John Stuart Mill on chivalry
John Stuart Mill published his Subjection of Women in 1869, writing that the State should take over the role of male chivalry. It appears his gynocentric vision has come true.
John Stuart Mill published his Subjection of Women in 1869, writing that the State should take over the role of male chivalry. It appears his gynocentric vision has come true.
“Matchmaker, matchmaker, make me a match…” -Fiddler on the Roof Millennial pop cultural news website Elite Daily reported on an interesting story over the weekend that your correspondent thinks is highly legitimate insofar as men’s issues are concerned. A Chinese man named Kang Hu attempted to commit suicide by drowning himself in a nearby river …
Chinese man jumping in river reveals the hidden side of arranged marriages Read More »
Hypocrisy is a difficult thing. It requires mental contortions and genuflections that few can long sustain. So here’s a suggestion for the news media: take notice of men.
Categorizing people by ideological criteria is airy and abstract, but recognizing the words they use when speaking is a simpler way to identify their concerns. Peter Wright attempts to group MGTOW according to their habitual speech patterns.
Auguste Comte (1798 – 1857) , the founder of modern sociology (actually coining the term), argued that women should be placed at the centre of social architecture. Professor Mike Gane supplies a few details about the gynocentric vision this first sociologist.
How exactly are poor men supposed to come up with jobs that simultaneously allow them to live and pay child support and how does jailing these men help anything? TJ Sotomayer investigates.
JudgyBitch wrote an article. It gave Paul Elam the idea to write one, too.
The following Letter To The editor of Reynolds Newspaper in 1896 provides a snapshot of inequity before the law. Has anything changed? Well no, it hasn’t.
British politicians like Karen Woodall are increasingly pushing ideological feminism into primary education. Karen Woodall challenges the notion that this is healthy or desirable.
As we see again and again, those who most often speak of the “best interests of the children” really don’t have the interests of the children in mind at all, but rather, the interests of their own personal careers.