A game not worth the candle
I have the pussy, so I make the rules. It is one of life’s truisms that people just tend to accept without thinking about. Well, except for people like JtO, who bends that rule to its absolute breaking point.
I have the pussy, so I make the rules. It is one of life’s truisms that people just tend to accept without thinking about. Well, except for people like JtO, who bends that rule to its absolute breaking point.
The Southern Poverty Law Center has amassed a full fledged attack on the men’s rights movement. It is all for naught, and will backfire from its intended purpose. That is the message from Paul Elam
Occasionally Skeptic daydreams to see what comes to mind. Only when folks ask the right questions, do they get the right answers. Questions don’t fall out of the sky and into our heads though. We need to take time to think them up.
There is no doubt a need for a revision, perhaps even elimination, of the social contract between men and women, but should it be destroyed? JtO takes a look at our connection to the other sex and makes his own calls.
The subject of male birth control, according to Skeptic, has been a hit and miss project in pharmaceutical research. That may be about to change, but the question remains whether it will find the market or just get buried.
As men, here are countless paths we can choose in life. All we have to do is pick one and go for it. Patrick Henry tells us how his choices were made, and why.
Feminists are experts at revising history. Well, as far as expertise goes when it goes unchallenged. That does not sit well with Greg Canning, a man Down Under whose sense of history is deep and highly personal, as well as accurate.
Round 4 of the debate between Elam and Frost. In this offering, Frost talks about the ambitions of young men, their lives and how they fit into the social void of the modern gender zeitgeist.
Do you know who Thomas James Ball was, Mr. Bennett? Do you have any idea at all of why he stepped up and self-immolated in front of a family court building? Did he just need to man up and take it? Any other bright ideas?
Starting from a foundation built on cultural myth, Wente builds a case for the innate biological inferiority of the sex whose energy, creativity and drive have levered humanity into a modern, clean, well fed civilization.