Good news, ladies and manginas: Apparently some MRAs don’t think it’s time to go out and start shooting people. At least not quite yet.
Some background: In recent days numerous MRAs have taken up the cause of a man named Thomas Ball – who burned himself to death outside a courthouse in Keane, New Hampshire in a protest against what he saw as unfair treatment in family court. Ferdinand Bardamu of In Male Fide has declared him “a martyr for the cause of men’s rights, a casualty of feminism’s stripping one half of the population of their humanity.”
Before killing himself, Ball wrote a long manifesto outlining his grievances and suggesting that the time had come for men “to start burning down police stations and courthouses,” describing the inhabitants of such buildings as “[c]ollaborators who are no different than the Vichy of France or the Quislings of Norway during the Second World War … So burn them out. “ (He offered specific advice on how best to do this, including tips on how to select the proper bottles to use for Molotov cocktails.)
All this has inspired some in the MRA to start talking ominously about violence. On The Spearhead, W.F. Price has responded to this talk with a piece suggesting that the time isn’t quite right for the MRAs of the world to take up armed struggle. Not just yet, anyway. As he puts it:
It is never a good idea to pick up a gun and start shooting to address some vaguely defined injustice — that is savagery. Before the American Revolution, for example, patriots took pains to spell out a long list of grievances that justified rebellion. …
We have to make our own lists, air our grievances, and give the state the opportunity to redress them. … Before anyone resorts to the same methods the state uses against us, we must put every reasonable effort into working with the law and the political system we have. Because this effort is still in its infancy, any calls for armed resistance are entirely premature and counterproductive, and shouldn’t be taken seriously.
Obviously, the flip side of this argument for delay is a justification for killing people if these “grievances” aren’t dealt with in the way that those in the MRA would like. Price’s reference to the American Revolution is an interesting one, because of course the central issue of that struggle was, you know, taxation without representation. The colonists couldn’t vote out the king if they didn’t like his policies. In case anyone has forgotten: we actually do have the vote now, which was kind of the whole point in the first place.
Of course, many of Price’s readers are a bit more impatient than he is. In a comment that drew (last I checked) more than 40 upvotes and only two dissenting downvote, Taqman took issue with Price’s call to delay the armed struggle:
Tell that to men who are facing imminent imprisonment for failure to pay child support.
They don’t have the luxury of time and can’t wait a couple of decades for the manginas of the world to wake up and decide that a gentlemanly form of armed resistance is now acceptable.
The ironically named Firepower, meanwhile, took a little swipe at Ball’s own actions, but didn’t challenge his advice for the rest of the men of the world:
What IS crazy is having to point out that setting YOURSELF on fire is a ridiculous way to “win” anything.
Set your enemies on fire. To even have to remind this questions the long term chances of victory for such a pathetic lot.
Jean Valjean suggested that political action was pointless — due to all those damned women who vote:
No amount of “stoic logic” will make politicians see our point of view.
Politicians are in the business of getting re-elected rather than the business of good governance. So long as women are the majority there will only be tyranny of the majority.
Peter-Andrew:Nolan(c) — you knew we were getting to him, right? — expressed his profound disappointment that more Spearheaders weren’t willing to embrace a violent solution:
Gee you guys are whimps and tiptoe around the ‘use of force’ like freaking ballet dancers. Are you so scared to speak about this when it is CLEAR the guvment LOVES using force against you and lots of other people too?
And he made the argument personal, explicitly denouncing, by name, the judge he claimed had “criminally abused” him with his rulings:
Judge [name redacted’s] life is now in my hands. He lives by my consent and my consent alone. …
And, like Ball, he declared judges to be essentially treasonous:
These judges pretended to be your servants. They are evil, evil people who deserve the kind of treatment reserved for those who commit treason.
There is more to Nolan’s comment(s) than that, but to get into it would require going down the rabbit-hole into his particular brand of crackpottery, which seems to involve him setting up his own courts to try judges he doesn’t like. (I frankly don’t understand his belief system and don’t care to.)
Now, it should be noted that a few Spearheaders actually objected to Nolan’s violent talk. But the last I checked, the comment I just quoted had more upvotes than downvotes. W.F. Price took more flak for suggesting men wait a little longer before taking up arms than Nolan did for, well, you saw what he wrote. That tells you a lot about The Spearhead, I think.
EDIT: Added quote from Ferdinand Bardamu; removed similar quote from The Spearhead.
Kirbywarp
That sorce looks like a feminist one, I will be favoring the fact based, independent evidence.
as it stands female abusers have relative immunity from shame and responsibility
Utter bullshit. I’ve worked with many, many women who have lost their kids due to abuse abuse or neglect. What you say is simply false.
Eoghan – Independent? “IPT” publishes exclusively on the topic of false child abuse allegations. I don’t know if they’re expert witnesses for defense attorneys or if it’s more personal, but they clearly have a dog in the fight.
That sorce looks like a feminist one, I will be favoring the fact based, independent evidence.
It’s from the American Bar Association.
MOR: 6 percent of cases have allegations of a abuse: Out of 1,000 case that’s 60. 21 percent of those cases have false claims of abuse (made by the father), for a total of 12.6 total cases.
Women make false claims 1.3 percent of the time, which =.78 We can round that up to one.
So one in a thousand divorces has a woman making a false claim of abuse. Way to clog the system.
Ami, I know – it doesn’t work on NWO and I don’t expect it to work on Eoghan/Middle of the Road. I think I do it for the sake of clarity.
Feminist Source = Any Source That Doesn’t Back Up MRA Positions
@Pecunium but he “knows” that it’s way more than that, so we need to RLY investigate the claims of abuse by women until we get them up to the rate they should be at! xD
Now I’m getting an idea for a card that says
“You cannot pay for the card’s casting cost using feminist sources of mana” xD
Perv – ” I have hung around with feminists for many, many minutes. And I know a lot who have been sexually assaulted and not reported it. Some who have been sexually assaulted, reported it, and not been believed or not gotten a conviction. (Which seems to go in the MRA books as a “false accusation,” regardless of the circumstances. I’m not saying we should convict without proof, but we shouldn’t call an accusation necessarily false just because it didn’t lead to a conviction.)”
Of course if you hang around with people that have been sexually assaulted and raped. You will know many of them and of course there are people that have been sexually assaulted and raped, I have a bunch of times.
I’m talking about feminists throwing around false accusations of abuse and rape and rape apology and all that crap. You yourself make a massive statement about all men that advocate for men’s rights further up the thread.By pointing this out I’m demonstrating how false allegations are just part of the landscape.
Person that is upset I shortened their name, my short term memory is not what it used to be.. I wasn’t trying to disrespect your online identity, I just didnt memorize your full name.
Also I get the feeling we’re going to get “NO THAT’S WHAT YOU FEMINISTS WANT TO DO AND ARE DOING WITH MEN AND RAPE, KEEP CHANGING LAWS UNTIL YOU CAN PUT EVERY MAN IN JAIL TO SUIT THE RATES YOU THINK THEY SHOULD BE” xD
Tho I should ask Kirby:
[20:02] Kirby: he’s just factually wrong
[20:02] Kirby: and I’m trying to get him to respond to me 😛
[20:03] Kirby: he’ll probably just say “oh that feminist controlled ABA, you can’t trust them for facts. Go to fathers4justice.com, that’ll give you the straight up.”
He’s the prophet here xDDD (note the time stamps xD 20 minutes ago)
@eoghan:
Plenty of others have already called it, but I specifically looked for one not by a feminist organization, and the ABA was the one that came up (buried under a ton of fathers4justice and mens-rights websites, I might add). Or are we saying now that “I don’t like your source” is now a valid rebuttle? No wonder you guys don’t like to provide your own.
Eoghan – I made an allegation using the word “probably” about men who advocate for men’s rights and have been accused of abuse.
And I stand behind that “probably.” When someone’s response to accusations of abuse isn’t “I didn’t do that, and I can explain what did happen” but “everyone just hates me because I’m a man”… well, I won’t say definitely. But I’ll say probably.
Plymouth – Ah, that explains why they think feminists are everywhere and control everything!
Pecunium
You seem to be a false accusation apologist. 1 in 10 Americans report being falsely accused, Even if half of them are lying its a serious problem. The police, lawyers, judges reports and independent research… show that false allegations by women are a common.
The only people saying that they are not, are generally feminists.
@eoghan:
And nearly 1 in 2 convicted criminals swear on their mothers grave that they “just didn’t do it, your honor.” Care to source your claim, since we already know it isn’t true in custody battles with child sexual abuse claims?
The accusations are not what they seem.
Beware of the Holly in the Smiling Bag.
Eoghan – Why is this suddenly all about women? Women do the abuse and women do the false allegations?
It’s almost as if you have something against… no. You’re just a crusader for justice.
(Oh God. Am I talking like NWO? I don’t mean to talk like NWO. What I mean to say is that you don’t actually read the journal of the IPT on a regular basis. You decided to believe that women were evil and then you looked up a source that would support you on that. I don’t think you started out caring about justice and then realized women were the source of a huge injustice; I’m pretty sure it went exactly the reverse of that.)
Rise NWOmistress!
@eoghan:
Also, how do you get that 1 in 10 Americans report being falsely accused in the first place? Do 1 in 10 Americans go through the legal system? That would be frightening…
“Come with me, and you’ll be
In a world of pure misogynation…”
MOR: You seem to be a false accusation apologist. 1 in 10 Americans report being falsely accused, Even if half of them are lying its a serious problem. The police, lawyers, judges reports and independent research… show that false allegations by women are a common.
Actually, I’m a person who understands about translation. I find it interesting that you discount one set of (sourced) numbers, and pull other numbers out of nowhere (women are clogging the system with false accusations).
I didn’t say the Austrian (not Australian) source was wrong, just that I’d not seen it in the original, and not on any source which I could trust to not be biased.
Then again, evidence, seems to be far from your long suit. Stick to the personal attack. It’s feebly done, but it’s your greatest strength.
Kirby – Come to think of it, 1 in 10 Americans being accused of any kind of violent crime sounds ridiculously high.
Either it’s including purely social accusations with no legal repercussions (i.e., I told my mom that my sister was the one who gave the doggy a “haircut”), or it’s another study out of the prestigious Institute Of Things Found In My Ass.