The Big What If
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.
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.
Most people assume that the men’s rights movement is a backlash of reaction to gender feminism of the 1960’s. Not so. Not even close. Robert St. Estephe tells our story here, with clarity and conviction. It is spectacular effort by a great writer, and is must reading for all MHRAs.
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 the pressure of rape and domestic violence hysteria continues to push more and more draconian laws into existence, AVfM relies on the founding fathers for wisdom, guidance and a road to reform.
Tonight Paul and John test the limits of your capacity to hear just how fucked up things have become in our criminal justice system. AVfM Radio is back with an explosive story.
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.
The mainstream media, this time Australian, has been doing their usual part of late, attempting to paint the MRM as pointless and possibly dangerous. Little do they know that there really is danger, and it is them. Paul Elam writes.
As the misandric zeitgeist continues to expand and morph into an increasingly Orwellian landscape, the land Down Under emerges as the next proving ground for corrupt feminist governance. This will likely be the MRM headline story for all of 2012.
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.
If I was a woman, I’d feel unsafe around male colleagues if the contention that I had a 1 in 3 chance of being raped was true. It isn’t, and it is apparently being repeated ad infinitum et nauseam around the Internet.