J4MB submits a 118-page report to a Home Office consultation on strengthening the law on domestic abuse
How to improve Domestic Violence legislation? Mike Buchanan and his crew at the J4MB party have some extensive suggestions.
How to improve Domestic Violence legislation? Mike Buchanan and his crew at the J4MB party have some extensive suggestions.
Beware of things that aren’t what they seem. Giving a nice-sounding title to a bad idea doesn’t make the idea any better.
Western media has been indulging in massive anti-Indian propaganda, degrading its people and terming various Indian cities as “rape capitals.” Anil Kumar exposes this misinformation campaign.
Treat fully grown women like helpless children incapable of making their own rational informed choices, and make men accountable for their choices instead. We always thought that was kind of “patriarchal” or something, but apparently not?
The child sex scandals in Rotherham, England are something gender ideologues are strangely silent on in much of the press. How deep does this rabbit hole go? Jim Muldoon explores.
The Justice 4 Men and Boys (& the Women Who Love Them) party has a challenge for Conservative Theresa May.
Recently, news broke of widespread child sexual exploitation in the northern English town of Rotherham. An independent inquiry into the abuse, led by Professor Alexis Jay, found that over 1,400 children, mostly White girls, had been repeatedly victimized. Professor Jay wrote: “It is hard to describe the appalling nature of the abuse that child victims …
1,400 girls raped in Rotherham, England–and big league feminists don’t care? Read More »
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.
Programs for “helping women” with European Union funds are nothing but a transnational corruption scheme, reports Lucian Valsan of AVfM Romania. Here’s part two of his examination of this scandal.
“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.