Size matters, but not just for men
Peter Lloyd gives some unmeasured opinion on the penis size debate, which apparently came across as a little stiff to female readers at mailonline. Well, if the whatever fits…
Peter Lloyd gives some unmeasured opinion on the penis size debate, which apparently came across as a little stiff to female readers at mailonline. Well, if the whatever fits…
Feminism may look good or bad depending on which side of the sexual fence that life placed you. But what might it look like to someone who has actually filled both pairs of shoes. Why, like pure bullshit, of course.
Imagine that for a day that all aspects of sexual roles in this world were reversed; that men experienced the lives of women and that women actually experienced the lives with which most men actually contend. Just imagine.
The pain of men is often covered by the shadow of human avoidance, even in MRA circles. For when we do pull back the covers it is often more than can be comprehended, even by the most compassionate among us.
Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you are going to get. But you have a lot better chance of getting something good if you are a woman. At least that is what Howard Gordan discovered.
We have used, and often over used, words like mangina and white knight when describing men who kowtow to feminist approval and PC groupthink. Maybe there was a simpler word all along. Like coward.
Carlos Andrés Gómez has a list of 25 ways to be a “good man.” At least that is what he is trying to tell you. He is actually selling something else. It comes in a bottle made of cheap glass with a tacky label, and it smells like snake oil. Don’t buy it. Or if you insist, get on your knees for the transaction.
You’ve probably been wanting to meet Schrödinger’s rapist. We finally found him. Although we’re a little confused, because we think he might be you. Or we think he’s a he, but could he be a she? Well maybe. Can you help us figure it all out?
AVfM welcome new contributor Mykeru, with a story of family history, oppression, cults, pious atheists, truck drivers, princesses and privilege that knows no bounds. A memorable first contribution. Hopefully the first of many.
Once again Robert St. Estphe has stepped to the forefront and delivered that most potent of antidotes to the toxic legacy of cultural self deception: The truth, organized and meticulously documented.