It’s not up to men to kill feminism

A thought-provoking piece by a Canadian blogger:

http://whoism3.wordpress.com/2012/09/19/its-not-up-to-men-to-kill-feminism/

An excerpt from the article:

It’s about women saying ENOUGH, we got the EQUAL rights we wanted so now STOP FUCKING AROUND WITH OUR MEN, OUR HUSBANDS, OUR BROTHERS AND OUR SONS.

Women need to rise up and say to Feminists:
– stop telling us there are no gender differences and that gender is a social construct
– stop telling us our men need to be emotional and in touch with their feelings and to talk out their problems like women
– stop telling our men that they should be ashamed of their sexual role, function, drive and need for sex
– stop telling me I’m just as capable as a man of putting out fires, fighting wars, or building skyscrapers, most of us can’t, and I don’t want to
– stop telling me, my daughter, my sisters that we can fuck like a man without any consequences
– stop telling us our brothers, sons, fathers are potential rapists we should always be in fear of and to teach them not to rape

and most importantly

STOP SPEAKING ON NATIONAL TV AS IF YOU SPEAK FOR ALL OF WOMANKIND. YOU DON’T, YOU’RE A BUNCH OF WHINEY LITTLE PUNK ATTENTION WHORE BITCHES WITH NO CARE ABOUT REGULAR WOMEN’S LIVES!

J4MB has almost caught up with the Conservatives

Our thanks to the people who run a blog concerned with the 2015 general election for letting us know that in terms of blog hits, J4MB has almost caught up with the Conservatives – and people spend more time on https://j4mbdotorgdotuk.wordpress.com than on the Conservatives’ website:

http://ukgeneralelection2015.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/septembers-political-pop-chart.html

They say:

J4MB who are still to stand in an election but do now have candidates for the next general election have seen their rise up the charts continue. They are at their highest of 7th and if it continues could see them over taking some of the heavyweights.

Please help us overtake ‘some of the heavyweights’:

http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/j4mb-is-seeking-gbp-1-000-to-fund-its-fourth-2015-general-election-candidate

How would people react if a woman assaulted a man in public?

There’s a great deal of evidence to show women are at least as physically aggressive as men with respect to their intimate partners:

https://j4mbdotorgdotuk.wordpress.com/2013/05/08/women-are-as-physically-aggressive-or-more-aggressive-in-their-relationships-with-spouses-or-male-partners/

So how would people react if a women assaulted a man in public? Would they have any sympathy for the man? We have the answer:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlFAd4YdQks

Our public challenge to Nick Baveystock, director general of the Institution of Civil Engineers

Why is it always a ‘problem’ when men dominate a profession, but never a problem when women do? For many years over 90% of psychology graduates have been women, and nobody bats an eyelid.

Four out of seven unemployed people in the UK are men, yet the state does everything it can to drive up female employment, and as a consequence male unemployment. In the public sector two-thirds of employees are women, yet the Equality Act (2010) allows public sector bodies to favour women over men when recruiting – the invidious ‘positive action’ provision, which is positive discrimination for women in all but name.

Decade after decade of taxpayer-funded social engineering initiatives have led to the feminisation of a number of professions which were historically male-dominated, medicine being an obvious example. 70% of newly-qualified doctors today are women. The NHS is in crisis as a result, as we’ve reported on a number of occasions, while 72% of the income taxes which pay for this insane ‘direction of travel’ are paid by men, just 28% by women.

Clearly it would make no sense to increase the employment of women in male-dominated professions which are not currently in crisis. Yet that’s precisely what government, businesses, and professional bodies have long been working together to deliver.

What about the professions which women have long been less inclined than men to pursue? This brings us to engineering, a traditionally male-dominated field, and Nick Baveystock nick.baveystock@ice.org.uk. He’s the director general of the Institution of Civil Engineers and is on the board of an organisation called WISE http://wisecampaign.org.uk. From their website:

At WISE, our mission is to increase the gender balance in the UK’s STEM workforce, pushing the presence of female employees from 13% as it stands now, to 30% by 2020.

Our services are designed to build and sustain the pipeline of female talent in STEM from classroom to boardroom, boosting the talent pool to drive economic growth.

WISE, which has nearly 30 years experience of inspiring girls to pursue STEM subjects, now incorporates the UKRC, which had a contract from the Government from 2004-12 to increase opportunities for women in science, engineering and technology through support services to business, education and women returners. The UKRC is now an independent Community Interest Company trading as WISE (company number 07533934).

How precisely might the proportion of women in engineering be increased from 13% to 30% in barely more than six years? Options might include growing some sectors of the economy at such a fast pace that the demand for engineers soars, whilst ensuring the vast majority of the newly-created engineering jobs are taken up by an army of new female engineers, with at most 2-3 years’ experience. Given the current economic climate, and the persisting reluctance of young women to pursue engineering careers, I see these options as being in the realms of utter fantasy.

The only option I can see which might increase the proportion of women in engineering jobs to 30% would be to sack large numbers of male engineers early in their careers, and replace them with women. I say ‘might’ because I don’t have any data on the age profile of the engineering profession. So even such a drastic move might not help us reach the ‘target’.

Let’s do some basic maths, whilst avoiding the tricky age profile issue. By 2020 – little more than six years away – WISE’s ‘mission’ is to more than double the proportion of women in engineering, from 13% to 30%. Put another way, they want the proportion of men in engineering to fall from 87% to 70%. All else being equal, we estimate this would require the number of men working in engineering to fall by 24.2% by 2020.

We’re today making the following public challenge to Nick Baveystock:

Are you aware that by virtue of being on the board of WISE, you’re supporting an initiative with the objective of reducing the number of men working in engineering by 24.2% by 2020? I should like to offer a presentation at ICE to outline why this ‘direction of travel’ will inevitably be highly damaging to the engineering profession, and those who rely upon it.

Invitation to contribute to a book about male victims of domestic abuse

Contrary to popular opinion, domestic abuse and violence (‘DA/DV’) aren’t gendered issues where almost all the victims are women, and almost all the perpetrators men. Hundreds of academic studies show that in their relationships with intimate partners, women are at least as aggressive as men:

https://j4mbdotorgdotuk.wordpress.com/2013/05/08/women-are-as-physically-aggressive-or-more-aggressive-in-their-relationships-with-spouses-or-male-partners/

Across the world, the support available for male victims of DA/DV is miniscule compared with the support available for female victims, and often non-existent. We don’t want abused women to receive less support than they do currently. We simply want abused men to receive the same level of support.

I’m planning to write a book about men who are (or who have been) victims of DA/DV. Their identities will, of course, be kept confidential. I would ask men with an interest in contributing their experiences of DA/DV to contact me, along with any women who have perpetrated DA/DV, whose identities will also be kept confidential. My email address is mike@j4mb.org.uk and my mobile number 07967 026163. Thank you.