Clementine Ford calling fellow feminists stupid
Australian columnist Clementine Ford assumes her fellow ideologues are so weak and stupid that they must be sheltered from criticism.
Australian columnist Clementine Ford assumes her fellow ideologues are so weak and stupid that they must be sheltered from criticism.
By telling men, or when men reject the lie, telling everyone else that men are privileged, a feminist can render their voice mute. We can all move along and redirect resources to female victims.
The dichotomy of feminism and men’s rights is argued from divergent perspectives. As MRA’s we often fight emotionalism with intellect. According to Cooter Bee, that may not be the best approach.
In his first offering to A Voice for Men, long time reader TCM brings us these thoughts as the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic comes and goes. A big AVfM welcome to TCM!
Lock all the doors and hide the children, John the Other has decided to become a soldier in the War on Women. John maps out his evil and highly sinister strategy for ultimate victory over the other sex.
Skeptic returns with part II of his articles on non hormonal male contraception. This time he raises a question that feminists don’t seem willing or able to take on. Will male power be a side effect of the new drug?
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 it turns out, the ethics of human societies are those they can afford. “Women and children first” is a group survival mechanism, it preserves the reproducers and the offspring at the expense of males. It’s the oldest deal in the book.
The outing of hateful ideologues and other dangerous people in positions of public trust continues. Paul Elam appears to just be getting started. Much more to come.
Does the accommodation of women excuse them from responsibility for their own violence, hatred and pathology? John the Other explores the question and offers some answers.