Snapshot of a narrative revolt—Sports media takes it on the chin for pop feminist domestic violence pandering
The message about domestic violence is getting out there, one drop at a time.
The message about domestic violence is getting out there, one drop at a time.
If a mother lost her son and daughter in a terrible accident and only spoke of her grief at losing her daughter, our community would be quite horrified. Yet time and again this is what we do when discussing the issues of domestic violence, slavery, the sex trade, rape, or oppression in various parts of this world.
If your bag is ideology, mathematics can be a decidedly inconvenient reality. Susan Patton and Dr. David Farley take on rape stats by the numbers.
Rose McGowan is concerned about all the woman-hating in the gay male community. Hate, you see, is when you don’t put all the attention on her.
Have you even looked into the concept of street harassment? Clayton Craddock has. And what he sees is both sexist and racist.
In India, there have been many instances of male rape wherein the legal system has pardoned the female rapist merely because she was a woman–and none batted an eyelid.
Foster in, garbage out. Ellsworth, Maine now has a shot at justice being served.
The other day someone anonymously donated £1,000 to our current appeal, the largest donation we’ve yet received as a party. We wrote to thank him (from experience we know donors of substantial sums are far more likely to be male than female) for the generous donation and asked him for his motivations.
The war on prostitution has always primarily been a fight between women, says Maggie McNeill.
In November, North Dakota voters will have the chance to approve an Equal Parenting Custody law. Hannah Wallen has the details on another crack in the anti-father armor.