New Year's wishes from AVfM
As 2012 draws to a close and 2013 arrives, Paul Elam offers some New Year’s wishes and some important words of thanks to those who have contributed great things to the MRM and to A Voice for Men.
As 2012 draws to a close and 2013 arrives, Paul Elam offers some New Year’s wishes and some important words of thanks to those who have contributed great things to the MRM and to A Voice for Men.
As the Land of Oz more and more lands on the heads of the men who live in that nation, the Sydney Morning Herald has come up with a list of the top 20 voices for continuing on that path. They are all feminists.
Feminism has three primary strongholds from which they are able to produce feminist governance. The mainstream media, politics and, very importantly, academe. Jim Muldoon reports on their slipping grip in the latter.
The nation of India may be the most man hating country on the planet. AVfM now reaches out to the men and women of that region, asking them to step forward and share with the world what is happening there.
Scholar Robert St. Estephe returns with an essay on a psychiatric disorder not likely to be formally recognized in medical journals any time soon–but probably ought to be, considering how long it’s been around.
Lucian Vâlsan examines the growing trend of utilizing chemical castration in as a response to alleged pedophilia in a number of European countries. As it expected, the laws target men only.
Tom Matlack of the Good Men Project has found himself in the hot seat with almost all of his former feminist allies. He is posturing through the crises, but it looks to Paul Elam more like he is cutting a deal.
The Good Men Project has been busy rewriting its own history to purge articles by uppity women who have now been judged guilty of WrongThink. We aim to correct that censorship.
Even while shock waves from the horrific events at the Sandy Hook School were reverberating through a shocked nation, feminist ideologues wasted no time in offering sexist and racist explanations for the tragedy. TDOM returns.
The Swedish government, the Swedish press and certainly Swedish feminists, all have the same brag. Sweden is the most equal country in the world. Lucian Valsan forces us to ask a question, though. Just what are they smoking?