Rated “P” for Patriarchy
There’s an argument to be had about whether America’s pop culture fear of sex but not violence in movies is crazy. But, as Jesse Folsom notes, Gender Ideologues tend to ruin even that discussion with their own type of crazy.
There’s an argument to be had about whether America’s pop culture fear of sex but not violence in movies is crazy. But, as Jesse Folsom notes, Gender Ideologues tend to ruin even that discussion with their own type of crazy.
Many young men, conscripted into military service in World War I, were seen by cynical women looking for an easy buck as fodder for their cynical marriage rackets. Female privilege in these cases could thus be well-served by these most disposable of males: draftees
We often use memes at A Voice for Men to make points, and quite often to give us a badly needed moment of laughter in the midst of our very serious work. Collegiate Activism Director Sage Gerard brings you another meme today. This time, we are not laughing at all.
Some called it “polite blackmail,” some called it the “alimony racket.” For German immigrant to the United States, George Wacker, it was more than a racket, it was a death sentence.
Janet Bloomfield did some intense investigation into domestic violence research. You will never believe what she found. The National Violence Against Women Survey found that there was violence happening to women, and made sure of that result with their methodology. See, we told you that you would never believe it.
There was a time when women were responsible for a significant amount of domestic labor. Thanks to technology ‘housewives’ today have very little work to do in the home save one or two hours of relaxed housework which they can weave among their leisure activities. However, the leisure class would like to forego those remaining few chores and are increasingly asking full-time working husbands to take the weight off their petite shoulders. Clint Carpentier provides an overview of the conundrum.
Victorian Police Commissioner Ken Lay gave an emotive and hyperbolic speech, titled “Breaking the pattern of family violence is everyone’s responsibility” in which he dramatised and exaggerated violence against women while refusing to properly acknowledge male victims. Greg Canning brings us the story.
Recently columnist Peter Lloyd offered his perspective on the revolutionary importance of a male birth control pill. His article was in part a response to obtuse reaction of Tom Sykes to the idea. Walter Romans thinks perhaps both men missed some of the big picture.
The social problem called “parental child abduction” began to get a great deal of media attention beginning in the 1980s. Yet the history of the phenomenon is at best poorly understood and at worst is deliberately misrepresented by politically correct historians. Here is one of many installments that will help to shed light on this unknown history.
This meme post is designed to give us all time to think over the weekend. Think of the poor children, being abused by a society that ingrains victim blaming into them from birth. It is a horrible thing to see and not even AVFM has adequately addressed the problem. Paul Elam offers an apology, and a reader submitted meme.