Ignoring the abuse of fathers
Giving birth is painful. But does it give women a right to be abusive to others? Clint Carpentier muses on the question.
Giving birth is painful. But does it give women a right to be abusive to others? Clint Carpentier muses on the question.
As the embracing of emotionalism has elavated, American masculinity has declined, says Professor Douglas W. Texter. Does embracing logic first and foremost point the way to the answer?
Hint for Adèle Mercier. Google “Streisand Effect.”
Lana Voreskova, an Irish Men’s Human Rights Activist, recently had a look at The Everyday Sexism Project. She found the content somewhat lacking in value.
On Wednesday of last week, Ben Radford, a well-respected and well-published member of what is broadly known as “the skeptic community,” published a website dedicated to answering accusations of gross sexual harassment made by Karen Stollznow, another prominent member of that community. Bob O’Hara has a report.
It’s election time in Brazil, and the incumbent President has been caught with her pants down: a group of her cronies fabricated a phony statistic claiming a majority of Brazilians supported raping a scantily clad woman. It made international headlines, and it was a lie. Aldir Gracindo has a report from Brazil.
The “Everyday Sexism Project” is proof positive that modern-day feminism is primarily characterized by whiny thoughtless selfish brats. Mike Buchanan explains.
After shameful efforts of Gender Ideologues to shut honest and non-shaming discussion of men’s issues in universities, proving once and for all that most of academia is hopelessly misandrist, Professor Miles Groth is taking the gloves off.
Based on internet comments made at Queen’s University’s “The Journal” and other internet comments elsewhere, it appears that a Queen’s University associate professor is a child rape apologist.
Philip W. Cook has suggestions on how to take advantage of an extraordinary moment provided by RAINN.