Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 2007-05-14 17:03
Story here. Excerpt:
"Since then, the actor has been behind bars, with no trial, at the maximum-security Quinte Detention Centre in Napanee, 30 kilometres west of Kingston, on charges of criminally harassing his wife during their marriage. It's alleged that his "reckless" behaviour led his spouse, Leah, with whom he has a now-2-year-old daughter, to be afraid for her own safety or others'."
Rosato's situation raises troubling questions. Why must he wait so long for a trial? And if he is suffering from mental illness, why isn't he in a hospital room instead of a jail cell?
'nuff said.
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by GaryB on Mon, 2007-05-14 11:14
News.com.au reports here on a woman who tricked her ex into being handcuffed, then used a sex toy to brutally sodomise him, whilst also getting her new boyfriend to beat the crap out of him. The new boyfriend killed himself (presumably from the shame of what he'd done), but of course the girlfriend denies everything - and who knows, she's a woman so she's innocent and will probably get off.
QUOTE:
"A PERTH woman today denied in court that she tied and handcuffed her soldier lover to a chair and sodomised him with a sex toy in an hour-long attack.
Nicola Clunies-Ross, 19, is accused of luring the Darwin-based soldier, also 19, to her home on October 28 last year and tricking him into being tied to a chair and handcuffed."
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by Matt on Sun, 2007-05-13 17:07
Still out there... see it here. Looks like David & Goliath have just switched mediums for their anti-boy merchandise.
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 2007-05-13 07:37
Story here. Excerpt:
'A woman falsely accused an ex-boyfriend of rape after her current partner beat him up, a court heard yesterday.
Sharon Owers told police that keen yachtsman Chris Sullivan had raped her on her birthday on a pontoon at Swanwick Marina, near Southampton.
However, she made the allegation only when she and boyfriend Craig Abernethy were being interviewed over a frenzied attack on Mr Sullivan.'
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by AngryMan on Sat, 2007-05-12 18:54
Story here. Excerpt:
'A female pimp who lured girls as young as 12 into prostitution by getting them hooked on drugs has been jailed.
...
Walsh, of Kilburn, north-west London, was given a 10-year prison term after she pleaded guilty to four counts of child prostitution and supplying drugs.
...
Joanna Korner QC, prosecuting, said the two victims were vulnerable as they were from "dysfunctional, single parent family backgrounds".
"She cynically and cold-bloodedly befriended them in order to use them for her own purposes," she said.
"She exercised control over them through the belief she was their friend and by supplying drugs."'
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by Roy on Sat, 2007-05-12 15:45
Article here. A new book "Opting Out" looks at American moms’ struggles to balance both work and family and finds that women often aren't opting out — instead they're being shut out. Excerpt:
“Even the brightest women have fewer options around balancing work and family than society assumes. ... the stories women tell reveal not the expression of choice, but rather the existence of a choice gap, a gap that is a function of a double bind created primarily by the conditions of work in the gilded cages of elite professions. ... women go home because they have been unsuccessful in their efforts to obtain flexibility or because they found themselves marginalized and stigmatized for trying to hold onto their careers after becoming mothers.”'
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by AngryMan on Sat, 2007-05-12 13:39
Story here. Excerpt:
'Hundreds of Britons accused of being paedophiles in the country's biggest Internet child pornography investigation were actually victims of credit card fraud, it was claimed last night. More than 7,000 - including rock star Pete Townshend - were said to have downloaded child-porn images from a U.S. website. But an investigation has found that many of those charged as part of the police inquiry codenamed Operation Ore were innocent and their card details had been used illegally.'
To listen to the original BBC Radio program, click here. It is available for 7 days until Thursday 17th May.
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by TomP on Sat, 2007-05-12 01:45
Story here. Excerpt:
"For more than 30 years U.S. judges have given custody or unsupervised visitation of children to abusers and molesters putting the children directly at risk," says Dianne Post, an international attorney who authored the petition. "These horrendous human rights violations have been brought to the attention of family court systems, and state and federal governments, to no avail. We turn now to international courts to protect the rights and safety of US children."
I might agree with the quoted attorney's sentiments, but I think she got the sex of the offenders wrong in way too many cases...
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by Matt on Fri, 2007-05-11 21:49
Read it here, it's beautiful. Amy Alkon is syndicated in over 100 newspapers in the US. Excerpt:
'Warped thinking like yours makes me realize how lucky I am to be a woman and white as typing paper. Although I recently got stopped by a cop for going the wrong way on a one-way street (he rolled his eyes and let me go when he realized I wasn't drunk, just ditzy), I'm generally safe from automatic presumptions of criminality like Driving While Black or Living And Breathing While Male.
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 2007-05-11 21:42
I've just read on the menshealthforum site (UK) this breaking news:
"The Equality Act 2006 has created an important new duty for NHS organisations: the ‘gender duty’. NHS organisations’ compliance with the duty will be overseen by the new Commission for Equality and Human Rights and the Healthcare Commission."
"Men's Health Forum's president Dr Ian Banks believes ‘men are being badly let down because of the "one size fits all" approach to health care that has bedevilled the NHS since its inception.’ He says: ‘the Equality Act provides the biggest opportunity to improve male health since the foundation of the NHS."
This one is the best:
"The Men’s Health Forum will be monitoring the performance of the NHS and will not hesitate to use the new legislation to ensure compliance."
"Since men do worse in any areas of health, specific actions are needed to improve male health."
Check out the five main issues affecting men's health according to the MHF.
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by anthony on Fri, 2007-05-11 17:57
Article here.
Sacks writes:
"In other words, it's more economically efficient for the child to live with mom in a household dad finances, and for the child to see dad in a park on Sundays and no more. This is hardly in the best interests of children. And since NOW is interested in economic efficiency, I would argue that it's more economically efficient to not get divorced to begin with, but since the vast majority of divorces are initiated by women, NOW is not about to come out against divorce."
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by anthony on Fri, 2007-05-11 17:54
Story here.
"Acceptable manner" is simply a politically correct way of saying "lets manipulate this culture with propaganda". Excerpt:
"There are many socio-cultural issues surrounding male circumcision that need to be addressed in order for it to adequately contribute to HIV prevention. It is, therefore, important that promotion of male circumcision be promoted and delivered in a culturally appropriate manner that minimises stigma that may be associated with circumcision."
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by anthony on Fri, 2007-05-11 17:49
Article here.
Be prepared, this article is from "Women's E News". My suggestion to NOW, just come right out and speak the truth. This law is not aimed at gender hate crimes, its simply a way to manipulate society with the fallacy that all men hate women. Excerpt:
"It looks like it will be unlikely that it will become law, but we will keep working at it," said Olga Vives, a vice president at the National Organization for Women in Washington, D.C.
If the legislation becomes law, it would establish uniform protections for women and girls who are victims of hate crimes around the country. Currently, 28 states include gender in their own versions of hate-crimes laws.
If the bill fails, advocates say a hard-won opportunity to specifically address hate crimes against women and girls will be lost, or at least put on hold until a different president occupies the White House."
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by anthony on Thu, 2007-05-10 20:56
Story here. Excerpt:
"A woman who posed as an homeless orphaned boy, befriended a teenage girl and was taken into her family's home has pleaded guilty to child molestation.
Prosecutors say they would seek the maximum one-year jail term for Lorelei J. Corpuz, 30, who entered her plea Wednesday. Charges of third-degree child rape were dropped last month.
Authorities said Corpuz, who cropped her hair and stands 5-foot-3, passed herself off as 17-year-old Mark Villanueva after meeting the girl at a mall in September 2005. Her parents, immigrants who speak little English, later let Corpuz live at their home."
Like0 Dislike0
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 2007-05-10 05:24
The Democrat-controlled US Congress has recently passed a bill which would extend existing federal hate-crime legislation to cover attacks based on gender - here's a reasonable discussion of the law. Given the easily demonstrated anti-male bias of both the civil and criminal justice systems in the US it's a fair bet that the law is yet another move towards criminalizing men and masculinity, and that the law (like many other criminal sanctions) would be used to selectively prosecute and penalize men.
Let's hope President Bush has the good sense to veto this law before it can used in the war against boys and men. It's too bad that his badly needed veto will likely be about state rights or religious issues rather than any sense of protecting men from selective and discriminatory law enforcement.
Like0 Dislike0
Pages