WhoreMods -> RE: When I Stood Up for Equality, Parliament Heckled and Jeered (2/16/2017 4:24:31 AM)
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You've yet to explain why somebody getting shouted down for trying to heckle a member's bill intended to stop honour killings of members of either sex from being so described in Government literature* is making a stand against institutional misandry (the Houses of Parliament is not the first establishment most would go to looking for victims of the feminazi conspiracy, put it that way), rather than acting like an attention seeking wanker with a chip on his shoulder about women's right. Look you female favouring wanker, the bill has nothing to do with equality, it's all about catering for females while leaving males totally out of the picture. That's not equality, that's favourtism. Males are victims too, they are human beings too, they deserve consideration and support too. Whatever females are entitled too, so should males. That's equality. If one gender is entitled to something while the other is not, how the flying fuck is that equality? It's not, it's totally not, it's a billion miles away from equality. No, the bill is to stop Government literature using the term "honour killing" to describe a bunch of savages murdering women and their their boyfriends. The bill's sponsor specifically mentioned male victims of these crimes in her address to the commons. Davies, as is his wont, ignored the facts in order to spin the bill as being an attempt to sacrifice men's rights to women's, which is his MO whenever he opens his trap in parliament. Davies does not feel that women should be entitled to whatever men are, and has a long history of trying to derail member's bills aimed at dealing with domestic violence. If anybody in this fiasco is opposed to gender equality, it's Davies. It certainly isn't Nusrat Ghani, whose introduction to her bill seems to have passed you by: quote:
Language matters. The use of the term ‘honour’ to describe a violent criminal act committed against a man, but more often a woman, can only be explained as a means of self-justification for the perpetrator. It diminishes the victim and provides a convenient excuse for what in our society we should more accurately call simply: murder, rape, abuse or enslavement.
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