Anita Sarkeesian–and Wikipedia–busted again
Despite amazingly disingenuous claims to the contrary, Wikipedia remains intractably corrupted–this time in defense of con artist Anita Sarkeesian.
Despite amazingly disingenuous claims to the contrary, Wikipedia remains intractably corrupted–this time in defense of con artist Anita Sarkeesian.
They say feminism has no power, or that it is about empowering the disempowered. Nowhere is this a more obvious lie than in Scandinavian countries.
Hateful Tumblr feminism has been the hub of most “social justice” activism online. Yuval Levental examines how this seems to be on the wane, and “social justice” discussions inclusive of men’s issues seem to be increasing on Reddit.
The Factual Feminist returns debunking more lies from The Sisterhood.
It’s that time of year again: the U.S. Open Tennis Championships have come. And once again, the sex discrimination is barely talked about. Robert Franklin takes a look.
Archi Desai grew up in the slums of London in the 1970s and experienced horrific racism and discrimination. Today he sees that same type of discrimination but not based on race, but rather on the human worth of men and boys in general.
Sometimes, it’s easier to tell the world what happened to us through writing.
“We’ll protect you poor helpless victims!” says the gaming press. But that’s only further stoking the fires of rage from people of the “victim class” the Social Justice warriors claim to be speaking for. Vincent James has more.
Clint Carpentier muses and speculates on what being “nice” really is, and what it means in women and what it means in men.
“I wish feminism were as powerful as they say” is the frequent refrain of those who deny its influence in government. In Sweden, it’s an increasingly laughable question.