The Women of Men's Rights Movement (VICE DOCUMENTARY)

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bkkbully;519961 said:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M4PDFaRPKM0

It was just after she’d had her first child that Janet Bloomfield realized she didn’t want to go back to work and pay some nanny to raise her kids. She had gone to college to study film theory and assumed, like practically every American woman does, that she would start a career before marrying and having a family, but that wasn’t how things turned out. She met a man, fell in love, and stayed at home.

She didn’t feel ashamed of this decision, nor did she feel denied in any way—a close college friend of hers nicknamed Pixie had wound up in a similar situation when her son was diagnosed with some severe health issues. But other people, especially other women, apparently had a problem with Janet’s choices. She felt that her friends were disdainful of her and thought she was crazy or stupid to rely on a man for her income; they insinuated that her husband would “trade her in for a younger woman,” and that she would wind up broke and abandoned.

Janet and Pixie started writing letters back and forth while Pixie’s son was in intensive care, where Pixie wasn’t allowed to bring her cell phone. They talked about how housewives had fallen out of cultural favor, and about how Janet was a “victim of parental alienation,” as she would later say—her parents had gone through a vicious divorce and her mother had turned her and her three brothers against her father. In October 2012 these paper and ink musings became a blog, JudgyBitch.com, with Janet writing rants and Pixie doing the graphics and maintaining the back end.

As she was starting the website, Janet was searching for answers as to why her peers disliked stay-at-home moms and why her mother had had the power to separate her from her father. She found herself exploring a part of the internet that was full of complicated theories about social hierarchies, propaganda, and gender bias, in the process reading story after story of men being discriminated against in family courts and custody battles. Respect for traditional family structures was waning. The very concept of the family, in fact, was now regarded as a means by which men oppress women.

As she read more, disparate threads started clicking together—all these things were the result of a systematic vilification of the male gender. The misinformation, the lies, the poison, it all came back to radical feminism. Even her film-theory courses had taught her to watch movies through a feminist filter. She gradually acquired a set of beliefs with the help of a loosely organized online community of thinkers and writers called the Men’s Rights Movement (MRM).

what our new age thinking has come to......................
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Both MRA'S and feminists claim to want equality, but focus on only one gender

That's not equality, that's a special interest group
 
Nothing worse than a broad that USED to do shit all of the sudden deciding that because they CHOSE to have a kid that YOU (the dude) MUST support both of them because she DECIDED to stop working for the foreseeable future... FOH...

 
I hate those Men's Rights clowns. Their arguments are all self-pitying "why don't we have a WHITE history month?!?" cracka logic. Like half of them are bitter lonely virgins that study all that "Pick Up Artist" shit and still can't get pussy to save their life lol.
 
Swiffness!;7281422 said:
I hate those Men's Rights clowns. Their arguments are all self-pitying "why don't we have a WHITE history month?!?" cracka logic. Like half of them are bitter lonely virgins that study all that "Pick Up Artist" shit and still can't get pussy to save their life lol.

That's like what people say to discredit feminists though

"they're all fat dykes that nobody would want to fuck let alone rape"
 
bkkbully;519961 said:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M4PDFaRPKM0

It was just after she’d had her first child that Janet Bloomfield realized she didn’t want to go back to work and pay some nanny to raise her kids. She had gone to college to study film theory and assumed, like practically every American woman does, that she would start a career before marrying and having a family, but that wasn’t how things turned out. She met a man, fell in love, and stayed at home.

She didn’t feel ashamed of this decision, nor did she feel denied in any way—a close college friend of hers nicknamed Pixie had wound up in a similar situation when her son was diagnosed with some severe health issues. But other people, especially other women, apparently had a problem with Janet’s choices. She felt that her friends were disdainful of her and thought she was crazy or stupid to rely on a man for her income; they insinuated that her husband would “trade her in for a younger woman,” and that she would wind up broke and abandoned.

Janet and Pixie started writing letters back and forth while Pixie’s son was in intensive care, where Pixie wasn’t allowed to bring her cell phone. They talked about how housewives had fallen out of cultural favor, and about how Janet was a “victim of parental alienation,” as she would later say—her parents had gone through a vicious divorce and her mother had turned her and her three brothers against her father. In October 2012 these paper and ink musings became a blog, JudgyBitch.com, with Janet writing rants and Pixie doing the graphics and maintaining the back end.

As she was starting the website, Janet was searching for answers as to why her peers disliked stay-at-home moms and why her mother had had the power to separate her from her father. She found herself exploring a part of the internet that was full of complicated theories about social hierarchies, propaganda, and gender bias, in the process reading story after story of men being discriminated against in family courts and custody battles. Respect for traditional family structures was waning. The very concept of the family, in fact, was now regarded as a means by which men oppress women.

As she read more, disparate threads started clicking together—all these things were the result of a systematic vilification of the male gender. The misinformation, the lies, the poison, it all came back to radical feminism. Even her film-theory courses had taught her to watch movies through a feminist filter. She gradually acquired a set of beliefs with the help of a loosely organized online community of thinkers and writers called the Men’s Rights Movement (MRM).

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@SixSickSins‌

@desertrain10‌

@Cunt_Lyfe‌

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Hopefully you ladies will be next.
 
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It's basic common sense. Just because one supports Feminism movement at doesn't mean they support unequal treatment against men ether.

She is a weak follower and doesn't have a mind of her own. She should have used her analytical skills and question things to make her own judgement and decision. How are going to allow your mother, Feminst ideologies and now this Men group to influence your thoughts just like that. She definitely lacks some basic intelligence to analyze things before blindly following others
 

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