Andrew Tate: Why Weak Men Can’t Lead, Love, or Be Trusted.
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Andrew Tate: Weakness Makes Men Useless in Love, Leadership, and Life Andrew Tate delivers a powerful critique of weakness, framing it as the root of failure in leadership, love, and loyalty. He argues that men are valued based on their utility—their ability to protect, provide, and lead. Without strength, a man has no utility and, consequently, no love or respect. “If you don’t have any strengths or you’re not strong, you don’t have any kind of utility,” Tate explains. “If you love anybody, you’re going to try and become strong.” Strength, he insists, is not just about physical power; it’s about the ability to stand firm under pressure, make tough decisions, and resist external threats. Weakness, on the other hand, is a liability that ruins relationships, betrays friends, and fails to uphold values. “There’s no nobility in being weak and a loser,” he says bluntly. Tate draws a direct link between strength and love, explaining that only strong men can truly protect their loved ones, lead their communities, and defend their countries. Weak men, he adds, crumble under pressure, cave in during challenges, and betray those they care about when the stakes are high. For Tate, strength is the cornerstone of being a good man. Without it, you can’t be a great leader, a loyal friend, or a dependable partner. His message is clear: if you truly care about someone, you’ll work on becoming strong—not just for yourself, but for them. In his words, “Weakness is the most disgusting quality a man could have.” If you truly loved, You'd never be tired. You COULDN'T be weak. Your strength is a direct reflection of your ability to love. If you truly loved, you'd become as capable as humanly possible as a testament to that love. -- Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices