My Lady Lump
Tim Patten finds sexism and misandry in a caring setting.
The accusation of group culpability (Patriarchy) is often leveled at men, but what about when women are at fault? Equality means that everyone accepts responsibility — or, everyone dodges it.
Instead of celebrating male sexuality, fear-based debates over porn and rape are taking over and isolating men
Feminism may look good or bad depending on which side of the sexual fence that life placed you. But what might it look like to someone who has actually filled both pairs of shoes. Why, like pure bullshit, of course.
They still find that the taxes they have to pay still go towards ever more programs for women. Scratch that…I meant ‘young families’ (read: single mothers). It’s like the Government doesn’t know about all the struggling men. Of course, we know different, but when you view men as non-human cannon fodder, the Darwinian way government treats disadvantaged men becomes much more understandable.
For White men, being the target of widespread cultural hatred is a new experience. For Black men. now targeted again, it will be nothing less than a return to their early post-African roots. For Black men, feminism is the end of their civil rights movement.
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.
As a short introduction, I’m a proud lifelong reader of the Post who nevertheless has long noticed the paper’s gender bias, most notably its imbalanced coverage of domestic violence, as described in a February 2023 report by The Coalition to End Domestic Violence.1 But my pride in the Post turned to quiet outrage in 2018 …
The Washington Post’s Disrespect for Male Veterans Read More »
Feminists that don’t need men will need the state, which is run by the worst sorts of men and women imaginable. Now the state is our father, and what a rotten dad he is.
Paul Elam excavates the ruins of modern masculinity.