Who’s lying, who’s self-justifying? Origins of the he said/she said gap in sexual allegations
A very interesting and thoughtful speech on the nature of sexual miscommunication between men and women.
A very interesting and thoughtful speech on the nature of sexual miscommunication between men and women.
Three DUI’s in two years, car wrecks, suicide attempt, drug abuse… and she gets custody of the children.
An NCFM member tells his story of the unfortunately all-too-common practice of judicial bias that favors mothers even when they are unfit to parent.
From Germany, Dr. Gerhard Amendt contributes a scathing indictment of the modern domestic violence zeitgeist in that nation. It is a paradigm precisely mirrored across western culture. He includes proposals for a revamped approach to the problem.
Barbarossa takes on the question of whether there should be taxpayer funded services to help abused men, and challenges standard libertarian thinking on the matter.
The story of Vladek Filler is the longest running saga of injustice ever to make the pages of AVFM. Paul Elam explains why, and why he is not going to quit, ever, till justice is finally served.
It’s no secret that women spend most household income which keeps the world economy turning. Clint Carpenter shares his observations on women’s spending and its implications for men.
Elizabeth Sheehy and other ideological “scholars” are playing a dangerous game excusing murder when it’s committed by women against men. But in the end, they may discover that they’ve begun the process of excusing murder of women as well.
It has been a long time, way too long, actually, since we have heard Jared White lay down the truth in one of his rap videos. Well, as they say, much better late than never.
Once in a while, some group or institution actually means it when they say they care equally about people regardless of things like race or sex, and puts that into action. Goshen College appears to have such people working for it, as Jonathan Taylor notes. Bravo!
Feminist lawyers and a growing field of “feelings” psychology rejoice every time a woman gets away with murder. Diana Davison follows the trail of how our legal system has been corrupted.