Meghan Murphy speaks with Phyllis Chesler about her new book, Requiem for a Female Serial Killer.
Tag: interviews
Meghan Murphy speaks with Keira Bell, the 23-year-old detransitioner who is suing the Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust, arguing minors cannot consent to puberty blockers.
Meghan Murphy speaks with Janice Raymond about her seminal book, The Transsexual Empire, which remains ever-relevant, 40 years later.
In this episode, Meghan Murphy speaks with journalist Helen Joyce about what she’s learned covering the gender identity trend and its impact on girls.
In this episode, Meghan Murphy speaks with Janice Raymond about her book, The Transsexual Empire, and what has happened since, in terms of the conflict between transgenderism and feminism.
Breanne Fahs and Phyllis Chesler, in conversation about women, pushed to the brink, who choose violence as an expression of rage.
Meghan Murphy speaks with Katherine Acosta and Lauren Levey about the aims of WHRC USA and the problem posed to women by the Equality Act (H.R. 5).
In this episode, Meghan Murphy speaks with Daphna Morell and Luba Fein about the Israeli feminist movement.
In this episode, Meghan Murphy speaks with Susan Hawthorne about her book, “In Defense of Separatism.”
Stella Perrett was a political cartoonist for the UK’s only socialist daily newspaper, The Morning Star, from 2015 to 2020. She had published cartoons criticizing capitalism, the police, Brexit, the American president,…
In this episode, Meghan Murphy speaks with Renate Klein about the harms of surrogacy.
The COVID-19 pandemic has been hard on everyone. But imagine if you were impoverished, a migrant, or living in close quarters with no way to socially isolate. What if you were a…
In this episode, Meghan Murphy speaks with Michelle Mara about the effect of decriminalizing prostitution in New Zealand.
Last month, a scheduled screening of Vaishnavi Sundar’s film, But What Was She Wearing? was abruptly cancelled. Vaishnavi was told, a week before the screening, that the event was cancelled because of…
Media, the police, and social workers knew girls were being exploited by Pakistani grooming gangs in Northern England, given drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, and food, then sold to grown men. Authorities ignored the story, but Julie Bindel reported on it.