Welcome to my rape fantasy
“We live in a rape culture, and don’t you ever forget it, not even for one minute!” Robert St. Estephe explores the psychology of the sick minds who invent false rape accusations for their own pleasure and amusement.
“We live in a rape culture, and don’t you ever forget it, not even for one minute!” Robert St. Estephe explores the psychology of the sick minds who invent false rape accusations for their own pleasure and amusement.
Many people suppose that the eugenics-inspired, genocidal ideation-styled, violent authoritarian types of feminist utopian philosophy find their source exclusively in ideology. The fact is that the mentality called misandric fixation need not arise through the influence of ideology, as history shows.
According to academic feminist thinking, we pretty much all have to be rapists. No seriously. Michael Sharron says it’s time to turn ourselves in.
Gold-digger. The very phrase will get you tarred in many circles as a “misogynist.” The interesting thing is, the phrase came from history, and it came about because of the way some people were actually behaving.
Back in 1893 Colorado passed a laws granting women full voting rights. The following year, three women were elected to the Colorado House of Representatives. Did this new political development put an end to the fair sex’s unconscionable and constant suffering under the iron domination of The Patriarchy?
During the month of October, Dr. Tara J. Palmatier presented a daily series of men’s stories, personal accounts of those who suffered abuses at the hands of sick women and the system that served their abusive ways. Paul Elam reflects back on that month, makes some observations and an appeal.
It’s day 31 of Domestic Violence Awareness Month for Men and Boys, the invisible victims of domestic violence, the last day of these offerings for this year. In this one, Dr. T brings us a different kind of abuse to examine, one rooted in lies, deception and abusive manipulation.
Yes, we were finally dragged into it: an article on “twerking.” But hey, Michael Sharron has a point: Miley Cyrus sexually assaulted Robin Thicke and belongs in jail. Sounds stupid to us, but that is the only logical conclusion from some feminist logic.
Public discussion about boys often focuses on their shared flaws and the need to shame them into conformity. Author Rosalind Wiseman recently took a more compassionate approach by sitting down with 200 boys and actually listening to what they had to say – she recommends we do the same.
Toby Dixon, author at online feminist publication Birdee.com recently penned a piece lauding discrimination against men because it helps men to know “how women have felt all along.” Jim Muldoon offers a response.