Shaming tactics III: the Patriarchy
Longtime AVfM contributor Typhon Blue, with the help of some others, presents Episode III of her groundbreaking series examining shaming tactics against males. This episode: Patriarchy!
Longtime AVfM contributor Typhon Blue, with the help of some others, presents Episode III of her groundbreaking series examining shaming tactics against males. This episode: Patriarchy!
Dr. Umar Johnson attacks the American myth of black fathers as violent deadbeats and criminals, and highlights how this ongoing demonization and marginalization has a deeply destructive effect.
If we were to make a list of all the legitimate complaints that men could make in this culture, we would either need to digitize it or cut down a forest for the paper to write it down.
Occasionally we are gifted with a piece of fiction from our friend Dr. F, from the land of Oz. This particular piece, which revolves around something called a Pamper Hamper, leaves a question in our minds. Is it really fiction?
Keith examines the proxy violence done by silent acceptance or marginalization of victims. All of society colludes when no one speaks.
Ever heard about the woman in the room that was the gun in the room that was the elephant in the room that no one talks about? Well, John the Other has heard of that very thing, and he is talking about it in this article on women and real power.
Seeking justice in a family court is hard enough in America’s densely packed urban centers. It becomes even more challenging in rural settings, where legal resources are scarce and everyone knows everyone.
As is the unfortunately reality every four years in America, we have an election approaching. Though its outcome may have little bearing on our destiny, we are obliged to consider difference there may be in the candidates as it pertains to men’s issues.
Paul Elam resurrects an old article as a contribution to Domestic Violence Awareness Month. It is offered here in the hopes that readers will help raise awareness by passing it on to other venues where it may shed some light on the problem.
Judge Lori B. Jackson of Harrison County, West Virginia appears to not only happily look the other way at child abuse so long as the abuser is female, but she has apparently never heard of a little thing called Freedom of the Press.