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Keyword: radfems

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  • Radical Feminist Groups -Predictable as Usual

    01/05/2006 3:14:53 PM PST · by Aussie Dasher · 4 replies · 250+ views
    Family Research Council ^ | 6 January 2006
    Washington, D.C. - Despite the fact that hearings are still a week away, radical feminists groups yesterday reiterated their opposition to the confirmation of Judge Samuel Alito as Associate Justice to the U.S. Supreme Court. Connie Mackey, Vice President of Government Affairs for Family Research Council issued the following statement: "In predictable fashion, they fired up the same old tired rhetoric and applied it to Judge Alito, just as they would to any nominee put forward by a conservative president. Even when the liberal leaning American Bar Association unanimously finds Judge Alito 'well-qualified' for the job, Kim Gandy and Co....
  • Men Step Aside, The Rad-Fems Are Set To Win the Culture War

    01/13/2005 5:09:38 PM PST · by GMMAC · 71 replies · 1,434+ views
    ifeminists.com / FreeRepublic ^ | January 5, 2005 | Carey Roberts
    Men Step Aside, The Rad-Fems Are Set To Win the Culture War ifeminists.com January 5, 2005 by Carey Roberts If you want to understand the Culture War, you need to appreciate the ideology, methods, and goals of radical feminism. And to understand feminism, you must understand Marxist philosophy and the history of the Soviet Union. On this last point, I recommend Joshua Muravchik's highly-readable book, Heaven on Earth. Future historians will note the Culture War took an important turn in the November 2 elections. Sensing their political standing was on the wane, the Leftists decided to pull out all the...
  • Infertility Campaign Can't Get Ad Space

    09/02/2002 2:36:10 PM PDT · by Constitutionalist Conservative · 9 replies · 140+ views
    The Washington Post ^ | 08/28/2002 | Rick Weiss
    For the second year in a row, an advertising campaign designed to educate people in their twenties and thirties about how to prevent infertility has run into trouble. The series of advertisements -- developed for the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, the nation's largest medical association devoted to fertility and reproduction -- uses provocative baby bottle images to highlight four major causes of infertility: cigarette smoking, unhealthy body weight, sexually transmitted diseases and advancing age. When the ads appeared on buses in several U.S. cities last year, they drew the ire of the National Organization for Women. Accusing the doctors...