The Red Pill – Documentary About the Men’s Rights Movement – IOTW Report

The Red Pill – Documentary About the Men’s Rights Movement

Telegraph – Cassey Jaye began the process as a feminist, but she ended up not only sympathising with the MRAs, but fundamentally questioning the “aggressive” ethos of modern feminism.

For her efforts, she says she has been smeared, threatened with “career suicide” and even saw her funding dry up – to the point where the movie was unlikely to see the light of day.

7 Comments on The Red Pill – Documentary About the Men’s Rights Movement

  1. At least something is being done about the S#&U%^($&Y that is feminism! Hey if they can take money away from a guy who DID NOT IMPREGNATE A WOMAN AND SHE STILL FINGERS HIM AS THE DAD then we are slaves!

  2. About 15 years ago, my next door neighbors were a husband and wife in their 50’s. One Sunday the wife came over to use the phone. Her husband had a medical condition and was very drunk and had fallen on the floor and she couldn’t get him up. Thus, she called 911 and requested an ambulance to help him.

    He was a big man and quite clumsy under normal circumstances, but in this case he got tangled up in the phone line and pulled it out of the wall as he was trying to get up. She explained this to the 911 operator and said she needed medical help and further explained that there was no fight or argument – he just fell and she couldn’t get him up. The husband was not violent at all (I never saw him angry) and she told the 911 operator this as well.

    Within a few minutes, 2 cop cars came tearing up and the cops jumped out and ran into the house – no ambulance ever showed up so her requests for medical help were completely ignored. A couple of minutes later, they took the husband out to the car in handcuffs and threw him in jail for several days, accusing him of domestic violence because he had pulled the phone cord out of the wall (apparently this was written in the law or policies as being domestic violence regardless of the circumstances of how the cord was pulled from the wall).

    He lost his job and had to go to court where he was finally exonerated of the false charges of domestic violence that were filed against him by the county prosecutors (his wife testified and told the truth, and wonder of wonders, the judge ruled in his favor)..

    That was my first introduction into how men are always at fault in any claims of domestic violence, even when no violence occurred or when the woman is the violent offender. I can only imagine how much worse things are these days. Yet another reason to NEVER call the “authorities” if you actually need help.

Comments are closed.