As we said, once feminists destroy men, the next will be women who don't agree with them. Men have already been stripped of all human rights, and a man's word means nothing compared to a woman's words
"Lisa never used to consider herself very academic and left school at the earliest possible time when she was offered her apprenticeship. She'd 'always loved cars and I was fascinated by how they worked'.
Lisa became a fully qualified mechanic but the job didn't live up to the dream. 'It was too much like hard work,' she admits, confessing she found it at once demanding, yet not stimulating enough.
She stopped working in the garage when her children arrived and, for a while, did admin work in her partner's diving business. It was he who encouraged her to think about studying full-time.
'He said I should do something I was passionate about, and I was very interested in doing something worthwhile, like law. I knew it would be a big undertaking but once the children were at school, I knew I could commit to a degree.'
For four years, she studied hard, and without incident.
Is it significant that she wasn't in what she calls 'any of the cliques'? Possibly. 'I wouldn't say I was a popular student. I wasn't unpopular but probably talked to only three or four others on my course.' During Covid, lectures and seminars moved online. Even then, Lisa was one of the quieter students.
'Often, I would just log on and not have my camera on. But the whole point of the seminars was that they were debate-based, so I knew I'd need to speak.' The seminar that proved contentious was on transgender issues. Views differed hugely from the off.
'The lecturer said something like 'all men are rapists and we should lock them up after 6pm'. I took offence at this. I have two boys and a partner who is a man. I don't think all men are rapists. Of course they are not.
'All this is about rights. What about men's rights to not be called rapists?'
Maybe the lecturer was putting forward a provocative argument to stimulate debate?
'Perhaps, but I got the impression she meant it,' Lisa says. 'That was the tone of the whole seminar. The other girls pitched in. It was men-hating. I was appalled.'
She says there were 12 or 13 students involved in the seminar, most of whom had their cameras on if they were talking. 'It was all women, apart from one who I think was a boy, but I'm afraid to even say that now. He didn't speak.'
At times it sounds as if Lisa is describing an unruly mob, rather than sober law students.
'What I actually find terrifying is that they were talking about men as if they were guilty. We are law students. Above all else we believe in the principle of innocent until proven guilty. Or we should.'
As soon as the group moved on to talking about transgender issues, she says, 'things got really heated. I made the point about sport — again, all my points were valid and based on things I knew about or had researched. I was basically accused of being transphobic.'
There was another altercation when she tried to comment on the idea of safe spaces. 'It got onto talking about women-only changing rooms, and one girl said categorically that trans people do not do bad things. I thought this was at best naïve, but also wrong. I cited a case where a rapist had been put in an all-female jail, but I was shot down and told I was a privileged, white cis woman, and what did I know.
'I found it offensive then, and I do now. Those students don't know anything about my background. If I said things they don't agree with, then fine. We don't have to agree. But to run and tell the teacher? And to put this awful spin on everything. It's wrong.'
Lisa says she would have said the same even if there had been a transgender person in the seminar (there wasn't, to her knowledge).
'The thing is, I have since read transgender people's online content and some have even been in touch to say they support me. So this is crazy. Who do those girls think they are speaking for?'
Her gripe is not with the students, though. It is with the university. 'The timing is awful. It's been so stressful going through all this during the final weeks of my degree. I understand they have to investigate, but for goodness sake, if I got an email saying someone had said women have vaginas, therefore they must be punished, common sense would have prevailed.'
On a wider point, she says, the repercussions are terrifying.
'Do we really want a society where we cannot even state biological fact, without being reprimanded?' she asks."
More in link
www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9606201/Law-student-degree-risk-said-women-vaginas.html#men #women #equal #father #discriminationmen #discrimination #segregation #falseaccusations #domesticviolence #childsupport #equalparenting #parentalalienation #divorce #fraud #falseaccusationsrape #fatherless #childsharecustody #fahtermatter #law #brokenlaw #familylaw #court #depression, #depressionafterdivorce #Divorce #effectsofdivorce #health #masculinity #mentalhealth #suicidal #suicide #equalpay #equalwork #menrights #humanrights