How can we talk about women’s history in English-influenced western law without talking about voting rights? Well, sorry ladies. If we’re going to talk about voting rights, we’re going back a bit further than the suffragettes. The practice predates women’s interest in it by a few hundred years.…
How current is the current thing? | HBR Talk 301
We’ve been hearing for a couple of years now that a certain woke ideological perspective isn’t being taught in universities or the public school system. Many of its detractors are discussing it as if it appeared recently out of the blue, and nothing could have been done to stop it in the past.…
Where did Women’s Studies come from? | HBR Talk 300
We’re two Thursdays into whammon’s history month. Last week we took a break from whammon’s studies to learn about the marxist history of International Whammon’s day. Tonight, we’re returning to our academic pursuits to learn more about the totally organic academic gender revolution with its totally legitimate corporate and government sponsors.…
How did Women’s Studies rely on men? | HBR Talk 297
We often ridicule the feminist “Patriarchy Theory” narrative that women have no power, and no influence in society, but when we so wryly laugh, what is the reality upon which we’re standing? I’ll give you a hint: It isn’t feminism standing on its own two feet.…
The accountability gap in reproductive choice | HBR Talk 296
How severe is the accountability gap in reproductive choice? One sex has rights, but the other only has responsibilities. Tune in Thursday, February 15, 2024 as the badgers discuss a series of talking points on this set of issues, or find other listening and viewing options in the dropdown menu at the top of this page.…
Who do they think we are? | HBR Talk 294
Who are we? In our opinions, that depends in large part on what we do, but if you ask our detractors, that’s not even part of the formula. We’re more like a Schmoo to them – they can make whatever they want of us, feed their paranoia with us, and our very existence causes a crisis and threatens their whole gynocentrism-based economy.…
One feminist narrative debunked by women’s voices | HBR Talk 293
When men’s advocates discuss either male experiences of sexual violence, or the subject of false allegations, we’re often answered with claims that sexual violence is a highly prevalent set of crimes that are disproportionately perpetrated by men.…
Do feminists always project? HBR Talk 292
Feminists like to accuse men in general, especially men in the men’s rights movement, of basing their values and intentions on controlling & violent impulses & ideology. In the past, when MRAs have documented evidence of female behavior that constitutes a serious men’s issue, feminists have accused those maintaining the documentation of stalking, harassment, and threatening women just for...
Women can’t even avoid this as members of the UK parliament | HBR Talk 291
We often discuss the ridiculousness of the progressive stack, the way feminism defines all women as victims, all men as predatory, a privileged perpetrator class, and all of society as a rube-goldberg domination device in which men oppress women en masse and individually, regardless of the facts.…
Do Flood’s claims about MRAs and DV hold water? | HBR Talk 290
In evaluating Michael Flood’s army of strawman arguments, we’ve run into a consistent problem with his answers. He seems to think Australia is representative of the world. This week, we’re going to examine his arguments about domestic violence, and look at another data set for comparison.…
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