Submitted by Mastodon on Thu, 2014-02-27 04:31
Article here. Excerpt:
'They claim that rape statistics are overinflated, that female-on-male sexual assaults are ignored or sneered at, and—above all—that false rape reports are a far larger problem than we acknowledge. And they’re taking action. In Canada this past summer, a men’s rights group plastered the city of Edmonton with posters aimed at young women. “Just because you regret a one-night stand doesn’t mean it wasn’t consensual,” the posters read. This fall, members of a MRM website took online vigilante justice against an Ohio University student they believed was falsely crying rape. (It turned out she was the wrong woman altogether.) The Occidental incident has sparked other, similar actions—this month, MRM websites called for a mass spamming of Dartmouth’s anonymous online sexual assault reporting form.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Thu, 2014-02-27 04:29
Article and video here. (NSFW: The recorded discussion among the women is explicit.) Excerpt:
'Pro-circumcision groups got a boost with the results of a survey made by AdamAndEve.com on female preference in terms of having the foreskin of their male partners cut or not.
The study found 54 per cent of American women favoured a circumcised penis, 33 per cent don't have any preference, 3 per cent opted for an uncircumcised dick and 10 per cent did not reply.
The survey has 1,000 adult female American respondents from age 18 and above.
Explaining the results of the study, Dr Kat Van Kirk, resident sexpert of AdamAndEve.com - vendor of adult products - said, quoted by Digital Times, "Circumcision is largely a cultural choice. With circumcision prevalent in the U.S. (as well as the Muslim world, Africa and Israel), many American women have never been exposed to an uncircumcised penis."'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Thu, 2014-02-27 04:26
Story here.
'The Arizona Senate has approved a bill outlawing female genital mutilation that's known as female circumcision.
The Senate unanimously approved the bill on Monday. The bill bars genital mutilation on girls under 18 and would make a first-time violation and conviction punishable by five to 14 years in prison and a minimum $25,000 fine.
Bill sponsor Republican Sen. Judy Burges of Sun City West says female genital mutilation is a problem that's beginning to appear in the United States.
The bill will now go the House of Representatives.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Thu, 2014-02-27 04:24
Story here. Excerpt:
'Jason Biggs and wife Jenny Mollen may have enjoyed sharing joyous photos from their son's circumcision ceremony, but it seemed to anger fans.
"Today was not a good day to be Sid's penis," Mollen captioned a photo on Instagram of her kissing her newborn's head as dad stands by smiling. "#babybiggs #circumcision"
The first-time parents were immediately criticized for their lighthearted approach to the situation.
"He has to live with a mutilated penis because his parents are ignorant," one critic with the handle "Ianbrayamia" wrote in response to their photo.
Another, named "Floppymagma," wrote, "Wasn't a good day for poor Sid either! Poor baby. It's amazing that a country so advanced in so many ways is still so backdated."'
---
Wikipedia on Biggs and Mollen, here and here.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Thu, 2014-02-27 04:18
Submitted by Mastodon on Thu, 2014-02-27 04:15
Article here. Excerpt:
'The future of America's national pastime is apparently in serious jeopardy at Air Force.
Budget cuts are expected to come down as early as March 4, and The Gazette has confirmed that sports may be eliminated. With baseball high on that list, a group of former players are doing all they can to proactively prevent it.
...
"We are experiencing unprecedented budget challenges over the next several years and have to make some very difficult decisions."
Title IX will be a factor when determining cuts. Since the academy's gender breakdown is roughly 80 percent male, male athletes must be offered about 75 to 85 percent of the intercollegiate athletic opportunities. So if baseball is cut, a corresponding women's team would likely have to go as well.
This may end up saving some men's sports, which flips the original impact of the law as many schools around the nation had to cut men's sports like wrestling and baseball to even out opportunities between genders.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Thu, 2014-02-27 04:06
Article here. Excerpt:
'The most insidious attacks are not happening to men though, they are being executed on boys. Little boys are energetic, rambunctious, enthusiastic and easily the root word for “boisterous.” Little boys and little girls, despite all of the populist arguments to the contrary, are not the same. A typical toddler girl, if separated from her mommy by a baby gate, will eventually sit down and cry if her mommy does not pay her attention. A typical toddler boy however, while he too might cry, will also attempt to break down the gate or scale it. The relative advantage of either approach is worth debating, but it is the difference which needs to be addressed.
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Submitted by fathers4fairness on Wed, 2014-02-26 23:52
Article here. [Ed.: Submitter's comments placed in first comment for story.] Excerpt:
'Jordan Ott was the third of his mother’s six children, born over the course of four marriages.
By age 8, he’d had two step-dads; his brothers and sisters had more or fewer based on birth order. Each child also had different numbers of siblings, depending on whether their own dads fathered other children. Ott has one full sister, four half-siblings and at one point had three step-siblings “that I know of,” he said. His own father has mostly lived far away.
His story is not uncommon today. More than half of babies of mothers under 30 are born to unmarried parents. The divorce rate among those who do marry exceeds 40 percent, according to the 2012 State of Our Unions report.
These statistics play out most often in the form of absent fathers—or the arrival and departure of serial father figures involved in romantic relationships with a child’s mother. (Moms still usually retain custody in a breakup or divorce.) Twenty-four million American children—one in three—are growing up in homes without their biological fathers, the 2011 Census says. Children in father-absent homes, it notes, are almost four times more likely to be poor.
...
Most children weather family turmoil and wind up OK, said Cherlin, who coined the term “family churn” to describe what happens to families as couples split, often moving dad out of the home and a new man in. A study in the Journal of Marriage and Family said children in such homes experience an average of more than 5.25 partnership transitions. That’s tough for kids who are used to having their own fathers within reach.
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Submitted by fathers4fairness on Wed, 2014-02-26 18:37
Article here. Excerpt:
'In 1981, 2,466 women in the UK took their own lives. Three decades later, thanks to improvements in psychiatric and emergency care medicine, to a range of suicide prevention barriers and policies and, perhaps, to gradual social, political and personal empowerment, the number in 2012 had almost halved to 1,391.
In 1981, 4,129 men in the UK took their own lives. Three decades later, despite improvements in psychiatric and emergency care medicine, a range of suicide prevention barriers and policies and, arguably, some degree of social, political and personal empowerment, the number in 2012 had risen to 4,590.
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Submitted by Minuteman on Wed, 2014-02-26 09:00
Link here. Excerpt:
'The tools of war have changed. With the increased use of powerful explosive devices, men and women patrolling on foot in bomb-laced areas of combat are increasingly suffering traumatic injuries to the groin and genitals, experts say.
Those injuries can pose complex long-term sexual and psychological challenges.
It is hard to even imagine having your genitals crushed, burned or ripped off in a blast by a makeshift bomb, said Dr. Chris Gonzalez, the lead author of a new review article published recently in The Journal of Men's Health. "For some, it's even worse than losing a limb," he said.
The impact of so-called "improvised explosive devices" (IEDs) is different from gun fire encountered in earlier combat, explained Gonzalez, who is a professor of urology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, in Chicago.
"The energy comes from the ground up, so the first thing that gets hit is in the perineal [groin] area," he said.'
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2014-02-26 06:32
Story here. Well of course not. But for her, that isn't the question. It's more like would she be the teacher who is "dating" the student? We already know the answer to that and so does her husband: the boy she started "having sex with" when he was only 12. Excerpt:
'It’s been more than 13 years since former Seattle schoolteacher Mary Kay Letourneau made international headlines when it was revealed that she was having a sexual relationship with her 12-year-old student Vili Fualaau — a relationship that netted her a seven-year prison sentence for child rape.
Today she’s 48-year-old Mary Fualaau: married to that former student, raising two daughters, and she recently greeted her first grandchild, a girl. And she has a word of advice for her daughters: “Wait.”
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2014-02-26 06:26
Article here. Excerpt:
'“A broad consensus of accomplished researchers and practitioners agree that, in normal circumstances, the evidence supports shared residential arrangements for children under 4 years of age whose parents live apart from each other.”
It is rare that you have a single article that reports the consensus of such a large group of social scientists. The article, Social Science and Parenting Plans for Young Children: A Consensus Report, focuses on living arrangements for young children (under 4 years of age). The focus is on young children not because the research shows something different for older children but because opponents of shared residential arrangements have focused their attention on these cases, arguing that it is vital for the children to develop a strong bond with one parent and that requires a sole-custody/visitation living arrangement.
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2014-02-26 06:18
Article here. The article opens in the typical nymphotropic way, but then you get into more of the nuts and bolts of the decision. It sounds like at least in view of the PAS the judge says the mom has been inflicting on her kids and her complacency around looking after them, it's certainly the right thing to do. Mom does sound depressed though, and so it's not something to be discarded from consideration; still, if indeed it's all supposed to be about the 'best interests of the child', then there has to be a line drawn someplace. However you'll see judges be a lot faster to draw that line in front of a dad than a mom. Excerpt:
'A mother said to have harmed her two sons by ‘permissive parenting’ has been stripped of the right to bring them up.
The brothers, 11 and 14, will now live with their father so they will be given ‘the guidance and boundaries appropriate for teenage boys’.
A judge made the order after hearing that the boys, who lived with their mother after their parents’ break-up, were staying up late, missing school, late for classes and neglecting their homework.
The mother spent much of the day in bed while her sons were left to play computer games, Judge Laura Harris heard. She said the mother was ‘complacent about the educational issues and minimised concerns about lateness, homework and general progress’.
...
She was awarded custody in 2002, and in 2004 a court ruled that the children should live with their mother while having weekend contact with their father.
In 2012, the father asked a court for custody after repeatedly complaining that he had been denied contact with them. Judge Harris said the father ‘has, in my view, demonstrated far better insight into the needs of his boys’.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2014-02-26 04:15
Story here. Excerpt:
'An 11-year-old boy, Caden Cook, was suspended from school for voluntarily turning in a non-firing plastic toy gun to school personnel.
Fredrick Funston Elementary School in Chicago instituted a random pat-down screening procedure as part of its security at the beginning of the school year, reports The Rutherford Institute, which has come to Cook's defense in the matter.
All students are physically separated from their bags and randomly chosen for pat-downs before going through metal detectors. Bags are also searched at random.
Caden Cook, a sixth-grader, had forgotten he held a plastic toy gun he had played with the previous night in his sweater pocket while waiting in line at school security. He alerted school security personnel, explained he accidentally brought the toy gun to school and relinquished it to security.
Cook was doing the right thing, but the school did not see it that way.
School officials allegedly subjected Cook to intimidation tactics, interrogation, accusations of lying, and threats. His mother was not present, nor had she been informed of the incident. When she did arrive, she was allegedly berated and criticized for allowing her son to play with toy guns, reports The Examiner.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2014-02-26 04:10
Article here.
'Hillary Rodham Clinton says that men are also responsible for advancing rights and opportunities for women around the world.
The former secretary of state says "it's not a women's issue" but, in her words, "a responsibility that we all share."
On Tuesday, Clinton presided over Georgetown University's annual Hillary Rodham Clinton Awards for Advancing Women in Peace and Security. She says it's not a mistake but a message that all three winners are men.
Clinton is contemplating a run for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016.
The former first lady says that everyone suffers when women are marginalized and that everyone benefits when women and girls have a chance to participate fully alongside men and boys in all facets of life, including politics.'
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