Why is discrimination bad?
Catreece Macleod goes into some dicey territory–what exactly is discrimination, and when is it OK and not-OK?
Catreece Macleod goes into some dicey territory–what exactly is discrimination, and when is it OK and not-OK?
Feminism controls the global discourse on gender, and is flailing to keep control of the uppity #WomenAgainstFeminism. In their desperation they have poked their own brand full of holes, revealing the hypocracy-ridden core of the movement.
Reciprocal violence between men and women is usually blamed on the male even when a women admits to physically attacking a men first. New contributor Mark Dent provides an example of the mystifying double standards in the case of NFL footballer Ray Rice.
Do women need liberation from the strictures of feminism? Doesn’t supporting women’s agency mean letting women make contrary choices, or are women obliged to support feminism?
Kristal Garcia grew up a feminist. Eventually she abandoned feminism. Then she became actively anti-feminist–then a Men’s Rights Activist. Here she describes her moving and powerful journey.
Sage Gerard has been looking into the Rape Aggression Defense (RAD) Systems implementation on Kennesaw State University and discovered that it was never designed for men. Taking the matter into his own hands he has decided to canvassing alternative self-defense companies to do business with.
“It must always be borne in mind that Woman’s social superiority lies at the root of rules of conduct for men.” Such is the expectation of male servility toward women detailed in traditional etiquette manuals; evidence that puts a lie to feminist mythology of male dominance.
It is common among gender ideologues to claim that false rape allegations are rare. This is based on pseudoscience at best. There is strong reason to believe that most real rapes go unreported–and that reported rapes are also commonly bogus. Both can be, and may well be, true at once.
Something’s happening here. What it is isn’t exactly clear. But history is often marked by small moments that change the world–and we seem to be witnessing just that in “Women Against Feminism.”
There has been quite a bit of media attention to the remarks of Whoopi Goldberg about women who commit violence against men with the idea that they are untouchable. Paul Elam offers some editorial on the matter.