Ignoring the abuse of fathers
Giving birth is painful. But does it give women a right to be abusive to others? Clint Carpentier muses on the question.
Giving birth is painful. But does it give women a right to be abusive to others? Clint Carpentier muses on the question.
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As the embracing of emotionalism has elavated, American masculinity has declined, says Professor Douglas W. Texter. Does embracing logic first and foremost point the way to the answer?
After shameful efforts of Gender Ideologues to shut honest and non-shaming discussion of men’s issues in universities, proving once and for all that most of academia is hopelessly misandrist, Professor Miles Groth is taking the gloves off.
The cultural assumption has long been that the sex industry operated at the degrading expense of women. Not quite so, says Sage Gerard, in an examination of the underbelly of the affection market, and the men who fuel it.
Professor Thomas Impelluso, when he published a moderate essay proposing that at the top 1% of math ability you will probably be more men than women, faced a backlash of hatred and harassment from Gender Ideologues. To them he has a rational response, one which they will likely not even try to understand, thugs that they are.
A court rules that a father may be excluded from the birth of his child if the mother wishes it. Ayami Tyndall takes exception.
The top one percent in math is male-dominated arguably due to specializations more frequently found in the male brain, but feminists would like to see women comprise half if not all of that one percent. Professor Thomas Impelluso, Ph.D., gives an impassioned plea for everyone to stop meddling and let people be who they want to be .
What feminists call sexual harassment is often less sinister than is made out – and it’s not only women who experience it. Clint Carpentier recounts some of the antics he has experienced in the workplace.
We’ve all heard the phrase, but few actually know what it means; fewer still demand to be heard after being told, to “Man Up!”