Telling the truth has become a revolutionary act, so let us salute those who disclose the necessary facts.
7 Aug 2013
Fracking Protest Support And Police Friendly And Firm
Feminism and Men's Rights by an Ignoramus
karen straughan: In one study designed to capture child sexual abuse (with
wording that places no moral value on incidents), only 16% of men with a
documented history of CSA reported it, compared with 64% of women with
such histories.
The narrative is "men are rapists/abusers; women are raped/abused"
The narrative is "women are victims; men are perpetrators"
I'd guess a lot of men talk themselves out of victimhood and a lot of women talk themselves into it.
The narrative is "women are victims; men are perpetrators"
I'd guess a lot of men talk themselves out of victimhood and a lot of women talk themselves into it.
US Govt Ties to Child Sex Trafficking: Speical Report
The youngest child was 13 years old,
Feminazi makes false sexual assault allegation and then assaults innocent man
Damsel in Distress - How Video Games exploit Women
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6p5AZ...
Start at 11:15 to see the feminazi critique of Mario Brothers.
This is video #1 of three video. The last video in the series was published on August 1, 2013. This is a feminazi video series to expose the evil and misogyny of video games.
The Great "Abu Ghraib" Escape
By Raheem Salman and Ned Parker: How al Qaeda broke hundreds of 'bad guys' out of the world’s most notorious jail -- and what it means for America.
On July 21, the temperature spiked to a sweltering 107 degrees in Baghdad -- brutal heat for the guards and prisoners inside Abu Ghraib's cement confines. Outside, among a patchwork of green farmland and dry brown fields, federal police and army troops -- packing AK-47s, PKC machine guns and sniper rifles -- were positioned throughout the terrain, which is dotted with Sunni farms and villages where insurgents had once launched a guerrilla war against U.S. troops. Within the walls of the infamous prison, the guards -- armed only with pepper spray and clubs -- were the last line of defense from would-be assailants.
At around 9 p.m. that night, as detainees were being counted on the way back to their cells after dinner, the mortars began to fall.
A barrage of more than 40 rounds hit the grounds in rapid succession -- some counted as many as 100 explosions. As guards and detainees scrambled for cover, two car bombs exploded outside, punching a hole in the walls of the massive prison compound.
More than 50 gunmen wearing tribal robes then entered the grounds, wielding pistols, AK-47s, and hand grenades.
On July 21, the temperature spiked to a sweltering 107 degrees in Baghdad -- brutal heat for the guards and prisoners inside Abu Ghraib's cement confines. Outside, among a patchwork of green farmland and dry brown fields, federal police and army troops -- packing AK-47s, PKC machine guns and sniper rifles -- were positioned throughout the terrain, which is dotted with Sunni farms and villages where insurgents had once launched a guerrilla war against U.S. troops. Within the walls of the infamous prison, the guards -- armed only with pepper spray and clubs -- were the last line of defense from would-be assailants.
At around 9 p.m. that night, as detainees were being counted on the way back to their cells after dinner, the mortars began to fall.
A barrage of more than 40 rounds hit the grounds in rapid succession -- some counted as many as 100 explosions. As guards and detainees scrambled for cover, two car bombs exploded outside, punching a hole in the walls of the massive prison compound.
More than 50 gunmen wearing tribal robes then entered the grounds, wielding pistols, AK-47s, and hand grenades.