A Call to Action: Women, Religion, Violence, and Power by Jimmy Carter (a review)
Former US president Jimmy Carter has written a book on women and gender that deserves two thumbs and several fingers down.
Former US president Jimmy Carter has written a book on women and gender that deserves two thumbs and several fingers down.
Despite attempts to wipe Chris Mackney’s existence from the public record, he will not be forgotten. Gregory Becker gives a moving tribute to a man he says did not suicide, but drowned.
As if men and boys did not already have enough problems. Tom Golden addresses the issue of endocrine disruptors. If you don’t know what the term means, we’re betting you won’t forget it after reading this.
Chris Mackney worked tirelessly to document and disseminate his personal legal nightmare in a family court. His final documentation was his suicide note. Now his former wife wants that document to fade away, just like the father of her children.
The AVfM community stepped up to help Kennesaw State University Men start a men’s issues group on campus. Sage Gerard (aka Victor Zen) has an update and tips for what others wanting to start men’s groups may want to check out.
The tragic shooting at Fort Hood was reported in mainstream media by a predictable line: heroic female cop brings an end to madman’s life. Michael Conzachi digs a bit deeper and asks questions that the media is yet to ask.
It has been said that a student at Queen’s University student was physically assaulted for being a vocal feminist. When will feminists help to find the brute who did this?
Our Iranian correspondent Ali Mehraspand looks at privileged Western Feminist assumptions about “women’s oppression” and proposes a counter-theory to “Patriarchy.”
Men are human beings and, consequently, deserve the same kind of reproductive control women do, argues Sammy Allouba. Crazy thinking, right?
Feminism has always been about the demands of privileged and mostly white women, says B.R. Merrick, and all that has resulted in is dysfunctional brats who think they get whatever they want by complaining–while noting women of achievement who never whined.