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Feminised Australian Women suck

April 19, 2006

New Australian Men’s Newspaper, toilet door copy.

Filed under: Aussie women, The MANifesto, World News — australianwomensuck @ 4:20 am

The idea of this newspaper is to spread the word. This copy will print out to one A4 page and will be ideal to glue onto a toilet door or window or post or anywhere where men will see it.

We believe that every male should shovel some gravel, as the saying goes. Make some effort and do something for the Men’s movement so we can at least get back some dignity.

It’s up to you, print out just ten copies and stick them somewhere. It will at least make you feel involved and made an effort to spread the word. If you made the effort then your An MRA. (Men’s Rights Activist) Congratulation, well done.

Australian Men’s Newspaper,A4 size for copying and nailing anywhere to get exposure

April 17, 2006

Finally,Feminists lying again. The feminazy always blamed males for causing anorexia.

Filed under: Aussie women — australianwomensuck @ 5:44 am

I have highlighted the best bits, I’ll wait till I stop laughing…..

Here the other best part “It is also keen for cheerleaders to be seen as athletes in sports wear, rather than bimbos in bikinis.”

Ha,ha,haaaaaaaaahahaha……….

Athletes….MMaaahhhaaaa!!!!!!!

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Cheerleaders ordered to cover up
By Hannah Davies
April 16, 2006

Queensland Reds cheer leaders … Jasmine, Taryn and Bec (r) - only Bec would have to wrap that midriff, according to Gymnastics Australia / file

SCANTILY-clad cheerleaders have been ordered to cover up because of fears they may be encouraging schoolgirl anorexia.
Cheerleading’s governing body Gymnastics Australia is banning teams from baring their midriffs and has given them until the end of the year to find new uniforms.

The organisation believes the revealing costumes make sensitive teenagers feel uncomfortable about their weight and “affect the self-esteem of others”.

It is also keen for cheerleaders to be seen as athletes in sports wear, rather than bimbos in bikinis.

This has angered cheerleading squads who say audiences don’t want a cover-up.

Brisbane Broncos cheerleaders’ manager Anthony Ikin, whose squad is not affected by the ban, described it as “ridiculous and way too extreme”.

“The midriff is not an area to be concerned about exposing … no one wants to go to a game and see people in tracksuits and baggy clothes, it’s not appealing .”

Broncos cheerleader Angeli Chupungco, 21, said she was happy wearing the uniform of a sports top and shorts with stockings. “The outfits are appropriate for what we’re doing and we look the way people want us to look as cheerleaders.”

The ban, which has already been imposed in the United States, will affect teams which are registered with Gymnastics Australia or compete at their events.

This covers 33 Queensland clubs including Logan’s Acrobatics Fanatics, Townsville Dance and Cheerleading, and Cheersport, which has squads in Brisbane and Townsville.

The ban follows the Queensland Reds cheerleaders being forced to cover up and tone down their moves after their revealing bikinis led to complaints from rugby fans.

Gymnastics Australia national cheerleading program manager Nerine Cooper defended the ban, saying it was important to bear in mind that “cheerleading is for family viewing”.

“We don’t want girls to feel under pressure to lose weight because of the uniforms, and we also don’t want girls who see cheerleaders developing self-esteem issues which can lead to anorexia,” she said.

[b]”We also want the cheerleaders to be seen as athletes, not bimbos in uniforms which are too brief.”

Counsellor Alan Spencer, who runs the Gold Coast Eating Disorders Association, said cheerleaders were role models.

“Scantily dressed cheerleaders do contribute to some girls developing anorexia,” he said.

“These cheerleaders are adored by the population and some teenagers see all the love and attention they get and they think they are not measuring up.

“They think if only they could just have their body then people would love them, too.”[/b]

April 16, 2006

Women are bitches knife holder

Filed under: Aussie women — australianwomensuck @ 9:47 pm

It would seem that it’s just fine to introduce a knifeholder called “all Men are Bastards” knife holder, but what about this one ?

Are we offended yet…………

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Wommyn’s Studies, ha,ha,ha…………

Filed under: Aussie women — australianwomensuck @ 9:44 pm

Wommyns studies is just another excuse for women to get together and work on their already over-bloated victim complex. The only complex that ensures copious amounts of government funding. Billions in fact.

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April 13, 2006

Feminists ruing their childless lives (I just love this, Poetic Justice)

Filed under: Uncategorized — australianwomensuck @ 11:07 pm

I love this article, especially that the male-hating Greer gets bitten by her own lies and hate.

Absolutely Love it, POETIC JUSTICE

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Me laughing at Greer. Hahahahahah!!!!

Feminists ruing their childless lives seems pitiful

Dr. Laura Schlessinger

Charles Krauthammer, a brilliant columnist, recently wrote a piece in The Washington Post that caused me to realize I have definitely mellowed. There was a time when I would have reacted in a kind of “I told you so” smug way. But my reaction was quite different. I felt pity for the childless women described in the piece.

The column begaï,with a quote from a recent interview in the British magazine Aura, headlined “I Was Desperate for a Baby and I Have the Medical Bëlls to Prove It.” Krauthammer asks, “Some love-struck movie star? A lesbian celebrity? No. Germaine Greer, icon of 20th-century feminism.”

“I still have pregnancy dreams,” Greer confessed movingly in the premier issue of the magazine, “waiting with vast joy and confidence for something that will never happen.” Of course, women longing for children is nothing new, but this kind of confession from a hard-core, founding-mother feminist is very telling.

Krauthammer writes: “The one adjective rarely attached to Greer was domestic. And now she reveals the hollowness that haunts her, the terrible sorrow she feels at what she lost: her chance for motherhood. Many years ago, she now writes, she cared for the infant girl of a friend. ‘Ruby lit up my life in a way that nobody, certainly no lover, has ever done. I was not prepared for the incandescent sensuousness of this small child, the generosity of her innocent love.’ ”

By the time Greer experienced this epiphany, she was too old to conceive. She had bought into the feminist myth she helped create, that childbearing was part of the patriarchal plot to keep women enslaved.

As many of you know, I absorbed this mentality in college in the ’60s and was a card-carrying(Feminist throughout the early days of my career. I lapsed out of it somewhere closing in on my mid-30s, when I had my own agonizing experience with the “haunting hollowness” Greer refers to. Thank God I still had time, though I, too, had some difficulty in getting pregnant.

There is something so special in realizing that part of your personhood as a woman, connecting your femininity and sexuality to your power to reproduce. The joy of being pregnant was a unique experience, despite its duration, discomforts and the pain of childbirth. All that just fades into the background when your child is born. And the joy continues to multiply and grow, just like my son, who is now 14 and 6 feet tall.

I recently gave a newspaper interview about my new book, and the reporter asked me a question that left me speechless: “What are you going to be doing in four years when your son graduates from high school and is out of the house?” Of course, intellectually, I know my son is going to grow up and go away to college. But until that moment, I had never thought about what that would actually be like, or what I would do. And then, of course, I didn’t want to think about it. Because while all parents grouse, grumble and complain, our children are the most incredible part of our lives.

So, whereas in the past I might have thought that Germaine Greer had earned her desolation, that it served her right for the critical damage feminists did to all the women with their negative brainwashing about the value of motherhood, I mostly now pity her. All that anger for so long has robbed her and so many others of the most incredible beauty that they as women could experience.

April 12, 2006

Female Sexual Predators

Filed under: Uncategorized — australianwomensuck @ 12:53 pm

If this is the standard why aren’t more women caught and punished in Australia ?

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The Case Against Female Sexual Predators

By GORDON E. FINLEY

Debra Lafave’s court case is over now, and she has immediately moved on to a new man, a national interview on CNN and a new book to write. What an exciting and empowering outcome to this sordid event - for her.

But what of the 14-year-old schoolboy she sexually molested - whose life, by media accounts, never will be the same again? I shudder to think how this experience will shape not only his future relationships with his peers and parents, but above all, his adult relationships with women and perhaps even his role as a father if ever he becomes one.

Of perhaps greater concern, evidence that Lafave represents but the tip of the iceberg can be found in a 2004 U. S. Department of Education report titled “Educator Sexual Misconduct: A Synthesis of Existing Literature.”

This report includes data from two large-scale surveys wherein students report that 43 percent of their molesters were female. Such a proportion of female sexual predators is high by any measure.

For centuries we have entrusted our children to females for nurturance, care and emotional support - not sexual abuse. We must open our hearts and minds to the reality that females can be sexual predators and that their victims are harmed, just as the victims of male sexual predators are harmed.

Lafave has made Tampa - indeed, Florida - synonymous worldwide with a reeking double standard in its punishment of sexual predators: jail for males, fame and fortune for females.

I find nothing in her story that remotely hints that any female sexual predator ever will be deterred by this legal outcome. If anything, I would expect it to encourage female sexual predators, since they now know that they need not fear prosecution in this state.

I believe the Florida Legislature needs to create and fund a Female Sexual Predator Act to protect our sons and daughters from female sexual predators, just as existing laws protect them from male sexual predators.

First and foremost, such an act would provide immediate services - protective, therapeutic and rehabilitative - to the victims of female sexual predators. Second, the act would require equal treatment and uñual punishment under the law for male and female sexual predators.

As a society, we need to reframe the sexual abuse debate to acknowledge that female sexual predators do exist in substantial numbers. Delay in passing a Female Sexual Predator Act only continues to leave children in Florida at risk from further female sexual predation.

Gordon E. Finley is a professor of psychology at Florida International University.

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