Husbands go on strike: Tibet, 1928
Gonzo Historian, Robert St. Estephe, offers us another fascinating look into the past with a historic marriage strike that was, literally, a strike. It happened in Tibet.
Gonzo Historian, Robert St. Estephe, offers us another fascinating look into the past with a historic marriage strike that was, literally, a strike. It happened in Tibet.
Gonzo Historian, Robert St. Estephe, returns with yet another lesson in the Unknown History of Misandry. This is the history they don’t teach in schools or gender studies classes, folks. It’s the stuff that’s been expelled from the official record and it’s here for your edification. Today’s piece is on the Advice columnist Dorothy Dix and her advice to women that they are “killing the goose that laid the golden egg.”
Gonzo Historian, Robert St. Estephe has returned with a story that will seem very familiar to many fathers today. In 1936 William H. W. Evans was jailed for kidnapping his daughter based on accusations by his ex-wife; he went on a hunger strike to protest as he had a written agreement to share custody. The only difference to today? That written agreement actually mattered to the Judge. He was cleared of all kidnapping charges.
Think all serial killers are men? Think again – the evidence, long suppressed, of brutal female serial murderers is growing like wildfire, and even more disturbing are the often light sentences they received for their crimes – sort of like Mary Kellett, one might think. In another installment of his Unknown History of Misandry, our own gonzo historian Robert St. Estephe uncovers the grisly, hidden crimes female serial killers inflicted on the most helpless of victims for all the world to see.
Robert St. Estephe brings us another installment of his ground breaking Unknown History of Misandry. This time he documents the phenomena of female judges who came out against the misandry in the court system–yep, misandry in family and criminal law has a long and sordid history–way back when. It seems somethings never change. [Illustration by Typhonblue]
We all know that females never kill unless in self-defense, and they would especially never engage in something as ugly as serial killing – so says society’s romantic stereotypes about women. Robert St. Estephe, Gonzo Historian, lifts the lid on ‘Female Serial Killer Bandits,’ providing chilling accounts of women who commit serial acts of killing-and-robbery. [Illustration by Typhonblue]
Robert St. Estephe returns to the pages of A Voice for Men to remind us, as always, that there is nothing new under the sun. And that includes a type of crime that society is all to willing to ignore. This time, it is the case of Charles Atkinson, who was released from prison after he was cleared of a false allegation of rape by his step daughter, Mary Miller. [Illustration by Typhonblue]
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.
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.
In a stunning example of proxy violence from 1911, Robert St. Estephe brings us another example of the Unknown History of Misandry