“Consent For Me, But Not For Thee” and other Black feminist hypocrisies
Mumia Ali notices that among feminists, attakcs on “The Nice Guy” are astonishingly hypocritical given feminist propensity to make the exact same complaints as “Nice Guys.”
Mumia Ali notices that among feminists, attakcs on “The Nice Guy” are astonishingly hypocritical given feminist propensity to make the exact same complaints as “Nice Guys.”
The diva culture of feminism continues to be fertilized with the pain of its DV victims. Mumia Ali continues to illuminate the guilty.
When your political feminism is making your personal life miserable, perhaps you should reassess. Mumia Ali shows where to start.
Over 35 million Americans self-identify as Black. And Black men are one of the most marginalized groups of men in America. Increasingly, a number of them are waking up and realizing the biggest enemy anymore isn’t racism, it’s misandry.
Black women have moved into the modern world but still hold Black men to turn of the century ideals of masculinity.
Quiet as its kept, and long before it became fashionable in White America, Black Men have been silently voting with their feet in a myriad of ways from “Black relationships” – and one of those ways involves leaving the country altogether.
Black men who are drawn from Black America’s most marginalized sections are lifting their voices and being heard, presenting another side to the blue pill narrative.