Call to Action for KSU Men
The idea of men’s issues groups in our colleges and universities is spreading. Sage Gerard, aka Victor Zen is now pushing ahead with a men’s issues group at Kennesaw State University. You can help.
The idea of men’s issues groups in our colleges and universities is spreading. Sage Gerard, aka Victor Zen is now pushing ahead with a men’s issues group at Kennesaw State University. You can help.
Efforts to bring Men’s Human Rights – equality – to Kennesaw State University in Georgia are hitting a few gynocentric roadblocks. Male students there are just too rapey and violent to even be allowed to socialize together.
Victor Zen brings us an update and makes an appeal for assistance with the project to continue to gather information on the signatories of WAM!’s ultimatum to the social Network site Facebook. Much work has been done, and Zen could use a hand finishing the project.
Thanks to the tireless efforts of Victor Zen and a handful of other activists, there appears to be emerging an answer to a rather sticky question about the recent efforts to censor pages on Facebook. Is there American tax dollars at play in the agenda to shape Facebook into a pro-feminist mouthpiece? The answer could be a resounding yes.
It’s time for action. The AVFM community has scrambled to look beyond the fine print of WAM!’s ultimatum to Facebook and into the signatories. You can help with this by participating with others in the A Voice for Men Forums. Let’s root out the conflict of interests and make an impact!
The feminists have decided that what has severely damaged the secular community, as well as many other places, is now good for Facebook. They are setting out to turn the entire environment there into one that must reflect feminist values. That means, MHRAs, they are coming after you.
There’s no question when writing comedy, there’s always a danger that you’ll offend someone. Nevertheless, sometimes what a culture thinks is funny, or not funny, says far more about that culture itself than it does about the nature of humor. It can tell us what we choose to see, and also what we choose not to see.
New writer Victor Zen has checked his privilege and hasn’t found it. He’s looked under his bed, in the fridge, everywhere. He invites feminists to come down from their velvet castles to help him look.