One problem men have when trying to uphold their human rights is that most people do not listen or respond in a hostile way.
For this reason female supporters on men’s human rights are among the most effective communicators.
Here are some of them.
Prof. Naomi Murphy
Women in prison are treated as a traumatised population and that maybe prison is not the right solution for women who have offended. With men, we are fed a narrative that crime is inevitable, that they are born with genes to violence, a defective, psychopathic brain and that ‘masculinity’ is so damaged that we have to teach our boys why it is wrong to rape. The mental health of men-in-prison is not so very different to women-in-prison. There are multiple points where society could be strengthened to stop crime being ‘inevitable’ and prevent suicide being an outcome.
Dr Liz Bates
‘The Hidden Victims: Men and their Experience of Domestic Violence.’ Dr Bates is a Senior Lecturer in Applied Psychology at the University of Cumbria.
The aim of this talk is to discuss men’s experience including reference to several recent studies that reveal men’s experiences of physical and sexual violence, and controlling behaviour.
Cassie Jaye
Cassie Jaye is the documentary film maker who made ‘The Red Pill’ movie. She describes not only how she did it, but also tells us how, while transcribing the interviews, she discovered her own prejudices.
Erin Pizzey
Erin Pizzey was one of the founders of the Shelter movement. In this 2008 talk, she describes how the early movement was hijacked by men-blaming feminists.
Dr Siobhan Weare
Men ‘Forced to Penetrate’ Women
Dr Weare is a Senior Lecturer in Law at Lancaster University Law School. She has conducted the first research study exploring the experiences of men who are forced-to-penetrate women. She shares some of the findings from her research, including the contexts within which this form of sexual abuse can occur, societal and criminal justice responses, and men’s experiences of disclosure.
Elizabeth Hobson
Leader of Justice for Men and Boys.
Elizabeth has spoken extensively on the history of the feminist movement and how the anti-male narrative developed.
Jan James
Jan James runs Parental Alienation UK which campaigns to raise awareness of PA and to get laws and court practices changed to minimise its occurrence.
Janice Fiamengo
Janice Fiamengo, is a retired professor of English at the University of Ottawa. She has created over 100 short videos challenging mainstream views of equality.
Bettina Arndt
Bettina Arndt is an Australian clinical psychologist now specialising and challenging anti-male feminism.
This clip covers the alleged ‘university rape culture’ and dismantles the distortions which led to it.
Greta Aurora
Greta Aurora describes herself as an author and video blogger. Based in London, UK, her work celebrates femininity and masculinity in beautifully dark ways.
This video looks at the science of difference between human males and females.
Jess Butcher
Jess Butcher is an entrepreneur how asserts: “There has never been a better time to be a women”.
This TED talk has a wide spread but touches on the importance of choice in the perception of glass ceilings, gender pay gap etc.
In this interview with Triggernometry Butcher reveals how her mother helped her see she was not oppressed!
Anna Machin
Dr. Anna Machin is an Oxford University-based evolutionary anthropologist. She has spent ten years researching the psychology, biology, and behaviour of new fathers.
Here she explains why this new-found knowledge means that we need to change how we talk about dads. We should move away from lazy stereotypes, to acknowledge their unique and special role in their children’s lives and the power they hold to bring about real positive changes to inequality in our society.
Marilyn York
Marilyn York owns a Men’s Rights Family Law Firm in Reno Nevada, USA. She and her ten female employees focus on representing men in divorce cases for two reasons:
1. Fathers are crucial in the upbringing and development of their children; and
2. Fathers are the disadvantaged parent in family court and society. While the laws are improving, the statistics are not.
Edwina Currie
In this speech at the Oxford Union in 2013, Edwina Currie opposes the motion: “THIS HOUSE BELIEVES THAT WE ARE ALL FEMINISTS”.
She disagrees with the ‘men hating’, the idea that the sexes should be equal in every way and with the need for special measures to promote equality. She concludes by saying to women that they need education, skills, single-mindedness and, most of all, courage to achieve what you want.
Deepika Bhardwaj
Deepika talks about the how men in the Indian society are suffering due to the draconian Indian Penal Code which is made for the protection of women but ignores men and their issues. She addresses the Indian Dowry Act from the perspective of men.
She talks of men who are victimised and systematically abused by laws that are made for women but are abused to victimise men.
Christina Hoff Sommers
This video is part of a series: The Factual Feminist.
Do men need to check their privilege? Gender activists tell us that men carry around with them an invisible knapsack of advantage. Well, is this true and is it the whole story? AEI Scholar Christina Hoff Sommers checks the facts.
Dr. Tonia Nicholls
This talk: ‘The uncomfortable facts on IPV.’ was given at the 2016 conference of Canadian Association for Equality
Nicholls takes us through the evidence about IPV (Inter-personal violence) and shows how the popular narrative of the patriarchal, aggressive male simply does not fit the facts and account for the failure of ‘perpetrator programs’ to reduce IPV.