Submitted by axolotl on Sat, 2007-08-04 07:40
Check out this 10 minute video, in which Sacks talks about several specific cases where television, movie and musical performers, reinforce the idea that violence by women is OK.
One of these really astonished me, it is a video of a woman getting revenge on her ex by tearing up his car with a knife and baseball bat. It turns out the video was the first one ever written and directed by a woman to achieve "video of the year" awards, and was voted number one on CMT. Incredible!
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Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 2007-08-03 18:16
The New York Times reports that in Los Angeles, Dallas, and New York City, the gender wage gap among people in their 20's favors women.
For women in Dallas it is as extreme as 120%!
Excerpt:
'Young women in New York and several of the nation’s other largest cities who work full time have forged ahead of men in wages, according to an analysis of recent census data.
The shift has occurred in New York since 2000 and even earlier in Los Angeles, Dallas and a few other cities.'
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Submitted by Female MRA on Fri, 2007-08-03 12:05
Excerpt:
"Hollywood is still an old boys' club and boys are bullies.
The ultimate symbol of the film industry is a man, Oscar, clutching a sword and standing on a reel of film because he's defending his turf," said Tom O'Neil, columnist for theenvelope.com Web site. "I think that says it all."
Read the rest here.
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Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2007-08-02 18:14
Story here. Excerpt:
"The state Department of Social Services wants any man who is not married to a woman but could be the father of a child with her to voluntarily fill out a one-page registration.
The law, which went into effect July 1, is designed to protect men's rights in the case of a future adoption.
State officials emphasized that the confidential database is not an attempt to track sexual activity or partners. But it suggests men register "after relations with new partners or continued relations with the same woman."
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Submitted by blaze4metal on Thu, 2007-08-02 15:20
Article here. Excerpt:
"Several Ohio state representatives who normally take an anti-abortion stance are now pushing pro-choice legislation - sort of.
Led by Rep. John Adams, a group of state legislators have submitted a bill that would give fathers of unborn children a final say in whether or not an abortion can take place.
It's a measure that, supporters say, would finally give fathers a choice."
Later on, the feminists get to say: "This measure is a clear attack on a woman's freedom and privacy."
What about the man's freedom to not have to pay child support for the next 18 years for a baby he didn't want to have? Say what you will about abortion, but if you want the baby, they you pay. If you don't and she does, she should pay.
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2007-07-31 13:23
Linked from the CNN main page as of this writing:
How to get through to a man taken from Oprah.com. Anyone else notice the link to Time.com on the top? Looks like CNN and Time are collaborating these days in their misandrist pursuits. Excerpt:
'Meet every protest and argument he makes, no matter how ridiculously false, with the observation that he is absolutely correct ... but you still want what you want. In boxing this is called rope-a-dope, and even if you don't know what the rope part means, the dope part sounds pretty applicable. This is called win-win -- except you did and he didn't.'
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2007-07-31 13:19
From Glenn Sacks:
'My new co-authored column, Choosing Foster Parents over Fathers (San Diego Union-Tribune, 7/11/07), discusses perhaps the worst verified child custody/family law injustice against a father and a daughter which I have ever seen--the outrageous Melinda Smith foster care case.' Excerpt:
"In the heartbreaking Melinda Smith case, a father and daughter were needlessly separated by the foster care system for over a decade. Last week, Los Angeles County settled a lawsuit over the case for an undisclosed sum. Yet a recent Urban Institute study found that the Smith case typifies the way the foster care system harms children by disregarding the loving bonds they share with their fathers."
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2007-07-31 05:58
Story here. Excerpt:
'They were often handcuffed, tethered together with plastic ties and allowed to soil themselves, investigators say. They had scars on their wrists. Some had burns.
None appeared to have more than a fourth-grade education, not even the adults in their 20s. All were starving.
In all, nine teenagers and young adults were held like prisoners in Judith Leekin's home in what appeared to be a decades-long scheme to line her pockets with the government payments she received for adopting and raising them, police say.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2007-07-31 05:55
Story here. Excerpt:
'A mother of four who is facing murder charges in the death of her new baby last week and is suspected in the killings of three infants whose remains were found on her property was denied bail Monday after pleading with the judge to free her on bond.
...
The bodies of four small infants were found at the home of Christy Freeman, 37, a woman who denied having been pregnant, even after she was taken to a hospital and doctors discovered a placenta and part of an umbilical cord, police said.'
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2007-07-31 05:53
Story here. Excerpt:
'Even for seasoned detectives, the crime scene in an apartment last weekend was horrific: A man, gagged and handcuffed, had been killed and his penis was cut off.
Investigators believe the suspect, Brigitte Harris, "did it," said a law enforcement official. "We are trying to determine why."
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because Harris had not been arrested or charged, said police were checking reports that Goodridge, 55, may have abused Harris as a child. Detectives were hoping to question the 26-year-old suspect at a hospital mental ward where she was admitted after the slaying, the law enforcement official said.'
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Submitted by Kavius on Mon, 2007-07-30 20:12
Article here.
An article in the Calgary Sun recently addressed the killing of Ephraim Brown in a unique way. Excerpt:
'A boy named Ephraim Brown was killed recently in Toronto, caught in a crossfire between the vicious thugs who populate large cities. It is a wicked and sad thing.
...
...feminist theory forbids examination of the true roots of crime because it makes them uncomfortable and violates the sacred tenet of their creed, which says men are essentially disposable.'
The author (Ian Robinson) does a really nice job of raising points that no one else is considering in all of this. The knee-jerk reaction is to blame the tool and not look at the root cause.
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Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2007-07-30 12:47
There is no case of prosecutorial abuse more overdue for investigation than that of Mike Nifong, the prosecutor in the Duke Case who tried to convict men he knew to be innocent. Last week, Nifong finally admitted that the men had committed no crime.
There is abundant evidence that prosecutorial abuse is not rare. There are many individuals in prison for crimes they did not commit, while those who did commit the crimes roam scot-free. The Innocence Project has freed over 200 of them. This is just the tip of the iceberg.
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Submitted by AngryMan on Mon, 2007-07-30 08:19
Story here.
'A Royal Air Force typist who injured her thumb at work is to be paid almost half a million pounds by the Ministry of Defence.
...
It is eight times more than a soldier would receive for losing a leg and almost double the amount he could expect if he lost both legs.
...
The woman, believed to be in her 20s, developed a repetitive strain injury while typing computer data.
She claimed it left her unable to work and caused her to become depressed, and she started legal action against the MoD.'
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Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 2007-07-30 05:07
Do women really want equality or it's a mask for seeking privileged treatment? A good article by Chandan Mitra - a senior Indian journalist. Excerpt:
'At the risk of inviting the wrath of vocal women's activists in the metros, I must unambiguously state that I do not think there is any concerted or deliberate discrimination against women or in-built gender bias in the professions. In fact, India's record in this regard, be it politics, business, the civil services, law, medicine, academia - the list could be hugely long - is better than that of the West. Arguably, women do face some unequal situations in the home, but Indian laws are so draconian and unthinking that they have probably worsened the position of women in recent years. The Anti-Dowry Act (Article 498a) and the recently enacted Domestic Violence Act have done great disservice to gender harmony.'
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Submitted by anthony on Sat, 2007-07-28 21:53
Story here. Excerpt:
'Police in Washington County say a female caregiver raped a man for whom she was caring.
Alyson Bush, 41, of Washington, Pa., is charged with rape of a mentally disabled person, institutional sexual assault and related offenses.
Donegal Township police Chief Ethan Ward said the man's mother contacted them after her 32-year-old son told her that Bush had been forcing him to have sex with her.'
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