#Rape – SurvivorsUK Faces Funding Cut

First the important and ‘good’ stuff.

UPDATE: You can donate HERE.

Survivors UK is a rare beast, a charity concerned with male victims of rape. Statistics are notoriously hard to come by on the incidence of male rape and men are even less likely than women to report sexual violation, but in the United States it has been suggested that – if you include prison rape – men may be even more likely to suffer a sexual violation than women.

Despite this there’s precious little support for male victims of sexual violation (or domestic abuse for that matter).

As such, Survivors UK deserves our support, fundraising efforts and perhaps most importantly, awareness raising.

Despite being interested in these topics, I was virtually unaware of the existence of Survivors UK so, clearly, there needs to be consciousness raising of their efforts and increased support from the Men’s Human Rights/Men’s Issues communities, as well as anyone with a conscience.

However, sadly, Survivors UK has had their funding cut to nothing.

There is a petition to protest this and as well as the Twitter link above you can check out their website. Please add this resource to your men’s issues blogs and websites as a link to raise them in the Google search rankings and to raise their profile so that men who have suffered sexual violation have more chance of finding them.

Thank you.

***

Now the less good stuff.

I found out about Survivors UK and their funding crisis via an awful, awful article in The New Statesman by June Eric-Udorie.

The overwhelming majority of the article was not concerned with Survivors UK or their funding crisis, but rather with bashing Men’s Human Rights movement and accusing them of the usual laundry list of complaints, misrepresentations and so on. I’ll answer that part of the article below:

Recent government statistics estimate that 75,000 men are victims of sexual assault or attempted assault and 9,000 men are victims of rape or attempted rape every year. Yet, despite the figures, dangerous stereotypes still persist that men can’t get raped and we can’t seem to break the taboo around the subject.

Sadly, feminism is not helping that. There have been efforts in some countries to prevent ‘made to penetrate’ being counted as rape and concepts such as patriarchy and privilege undermine the idea that men can also be victims, that they can be powerless, that they can be victimised. Feminist rhetoric also dominates the public conversation on these topics and does little or nothing to tackle men’s issues by leveraging that privilege and power. Even when it does mention these issues, it becomes twisted with ideological dogma (patriarchy theory) and ends up being used as a club to further beat men with – precisely as has occurred in this article.

I am outraged and we all should be. Survivors UK run a vital service for men who have been affected by sexual abuse and if it shuts, this will affect countless men in London. But perhaps what makes me angrier is that so few men and men’s rights activists (more commonly known as MRAs online) have condemned this.

It’s good that you’re outraged. Hopefully that outrage will carry you forward to examine other men’s issues and get angry about those too but I shan’t be holding my breath. Personally, I am incredibly angry that you used this outraged animus less to help Survivors UK and to highlight men’s issues but rather to bash further on men and their advocates, who have been fighting for funding and attention on this and similar issues for years.

I didn’t know about this issue, despite being interested and involved in Men’s Issues and I had to hear it from you, contained within rabid misandry that honestly made me suspect that Survivors UK might not be a good charity to back – if someone like you thought they were worthwhile.

Why didn’t I know about it?

Why doesn’t this story have a higher profile?

Why was the funding cut in the first place?

Because these issues aren’t considered important, aren’t communicated, aren’t made public and this is largely down to feminist domination of the discourse on the issue and the dismissive attitude even you still show, despite claiming to be upset about this.

I’m always being told that feminists don’t give a shit about issues like male rape or suicide. In fact, our detractors contend, feminists don’t give a shit about men. In case you missed the memo, feminists hate men. At least that’s the impression that we get from anti-feminist men and MRAs, mostly active on the web where they moan about men being oppressed because obviously, being a man is so hard these days.

And they say this with good reason. I would refer you to the above comments and the continual dismissal, laughing at and undermining of men’s issues. Again, you, yourself, used an article ostensibly about the scandal of this charity being defunded, primarily to attack men and men’s advocates. Part of the problem.

And yes, being a man is hard these days, not that it was ever easy. People don’t appreciate how hard.

Yes, there are issues that predominantly affect men like homelessness and suicide, but surely it’s a no brainer that both men and women suffer in our patriarchal society – one that prizes masculinity and expects only three things of women: to get married, get fucked and have babies.

You’re advocating part of the problem when you bring up ‘patriarchy’. A nonsensical conspiracy theory that blames everything on men and which simultaneously claims that men control and run society for their benefit, yet are harmed by it, which would mean it couldn’t be a patriarchy.

Are there patriarchal societies historically and in the contemporary world? Sure. Here in the west? No.

Masculinity isn’t a dirty word and is not the only thing valued. Our society does not only expect women to get married, get fucked and have babies but it does still expect men to self-sacrifice, protect and provide and that comes as much from women as anything else.

However, Paul Elam, the founder of A Voice for Men, disagrees and told the Huffington Post that “the problem we see is a culture that puts women first in so many ways and men last”. Men’s Rights Canada launched their controversial “Don’t be that Girl” campaign, which said that women often make false rape accusations because they feel guilty for having one night stands. And on Return of Kings, when commenting on the statistic that 90 per cent of women know the perpetrators in rape cases, a contributor wrote that “a man looking to rape someone would not pick a target who could identify him to the police”. The focus from men’s rights activists seems to be on false rape accusations by women (which are far and few) rather than helping male victims of sexual violence.

Paul Elam and A Voice for Men are not the only face of Men’s Issues, any more than Cathy Brennan is the voice of all feminism – though Elam and AVFM are a hell of a lot more sane than she is. While I appreciate the work of AVFM in many instances I felt they were too strident and made too many of the same mistakes feminism has over the years, which is why I decided to create this space for myself. CAFE, Honey Badger Brigade, KSUMen and other groups are also more moderate and measured than AVFM is.

Even though I part company with AVFM and prefer to set my own tone, I must defend them – and others – when they are attacked and misrepresented as you have done here. Don’t be that Girl was a much broader campaign than you represent and was a reaction to a disgustingly misandrist campaign in their province that was essentially assuming any and all men were rapists-in-waiting who had to be told not to.

Return of Kings is NOT an MHRA website, as has been repeatedly made clear both by RoK and AVFM in the wake of the Mad Max stupidity.

False rape accusations are an issue, as are many other things coming out of feminist activism on these issues – such as advocacy of removing basic rights from men (such as being considered innocent until proven guilty when accused of rape). It’s unsurprising that a large amount of Men’s Issues Activism is fixated on at least preserving existing rights against assault.

The reality is that MRAs are a group of misogynists who spend their time on the internet saying things that simply aren’t true or attacking women. The Southern Poverty Law Centre describes their activism as “dedicated to savaging feminists and in particular, women”. MRAs do not really care about men. They resent feminists not only because their campaign to get rid of Page 3 denied them their daily wank at the breakfast table, but also because every step forward in achieving gender equality, where women are not a subclass of fuckable objects, is a disadvantage in their eyes. And sadly, their resentment towards the fight for the liberation for women does not actually make any difference to the men they are trying to help. I’m sure than men who genuinely believe in gender equality must be fed up with their rhetoric that the reason why men are “suffering” is because of women.

These are standard talking points, all debunked at length on various Men’s Issues sites. Here’s the short version.

  • Misogyny means the hatred of women. While I’m sure there are genuine misogynists within the MHRA there are also genuine misandrists within the feminist movement. Neither should be taken as representative of the whole. The MHRA movement does not hate women, there is a distinct difference between hating a particular wave of feminism (the ideology) and women (the human beings).
  • The SPLC gets constantly quoted in reference to the MHRA but is not particularly credible. It’s specific claims upon which it based its conclusions have been debunked and while not mentioned here it is often said the SPLC called the Men’s Movement a hate group, when it did not.
  • The objection to the NMP3 campaign is to preserve free expression and because it hurts absolutely nobody. It is an overreach by sex-negative current-wave feminists also resisted by free-speech advocates and sex positive feminists.
  • We already have gender equality in the west – would be the argument of the Men’s Movement and it’s not equality that’s the issue to any MHRA I’ve ever talked to. It’s where things go past that point and begin harming the other sex. It is even arguable that women now have more rights than men in the west as they have every right men do, but also have reproductive and bodily integrity rights that men don’t, as well as having degrees of legal advantage based solely on gender in arenas such as custody battles. It’s also arguable that in a non-rights, non-legislative arena that women also now have enormous advantage, up to and including a reversal of the ‘pay gap’ which doesn’t really exist in the first place. Not to mention – relevant to this article – a stranglehold on funding for dealing with sexual and domestic assault.

Challenging why a Men’s Movement might spend time fighting against feminism is like asking an anti-fac group why they spend time fighting Stormfront when they could just be helping minorities. Defending against incursions on rights and the victimisation of men does help men.

For instance, on “The Rights of Man”, Skimmington writes that all-women shortlists for political selections mean that “men are banned (in Labour’s case) from standing for Parliament solely because they are men”. I guess I didn’t notice the men who are MPs for the Labour Party. Paul Elam once wrote on “A Voice for Men” that drunk women were “freaking begging to be raped”.

Would an ‘all male’ shortlist or an ‘all white’ shortlist be acceptable?

No it would not.

Why not?

Racism/sexism.

What’s good for the goose is good for the gander.

If there are male MPs it is because they won their selection processes and got elected. There is not and has not been anything barring women from pursuing the same aim. Gender-limited selection lists, however, do bar people on the basis of gender and since they suggest women can’t win and get elected on their own merits, you would think that feminists might be against it.

It seems that if men and MRAs aren’t writing, and let’s be honest, complete bullshit, they are attacking women. Men’s rights activist and founder of Justice for Men and Boys (and the women who love them), Mike Buchanan, has accused the founder of the Everyday Sexism Project, Laura Bates of lying because she talks about sexism and the disproportionate effects it has on women compared to men. He also gives out “awards” to feminists for “lying”. Men on the internet can send the feminist campaigner, Caroline Criado-Perez online abuse detailing how they want to kill, mutilate and rape her, interspersed with complaints about the inequalities that men face and how men are neglected. But do we see them taking any action?

While there are sometimes valid points on #EverydaySexism, sexism is also something suffered by men, but any posting of sexism men face to that tag is met with derision and is minimised or dismissed. Most of what’s on there is what Hirsi-Ali calls ‘Trivial bullshit’, extremely subjective, or describes what might also be termed ‘female privilege’.

I’m not a huge fan of Buchanan either, while he’s often right on the statistics he comes across as rather pompous and fits a stereotype which doesn’t help the cause of men’s issues. People do, however, lie for social advantage, especially in relation to social activism. Look at Rachel Dolezal, Anita Sarkeesian or Brianna Wu and you see this is not that rare a phenomenon in activists with a large media footprint.

We do see men taking action, but we often only hear about it when people like you write a bashing article like this. When the funding has already been withdrawn. You’re not interested in reporting on Men’s Issues group when they’re trying to do something – or succeeding.

As to Perez, she got two harmless, mentally unstable people imprisoned for trolling that could easily have been ignored. She’s hardly the poster-child you want here since she’s an authoritarian bully with all the net-savvy of a spoon.

Since the funding for Survivors UK was cut, Michael May started a petition calling for proper funding for men’s services. Since he started it, another one was initiated by Andy Keene asking that the Diversity and Equalities Officer of Goldsmith’s University be sacked. Bahar Mustafa created an event and asked that men did not attend because she wanted to create a safe space for black and minority ethnic women. That petition had over 23,700 signatories compared with the just over 3,900 signatories of the Survivors UK. It’s hard not to draw conclusions about the relative weight given to these two issues from this.

Which one had the higher media profile and why?

Mustafa is a horrific racist who has been defended to the hilt by ‘progressive’ activists such as yourself. The double standard riles people up and the hypocrisy created a media storm that drew people’s attention. In contrast, I only heard about Survivors UK from you.

The idea that the world doesn’t revolve around men’s needs is inconceivable for MRAs, and that is why they try and get women to shut up, painting misogyny as the righteous option in the process. Men’s rights activists forget that the feminist fight for equality will benefit us all. As Laura Bates, the founder of the Everyday Sexism Project has said, “It’s not about men against women but people against prejudice”.

It doesn’t. Men’s Issues campaigners well know this. In fact, the world sees men as disposable, as being unworthy and unneeding of help and you’ve done nothing to change that with this article.

MHRAs don’t want women to shut up, they want militant, radical feminists who are harming men (and women) to be pushed back against in order to preserve everyone’s freedom and to allow Men’s Issues to be honest addressed.

Feminists don’t seem to fight for equality in this current wave (smaller, less public divisions of the movement notwithstanding). MHRAs do actually seem to be invested in equality by comparison. If equality will truly benefit us all then you should be working alongside the Men’s Human Rights Movement, not against it. If you dismiss anti-feminist concerns, perhaps you should examine your own prejudices against the MHRA, since they mirror one another.

It is about people against prejudice, and the prejudice against men – exemplified in this godawful article – is a prime example.

All sides can do better.

Pax.

#Feminism – An Informal survey on the nature of Feminism in the public discourse

f9afe7dabd37df1b841268aa4e4400a6Explanation

My criticism and hostility towards current, 3.5 wave’ feminism has come under fire and I would like to substantiate my position and check it to ensure that my contentions are reasonably accurate.

As I have described elsewhere, when I criticise ‘feminism’ it is the kind of feminism that I encounter every day. The #killallmen hashtags, the misrepresentations about a supposed boycott of the Mad Max movie, moaning about comic book covers and trying to have them changed, supporting the government in its restriction of free sexual expression and so forth.

semenNow, obviously I have developed some confirmation bias on this score and my personal, anecdotal sampling tends to centre around cultural and artistic conflict. I am, in other words, an unreliable narrator on this issue.

Sadly I don’t have access to third parties to ‘check my work’, so I’ve tried to devise at least a crude method for checking my own biases.

Method

The BBC is, remarkably, still a fairly respected source of news and information and a search on the BBC News site returns relevant and popular results without being skewed by my personal bias in the way a logged-in Google search would.

As such I simply searched for the term ‘feminist’ on the BBC news site and surveyed the top 100 returned results – presumed to be the most relevant if not necessarily the most current (some went back to the 1990s).

I then assigned each search return to a category:

Historical: Looks back on previous feminist or pre-feminist waves such as the suffragettes. I do not consider these relevant when discussing modern feminism.

Puff: Any returned hit without substance for the debate. This included obituaries and ‘clickbait’ style pieces that never got into any subtance.

Supporting: Anything that supported my contention that modern feminism is prescriptive, authoritarian, censorious, propagandist etc.

Confounding: Anything that confounded that contention.

Flaws

A single person, working alone on a Sunday morning with his dander up is not the most objective method by which to categorise pieces and I am sure there would be disagreement on some of these issues. For example I would regard the imprisonment of Criado-Perez’ trolls as supporting my contention, while others might see it as a genuine feminist issue. I would also consider several of the pieces I’ve filed under ‘puff’ to be examples of what Hirsi-Ali calls ‘trivial bullshit‘ and, as such, to support my contention, but in an attempt to be fair if there was any question I characterised them as ‘puff’.

I also have not had time, at this juncture, to listen to every podcast/program in detail and have had to make a decision based on the show notes and the profile or professed beliefs of panelists or the described topic.

Public fights over feminism have been considered supporting where one side agrees with my contention, as it demonstrates the conflict goes beyond my own, personal perception. EG: Even though I don’t agree with Mike Buchanan on a great deal, his existence and profile is indicative of a broader social conflict which supports my position.

News services have decreasing relevance, which is another factor. Social media campaigns are much more indicative but impractical to survey in this manner and I don’t think there’ll be much opposition to the thought that social media is even more rife with this brand of feminism, often in the form of hashtag campaigns such as the aforementioned #NotAllMen or others such as #YesAllWomen, #HeForShe, #ToTheGirls and it goes on and on and on.

Results

Historical: 15
Puff: 21
Supporting: 45
Confounding: 19

Of those which are relevant (supporting/confounding), my contention is supported by 70.3125% of BBC search hits.

It’s worth noting that of the 19 confounding results, many were repeats and 12 (over 60%) were non-western in origin, coming from places where equality is still quite distant.

1. Editor’s Choice – Second Wave Feminism (historical).
2. Editors Choice – The Age of Reason (historical).
3. #BBCtrending – Women Against Feminism (supporting).
4. Books and Authors Podcast: Open Book: Kamila Shamsie; young feminist writing (supporting).
5. Eve Ensler on trafficking drama and why Mad Max is feminist (supporting).
6. Spotlight: Caryl Churchill (supporting)
7. Jeremy Vine’s Being Human Podcast: Caitlin Moran (supporting).
8. Helen Skelton: Children do not look for role models in books (supporting).
9. Books and Authors Podcast: Open Book: A Book of One’s Own Part 3 & Crime ficiton: Too gory? (Historical).
10. Talking Books at Hay Festival (supporting).
11. Woman’s Hour: Weekend Woman’s Hour: Anita Dobson, Jodi Piccoult (Puff).
12. Call Yourself a Feminist (historical).
13. Feminist Comedian claims Uni Gig pulled over feminist threat (supporting).
14. Student Showcases feminist art (puff).
15. French feminist challenges greens (supporting).
16. Leading Japanese feminist dies (puff).
17. Victorian feminist celebrated (historical).
18. #BBCtrending: Feminist Hacker Barbie (confounding).
19. Coelho savages feminist nightmare (supporting).
20. Mary Wollenstonecraft, Britains first feminist (historical).
21. Hardtalk: Kat Banyard, Feminist Author (supporting).
22. Paris Brudge named after feminsit (puff).
23. Home town finds feminist painting (puff).
24. Egypt feminist in presidency bid (confounding).
25. Feminist writers appeals for protection (confounding).
26. Egyptian feminist threatened with divorce (confounding).
27. Bangladesh police hunt feminist writer (confounding).
28. Same story repeated (confounding).
29. Same story repeated (confounding).
30. US Masters draw feminist ire (supporting).
31. Women banned from feminist show (confounding).
32. West Yorkshire’s first feminist (historical).
33. Suffragette to open London Film festival (historical).
34. The Interview Archive: Natasha Walter, feminist (supporting).
35. Call yourself a feminist: Episode 1 (historical).
36. US feminist Friedan dies aged 85 (puff).
37. Egyptian feminist faces apostasy trial (confounding).
38. Egyptian feminist faces ISlamic divorce case (confounding).
39. Feminist icon French dies at 79 (puff).
40. Call yourself a Feminist: Episode 3 (supporting).
41. Call yourself a Feminist: Episode 2 (historical).
42. Is Jane Eyre a feminist icon? (puff).
43. How Iran’s feminist genie escaped (historical).
44. Killing Star on challenging feminist views (puff).
45. Feminist academic Germaine Greer assaulted (puff).
46. Bangladeshi feminist writer goes back to exile (confounding).
47. Egytpian Feminist: Parents encouraged me to rebel (confounding).
48. Volleyballers’ bikini bottom ads criticised by feminist (supporting)
49. Danish feminist group claims Little Mermaid beheading (supporting).
50. Hardtalk: Gloria Steinem (supporting).
51. Same story repeated (supporting).
52. Open Book: Kamila Shamsiel Young feminist writing (supporting).
53. London Fashion Week 2015: Is fashion feminist (supporting).
54. #BBCtrending: China’s feminist five and homophobia in Iceland (confounding).
55. Sweden feminist party’s 2010 equal pay protest (supporting).
56. Election 2014: Feminist meets Justice for Men leader (supporting).
57. In Toronto with the world’s feminist pornographers (supporting).
58. BBC Learning English – US feminist Betty Friedan dies (puff).
59. Twitter abuse pair jailed over threats to feminist (supporting).
60. Knickers used by artist for York feminist carnival (puff).
61. Feminist video-games talk cancelled after massacre threat (supporting).
62. Pair jailed over abusive tweets to feminist campaigner (supporting)
63. Baby it’s cold outside: the feminist version (supporting).
64. Tweets to feminist campaigner Criado-Perez – two charged (supporting).
65. Two guilty over abusive tweets to feminist campaigner (supporting).
66. Books and Authors Podcast: Open Book: A history of women’s writing, Ross Raisin (historical).
67. Ukraine’s Femen: Topless protests ‘help feminist cause’ (supporting).
68. Nuns meet with Vatican over ‘radical feminist’ accusations (confounding).
69. Gloria de Piero MP on feminist Mary Wollstonecraft (historical).
70. Baby it’s cold outside: The feminist version (supporting).
71. Feminist site attacked on International Women’s Day (supporting).
72. So is Andy Murray a feminist icon now? (puff).
73. All about that Bass: The feminist business parody (supporting).
74. Theresa May slaps down ‘feminist bigots’ (supporting).
75. ‘We must end feminist bigotry’ is the headline (supporting).
76. Did David Cameron refuse to wear feminist T-shirt? (puff).
77. Bangladeshi feminist comes out of hiding for court appearance (confounding).
78. Feminist T-shirt sweatshop claims denied by Fawcett Society (supporting).
79. Is explicit funk carioca Brazil’s new feminist movement? (puff).
80. Feminist initiative shakes up politics in Sweden and Norway (supporting).
81. Leading writer and feminist Elaine Morgan dies aged 92 (puff).
82. Woman’s Hour – The Catholic Feminist (confounding).
83. Helen McFarlane – the radical feminist admired by Marx (historical).
84. Leading writer and feminist Elaine Morgan dies aged 92 (puff).
85. Feminist author Alice Walker on women, aortion and ageing. (Puff).
86. Woman’s Hour: Feminist movement re-evaluated; Parenting classes (supporting).
87. Talking Books: Germaine Greer (supporting).
88. Woman’s Hour: Author Abi Morgan, Italy’s Feminist Emergency (confounding)
89. Same story (confounding).
90. In pictures: A male feminist’s view on African women (puff).
91. Woman’s Hour- 80s feminist agenda (historical).
92. Plea to call off Miss World feminist protest in London (supporting).
93. Front Row: Alan Cumming; Marlowe’s Edward II, new feminist comedians. (Supporting).
94. Wizard of Oz’s Dorothy was ‘first feminist role model’ (puff).
95. Woman’s Hour: Girl summit; Carolyn Forche, Tartan; feminist marketing (confounding).
96. Did a feminist abort her baby because it was a boy? (supporting).
97. Woman’s Hour: Representation of Sikh women, Cyber feminist Eva Pascoe (puff).
98. Alison Wolf on feminist help for women in low paid jobs (supporting).
99. Woman’s Hour: Women who leave their children, feminist Catharine McKinnon (supporting).
100. Alison Wolf on feminist help for women in low paid jobs (supporting).

#waystohelpmenandboys A Series of Useful Links

0_0_456_http---offlinehbpl.hbpl.co.uk-News-NST-01199E80-9B24-0C3C-4833539992F7790CThe hashtag #waystohelpmenandboys on Twitter was intended to show up Men’s Rights as not doing anything of practical value. Despite the spite involved in creating the tag it did bring together a great many useful links which I’ve replicated below (and added to). In my opinion simply advocacy does do good as well and discussing issues and garnering publicity for them is a productive use of one’s time.

Thanks to Nostradormouse for turning me on to these links.

I have not been able to vet these, so if any appear to be frauds or to have other issues please inform me, or if you know of any other men’s charities let me know about that too.

Another great resource for making big differences with little effort is kiva.org, which helps people get up on their feet from a position of poverty and make new lives for themselves.

These first links are US oriented:

http://www.justtell.org/
JustTell was created to educate and empower children and adults around the issue of childhood sexual abuse. On the kids’ pages of the site, we encourage children who are being sexually abused to choose an adult in their life who they trust, and to tell that adult about the abuse. We believe we are the first organization in the United States to create and disseminate public awareness campaigns directly aimed at children who are being sexually abused. Through the rest of the website we help to educate trusted adults, so that they will better understand what to do if a child comes to them for help.

http://www.aecf.org/resources/helping-children-aging-out-of-foster-care-prepare-for-independence/
On any given day, there are 500,000 children and youth in the foster care system. Instead of security and stability, these kids are subjected to situations that change frequently. When youths “age out” of the foster care system, they do not possess the skills to thrive on their own. This discussion guide provides suggestions on ways you can invest in this area, questions for general discussion and where to find additional information and resources.

http://www.va.gov/homeless/resources.asp
https://www.onecpd.info/homelessness-assistance/resources-for-homeless-veterans/
Resources to help military veterans who have become homeless.

http://www.casaforchildren.org/site/c.mtJSJ7MPIsE/b.5301295/k.BE9A/Home.htm
Every day in this country, 1,900 children become victims of abuse or neglect, and four of them will die. Every day. Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) for Children is a network of 951 community-based programs that recruit, train and support citizen-volunteers to advocate for the best interests of abused and neglected children in courtrooms and communities. Volunteer advocates—empowered directly by the courts—offer judges the critical information they need to ensure that each child’s rights and needs are being attended to while in foster care.

http://jlc.org/current-initiatives
Juvenile Law Center is the oldest non-profit, public interest law firm for children in the United States. Founded in 1975 by four new graduates of Temple Law School in Philadelphia, Juvenile Law Center has become a national advocate for children’s rights, working across the country to enforce and promote the rights and well-being of children who come into contact with the justice, child welfare and other public systems.

https://www.justgive.org/donations/help-homeless.jsp
The world of the homeless seems very far from yours — but in some ways it is quite near. For any of us, the loss of a job, the death of a spouse or a child or a severe physical disability could be the route to total despair. These are the very tragedies that have happened to many homeless people. Struck by personal tragedies, the people in shelters across America, have lost their homes and been deserted by the families and friends they once had. What can you do to help them? Sometimes the smallest can go a long way.

http://sentencingproject.org/template/index.cfm
Established in 1986, The Sentencing Project works for a fair and effective U.S. criminal justice system by promoting reforms in sentencing policy, addressing unjust racial disparities and practices, and advocating for alternatives to incarceration.

http://heartgalleryofamerica.org/
The Heart Gallery is a traveling photographic and audio exhibit created to find forever families for children in foster care. The Heart Gallery of America is a collaborative project of over 120 Heart Galleries across the United States designed to increase the number of adoptive families for children needing homes in our community.

http://www.justdetention.org/
Just Detention International is a health and human rights organization that seeks to end sexual abuse in all forms of detention. The rape of detainees, whether committed by corrections staff or by inmates, is a crime and is recognized under international law as a form of torture. In the U.S., sexual assault in detention has reached epidemic levels, with more than 200,000 people subjected to this form of violence every year.

http://childtrauma.org/
CTA is a not-for-profit organization based in Houston, Texas working to improve the lives of high-risk children through direct service, research and education. We recognize the crucial importance of childhood experience in shaping the health of the individual, and ultimately, society. By creating biologically-informed child and family respectful practice, programs and policy, CTA seeks to help maltreated and traumatized children.

These links are more UK oriented:

http://prostatecanceruk.org/
Prostate cancer charity raising awareness and research money, endorsed by Bill Bailey.

http://www.blueribbonfoundation.org.uk/
The Blue Ribbon Foundation has three very important objectives…
1. To raise awareness of male health issues – particularly cancer.
2. To use the Blue Ribbon as a ‘rallying banner’ to help bring about awareness; and to encourage other male health charities to adopt the ribbon.
3. To support other male health and cancer charities.

http://uk.movember.com/
The Movember Foundation is a global men’s health charity committed to changing the face of men’s health. With an official presence in 21 countries, the Movember Foundation is committed to driving significant improvements for the prioritised men’s health issues – prostate cancer, testicular cancer and mental health.

http://www.mankind.org.uk/
The ManKind Initiative is committed to:

  • Ensuring male victims of domestic abuse and domestic violence receive the help they need.
  • Challenging the lack of recognition and awareness by society.
  • Ensuring that the police, councils, the NHS and the Government provide adequate services and support to male victims at a national and local level.
  • Ensuring that safe houses, services and information campaigns are made available to support male victims.
  • Removing gender politics from the issue of domestic abuse and ensuring that both male and female victims are treated as equals.
  • Ensuring that statutory agencies, in particular, the Government, the police, local authorities, the NHS and the Crown Prosecution Service fully comply with the Gender Equality Duty and other legislation in supporting male victims.

http://www.chaps.uk.com/
Originally founded in 2000 as a local prostate cancer charity – Colchester Has Active Prostate Support – CHAPS now aims to be an advocate for all men’s health issues.

http://www.separatedfamilies.info/
Practical information for parents who are sharing care, those who are caring for their children alone and those who are not able to spend time with their children. Parents, carers, grandparents or anyone else with concerns about family separation are welcome.

http://www.parity-uk.org/
Objects
The Objects of PARITY are those set out in the current PARITY constitution, namely:
– to promote and protect the equal rights of men and women to the enjoyment of all civil, political, economic social and cultural rights under the law;
– to institute proceedings in the UK or appropriate European Courts for the purpose of establishing or protecting any such equal rights.

http://www.abandofbrothers.org.uk/
abandofbrothers is a charity established by men committed to positive social change through personal development and community building. The organisation was born out of concern at the continuing escalation of self-destructive and anti-social behaviour among young men from every section of society, together with the realisation that any meaningful and sustainable solution entails the reclamation of shared local responsibility

http://www.workingwithmen.org/
Working With Men is an award winning charity supporting positive male activity, engagement and involvement, our current work includes solution based approaches to tackling conflict and knife related incidents in schools and in the community, Raising the attainment levels of boys in school, Support for single mothers of boys, fatherhood and fathers into school programmes, tackling racial violence and issues of identity among young people…

http://mengetedstoo.co.uk/
Typically eating disorders are perceived to be conditions that affect only women – this is far from the case. Between 10 and 25 per cent of those people experiencing eating disorders are male. We know that the majority of men who have eating disorders struggle to get access to appropriate support and treatment. Therefore it is difficult to know how many men are actually affected by the conditions.

http://www.menssheds.org.uk/
This movement began in Australia when men realised they could come together around practical tasks on a regular basis, particularly if they had a designated place or workshop where tools and work in pogress could be stored. This appeals to men both living alone or with partners and at all ages although the vast majority of ‘shedders’ are at or beyond retirement date. Many older men lose some sense of purpose with the loss of their work role, status, workmates, income etc and can find themselves disengaged from their community if the pub or sports is not their thing. The generality of community activities on offer do not appeal to men and with their own expectation of meeting their own needs then some level of social isolation can occur. Men with their own shed have often developed their skills and interests there but in a larger facility, with better or more equipment, with skills you can develop with others and jobs you can do for the community a Men’s Shed offers something new. Finding a way of working, alongside others and with a purpose in view but without imposed demands can be exactly what many men need.

https://www.thecalmzone.net
THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST LIVING MISERABLY, or CALM, is a registered charity, which exists to prevent male suicide in the UK. Male suicide accounts for 77% of all suicides here and is now the single biggest cause of death in men aged 20 – 49 in England and Wales.

PREVENTING MALE SUICIDE
We seek to prevent male suicide by:-

  • Offering support to men in the UK, of any age, who are down or in crisis via our helpline and website.
  • Challenging a culture that prevents men seeking help when they need it, see http://www.yearofthemale.com
  • Pushing for changes in policy and practice so that suicide is better prevented via partnerships such as The Alliance of Suicide-prevention Charities (TASC), the Samaritans Call to Action. CALM also hosts the Suicide Bereavement Support Partnership, (which includes Cruse, If U Care Share, Papyrus, SoBS and the Samaritans amongst others). This partnership aims to ensure that everyone bereaved or affected by suicide is offered and receives timely and appropriate support. Its members are working collaboratively to ensure this vision becomes a reality.

 One in Six
Frankly I’m not convinced by the statistic driving this site because the research seems to have the same flaws as the 1/4-5-6 rape statistic, which has been debunked. However, whatever the statistic the site does have a lot of useful information on it.

The mission of 1in6 is to help men who have had unwanted or abusive sexual experiences in childhood live healthier, happier lives.

Our mission also includes serving family members, friends, and partners by providing information and support resources on the web and in the community.

#ManBrain Bi-Polar Curious?

cropped-img_20140306_2352582I know next to fuck all about bipolar disorder despite having a couple of friends with it.

If you’re looking for a resource and community to help you though, you could do worse than The Bipolar Bum.

There’s gender differences in bipolar disorder, that I wasn’t aware of before, which mean that different approaches and awareness of those differences could be of great use in helping men cope with their illness.

Check it out and the community around that site should be able to help you out.

 

Venturing into No-Man’s Land – Welcome

Sealing the dealAfter appearing on Al Jazeera’s The Stream and given that The Athefist (one of my other blogs) has wandered away from its original remit of atheism and into broader skepticism, especially of feminism, I thought it might be better to bring that here. This new blog will be concerned with men’s rights and men’s issues, discussing them in a way that’s more for the average guy than the other main options out there.

There really doesn’t exist a place, yet, for men who are neither male feminists (The Good Men Project) or angry activists (A Voice for Men). It is my arrogant hope that this may be the germ of something that grows into that.

My goal will be to find that path between the two and present articles that do more than simply attack feminist ideas, accusations and causes and spends more time looking directly at the issues that men face – though there will be some critique as well. I will try to foster a mutually attentive and respectful place of idea exchange, more like that I experienced on The Stream and less like one would experience on Tumblr.

I don’t know if I’ll post for a while yet. I may reblog some entries from The Athefist which I feel are still pertinent but being involved in the Gender Wars is exhausting and mentally debilitating and I do need to step away from it for a while. It’s also hard to change tack, alter people’s pre-existing perceptions of you and to build an audience for something new. We’ll see how it goes.

People are welcome to submit articles of their own, or to submit counter-articles and posts so long as they’re in the right spirit.

Let’s try and start that conversation.