An MRA by any other name
In a movement that still struggles to find its identity there is often debates about names and labels. But to Paul Elam, we are what we are, no excuses needed.
In a movement that still struggles to find its identity there is often debates about names and labels. But to Paul Elam, we are what we are, no excuses needed.
There are a number of ways to evaluate how men’s rights activism should be executed. A writer by the name of Brutal Antipathy offers his own ideas for direction.
Fidelbogen, recently appointed to the editorial staff at A Voice for Men, offers a few words of introduction, to new readers and old friends alike. We’re all smiles around here.
This is an AVfM action alert. We have recently been notified of what appears to be a developing plan to face men with the prospect of extermination.
One, the article was written with a good measure of objectivity. Yes, that is OB-JEC-TIV-I-TY. You will need to practice saying this.
Texas legislators have stopped preventing victims of paternity fraud from challenging child support obligations. The landmark legislation took six years to complete.
To everyone who thinks The MRM and Feminism are two sides of the same coin, take a closer look at the damn coin. One side endorses legal bigotry while the other seeks to end it. Can’t get any more different than that.
The attempt to control the definition of a “real man” is considerably more pervasive than the long reach and direct address of the topic in the mainstream media, and it is increasingly more shrill.
So what the hell does any of this have to do with you and me? Well, the thing is because you and I know about the Quattro livelli di conoscenza. We can go about our ways better as MRA’s.
The opponents of feminism are famous for speaking their minds “not wisely but too well.” In this way they offer grappling points to their enemy and make their own work needlessly difficult.