute (((men))) and (((patriarchs))) from their space, because they were considered the "Untermensch", so that women can become the dominant gender.

Personality and Behaviour
National Feminism is generally anti-Semitic, racist and is violent towards communists, Jews and men alike. She wishes about a world where men doesn't exist.

How to Draw

 * 1) Draw a ball,
 * 2) Fill in with pink (#DB5268),
 * 3) Draw a white (#FFFFFF) circle in the center,
 * 4) Draw, in the middle of the circle, a black (#141414) Venus symbol (♀),
 * 5) Draw a black swastika inside the Venus symbol,
 * 6) Draw the eyes,
 * 7) Draw a white bow on Feminazi's head and

You're done!

Friends

 * [[File:Radfem.png]] Radical Feminism - Yes, kill the men! KILL 'EM ALL!
 * [[File:Nazi.png]] National Socialism - The [[File:Zio.png]]Jews and the [[File:ML.png]]Communists don't deserve to live.

Frenemies

 * [[File:Fem.png]] Feminism - Women are the supreme race, but we need to kill the undesirables.
 * [[File:Fash.png]] Fascism - I like your ideas, but those men need to die.

Enemies

 * [[File:Pat.png]] Patriarchy and [[File:Mansphere.png]] Masculism - Off to the gas chambers to go!
 * [[File:Zio.png]] Zionism - Your state? Annexed. Your people? Gassed.
 * [[File:ML.png]] Marxism–Leninism - Fascism is the new type of Utopia. GET OVER IT, COMMUNIST SCUM.
 * [[File:Trans.png]] Trans people - DISGUSTING PERVERTED MEN AND TRAITOROUS WOMEN WHO NEED TO BE GASSED!

Further Information

 * Feminism and Nationalism in the Third World
 * Divided sisterhood? Nationalist feminism and feminist militancy in England and Ireland
 * The Disturbing Rise of ‘Femonationalism’
 * Should feminism transcend nationalism? A defense of feminist nationalism in South Korea
 * Feminist nationalist social movements: Beyond universalism and towards a gendered cultural relativism
 * Feminism and Nationalism in India, 1917-1947
 * The Possibility of Nationalist Feminism