Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-05-25 17:55
Article here. Excerpt:
'As low- and semi-skilled manual jobs disappear, working-class men are getting hammered - and so is their masculinity. “Manual labour has been a key source of identity, pride, self-esteem and power for working-class men,” says a recent British study, which set out to probe a fascinating question: What makes these men so unemployable?
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-05-25 17:44
Article here. Excerpt:
"I can't tell you the number of women, including Michelle, who say choose the person you think is going to be best," President Obama said in an interview airing today on C-SPAN.
Michelle Obama understands the nomination of a woman to the Supreme Court in a way her husband cannot.
...
Those feminists who continue to insist that the president should nominate a woman to the bench in order to balance the numbers to reflect the population are demeaning all professional women.
In my career in politics and the media, I have never gotten a job because my boss needed a woman. I was hired for my hard work ethic, experience, intelligence, and skills.'
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Submitted by anthony on Mon, 2009-05-25 17:42
Article here. Excerpt:
'The current economic crisis has thrown such touchy issues into sharp relief. With the recession intensifying financial pressures on millions of families, many men have lost—or are afraid of losing—their jobs. Even in prosperous times, husbands often feel threatened when their partners’ achievements or incomes surpass their own. More than a quarter of working wives now outearn their spouses, and as women’s economic empowerment and professional clout transform the American marriage, couples are becoming increasingly egalitarian. But even if a husband remains the major breadwinner, his wife’s financial autonomy may threaten his control or erode a fragile sense of self-worth. Needless to say, problems can be greatly exacerbated if the man’s economic power is diminished or jeopardized.
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Submitted by antifeminist on Mon, 2009-05-25 06:44
Story here. Excerpt:
'A woman who was allegedly raped by a man whom she met on MySpace.com now says the sex was consensual, according to Orlando Police.
The woman told officers earlier this week that the man raped her when she went to his apartment on Westgate Drive.
The 21-year-old woman told officers she met the man, 25, on MySpace.com on April 20 and began talking to him on the phone and via e-mail.
According to a police report the woman went to the man's apartment on Tuesday afternoon to hang out there and eventually leave to go hang out somewhere else together.'
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Submitted by webdigr on Mon, 2009-05-25 04:14
Story here. Excerpt:
'"Do as your wife commands and never question her authority": this advice to husbands came in a lighter vein from a vacation Bench of the Supreme Court comprising Justices Markandey Katju and Deepak Verma. The judges asked them to adhere to this time-tested formula.
...
The Bench’s banter did reflect the traditional sympathetic view that the law and the courts adopt towards the fair sex. Law considers matrimonial relationship to be sacred and takes a strict view of anyone polluting it.
Take for example the offence of adultery, which is punishable under Section 497 of Indian Penal Code (IPC). The offence, as defined in IPC, can only be committed by a man, not by a woman! In Sowmithiri Vishnu vs Union of India (1985 SCC Sup 137), the SC held, “Indeed, the section provides expressly that the wife shall not be punishable even as an abettor... The contemplation of law is that the wife, who is involved in an illicit relationship with another man, is a victim and not the author of the crime.”'
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Submitted by Minuteman on Mon, 2009-05-25 00:47
This story aired on Australian television last night, and I immediately wished I hadn't dignified it by watching it: here . (The main story is preceded by about 30 secs of advertising).
Excerpt from story tag:
'The kindest cut?
The complex debate surrounding male circumcision is back on the agenda and Monique Wright discovers the decision to snip or not to snip is not an easy choice for parents.'
Actually, 80+% of the world's parents are never confronted with any decision at all and the 'choice' for parents in Australia is only made difficult by the statements of discredited, publicity-drunk academicians like Brian Morris and profiteering doctors like Terry Russell.
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Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2009-05-25 00:23
From Jay H.: The National Women's Law Center provides a form to express one's support for the Paycheck Fairness Act 2009, a bill rife with bias against men here.
The nwlc.org website is on the first page of search results when searching Google for either "Paycheck Fairness Act" or "Paycheck Fairness Act 2009" or "women's pay". When searching for a variation of "fair pay" it is the first or second result.
The ACLU's frontpage provides a link to a nearly identical form with the description, "TAKE ACTION - Tell Your Senators to Support The Paycheck Fairness Act". Shouldn't we be asking for a similar call to action against this misguided bill?
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Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2009-05-25 00:20
Story here.
'The mother of a three-year-old boy whose body was pulled from an Oregon river hours before daybreak on Saturday was arrested and accused of dumping the boy and her seven-year-old daughter off a bridge.
Portland police said Amanda Jo Stott-Smith, 31, was taken into custody at a downtown parking garage.
Police said her car was on the Sellwood Bridge over the Willamette River moments before residents of the area heard the children's screams and a massive search was launched.
A resident who joined the search in his boat found the children nearly an hour after the screams were heard. Rescuers were unable to revive the boy. The girl was admitted to hospital.'
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Submitted by Michael on Sun, 2009-05-24 21:51
Article here. Excerpt:
'Only 7% of men would be prepared to stay at home with a newborn baby if maternity benefits were replaced with parental ones, according to a survey.
Even fewer women - 4% - would hand over the role at home to the father, while two-thirds of working mothers said they only kept jobs out of necessity.
...
"And interestingly women who don't have children tend to continue earning virtually the same as men as they continue in their careers."
...
New mothers currently get nine months paid leave, six weeks at 90% of their salary and the rest at the statutory rate of £117.18 a week. Fathers get two weeks at the statutory rate.
...
The show's survey found that 54% of respondents thought men were the main breadwinners, although 67% did not think they should be.
Almost one in five women said they experienced sex discrimination at work, while twice as many men than women surveyed had asked for a pay rise in the last five years.'
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Submitted by Michael on Sun, 2009-05-24 21:47
Article here. Excerpt:
'A report by a lobby group championing men's rights on Sunday said over 1.5 million in Kenya are victims of domestic violence daily.
The Maendeleo ya Wanaume organisation said even though they are battered by their wives, men find it difficult to report this to authorities for fear of social ridicule.
The findings show the campaign for the rights of the women has led to a reverse of the scenario and now men are at the centre of violence. The group carried out a survey in 40 selected districts in Kenya's provinces from August 2008 and has found out that between 1 and 1.5 million men are domestically abused by women daily.
The report shows that men have little say on issues that concern conjugal rights in their relationship and that women are the ones who determine when they should get intimate. In an apparent reference to the just-concluded sexual boycott called by a group of women activists, G10, the men said “this was equal to a domestic abuse against men.”'
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Submitted by Michael on Sun, 2009-05-24 21:42
Article here. Excerpt:
'In science, Japanese fourth-graders ranked fourth in performance compared to their international peers; eighth-graders ranked third; 15-year-olds ranked third. All three ranks represent performances significantly above international averages.
The only difference in average math performance between Japanese boys and girls was in the 15-year-old category, wherein boys outperformed girls by 20 points. The math gender gap has widened by 9 points since 2003.
Japanese 15-year-old girls outperformed boys in reading by 31 points. The reading gender gap has not narrowed since PISA began collecting data in 2000. It is currently more than 50 percent larger than the math gender gap.
...
52 percent of males and 38 percent of females enter universities in Japan. The international average is 50 percent of males and 62 percent of females.'
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Submitted by Michael on Sun, 2009-05-24 21:40
Article here. Excerpt:
'Most societies all over the globe miss answering the most crucial question for men: What is our purpose in life?
Women do not have to face this question as they are the giver of life — with the exception of the growing number of women not willing to face motherhood and, sadly, including women not able to give birth. These women as well as men face the critical question of the purpose of their existence.
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Submitted by Matt on Sun, 2009-05-24 20:05
Video here. Caption: "Girls at a Spanaway, Washington school made a video showing ways to kill a classmate."
Only boys are violent or bully other kids. We all know this. So this can't possibly be right. There must be a boy behind it, controlling the girls' minds in some way. Yeah, that's it.
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Submitted by jayhammers on Sun, 2009-05-24 00:37
Let President Obama know that his nominee for the Supreme Court should be someone who understands equal rights is not a one-sided issue. Men's rights should not be left by the wayside.
You can contact the administration here.
I sent the following letter.
Mr. President,
One of the reasons I voted for you is I believe you are a wise, far-sighted individual with a firm grasp on what progress really entails. I urge you to strongly consider a Supreme Court Justice who is similarly far-sighted in the area of civil rights, specifically in the area of gender fairness. The women’s rights movement has achieved a great deal of progress toward gender equality in the law, in the workplace, and socially. However, we should not discount the equal importance of men’s rights.
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Submitted by Matt on Sat, 2009-05-23 23:29
Article here. Excerpt:
'A taxi driver falsely accused of rape could receive a five-figure compensation payout after winning a landmark victory.
Clive Bishop, 49, says his life was ruined after a drunken 17-year-old passenger claimed he attacked her.
Kirsty Palmer later admitted she made up the allegations and was jailed for ten months for perverting the course of justice.
When he applied for compensation, Mr Bishop described how months of living under a cloud of 'slurs and lies' had caused him enormous suffering.
But the foster carer was twice refused a payout by the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority on the grounds he had not come to physical harm.'
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