What do you have to complain about?
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.
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.
No one is doubting the impact on culture from the work of Germaine Greer. We do, however, find it ironic that for the only honest analysis of that impact we must turn to one of the first professional casualties of gender feminism.
Dr. Greg Canning, brave soul that he is, took the brunt for us by reading Joseph Gelfer’s self proclaimed masterpiece of revelation, The Masculinity Conspiracy. Thank you Greg, for going there for us on this one.
Even in a capitalist, free enterprise system, it is often good form and good business to offer some assistance to your competitors. In that spirit Paul Elam presents a letter of recommendation to the Good Men Project.
Erica Jarvis, an aspiring feature writer in Canada, decided to do a piece on AVfM after the protests at the University of Toronto led to violence and controversy. She did a good job, and now she is paying the price for it, perhaps at the expense of her ever being a feature writer.
“You weren’t raped. You’re a whore. Join the Club.” So says former college girl JudgyBitch, while noting how infantalizing of women and brutalizing to real victims the phony Jezebel notion of “Rape Culture” is.
The problem with governance based on lies is that it requires an increasing amount of obfuscation to maintain the myths, and the money. Jim Muldoon points to this problem with a breakdown of the Australian wage gap myth. The deception grows like a tumor.
The National Organization for Women appears to have recognized that there is a men’s movement unlike anything they have ever seen before. They have issued a PDF that reveals a great concern about our existence. And so it begins.
Dr. Greg Canning delivers a stunning exploration of recent and possible future changes in Australian law, as well as a caution for Australians to pay attention to what is happening behind the political scene at home.
The ushering in of 2013 also meant the ushering out of the Violence Against Women Act, at least for the time being. Paul Elam offers some suggestions to readers and Republicans about the comeback.