Submitted by Matt on Thu, 2014-08-14 12:05
Essay here. Excerpt:
'In a society, culture, and system as complex as ours it is absolutely ridiculous to assume that all of the victimization occurs to women and that all of the advantage comes to men. Yet those are the assumptions. Men have plenty to complain about and women have significant powers. It has always been this way, but after 40 years of omnipresent feminism, today's imbalance is greater than ever. I suppose this is because of strong remnants of chivalry. Men must be strong and never complain. Men must always protect and help women. This is a sexist attitude that women, including feminist women, have encouraged and demanded instead of placing where it belongs, in the dustbin of history.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2014-08-13 21:28
Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2014-08-13 21:21
Story here.
'The woman who filed a federal lawsuit alleging that an Oklahoma Highway Patrol trooper raped her last month is wanted in another county on an allegation that she falsely reported a rape in 2009.
The woman, identified in the lawsuit only by her initials, is linked through public records to that Cherokee County charge as well as to an outstanding arrest warrant in Oklahoma County on charges of second-degree burglary and knowingly concealing stolen property.
Gary James, an attorney for Oklahoma Highway Patrol Trooper Eric Roberts and the Oklahoma State Highway Troopers Association, said the allegations of rape "are unequivocally untrue."'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2014-08-13 21:12
Article here. Excerpt:
'The Campus Accountability and Safety Act (CASA), S. 2692, seeks to change how publicly funded universities investigate allegations of sexual assault. CASA and its House version, H.R. 5354, are currently in front of congressional committees. S. 2692 in particular has been widely hailed as a rare display of bipartisan support. Why, then, does the congressional watchdog GovTrack.us give CASA only a 1 percent chance of being enacted?
The act contains some alarming provisions.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2014-08-13 05:24
Article here. Excerpt:
'If you tried to create a profile of someone at high risk of committing suicide, one likely example would look like this: A middle-aged or older white male toward the end of a successful career, who suffers from a serious medical problem as well as chronic depression and substance abuse, who recently completed treatment for either or both of those psychological conditions and who is going through a difficult period, personally or professionally.
In short, that person would look a lot like Robin Williams, the 63-year-old actor and comedian who, authorities said Tuesday, hanged himself with a belt in the bedroom of his San Francisco Bay area home a day earlier.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2014-08-12 19:08
Article here. Exverpt:
'Those who illegally cross into the United States have more rights than a college student accused of rape, according to a George Washington University (GWU) law professor.
John Banzhaf, a public interest law professor at GWU, is calling attention to disparity within America’s judicial system after finding “dozens” of cases in which colleges forgo due process when handling students accused of sexual assault while those crossing into the United States illegally are still granted an impartial hearing.
...
Banzhaf, who helped get all charges dropped against three Duke lacrosse players in a highly contested and bitter case, claims that he first spotted what he calls a “trend” of students successfully suing their universities for improperly finding them guilty of date rape.
“With date rape, [college judiciary committees] particularly try to find out what exactly happened in that room,” Banzhaf told Campus Reform. “The need seems to be much greater [for that] in the case of date rape for protection.”
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2014-08-12 19:05
Story here. Excerpt:
'This was their march on Tiananmen Square.
A group of protesters — from the so-called Revolutionary Student Movement, the Proletarian Feminist Front and the Proletarian Revolutionary Action Committee — confronted a couple of speakers at the University of Toronto last week. Unhappy with the topic of the event (“Men’s Issues Go Global”) or the host of the event (University of Toronto Men’s Issues Awareness Society), protesters decided to interrupt the event by hollering slogans, clapping their hands and singing.
Campus security was called in to mitigate the disruption, and the event was moved to another location on campus. The protesters ostensibly then went home, or possibly convened elsewhere to celebrate their insurrection. Either way, the lecture continued.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2014-08-12 05:56
Article here-. Excerpt:
'Las Veags, NV – A couple of days ago, Cynthia Maloney came across the ALS Association’s popular “Ice Bucket Challenge.” ALS stands for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (more commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease) in which patients lose all motor function as the disease progresses. “Ice Bucket Challenge” participants record and share videos of themselves dumping buckets filled with ice water on their heads, including the hashtag #icebucketchallenge, to raise awareness of ALS.
Maloney thought that it would be great if the genital autonomy movement came up with something similar to get the word out about children’s rights to bodily autonomy – to protect male, female and intersex children from genital cutting.
Two days later she woke up and read an article about a women’s campaign advocating against sex discrimination and for bodily autonomy. The article included a photo of a young woman holding a sign reading, “#IF I WERE A BOY – I’d be able to make choices about my own body.”
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2014-08-12 03:15
Article here. Excerpt:
'Blake looks at the views and biographies of a half-dozen women who are vigorously defending men against feminist extremism.
"It may seem counterintuitive that women would be helping drive the conversation about a movement that's fighting anti-male discrimination and campaigning fiercely against feminism," Blake reports.
Interestingly enough, two of these women — Karen Straughan and Janet "Judgybitch" Bloomfield — are Canadians who shred feminist cliches with acidic logic and humor. Both attained public notice via YouTube.
...
Schow shines much-needed light on the injustice of dispensing with the presumption of innocence, while Blake does the same by highlighting six heretofore obscure but intellectually courageous women.
That's what journalism does at its best — bring into clearer view previously unseen people and forgotten ideas that make us think in new ways about old issues.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2014-08-12 03:06
Article here. Excerpt:
'Moms and dads, be afraid for your sons. All across America, men are getting snared in what feminist activists and leftists call a “rape culture’’ that supposedly exists on college campuses.
In April, the Obama administration released a report concluding that nearly 1 in 5 women attending institutions of higher education become victims of unwanted sex acts. Legislation has been proposed in the Senate to tackle this “epidemic.”
Never mind that one of the sources of the 1-in-5 statistic was a 2007 online survey in which some respondents, who were rewarded with $10 gift certificates, equated drunken hookups and men’s attempts at stealing kisses as examples of sexual assault, according to Christina Hoff Sommers, resident scholar at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute. She spoke out against the nonsensical notion that huge numbers of women are being sexually assaulted on campuses at a June panel conducted in Washington by the Independent Women’s Forum, a conservative think tank.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2014-08-12 03:04
Article here. Excerpt:
'Kevin Parisi is 5 feet, 5 inches tall and barely weighs 120 pounds.
He’s hunched over and walking with a cane after back surgery earlier this year. He suffers from severe anxiety and digestive disorders, along with extreme allergies and panic attacks.
But in his junior year at Drew University in Madison, N.J., Parisi was accused of forcing a fellow student — one who is now a professional athlete — to have sex with him.
He was kicked off campus and placed under investigation. Three months went by before he was found "not responsible" in a campus disciplinary proceeding. Local police never filed charges against him.
Being accused, however, was enough to cause his world to collapse. Now he is suing Drew for assuming he was guilty from the outset and treating him as such until it was determined he was innocent.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2014-08-12 00:11
Article here.
Back when our culture (mostly mothers) taught little boys to be respectful of little girls, in the hope that they would grow up to be respectful men, females existed relatively safely. Now that the culture is in the toilet and feminists and homosexual activists have targeted normal men for destruction, you take your chances.
From my perspective, if you are a woman who physically attacks a man (who is likely larger and stronger), you deserve what you get. If a man is self-restrained (because of Mom's teachings or some residual of an American culture that no longer exists), you might get away with a verbal comeback or even a walk-away. He may, however, knock the heck out of you.
If you are one of those women who have bought into the absurd feminist notion that women are no different from men, yet men must treat you differently when it comes to physical defense, then you are delusional.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2014-08-11 04:07
Article here. Excerpt:
'A congressional bill aimed at curbing sexual assault on America’s college and university campuses actually would make the problem worse, contends the anti-violence group Stop Abusive and Violent Environments, or SAVE.
The Campus Accountability and Safety Act sponsored by Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., includes provisions for counselors for sexual assault victims, anonymity for those who report sexual assaults and increased standards for campus security and safety officers.
Her office declined to respond to WND questions, but in a statement previously released by her press office, she said women on college campuses are in danger of sexual assault.
...
But SAVE President Everett Bartlett said one of the major consequences of the bill will be to remove some of the U.S. Constitution’s protections for the accused.
“The bill as it reads is biased in favor of the accuser and biased against the accused. It will make it difficult to protect a young man from false accusations,” Bartlett said.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sun, 2014-08-10 20:46
Story here. Excerpt:
'The sports network has suspended host Max Kellerman after he admitted Monday on ESPN-LA Radio show Mason & Ireland that he hit his then-girlfriend, Erin, several years ago. Max and Erin have now been married for 20 years.
"Max Kellerman will return to ESPNLA Radio and SportsNation on Thursday," ESPN said in a statement released to The Hollywood Reporter.
Max explained in the story that he and Erin were at a college party and were drunk at the time. Max said that Erin slapped him, and so he slapped her back.'
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Submitted by Matt on Sat, 2014-08-09 17:35
From the author/publisher:
We are pleased to announce a new tell all book about Family Court that is long overdue.
Want to know what happened to your rights as a parent, honest citizen and decent human being?
Want to know what was the 'genesis seed' for all this mess?
Do you know parents and children whose lives were ruined by Family Court? Then this book is a brutal must read.
Available now in the Amazon Kindle store: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MEJKDRA
Please "Like" us on Facebook, tell everyone you know and ask them to do the same.
It is time the truth was outed!
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