Mens’ Rights vs Feminist Rape Culture explained using Puzzle Pieces
False Rape statistics in a nutshell
False Rape statistics in a nutshell
Have you ever heard a woman say she was keeping her vagina on hold for that “one special guy”? Not so fast, says Typhonblue, who takes a look at hookup culture through the lens of human sociobiology. Her explanation is so simple, even a monkey could get it.
Men’s Human Rights Advocates seek to bring awareness about men’s vulnerabilities in a society driven largely by feminist narratives. Alison Tieman explains the dynamics in this video with the help of a few magnets.
Typhonblue takes a hard look at the relative social value of the limp dicks of the world, and posits the case that sexual dis-interest might be what stimulates change in what sometimes feels like a long, hard rod, *** ahem road.
“The One Good Man sees all other men as feckless, immoral, weak, beneath him. The One Good Man is good because he knows he is the only good man. He is special.” These are the words of Alison Tieman, who gives us some brilliant insight into the nature of “good” men, or at least those who obsess on making that claim.
International Conference on Men’s Issues for 2019
Men’s Human Rights Advocates seek to bring awareness about men’s vulnerabilities in a society driven largely by feminist narratives. Alison Tieman explains the dynamics in this video with the help of a few magnets.
False Rape statistics in a nutshell
Men’s Rights activists seek to bring awareness to how men are acted upon by society, acted upon by other men and acted upon by women. They are opposed by feminists who think that bringing attention to how men are acted upon will take something away from women. Alison Tieman explains the dynamics in this video with the help of a few magnets.
“The Raw Story” is misnamed, and should really be called “The Slightly Cooked Story.” It should also be called “The Self-Loathing Misogynyist’s Magazine,” as Alison Tieman recently discovered.