Call Email Join Donate
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

News

NCFM PR Director Steven Svoboda book review, Replacing Misandry: A Revolutionary History of Men.

September 24, 2020
By
NCFM PR Director Steven Svoboda book review, Replacing Misandry: A Revolutionary History of Men.

Replacing Misandry: A Revolutionary History of Men. By Paul Nathanson and Katherine K. Young. Chicago: McGill-Queens University Publishing, 2015. 223 pages. No price on book but Amazon.com gives price as $34.95. Review by J. Steven Svoboda. Canadian academics Paul Nathanson and Katherine K. Young have released their fourth book out of a projected total...
Read more »

Tags: , , ,
Posted in Abused Men, Discrimination, Discrimination Against Boys, Discrimination Against Males, Discrimination Against Men, Discrimination Against Women, Discrimination Men by Men, Misandry, Steven Svoboda, Esq. | 3 Comments »

NCFM Board Member Fred Sottile, I Need A Little Help with Men’s Rights

September 24, 2020
By
NCFM Board Member Fred Sottile, I Need A Little Help with Men’s Rights

I Need A Little Help with Men’s Rights by Fred Sottile There is a lot of talk, still in 2020, about women’s rights. You’d think the issue would have been addressed enough by now. After all, women compose more than half of college enrollment, have equal pay for equal work and any job they...
Read more »

Tags: , , ,
Posted in Fred Sottile, Men's Rights, Men's Rights Movement | 5 Comments »

NCFM Member Mark Lesmeister, Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a men’s rights advocate

September 23, 2020
By
NCFM Member Mark Lesmeister, Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a men’s rights advocate

Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a men’s rights advocate. I doubt that she ever called herself that. But when you fight for gender equality, that means you fight against discrimination against men, unless you’re a hypocrite. And though I don’t agree with Justice Ginsburg on much, I don’t think she was a hypocrite. If you...
Read more »

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »