Lately, powerful women have been getting a lot of bad press. But not all women use their power for evil or to grab non-consenting penises. Man Who Has It All interviews some of these Good Women to find out how they learned to see men as human.
Commentary
We have to let go of a comforting illusion — that there is some bright line between men who rape and men who don’t rape, between the bad guys and the good guys.
“Exclusion” has become a bad word, of late, but is not inherently so.
Powerful men need to be accused by dozens of women before there is a chance their careers will be affected. Kevin Spacey’s career seems to have come to an abrupt end on the word of one man.
#MeToo has encouraged some men to post about their misogynist behaviour online, but they need to move beyond social media confessions.
How can we claim to be shocked by a culture we all live in, participate in, and are complicit in?
That men have learned to put their pleasure first has created a world where sadists like Peter Madsen and Brendt Christensen not only fantasize about hurting women, but make those fantasies a reality.
It is no accident that, as we celebrate individuals rather than movements for radical change, Hugh Hefner has been hailed as the leader of the sexual revolution.
Murray Edwards College, one of Cambridge’s women-only colleges, has decided to open admissions to any student who “at the point of application identifies as a woman.”
In Julie Bindel’s new book, “The Pimping of Prostitution: Abolishing the Sex Work Myth,” she explores the connection between the “sex work” lobby and trans rights activism.
Hef should not be remembered as a freedom fighter, but a con artist of epic proportions.
In a demonstration of cluelessness, Justin Trudeau says he decided to start calling himself a feminist because a man said it was ok.
Men don’t rape because they don’t think consent is “sexy” enough, they rape because they think they will get away with it.