How to kill men and get away with it

Our thanks to David, a man who has spent many years counselling both male and female perpetrators of intimate partner violence, for this photo he took in a Tesco store today:

 


Our YouTube channel is here, our Facebook channel here, our Twitter channel here.

If everyone who reads this gives us £5.00 – or even better, £5.00 or more, monthly – we could change the world. You can support our work by making a donation (link below) to Mike Buchanan’s company, MRA International Ltd. Thank you.

If you’d like to support Mike Buchanan personally, you can do so via his Patreon account or through Bitcoin, his account address is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf . Thank you.

J4MB will continue to operate, but no longer as a political party

Following lengthy consideration, we recently decided that operating as a political party was no longer an asset for our work, so we’ve de-registered as a party.  

Our work will, however, continue.  We’ll continue operating under the J4MB ‘banner’. We remain as committed as we’ve always been, since we launched J4MB as a political party in 2013 (how time flies!) We’ll continue to campaign for the human rights of men and boys, and continue to raise public awareness about the toxic ideology of feminism.

De-registering as a party will do little to reduce our operating costs. One change that will affect donors is that future donations (and subscriptions) should be made to Mike Buchanan’s company, MRA International Ltd., rather than the bank or PayPal accounts of J4MB. You can make a donation through the button below, fuller details (including bank account details) on the donations page.

Thank you for your support of J4MB as a political party, I hope you’ll continue to support us in our new form.

Feel free to contact me (mike@j4mb.org.uk / 07967 026163) on this or any other matter.

—————————-

Our YouTube channel is here, our Facebook channel here, our Twitter channel here.

If everyone who reads this gives us £5.00 – or even better, £5.00 or more, monthly – we could change the world. You can support our work by making a donation (link below) to Mike Buchanan’s company, MRA International Ltd. Thank you.

If you’d like to support Mike Buchanan personally, you can do so via his Patreon account or through Bitcoin, his account address is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf . Thank you.

Free Speech Union: weekly news round-up

Dear Mike Buchanan,

Welcome to the FSU’s weekly newsletter, our round-up of the free speech news of the week. As with all our work, this newsletter depends on the support of our members and donors, so if you’re not already a paying member please sign up today or encourage a friend to join and help turn the tide against cancel culture. You can share our newsletters on social media with the buttons at the bottom of this email. If someone has shared this newsletter with you and you’d like to join the FSU, you can find our website here.

New FSU event on the return of blasphemy laws – book your tickets here!

The FSU is delighted to announce a new event, ‘Blasphemy law by the back door?’

Speakers include Director of Common Sense Society UK Emma Webb, researcher and author Dr Rakib Ehsan, Steven Evans of the National Secular Society, and Ben Jones, the FSU’s Deputy Case Director.

Although the offence of blasphemy was abolished in England and Wales in 2008, the disturbing case of the Batley Grammar School teacher – still in hiding two years after showing a picture of Mohammed to an RE class – and the recent punishment of four schoolboys in Wakefield for lightly scuffing a copy of the Quran suggests that de facto blasphemy laws are still being enforced in the UK, just not on behalf of Christians.

In this climate, are we seeing the return of blasphemy laws ‘by the back door’? How might we strike a balance between tolerance for diverse beliefs and the right to ridicule or criticise religion? And can we defend the right to criticise Islam, when our institutions routinely censure dissent from woke liturgy?

Join us in-person – or online if you’re an FSU member – on Wednesday 10th May from 7:30pm as our impressive panel address one of the most pressing threats to freedom of speech in western, liberal democracies.

Full details and a link to purchase in-person tickets can be found on our Events page. If you can’t get to London, then join us via Zoom – it’s free of charge for FSU members, and you can register for the link here.

Online Speakeasy with Simon Fanshawe – register for tickets here!

On Tuesday 18th April, Toby Young will be joined in conversation at an exclusive, members only Online Speakeasy with writer and broadcaster Simon Fanshawe OBE. Simon has had a career that stretches from being an award-winning comic (Perrier Award 1989) to a Sunday Times feature writer, as well as a broadcaster and columnist. He is also the author of the best-selling book The Power of Difference, which has just been awarded Management Book of the Year 2022. Further details about the event are available here. If you’re an FSU member, Zoom registration is free of charge – you can register for the link here.

The latest episode of the FSU’s podcast now available!

In this week’s episode of That’s Debatable!, Ben Jones and Tom Harris, two FSU officers, discuss the mobbing of women’s sex-based rights campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen by trans rights activists, the rewriting of Agatha Christie’s novels, and the dangers that digital currencies pose to everyone’s speech rights. Click here to listen to the podcast – and don’t forget to search for That’s Debatable! on your favourite podcasting app and hit ‘subscribe’ so you don’t miss next week’s episode.

University administrator warns that ‘trigger warnings’ infantilise undergraduates

The introduction of trigger warnings on university texts is teaching students to become fragile and childlike, a former senior university administrator has claimed (Scottish Daily Express, Times).

In an essay for the Scottish Union for Education, the former Director of Careers at the University of Glasgow argued that undergraduates are being infantilised by suggestions that they need to be protected from ideas that might upset them.

“Given the proliferation of reports about the fragility of students, you might be forgiven for thinking that higher education is deeply harmful,” Linda Murdoch wrote. “Or alternatively, you might be forgiven for thinking that those that describe young people as frail, flaky or snowflakes have a point.

“It’s almost every day a university announces trigger warnings cautioning students about course material, or a student group demands a safe space away from hurtful ideas.”

She went on to point out that issues such as stress over meeting essay deadlines or exam anxiety were now seen as threats to a student’s mental health, rather than normal emotional reactions.

“Students today have been taught to fear their thoughts and feelings,” she continued, “and it is this, together with the pathologisation of their everyday emotions and the promotion of risks and campaigns in help-seeking behaviour, that have led to more of them reporting themselves to be emotionally fragile.”

Last year, an investigation by the Times found 1,081 examples of trigger warnings in university courses across the UK.

Two universities – Essex and Sussex – admitted to removing books from study lists for fear that they might ‘trigger’ students, the first time this has happened at British universities. Eight others, including Russell Group members Warwick, Exeter and Glasgow, had made certain texts optional “to protect students’ welfare”. Some of the Britain’s most celebrated authors – including William Shakespeare, Jane Austen, Charles Dickens and Agatha Christie – are among those whose works have been deemed disturbing enough to require warnings.

Agatha Christie novels latest to be re-written to align with progressive sensibilities

In a boon for second-hand bookshops up and down the country, sensitivity readers have been bowdlerising new editions of Agatha Christie’s novels, rewriting entire sections and deleting others to bring them into line with ‘progressive’ sensibilities (Express, GB News, Guardian, Independent, Telegraph). The news comes after books by Roald Dahl and Ian Fleming were given the same treatment by so-called ‘sensitivity readers’, who comb through books looking for anything that might conceivably cause offence to anyone at any time for any reason (Daily Sceptic, Telegraph).

The latest editions of Agatha Christie’s works have been released since 2020 by HarperCollins Publishers, including new editions of the entire run of Miss Marple mysteries and selected Poirot novels. Digital versions include scores of changes to texts written between 1920 and 1976, stripping them of numerous passages containing descriptions or references to ethnicity, particularly for characters that Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot encounter outside the UK.

Certain ‘boo’ words have been deleted, most notably the term ‘Oriental’. Other descriptions have been altered in some instances, with a black servant originally portrayed as grinning as he understands the need to stay silent about an incident, described as neither black nor smiling but simply as “nodding”.

In a new edition of the 1964 Miss Marple novel A Caribbean Mystery, the amateur detective’s musing that a West Indian hotel worker smiling at her has “such lovely white teeth” has also been removed, with similar references to “beautiful teeth” elsewhere in the book also taken out.

But these Orwellian airbrushings aren’t just to do with ethnicity. Apparently, any fictional character that said anything potentially offensive to the progressive modern ear was fair game to the publisher’s sensitivity readers.

In many instances, the author’s own narration, often channelled through the inner monologue of characters like Miss Marple or Hercule Poirot, has been altered. Sections of dialogue uttered by often unsympathetic characters have also been cut – not even murderers are now allowed to be politically incorrect, it seems.

In the 1937 Poirot novel Death on the Nile, the character of Mrs Allerton complains that a group of children are pestering her, saying:

They come back and stare, and stare, and their eyes are simply disgusting, and so are their noses, and I don’t believe I really like children.

This has been stripped down in a new edition to the following:

They come back and stare, and stare. And I don’t believe I really like children.

‘Progressive’ it might be, but it’s also an infringement of an author’s right to freedom of expression. In the revised version, the prosody of Christie’s original is entirely destroyed, as is the insight it was designed to give us in to the peculiar psychological make-up of Mrs Allerton’s character.

Transgender athlete research rejected after academic refers to trans women as ‘males’

In an apparent attack on academic freedom, research into transgender athletes has been shut down after a senior academic at King’s College London (KCL) referred to trans women as ‘males’ in a funding proposal (Telegraph).

Dr John Armstrong applied to carry out a survey of elite athletes and volunteers on whether transwomen, who are born male, should compete in women’s track and field categories and whether they felt they were free to express themselves on the subject.

However, the university’s ethics panel rejected his application, citing equality and diversity concerns. In what appears to be a dismissal of the protected status of ‘gender critical’ beliefs, the panel stated: “The language is not sensitive and the misgendering of athletes is not appropriate… there is obvious bias in the language and there is very little scientific reasoning underpinning the hypothesis.”

At issue was a particular section of Dr Armstrong’s application that stated: “The principle aim of the project is to find the views of athletes and volunteers on the question of when males should be allowed to compete in the female category in athletics.”

Dr Armstrong, a Reader in financial mathematics, also accused the ethics panel of an ‘ad hominem’ attack on his expertise after they questioned why he was leading the project – as he pointed out, he is already conducting statistical analyses on trans athletes and had brought in leading survey expert Prof Alice Sullivan as co-investigator of the proposed project.

KCL’s panel also said “there is a risk that some participants might be unhappy or distressed by the questions that are being posed to them” and asked Dr Armstrong to “please contact the Equality, Diversity & Inclusion team to seek input on the wording used”.

Worker Protection Bill reaches second reading stage in the House of Lords

As many members will be aware, the FSU has been briefing allies across both Houses of Parliament on the troubling implications for free speech of a Private Members’ Bill proposed by Lib Dem MP Wera Hobhouse that has received very little Parliamentary scrutiny and provoked almost no debate in the public square.

Thanks to the Government’s support, the Worker Protection (Amendment of Equality Act 2010) Bill sailed through the House of Commons last month. This week, it had its second reading in the House of Lords, and it was heartening to see some terrific speeches from the floor of the House (we clipped some of them for our Twitter page here, here and here). Arguably, Lord Strathcarron’s was the pick of the bunch.

As the bill’s title suggests, the legislation Hobhouse and the Government are proposing to amend is the Equality Act 2010, which imposes a legal duty on employers to protect workers from harassment by other employees defined as “unwanted conduct relating to a protected characteristic” (i.e., age, disability, gender reassignment, race, religion or belief, sex or sexual orientation) where that conduct has the purpose or effect of “creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment”.

The Hobhouse bill will expand that duty, rendering bosses additionally liable for harassment of their employees by members of the public that they come into contact with while doing their jobs.

If we were just talking about, say, sexual harassment, that would be one thing. But the bill seeks to extend third-party liability to every type of ‘unwanted conduct’ already prohibited by the Equality Act, including overheard conversations. In other words, if the bill becomes law, employers will have a duty to take “all reasonable steps” to protect their workers from overhearing ‘upsetting’ remarks made not only by their colleagues, but third parties as well.

Following pressure from the FSU, the Government has amended the bill so speech that involves “an expression of opinion on a political, moral, religious or social matter” is protected. That’s better, but it’s still not great. What about pub banter and football chants, for instance?

As Lord Strathcarron pointed out during his speech, what will become of book launches? “Would Waterstones, for example, risk an in-store book signing by JK Rowling or Helen Joyce on the off-chance that one of the author’s fans might be wearing a T-shirt that says, ‘Woman Equals Adult Human Female’, knowing that an employee could sue for hurt feelings – real or vexatious?”

These were “real issues facing real businesses” he said, before adding “we are wading into very dangerous waters” with this legislation.

The FSU is calling on the minister for women and equalities, Kemi Badenoch, to ditch the bill in its entirety. With hospitality venues struggling to survive rising energy costs, inflation and a hiked corporation tax rate, more red tape is the last thing they need. At the very least, the Government should make commencement of all the clauses other than the ones dealing with sexual harassment contingent on a proper consultation with all the sectors likely to be affected.

You can read our briefing note on the Worker Protection Bill here.

Bettina Arndt: Women work harder than men – phooey!

Enjoy.

If you’d like notifications of our posts, please enter your email address in the box underneath the text, “Enter your email address…” near the top of the right-hand column.

You can make a one-off donation or take out a monthly subscription to support our work here.

Nobody working for the party draws an income from the party’s income streams. You can help Mike Buchanan meet his personal living expenses through his Patreon page, or send him some Bitcoin, his account is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf. Thank you.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Twitter feed here, our Facebook page here.

Audio / video #94 from our Laughing at Feminists comedy channel – Sir Les Patterson (Barry Humphries) pt.1 (1982)

We’re linking daily to selected audio / video files from the comedy channel of our associated website, Laughing at Feminists. Today’s file is here (video, 8:24).

If you’d like notifications of our posts, please enter your email address in the box underneath the text, “Enter your email address…” near the top of the right-hand column.

You can make a one-off donation or take out a monthly subscription to support our work here.

Nobody working for the party draws an income from the party’s income streams. You can help Mike Buchanan meet his personal living expenses through his Patreon page, or send him some Bitcoin, his account is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf. Thank you.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Twitter feed here, our Facebook page here.

Audio / video #94 from our archives – A man circumcised at 18 years of age reflects on the impact of the procedure (2015)

We’re linking daily to selected audio / video files from our YouTube channel. Today’s file is here (video, 21:40).

If you’d like notifications of our posts, please enter your email address in the box underneath the text, “Enter your email address…” near the top of the right-hand column.

You can make a one-off donation or take out a monthly subscription to support our work here.

Nobody working for the party draws an income from the party’s income streams. You can help Mike Buchanan meet his personal living expenses through his Patreon page, or send him some Bitcoin, his account is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf. Thank you.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Twitter feed here, our Facebook page here.

Kirsty Barr, 24, ‘devious’ North Lincolnshire woman, jailed after false claims ex abused her

Our thanks to Joe for this. The end of the piece:

Ch Supt Wilson said: “Barr told her fabricated story to anyone who would listen, portraying Ryan to the whole country through national and social media as a violent man she was terrified of when, in reality, Ryan is the one who was suffering a tirade of abuse from the vicious and false allegations Barr made against him.

“Whilst Ryan can never regain the last four years, I hope there is some comfort for him and his family knowing Barr has now been held accountable for her actions.

Whilst men are stereotypically the perpetrators of domestic abuse against girls and women, [J4MB emphasis – the stereotype is patently untrue, and has been known to be untrue for decades, why not write THAT?] we must ensure in policing we do see the less visible side of these horrific crimes where men are also victims, and always investigate thoroughly and effectively for anyone who is a victim of abuse by a partner.

“Allegations of this nature when falsely made, can have a detrimental impact on genuine victims coming forward.” [J4MB emphasis – why not refer to the men also as “genuine victims”?}

Barr was jailed for three years and nine months.

If you’d like notifications of our posts, please enter your email address in the box underneath the text, “Enter your email address…” near the top of the right-hand column.

You can make a one-off donation or take out a monthly subscription to support our work here.

Nobody working for the party draws an income from the party’s income streams. You can help Mike Buchanan meet his personal living expenses through his Patreon page, or send him some Bitcoin, his account is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf. Thank you.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Twitter feed here, our Facebook page here.

 

Men vs Women in Football Female Athletes Challenge Male Opponents in Soccer

Enjoy (video, 9:19).

If you’d like notifications of our posts, please enter your email address in the box underneath the text, “Enter your email address…” near the top of the right-hand column.

You can make a one-off donation or take out a monthly subscription to support our work here.

Nobody working for the party draws an income from the party’s income streams. You can help Mike Buchanan meet his personal living expenses through his Patreon page, or send him some Bitcoin, his account is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf. Thank you.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Twitter feed here, our Facebook page here.

Margaret Ferrier: MP faces Commons suspension for Covid train trip

Our thanks to Chloe for this.

If you’d like notifications of our posts, please enter your email address in the box underneath the text, “Enter your email address…” near the top of the right-hand column.

You can make a one-off donation or take out a monthly subscription to support our work here.

Nobody working for the party draws an income from the party’s income streams. You can help Mike Buchanan meet his personal living expenses through his Patreon page, or send him some Bitcoin, his account is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf. Thank you.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Twitter feed here, our Facebook page here.

 

Trans woman who stabbed her partner will serve sentence in men’s prison

Our thanks to Len for this.

If you’d like notifications of our posts, please enter your email address in the box underneath the text, “Enter your email address…” near the top of the right-hand column.

You can make a one-off donation or take out a monthly subscription to support our work here.

Nobody working for the party draws an income from the party’s income streams. You can help Mike Buchanan meet his personal living expenses through his Patreon page, or send him some Bitcoin, his account is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf. Thank you.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Twitter feed here, our Facebook page here.