Women: Power in the past
For once, we see a video that is exceptional for its non-stupidity on the subject of the role and power of women (and men) in history.
For once, we see a video that is exceptional for its non-stupidity on the subject of the role and power of women (and men) in history.
Modern media presents acid-attack perpetrators as almost exclusively men. History tells a different story.
For once, we see a video that is exceptional for its non-stupidity on the subject of the role and power of women (and men) in history.
Gonzo Historian Robert St. Estephe, author of the indispensible “Unknown History of Misandry” weblog, returns with another entry on the history of violence committed by women, and society’s tendency to excuse it and even make allowances. This one will really make your head spin: a 1922 proposal to just make it legal for women to kill.
Feminism is about equality, how can you possibly say it’s a hate movement? Robert St. Estephe looks at the history, quotes the leaders, and proves that they said so themselves.
Male celibacy leads directly to rape, murder and the beastly use of sodomy – so claim two women who in 1707 proposed the remedy of a bachelor tax, combined with severe punishments for unmarried men.
For the history-minded among us, this piece by professor Amy Kelly reveals the taproot of our gender malaise
Men’s historical social and political disadvantages