Alimony slaves can do it!
Men stuck in debtors’ prisons for failure to pay either alimony or their wives’ debts sometimes found a way out by putting their lives at risk on the battlefield. Robert St. Estephe reports from the trenches.
Men stuck in debtors’ prisons for failure to pay either alimony or their wives’ debts sometimes found a way out by putting their lives at risk on the battlefield. Robert St. Estephe reports from the trenches.
Gonzo Historian, Robert St. Estephe, returns with yet another lesson in the Unknown History of Misandry. This is the history they don’t teach in schools or gender studies classes, folks. It’s the stuff that’s been expelled from the official record and it’s here for your edification. Today’s piece is on the Advice columnist Dorothy Dix and her advice to women that they are “killing the goose that laid the golden egg.”
Gonzo Historian Robert St. Estephe, author of the indispensible “Unknown History of Misandry” weblog, returns with another entry on the history of violence committed by women, and society’s tendency to excuse it and even make allowances. This one will really make your head spin: a 1922 proposal to just make it legal for women to kill.