Submitted by Matt on Thu, 2007-03-08 03:53
Submitted by Matt on Thu, 2007-03-08 03:38
In response to an inquiry, we copied the guidelines for submissions from the old site archives here to the Freq. Asked Questions menu item (look to the left under "Main Menu" for this link).
Also, please when submitting a question to MANN admins, use the admin@mensactivism.org email address. This allows us to respond directly to you and also to respond faster, as well as guaranteeing that the entire MANN admin team will get to read your note.
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Submitted by ItsDan on Thu, 2007-03-08 01:26
Yes that's right. Raping. R-A-P-I-N-G. Not "abusing", not "contributing to the sexual experience of a minor", not "making happy time with little Timmy", or one of the other ridiculous charges that come up when it's a female perpetrator. Article here. Excerpt:
"Marcia Amsterdam, 30, was charged with second-degree rape, second-degree sex abuse and endangering the welfare of a child, according to a statement released by the special commissioner of investigation for the New York City School District"
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Submitted by Roy on Thu, 2007-03-08 00:36
The following excerpt is from Sen. Joe Biden's latest letter to Congress soliciting support to fully fund the 2008 VAWA budget, at over $1 BILLION!
"In 2005, Congress reauthorized the landmark Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), which both continues successful and lifesaving programs and crafts new initiatives to end sexual assault, domestic violence, and stalking. While the federal fight to end these crimes is over ten years old, our resolve must not fade. Nearly 25 percent of u.S. women report that they have been physically assaulted by an intimate partner during their lifetimes and 1 in 6 have been the victims of attempted or completed rape.
The cost of intimate partner violence exceeds $5.8 billion each year, $4.1 billion of which is for direct medical and mental health care services. In fiscal year 2008, we must remain committed to ending domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking. Accordingly, we urge you to fully fund the VAWA programs in the Department of Health and Human Services at the authorized level of $320 million and fund the Department of Justice VAWA programs at the authorized level of $683 million."
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2007-03-07 17:28
This year's congress will focus on the theme 'Boys and the Boy Crisis' Visit http://www.trueequality.com/ to read about it. Early registration for the congress, including the three pre-conference workshops to be given by Matt O'Connor of F4J, Glenn Sacks and Warren Farrell, can be done here. This year's congress is going to be great! Register early for savings, and block the July 13-14 weekend on your calendar.
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Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 2007-03-07 06:53
We are pleased to announce a new men's activism YouTube channel: XYVideo.
XYVideo puts the spotlight on issues affecting men.
http://www.youtube.com/xyvideo
We'll continue to post up-to-date news stories on issues that affect men, equality, and men's rights. Subscribe to the channel, offer your story ideas and links, comment on the videos, and help spread the word!
Help keep the channel current. Submit videos and story ideas by sending a note to 'xyvideo' on YouTube.
All comments and discussion on the videos are welcome and encouraged. Inappropriate or inflammatory posts will be removed.
Thank you for subscribing. We look forward to building one more channel for men and men's rights around the world!
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Submitted by Martian Bachelor on Wed, 2007-03-07 05:12
Yet another story involving a woman in a position of trust/power... Excerpt:
'A former security guard at a Colorado Springs juvenile detention center was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of having sex with a 14-year-old boy who was held there in 2005, police said.
Erin Hutchinson, 31, was a guard at the state-operated Zebulon Pike Youth Services Center for 4½ years before she was fired in July, according to Mary McGhee, a spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Human Services.'
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Submitted by digitalhermit on Wed, 2007-03-07 04:32
ABCNews is running a story about a woman who decided to go undercover as a man to discover how men really behave around each other. She discovered that (shockingly!) the differences between men and women were much more than skin deep.
Excerpt:
Her experience with these men turned some of her long-held perceptions about men being harsh and rejecting and women being warm and welcoming upside down.
"I mean, it was just the most wonderful rush to get these guys' handshakes, and I felt comfortable, I mean as comfortable as I could feel, right away. They just took me in … no questions asked," she said.
---
Ed. note: This is a reprint of a story ran in Jan., 2006. However, the content is so incisive, it bears repeating. If you missed it the first time, don't skip it now.
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2007-03-07 00:40
Story here. Excerpt:
'Many non-custodial parents across the country are in similar or worse circumstances after being ordered to make child support payments that are high relative to their income.
...
David L. Levy, chief executive officer of the Children's Rights Council, a Washington D.C. based nonprofit advocating "meaningful and continuing contact" between children and both parents, said shared custody arrangements are better than systems that create a "custodial" and a "non-custodial" parent.'
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Submitted by anthony on Wed, 2007-03-07 00:35
Article here. Excerpt:
"But according to the report, female professionals actually surpass their male counterparts in salary among specific job titles. Help desk professionals, earned $40,937 on average, 4.8 percent more than men; technical writers at $73,816, made 2.5 percent more than men. IT executives (CEOs, CIOs, chief technology officers, vice presidents and directors) earned an average of $109,912, or 1.4 percent more than men."
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Submitted by anthony on Tue, 2007-03-06 21:38
Story here. Excerpt:
"WASHINGTON — Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton called Tuesday for the majority of voters — women — to help her break the nation's highest glass ceiling by electing her the first female president.
'Today, women are a majority of the voters, a majority of students in college...'
...
The senator from New York is part of a generation of women who broke the so-called "glass ceiling" of advancement for females in the workplace, but she said the current government should do more to ensure that women receive equal pay for equal work."
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Submitted by Matt on Tue, 2007-03-06 20:02
First appeared in the Philadelphia Daily News, this by Sacks and Leving. Excerpt:
'Lisa Nowak is receiving widespread sympathy, in part because she is legitimately admired for being an astronaut. But a large share accrues because she’s a woman, and our society—both men and women—views women’s misdeeds more sympathetically than men’s.
The media is soft-pedaling numerous aspects of the Nowak case. Practically every media outlet has explained Nowak's decision to wear astronaut diapers on her journey to allegedly attack romantic rival Colleen Shipman as a bizarre, freakish action indicative of her mental instability. In reality, Nowak acted with logic and calculation—she did not want to stop several times on the way from Houston to Orlando and leave a trail of convenience store camera records behind her. For the same reason, when Nowak arrived in Orlando she disguised herself, checked into a hotel under a fake name and address, and paid cash.'
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Submitted by ItsDan on Tue, 2007-03-06 19:15
Story here.
'A woman pleaded guilty Tuesday to swinging her 4-week-old son like a bat to hit her boyfriend during a fight, fracturing the infant's skull in the process.
Chytoria Graham, 27, pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and endangering the welfare of a child under a plea agreement with prosecutors.'
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Submitted by AngryMan on Tue, 2007-03-06 13:14
Story here.
'Children are more likely to suffer development problems if their fathers do not take paternity leave or spend enough time with them when they are very young, according to an analysis of thousands of babies born around the turn of the millennium.
A report published today by the Equal Opportunities Commission and based on research tracking 19,000 children born in 2000 and 2001 found emotional and behavioural problems were more common by the time youngsters reached the age of three if their fathers had not taken time off work when they were born, or had not used flexible working to have a more positive role in their upbringing.'
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Submitted by GaryB on Tue, 2007-03-06 11:28
This story on News.com.au is a classic. Woman dumps a baby in a public toilet, in a plastic shopping bag. But, of course, police hold 'grave concerns for the mother's wellbeing, fearing that she may be suffering emotionally'. Poor thing. And of course should a father ever dump his baby in a toilet, he'd be lovingly looked after. Right.....
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