Interviewers often ask me - and any feminist(s) I'm in a discussion with - to cease employing statistics. Phillip Schofield did this in the ITV programme, Jeremy Vine did it in his BBC Radio 2 show during my discussion with Special Snowflake, and Frances Finn takes a similar line here after I'd raised the issue of longitudinal studies (which I'd presented to House of Commons and House of Lords inquiries) demonstrating a causal link between increasing female representation on corporate boards and (on average) corporate financial decline.
It's an annoying request, because they may as well ask me not to present facts. Facts and statistics always support men's rights advocates' arguments, not feminist arguments. Feminists have nothing other than conspiracy theories, fantasies, lies, delusions and myths, which are accepted by the general public as being truthful as a result of endless repetition in the mainstream media, decade after decade.
No comments:
Post a Comment