Nobody likes a male feminist

Our thanks to William for this link to an interesting article in Psychology Today which concentrates on work by Gul and Kupfer who found that women (regardless of how strongly they identified with feminism) preferred men who displayed benevolent sexism regardless of the fact that “previous research has found that women who endorse these beliefs often demonstrate approval of restrictions on women’s freedoms, independence and autonomy, and may impact women’s support for gender egalitarianism.”

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Why all feminists should back a second Brexit referendum

Ex-Blue Peter star, Konnie Huq leads the call in this Guardian article.

She argues that it would endanger workers rights, particularly those of women. For context:

The minimum wage was introduced by the UK Parliament, not the EU.

Maternity pay is 39 weeks in the UK (EU law only mandates 14).

Holiday entitlement is actually 5.6 weeks in the UK.

The Equal Pay Act was introduced in 1970 – 3 years BEFORE we joined the EEC.

…I think it’s a feminist issue just because feminists love dividing societies in two and causing as much instability as possible!

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Badger Belles and the Doge give a run down on men’s rights happenings at 11pm GMT

The Badger Belles in question being myself and Natty Kadifa… We’ll be talking about Philip Davies’ raising of the MGM issue in Parliament, the #MeToo allegations against Neil deGrasse Tyson and Italy’s reform of child custody laws.

You can tune in live in half an hour or watch later here.

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Philip Davies with MGM bombshell in the House of Commons

[Update: The video of the 90-minute International Men’s Day debate is here. The debate starts at 15:00:45, and Philip Davies’s initial statement on MGM (and FGM) – the transcript of which is below – covers 15:11:10 to 15:14:30.]

Excerpt from the Hansard record of yesterday’s International Men’s Day debate in the House of Commons, from Philip Davies MP’s opening address:

I also want to touch on male circumcision: male genital mutilation. According to a barrister’s opinion, carrying out circumcision on males when there is no medical need—non-therapeutic circumcision—is a crime under the Offences Against the Person Act 1861, being at least actual bodily harm if not grievous bodily harm. [J4MB emphasis] In 1983, Lord Hailsham, the then Lord Chancellor, said of female genital mutilation: “in the case of a minor under the age of 16, there is no possibility that consent is any defence at all. A minor under the age of 16 is not able to consent to the commission upon her of a criminal assault. Neither parental consent nor the consent of the minor would be any defence at all, and if the parents did such a thing, or instigated such a thing or participated in such a thing, it would only render them liable to criminal penalties, too.”—[Official Report, House of Lords, 21 April 1983; Vol. 441, c. 677.]

When I put it to the Government in 2016 that female genital mutilation was already illegal before specific laws on the subject were introduced, they agreed that it was. When I then put to them the position regarding boys, they took a different line. They quoted Sir James Munby, who was the president of the Family Division of the High Court, in a case of January 2015: “Whereas it can never be reasonable parenting to inflict any form of FGM on a child, the position is quite different with male circumcision. Society and the law, including family law, are prepared to tolerate non-therapeutic male circumcision performed for religious or even for purely cultural or conventional reasons, while no longer being willing to tolerate FGM in any of its forms.”

As the former barrister who I mentioned earlier also said, it would require a parliamentary override for male circumcision to be legal, and that has never existed. No exemptions to the law of the land are permissible for religious or cultural reasons. [J4MB: our emphasis] The Ministry of Justice went on to say that there was no doubt that female genital mutilation could have a physical and psychological impact on women, and also said that some girls die as a result of the procedure, which is absolutely correct. I do not pretend to be an expert in this field, but I believe that boys have also been reported to have died following a circumcision, and I have seen accounts of the physical and psychological impact of circumcision on men.

I understand that the position of the NHS is that the risks associated with routine circumcision, such as infection and excessive bleeding, outweigh any potential benefits. I am mentioning all this because I believe it should be on the record, not least because of the very different approaches to male and female genital mutilation.

The Government said back in 2016 that they had no current plans to change the law in relation to male circumcision. Given everything I have said, there may be no need to change the law to bring about a change in male circumcisions. However, I would be particularly interested to hear from the Minister on that point.

Now the illegality of MGM is on the official parliamentary record, for the first time. Our thanks to Philip Davies, whose courage knows no bounds.

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International Men’s Day debate minutes

The debate in Westminster Hall will be broadcast on Monday 3rd December, you can watch here.

If, like me, you can’t wait that long, the Hansard Record is here.

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Goldsmiths and Kings College London get rid of “women”

In an attempt to be more inclusive, Kings College’s Womxn in Physics Society and Goldsmiths Student Union have both adopted the term “womxn”.

“The latter, in a Facebook post promoting sports at the institution on November 20, said: “Why not give our Womxn’s Basketball session or Adidas Womxn’s Fun Run a go later on today?””

The laughs just keep coming from these institutions.

Read more at The Evening Standard.

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