Feminists – man-hatred and irrationality

Another powerful article by Janice Fiamengo, flaying feminists for their bigotry, man-hatred, and irrationality.

*****

The Feminists Who Hate MAGA More than They Hate the Mullahs

A movement in thrall to anti-western animus

Janice Fiamengo, Mar 13, 2026

Here are all the parts of the Constitution Trump's Muslim ban violates.

Some commentators have expressed disappointment at the relative silence of feminists on the situation of Iranian women. “Isn’t feminism supposed to be about women’s liberation?” asked Iranian-born Sheila Nazarian, a Beverly Hills doctor and media personality.

Nazarian expressed shock that “with Iran, a country where women are governed by absolutist religious law that hardly treats them as human, so many Western feminists either maintain their silence or end up supporting the regime.”

Annabel Denham, columnist and senior political commentator at The Telegraph, recently expressed similar astonishment, asking “Where is the support for [Iranian women’s] glorious defiance? The Instagram carousels, the breathless declarations of ‘solidarity’ from former Harry Potter stars and pouting influencers?”

Others have noted the lack of outcry by feminist athletes, including the normally-vociferous Megan Rapinoe, over the request for asylum by members of the Iranian women’s soccer team.

Read the rest HERE

The madness of Native Title. Where will it end? Multiple white Aboriginal millionaires is where

Native title holders awarded more than $54m for economic, spiritual loss from NT’s McArthur River Mine

A serious-looking man in a hat an a red shirt looking to the side, with a river and bushland in the background.
Jack Green was among the claimants who took the NT government to court for compensation over operations at the McArthur River Mine site outside Borroloola. (ABC News: Michael Franchi)

In short:

The Federal Court has ordered the Northern Territory government to pay more than $54 million compensation to Gudanji, Yanyuwa and Yanyuwa-Marra traditional owners.

The compensation is for economic and spiritual losses associated with the establishment and expansion of the McArthur River Mine near Borroloola.

It marks only the second time a court has calculated compensation for native title losses, the first being the landmark Timber Creek case in 2019.

Native title holders for the land surrounding one of Australia’s largest mining operations have been awarded more than $54 million in compensation for “intergenerational and enduring” economic and spiritual loss.

The court ruling is only the second of its kind in Australia’s history and could have implications for native title groups, governments and private industry around the country

Read the rest HERE . . .

Grace Tame – her friends should intervene

Grace Tame is back in the news. She has dismissed the thoroughly documented rape of women – rape as a weapon of war – during the Islamic attack on Israel on 7 October 2023 as propaganda. One could hardly utter a more sickening claim.

There is now enough evidence to support the proposition that Tame has deep psychological problems. Whether it is autism, as suggested in one report, or some other affliction, it is clear that Tame is out of touch with her social environment and has problems rationally processing the social and political issues she dabbles in.

Of course, the usual gang in the media rush to her support. But that support is politically motivated. It would be far better – and merciful – for her real friends to take her aside and counsel her and, if necessary, seek psychological support.

Feminist lessons on high

Television becomes our feminist preacher

– Plus exciting alternative to rigged criminal justice system

Bettina Arndt, Mar 06, 2026

It comes across as a laborious exercise in moral posturing, reeking of performative empathy, as the ER’s raw, unfiltered brutality is paused for a sanitized, educational interlude that virtue-signals the show’s progressive credentials.

The HBO television drama series, The Pitt, is brilliant entertainment. The show has won a stack of awards for its authentic, gripping portrayal of the grisly medical cases staff confront in a Pittsburgh emergency room.

In the second series we witness this constantly overwhelmed, high-stakes environment during a chaotic July 4th shift, with staff juggling life-or-death traumas amid bed shortages, diversions from other hospitals, and other crises. The heroic staff routinely cope with these relentless dramas with rough, gallows humour, sarcastic one-liners, and dark banter that keeps morale afloat amid the chaos.

But suddenly the mood changes. We are told of a new patient in triage – a “sexual assault survivor.” The atmosphere snaps into hushed solemnity: jokes vanish, voices drop, and the entire team shifts to gentle, deliberate, almost reverent tiptoeing.

Somehow, in the overflowing ER – where beds are scarce and staff stretched thin – there’s instant allocation of a private room, specialized lighting, and three dedicated professionals for hours of solemn and meticulous evidence collection.

Read the rest HERE . . .