TDOM | September 1, 2010
Image via Wikipedia How Hate Relates to Feminism In Part 1 – What is Hate? I used a definition containing seven criteria to define a hate movement. In Part 2 and Part 3 I will demonstrate how feminism fits into each of the criteria and is therefore a hate movement. Part 2 covered points 1-4. [...]
Category: Men's Issues |
1 Comment »
Tags: Discrimination, Domestic Violence, Early Modern Europe, Feminism, Men, Men's rights, Misandry, Patriarchy, People, Sexism, United States, Women, Women's rights
TDOM | August 20, 2010
Image via Wikipedia Prats and pitfalls of quoting scientific research Recently I was involved in a discussion on another site concerning conflicting research findings. I cited several pieces of research that supported a position and discussed findings that conflicted with this research with the owner of that site. I don’t know whether the owner had [...]
Category: Psychology, Social concerns |
No Comments »
Tags: Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, Columbia University, National Survey of American Attitudes, Research, Sexual abuse, Substance abuse, United States, World Economic Forum
TDOM | August 10, 2010
An Odd Combination Bruce Plante, Tulsa World Related articles by Zemanta Judge’s Personal Life Debated After Gay Ruling (abcnews.go.com) Ronald Reagan’s Liberty Bomb Explodes in California (blogcritics.org) Republicans Avoiding Gay Marriage Ruling (outsidethebeltway.com) The Politics Of The California Gay Marriage Decision (outsidethebeltway.com) Gay Tea Partiers (mydd.com) Chris Weigant: If Gay Marriage Wins… (huffingtonpost.com) Rush Limbaugh’s [...]
Category: Politics |
No Comments »
Tags: California Proposition 8 (2008), Civil liberties, Conservative, Democrat, Discrimination, Gay, Gay marriage, Homosexual, Liberal, Libertarian, Men, People, Republican, Same-sex marriage, Supreme Court of the United States, United States, United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
TDOM | August 9, 2010
Image via Wikipedia Does honor define manhood? In medieval society, the phrase “on my honor” was not backed solely by a person’s reputation. Honor was equated with property. Therefore, a person (man or woman) who stated “on my honor” was making a pledge or guarantee backed by property or possession and not simply staking their [...]
Category: Men's Issues |
1 Comment »
Tags: Death, Duty, Equal opportunity, Honor, Law, Marriage, Men, Men's rights, Military, Organizations, People, Responsibility, Sacrifice, United States, Women
TDOM | July 29, 2010
Image via Wikipedia Hip Hip Hooray! I’d like to say a great big thank you to everyone who come to visit. Today the blog reached another big milestone and should reach another in a day or two. Today we reached 10K page views and are quickly approaching 2K visitors. I started the blog in June [...]
Category: My Blog |
No Comments »
Tags: Arts, Blog, Hosts, People, Publishers, Tools, United States, Website, WordPress, wordpress.com
TDOM | July 4, 2010
Image by The U.S. National Archives via Flickr Happy 4th of July Most Americans don’t realize that the Continental Congress did not declare indenpendence on July 4th, 1776. That was done on July 2. July 4th was the day they adopted the Declaration of Independence. The declaration touched of a fierce war with England that [...]
Category: Politics |
No Comments »
Tags: Continental Congress, Declaration of Independence, England, History, Holidays, Independence Day, United States, United States Declaration of Independence
TDOM | June 16, 2010
Paving the Road to the Feminist Revolution Kate Winslet (April Wheeler) and Leonardo DiCaprio (Frank Wheeler) are outstanding in Revolutionary Road, a movie dripping with feminism and misandry. The movie is set in the 1950s. April is an unhappy housewife and failed actress. Frank is a man trapped in a dead end job that he hates, but [...]
Category: Reviews |
No Comments »
Tags: Abortion, Family, Feminism, Gender, Kate Winslet, Leonardo DiCaprio, Men, Men's rights, Misandry, Patriarchy, People, Revolutionary Road, Sexism, United States, Women
TDOM | May 31, 2010
aka Decoration Day Memorial Day was first celebrated in 1865 by African Americans known as the Freedmen. To honor those who had fought and died to free them, they exhumed bodies of Union soldiers from a confederate prison camp where they had been buried in a mass grave and properly buried them in individual graves, [...]
Category: Politics |
Comments Off
Tags: African American, American Civil War, Civil War, Holidays, Memorial Day, United States, United States Congress, World War I, World War II
TDOM | May 21, 2010
Sci-fi thriller based on a short story by Phillip K. Dick Not every movie contains a statement (pro or con) about male-female relations, feminism, or misandry. This is one of the ones that doesn’t. That in itself made it quite refreshing. It does deal with a couple of issues, however. Written in 1953, it was [...]
Category: Reviews |
Comments Off
Tags: Arts, Big Brother, Cold War, Fugitive, Gary Sinise, Homeland Security, Police, Science fiction, Short story, United States, Vincent D'Onofrio
TDOM | May 4, 2010
In honor of those shot and killed or wounded 40 years ago today. Photo by John Filo On May 4, 1970 the Ohio National Guard shot and killed four unarmed students, and wounded nine others on the campus of Kent State University. The incident is now known as the Kent State Massacre or the May [...]
Category: Social concerns |
1 Comment »
Tags: College, History, Kent State shootings, Kent State University, Leroy Satrom, National Register of Historic Places, Ohio, Ohio National Guard, People, Politics, United States, University, Vietnam War