Who was Alois Dvorzak?
A haunting piece broadcast very recently by Channel 4 News in the UK, on a program with a reputation for rarely showing much concern for men.
A haunting piece broadcast very recently by Channel 4 News in the UK, on a program with a reputation for rarely showing much concern for men.
Fewer men are teaching boys how to be boys, and it seems that even fewer men are interested in teaching young men how to enter in.
Fewer men are teaching boys how to be boys, and it seems that even fewer men are interested in teaching young men how to enter in.
The idea that men require civilizing is long-lived. Peter Wright proposes a novel suggestion for how we might achieve that: by leaving men alone to be the caring and for the most part civil creatures they were from before society decided to impose its will on them.
What is the garb of the modern Western male? Is it boots and chaps, work shirt or coveralls? Is it a business suit or a military uniform? Is it all these things? Not so much, says Gordon Wadsworth, who explores the servile fashions of modern western men in all their “glory.”
Feminism is about equality, how can you possibly say it’s a hate movement? Robert St. Estephe looks at the history, quotes the leaders, and proves that they said so themselves.
Luisa De Jesus was a child care worker. Apparently to her, though that meant killing them, which she did to at least 28 of them. Why? Because she had been paid in advance to take care of them and with their death also came the freedom to go “care”: for another child.
Feminist wisdom claims that women are pressured into marriage by the patriarchy against their wills, and marriage is something women really don’t desire. No really. Anja Eriud points out a few ironies embedded in this narrative.
Should a woman be able to mutilate a man’s dead body in order to fulfill her desire to have a child with his sperm? Janice Fiamengo explores a recent case.
Cassie discusses “The Red Pill” movie with Andrew Bolt and tells the world about gender equality.