Per's MANifesto: An electronic newsletter of news and opinion on man-bashing, anti-male stereotypes and other great moral principles. April, 1997. WELCOME, READERS, to an issue we might have called "The Rape of Reason." But instead we'll call it "Destroying Democracy?" Did you know you're helping to destroy democracy just by reading this right now? Sure you are, according to some people who have a stake in preserving the status quo. Read on. MANifesto is now on the Web, at http://shell.idt.net/~per2/manifest.htm INDEX: I. PREDATORS AND PREY II. PUNISHING A RESPONSIBLE MAN III. THEIR CHOICE, OUR RESPONSIBILITY IV. DESTROYING DEMOCRACY? V. FEEDBACK ON HARASSMENT COMMENTS VI. MORE STUPID LAW TRICKS VII. ETHICS WATCHDOGS HUMOR: POW DEMANDS PARITY WITH HOSTAGES IN PERU. ========== PREDATORS AND PREY In the May 1996 MANifesto, we told you about another influential feminist study being debunked -- Lenore J. Weitzman's questionable "Divorce Revolution" study. It purported to show that divorce hurled a huge percentage of women into poverty while improving the status of men. There were questions raised about that study from the beginning, but for some reason the major news media gladly ignored the questions -- and the other studies that contradicted Weitzman. Weitzman's study added the phrase "the feminization of poverty" to the lexicon and influenced court decisions and governmental policy. Then it turned out that Weitzman herself admitted that her study was wrong. The people who questioned her study from the get-go had been right -- and they had been brushed aside. Did the news media learn anything from this? Not at all. They've continued to take their "studies" on gender issues from the feminists. And the studies often turn out to be morally and intellectually corrupt. That's why Per's MANifesto is a valuable source for finding out what's really going on. When feminist studies turn out to be bogus, it just doesn't seem to attract the same attention the studies got when they were first touted. Because it has happened again. A while back, social agencies that deal with teen pregnancy began reporting "anecdotal evidence" that up to half of all teen pregnancies were due to statutory rape. It was, they said, a problem of adult men in their 20s and 30s or older seducing very young girls and then abandoning them. This appealed to the natural instinct to protect girls, and to the familiar image of men as sexual predators. It wasn't just feminists who hopped on the bandwagon. There also were conservative male lawmakers with Victorian views of females as naive waifs in need of protection from bestial men. These forces joined together to demand that we start enforcing statutory rape laws and jailing the S.O.B.s who were seducing the flower of our fair young womanhood. Congress even demanded a crackdown on statutory rape as part of welfare reform. In all the uproar, no one really stopped to examine the evidence being advanced for all these claims. For one thing, the evidence was anecdotal. For another, many social-service agencies reporting this "evidence" were staffed with activists who had an axe to grind. And -- is this still surprising? -- their axes were often aimed straight at the neck of the male gender. The tip-off should have come as these activists raved about the male "predators." That suggests an atmosphere loaded with anti-male stereotypes even as they started collecting their evidence. Now, image that you are a pregnant teenage girl, and your counselor is pumping you to find out if the father was one of these "predators." Obviously, a lot of teenage girls could realize they could pass the buck by claiming to be victims of statutory rape. It shifts the responsibility off them, and it tells the counselors what they want to hear, thus getting the counsel off their backs. Is this so hard to predict? We've seen girls send innocent men to prison on false rape charges because the girls thought they were pregnant. Well, someone finally did take a tough look at all this anecdotal evidence about statutory rape. And guess what? They found the claim that half of teen pregnancies were due to statutory rape to be a wild exaggeration, and the claims of abandonment as well. The new study, conducted by researchers from the Urban Institute, found that only 8 percent of all births to 15- to 19-year-olds would be covered by statutory rape laws. "Nearly two thirds of all teenagers who have babies are 18 or 19 years old, too old to be covered by statutory rape laws in any state," the study says. As reported in the Washington Post, the study found that "some of the fathers were only a year or two older than the teenage mothers. Statutory rape laws typically require a five-year age difference between the mother and father, according to Laura Lindberg, one of four co-authors of the report to be published today in Family Planning Perspectives. Also, some of the couples were married when the child was born." (See "Statutory Rape-Pregnancy Link Reassessed: Crackdown Will Have Limited Impact on Births to Teens, Study Says, in the Washington Post, April 16, page A3.) Once again we have the anti-male forces playing fast an loose with the statistics. Sure you can say that a 20-year-old man sleeping with a 19-year-old woman is technically an adult male sleeping with a "teenager" (though it's a teenager who can vote.) Then you can take that kernel of truth and blow it up into an epidemic, rephrasing it so it sounds like lots of (older) men sleeping with lots of (younger) teenagers. The Post said the new study "also challenged the popular perception that large numbers of older men are taking advantage of vulnerable young girls and then abandoning them to be cared for by the nation's welfare system. Less than 2 percent of all adult men father a child with a teenage girl, Lindberg said, and half of the minors who had an adult partner were still living with him as long as 30 months after the birth of their child. This suggests that the men were not impregnating the girls and walking out." We know what some feminists will say to all this: that grown men should not be fooling around with young teenage girls. We *absolutely agree.* But we are not going to fix our real problems by chasing imaginary or exaggerated ones. Is feminism interested in looking at the real problem, or just in bashing men? Studies show that many girls who grow up without fathers are more promiscuous and start having sex at earlier ages. They're looking for the love they've missed. The answer is making sure that our children have loving and complete families. When some feminists start spreading the rumor that there is an epidemic of male predators preying on young teenage girls, it might launch those feminists into that high level of outrage and moral superiority they crave so much. Problem is, it doesn't help anyone, and it just further poisons the air between women and men. It merely feeds the anti-male feminist's sense of self-righteousness. And some feminists seem more interested in complaining than in fixing real problems. ========== PUNISHING A RESPONSIBLE MAN After reading the previous article, some feminists and their supporters might shrug and say: "What's the harm? So what if the original studies weren't all that accurate? Are we hurting anyone?" You might ask Kevin Gillson of Port Washington, Wisconsin. When Kevin Gillson found out that his girlfriend was pregnant, he did what countless men do across the country without attracting any headlines: he acted responsibly. Gillson, who is 18, set out to marry his girlfriend, get a job, and support his family. Is this a crime? According to the justice system in Wisconsin, it is. Police found out that Gillson's girlfriend is 15 years old. The law says that sex with anyone under 16 is statutory rape. Well surely they'd just warn Gillson and let him go, right? After all, he was getting married and supporting his family, wasn't he? Sure. But feminists will tell you there's a "rape epidemic" going on, and we can't let them get away with it. So Gillson was arrested, put on trial, and convicted. He faces sentencing of probation to 40 years in prison. (Yes, 4 followed by zero.) His girlfriend even tearfully pleaded that the sex was consensual and that she was marrying him. To no avail. And Gillson will have to register from now on as a convicted sex offender. Gillson is free on bail pending sentencing June 24. The Ozaukee County District Attorney is a woman, Sandy Williams. She defends her efforts to put a man behind bars after he marries the woman he supposedly "raped." "Does it mean that because he said he's sorry, we're supposed to close our eyes to it?" she asks. Well, that's sort of what was done with Tracy Ribitch. We discussed Ribitch's case in the last issue of MANifesto. She killed her newborn child, and was sentenced to not one day in prison. Her sentence was to go on the lecture circuit telling other teens about the perils of unprotected sex. Of course there are major differences between these cases. Gillson assumed responsibility for his actions and tried to make good. Ribitch assumed no responsibility for killing someone, and blamed her boyfriend for not being supportive. Oh, and Gillson's crime was to love someone. Ribitch, however, killed someone. Obviously, the man has to pay. Feminists, just keep repeating to yourselves: "Society is biased against women, society is biased against women ..." ========== THEIR CHOICE, OUR RESPONSIBILITY Speaking of responsibility: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that "pregnant women are drinking harder than they did four years earlier, raising the risk their babies will suffer mental retardation, learning disorders and other problems," according to an Associated Press report. The study "found that 3.5 percent of 1,313 moms-to-be in 1995 admitted they had seven or more drinks per week or binged on five or more drinks at once within the previous month. That's up from 0.8 percent of 1,053 pregnant women in 1991." "The sample suggests that 140,000 pregnant women nationwide were frequent drinkers in 1995, compared with 32,000 women in 1991." Many feminists insist that it is "her body, her choice," and men have to "get their hands off women's wombs." Unfortunately, her choice has consequences for us all. First, there's the consequences for children who are damaged by their mother's drinking. They are sentenced to a lifetime of punishment for the mother's "choice." And these children often need care throughout their lives, never living up to the potential that was taken from them. Your money and ours goes for medical care, treatment, and programs they will need. These women exercising their "choice" create a burden that we all have to pay. And we don't have a choice about it. ========== DESTROYING DEMOCRACY? Recently, TV journalist Cokie Roberts and her husband, Steven, warned about the grave dangers of the internet. It could, they said, destroy democracy. How touching for aristocrats of the airwaves and newspapers to be so concerned for democracy. Tell me, fellows, is Cokie known for giving your views a democratic airing on her broadcasts? In a syndicated column, they start right off with the stereotypes from the first: "Cyber seduction, cult by computer, kids caught in an indecent web! The headlines have been scary of late as we learn more about the dangers of the brave new world of the Internet." The Robertses know that one sure way to get people to make emotional reactions is to scare them about their kids. It worked for Gloria Steinem in the satanic panics over the supposed cults in daycare centers. It's sure to work for the Robertses. "The horrible thought that, in the privacy of your own home, your child could be the target of some sick predator was frightening enough," they say as they try to suggest that the uniform for every net user is the flasher's trenchcoat. Sure it's horrible to think that right in your home your child could be the target of some sick predator bent on twisting the kids to their own purposes. So turn off the TV. We all know there's junk on the net. There's junk on TV, too. The problem is when kids aren't supervised. The Robertses want to scare you about the net. Why? Obviously hoping that their contrived chills will get others shuddering, they say that supporters tout the net "like an electronic town meeting. That analogy makes our blood run cold. Remember, that was Ross Perot's big idea. Let's just all get together, via computer, and let the politicians know what we want, so then they will do it! No more pandering to the big contributors, no more deals between members, just the voice of the people will be heard! We hear that and shudder. To us it sounds like no more deliberation, no more consideration of an issue over a long period of time, no more balancing of regional and ethnic interests, no more protection of minority views." (You can see the rest of this pap at http://www.essential.org/listproc/info-policy-notes/0257.html) Their concern for protecting minority views certainly is touching. Always nice to see a white woman saying that protecting minority views requires that she keep her seven-figure salary. But can Cokie claim to be protecting the views of people who disagree with elitist and feminist views? Sure she can. She's got them safely locked up and hidden off camera. How safe can you get? And that's what's really at issue here. The Robertses are media stars, and they want to keep it that way. Cokie's a fixture on ABC News' "This Week," Steven wrote for the New York Times and U.S. News & World Report. They make a lot of money. And, with the positions they've been in, they often get to decide what gets covered and what doesn't -- and how it gets covered, who gets a chance to speak, what emotions get manipulated, whose "spin" gets passed along as the latest study. People who are protecting their own power base start telling us that the upstarts who threaten them are dangerous. Of *course* they're dangerous. Take any clout away from Cokie and she might have to drive the same Volvo two years in a row. People who control access to information want to keep it that way. Once upon a time, the Bible was available only in Latin, and Latin was available only to the elite. For translating the Bible into English, Oxford scholar John Wycliffe was condemned as "the very herald and child of anti-Christ, who crowned his wickedness by translating the Scriptures into the mother tongue." Sort of like the Robertses trying to convince us that the net is in the grip of religious cults. The established powers were all for keeping the Bible out of the hands of the commoners. Bible translator William Tyndale was burned at the stake. Pope Innocent III said "the secret mysteries of the faith ought not to be explained to all men in all places, since they cannot be everywhere understood by all men." Pope Gregory VII supported the ban, saying translations "might be falsely understood by those of mediocre learning, and lead to error." Like these clerics, the Robertses can cite all sorts of noble-sounding arguments against the net. And as with the clerics, it's a smokescreen. They don't want to dilute their own influence. This isn't about what benefits society. It's about what benefits the Robertses and those like them. We're touched by the Robertses dedication to democracy, but we have to wonder if it matches Cokie's dedication to truth. A while back, Cokie was supposed to deliver a report from in front of the Capitol building, but for some reason she couldn't get there. So she stepped in front of a big blow-up picture of the Capitol and faked it. Someone noticed that it was cold outside and it would look funny for Cokie to be standing at the Capitol without a coat. So she put on her coat to further reinforce the deception. If Cokie thinks the net is a threat to democracy, she's having as much trouble understanding the concept of democracy as she does understanding the concept of truth in journalism. ========== FEEDBACK ON HARASSMENT COMMENTS In last January's edition of Per's MANifesto, we discussed an article on employers who overreact to sexual harassment charges. The story quoted attorney Rita Risser, a principal in Fair Measures, a workplace training and advisory firm in Santa Cruz, Calif. "Some organizations will tolerate gross harassment -- rape, stalking, attempted murder -- and won't do anything, but other organizations will fire someone for doing something minor ..." We thought it odd that companies would tolerate attempted murder, and we said so. Ms. Risser found MANifesto while surfing the net and asked for a chance to reply. So we're about to "destroy democracy" again by actually giving her space to respond and clarify her views. She sent the following item to Per's MANifesto. It is reprinted in its entirety. Her remarks are in quotes, and our replies are set off by the word REPLY: Setting the Record Straight on Sexual Harassment by Rita Risser "I am an attorney who has specialized in sexual harassment law since 1981. As an attorney, I have represented both male and female victims of harassment, men accused of harassment, and companies defending such claims. As a business owner for almost 20 years, I have handled harassment claims among my employees, and have been accused of harassment by employees. As a high school student, I experienced harassment from an employer. For the past eight years, I have conducted over 500 training programs on harassment for managers and employees in companies throughout the U.S. I have a web site devoted to employment law issues which includes harassment, and I have just completed a study of all of the federal Court of Appeals decisions on harassment written since November, 1993 (the time of the last U.S. Supreme Court case). " "An article in Per's Manifesto (Jan. 1997) recently described as "bizarre" a quote from me in the Washington Post in which I said that some organizations "tolerate" attempted murder, stalking and rape. Per challenged me to back this up. I cite the case of Fuller v. City of Oakland, Cal., 47 F.3d 1522 (9th Cir., 1995)" "In this case, a woman police officer was harassed by a fellow officer. He followed her on numerous occasions, obtained her phone number illegally from personnel files every time she changed it to avoid him, and one time pinned her against her car until she would give him her number. One day, she was driving her boyfriend (another police officer) when the harasser came speeding at them in an unmarked police car. She was forced to swerve to avoid a head-on collision." "This is properly characterized as attempted murder. In order to prove murder, it is not necessary to show intent to kill, only that a person was killed because the perpetrator acted with malice aforethought." "However, the woman did not report this incident or any other incidents because she was afraid for her physical safety. Other officers reported the incident and an Internal Affairs investigation was begun. Two months later, the "investigation" was closed due to "lack of evidence," even though the investigating officer had not talked to the accused, the boyfriend who witnessed the incident, or any other witnesses." "In my opinion, this is "tolerating attempted murder." " REPLY: Some people might see this as "tolerating" attempted murder. The word "tolerating" makes it sound as if the police force had no objection. But, from the details you supply, it appears they could not prove the case one way or the other. This seems more like tolerance for due process. If the officer indeed was guilty, we sincerely hope he is punished. We also hope that society does not start punishing people on the basis of accusations that cannot be proven. One drawback to this system is that sometimes the guilty get away. But in the long run, it protects all our rights. And, because false accusations do occur, we need those rights now more than ever. You say: "In order to prove murder, it is not necessary to show intent to kill, only that a person was killed because the perpetrator acted with malice aforethought." We note that, since no one was killed, murder obviously wasn't proven. There is a serious dilemma in cases like this. If the charge is true, then you've got to do something to stop the dangerous person. But how do you know the charge is true? If the answer is to automatically jail any man as soon as a woman accuses him, then sure, that will protect a lot of women. It will also mean a lot of women will figure out that they can get immediate action with a false claim. Rita Risser continues: "Tolerating rape? How about Tomka v. Seiler Corp., 66 F.3d 1295 (2nd Cir., 1995) where a woman was gang raped by three of her managers. She did not come in to work the next day (or ever again), but called in to report the rape. The employer investigated by talking to one of the men, who said she consented. The employer then closed the "investigation," without ever talking to her in person, talking to the other perpetrators, or asking themselves, "Hmmm, would a reasonable person voluntarily agree to have group sex with three managers? Or might there have been an abuse of physical and/or managerial power here?" REPLY: To that, we reply, "Is every woman reasonable?" We certainly wouldn't make the claim that every man is reasonable. Not with so many male feminists out there. We could look at the situation as "every woman is reasonable, and no reasonable woman agrees to group sex, therefore this is rape." But some women do agree to group sex. And some reasonable people do things they are later embarrassed about, especially if they had been drinking at the time. After you've seen enough cases of girls sending an innocent man to prison on a false rape charge because the girls feared they were pregnant by their boyfriends, you know that some will claim rape to protect their reputations. Could it be possible that one of the participants began talking about the episode and the woman decided to say it was rape? We are also bothered by the phrase "talking to the other perpetrators." Calling the men "perpetrators" seems to presume they are guilty. Until we decide that a rape accusation equals a rape conviction, we have to fall back on that tired, cliched, unfashionable old idea of innocent until proven guilty. We are open to the suspicion that these men are guilty. But we're also open to the suspicion they are innocent. Rita Risser continues: "Many of these cases are "she said/he said" claims. That does not make them inherently unbelievable. Many cases go to trial on the basis of one person's word against another, such as mugging, robbery, car-jacking, assault and battery, or where there are no eyewitnesses (e.g. O.J. Simpson). Employers have a duty to investigate; and if they don't, they are tolerating the behavior." REPLY: It looks like they did investigate, though. If the investigation was deliberately shoddy or incomplete, that's wrongdoing on the part of the company. But we'd need evidence that that was the case, too. (We're sticklers.) As for shoddy investigations, remind us to tell you sometime how we were treated for reporting a hostile working environment by some fire-breathing feminists. Rita Risser continues: "I very much agree with Per and others who say that employers often overreact to claims of sexual harassment that clearly are not harassment. But it is also true that some employers fail to conduct reasonable investigations of claims of serious violations." "The courts since 1993 have significantly limited the definition of illegal harassment. This has given me the ability to go back to my clients and train the people in personnel and Human Resources to stop overreacting to claims of "harassment" which are based on no more than personality conflicts, politically incorrect speech or common courtesies (such as opening doors). The pendulum is swinging back, and publications such as the Manifesto can help by publicizing this fact." More information about my research report, tape and video on "The New Law of Sexual Harassment: Everything You Know is Wrong" can be obtained at http://www.fairmeasures.com." REPLY: Thank you, Rita, for a thought-provoking discussion of the issues backed up by facts. We don't agree with all of your conclusions, but we respect your work and your willingness to communicate. Good luck. ========== MORE STUPID LAW TRICKS Here's an item we intended to include in our "Stupid Law Tricks" issue. 9-year-old Jeremy Anderson of Las Vegas was arrested and strip-searched. The charge: writing name in wet cement. Jeremy says he was walking home with friends when a construction worker invited them to write their names in a sidewalk of fresh cement. So they did. Then the contractor called his family demanding $11,000 to redo the work. They didn't pay, and in January he was arrested. In Nevada, 8-year-olds can be arrested, and property crimes over $5,000 are considered felonies. So Jeremy, who has won citizenship awards at his elementary school, was booked and strip-searched. The story got remarkably little coverage, and even then it seemed as though the strip-searching of a boy was fodder for humor. ========== ETHICS WATCHDOGS We've heard all the rhetoric about how women would clean up government and provide a more moral, caring leadership. In other words "women good-men bad, so vote for the woman." This was a form of man-bashing -- implying that men are less honest and that women are morally superior. In fact Senator Christopher Dodd, head of the Democratic National Committee and a major player in President Clinton's reelection bid, pandered shamelessly to that anti-male stereotype. "Women are more inclined to think less of themselves and their own immediate needs and more of their families." That translates into broader support of a government role in guaranteeing things like education and health care, he said, hoping that pandering to such women-are-superior rhetoric would help keep men like him in office. So from time to time, Per's MANifesto likes to take a look at the moral leadership that women are providing. After all, if they're going to sell us that bill of goods, we ought to check it over. Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez is accused of stealing her seat through vote fraud, by registering non-citizens and having them vote for her. Sanchez defeated a fire-breathing conservative, Congressman "B-1" Bob Dornan. Many liberals are so delighted that Dornan was ousted that they don't seem to mind the methods that were used in doing so. And there is mounting evidence that Democrat Mary Landrieu stole the U.S. Senate election in Louisiana, a state famous for its ballot-box chicanery. Among the evidence: Her opponent has gathered testimony from people saying they were paid to vote for Landrieu, sometimes more than once. However, Democrats on the Senate Rules Committee are refusing to even look at the evidence -- see no evil, hear no evil. (See Robert Novak's column "We're Going to Louisiana" in the April 24th Washington Post, page A25.) And what sort of moral leadership is feminist Senator Dianne Feinstein providing on the Landrieu election? Is she holding to that high moral standard that we were told women politicians would bring to office? Nope. She's right down there in the mud with the big boys, bashing men in her efforts to defend her fellow member of the Senate good-old-girls club. When evidence is presented that Landrieu stole the election, Feinstein sneers that "hell hath no fury like a man beaten by a woman." Lots of MANifesto readers are used to that reaction from feminists on the internet. If you object to being discriminated against, bashed, smeared, threatened, or censored, it's really your fault because you're a "backlasher." According to Feinstein, the only reason to object to evidence of government positions being stolen and the will of the people being voided is that you're somehow against women. Take note. This ripe bit of hypocrisy is not just the trait of a few whacko feminists on the net, as some claim. It's a trait of a feminist right at the top of the heap. If you object to your job being stolen, it's just because you're trying to keep women down. And lastly, let's look at Valerie Lau, the Treasury Department Inspector General. She is accused of awarding a no-bid contract to a longtime associate -- someone who just happened to recommend her for the job to begin with. So she gets the job, and he gets the contract. Oh, and do you know what Lau's job as Inspector General is? She's the Treasury Department's ethics watchdog. We've said it before and we'll say it again. Women really are equal to men. ========== HUMOR POW DEMANDS PARITY WITH HOSTAGES IN PERU. The government of Peru, the Japanese Embassy in Lima, and all officials who took part in the hostage situation there should be condemned for their sexism and take steps to atone, says Colleen Hyphenated-Lastname, president of the Propaganda Organization for Women. "We know that men hold all the power," said Hyphenated-Lastname. "And all of the hostages inside the compound were men. Why were women systematically shut out from this center of power? Any time you see a group made up solely of men, you can be sure that discrimination against women is the cause. The Propaganda Organization for Women must insist that society set up special hostage-mentoring programs for women to make up for this injustice. "We cannot overstress the damage that has been done to women by refusing to let them be hostages. It sends women the message that their lives were not considered valuable enough to be held as ransom. And it meant that, as in so many other areas of life, women were shortchanged of the valuable life experience and the contacts they might have acquired while being held captive. "History shows that women were originally full members of the party in December at the Japanese compound in Lima. In that early time, before sexism, women did an equal share of the work in attending the party, and they even held high positions. But then men took over the compound and women were systematically excluded by the patriarchy, supposedly for their own 'protection.' "We are sure that many of the women wanted to stay on as hostages and face the dangers right along with the men. Unfortunately, the men would not let them. Besides, many of these women had to drive their kids to soccer practice. "To make up for this past injustice, we now demand that women be given preference in entering the Japanese compound and holding positions there. We can start by having Japan name a woman to be its next ambassador. We were shocked to see that the current ambassador -- a man, of course -- had to be carried from the compound on a stretcher. Obviously they're willing to let any old sick person be an ambassador just so long as he has a penis. "The Propaganda Organization for Women regrets that we were not quicker in demanding that more women be present in the compound. Some people might be suspicious of our timing -- just when the hostage situation ended. The timing is merely coincidental, and anyone who disagrees really just wants to keep women down. "Besides, POW was distracted by some urgent business. We have recently heard rumors that some woman named Paula Jones has accused President Clinton of something or other. We intend to give the matter our fullest and complete attention sometime in the next millennium." ============================= THE FINE PRINT MANifesto is a monthly newsletter containing news and opinion for people interested in gender equality and gender stereotypes. Subscribing: To have MANifesto e-mailed to you, message "subscribe MANifesto" to [email protected]. Send comments, kudos and castration threats to this address as well. What if you subscribed but did not get the latest issue? Our experience is that the issue "bounces" for a couple of people every month -- probably because some server between here and there is on the fritz at the time. If you don't think you received the latest issue, please e-mail us again saying "subscribe, send latest issue." Each month's current issue of Per's MANifesto is on the Web at http://shell.idt.net/~per2/manifest.htm And the Per's MANifesto Home Page is at http://shell.idt.net/~per2/index.htm featuring links to back issues. With a link to The POW Page! -- a collection of favorite satire featuring Colleen Hyphenated-Lastname and the Propaganda Organization for Women. You also can find Per's MANifesto on the Usenet each month in the following groups: soc.men, alt.feminism, and alt.mens-rights. (MANifesto is copyright 1997 by Per. Please feel free to copy, forward, repost, fax and otherwise distribute MANifesto. If you excerpt any section, please excerpt it in its entirety.) ========== ----- Tired of man-bashing and anti-male stereotypes? Read Per's MANifesto, a monthly newsletter on anti-male attitudes and related topics. An informative package of news and humor. http://shell.idt.net/~per2/manifest.htm