A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:
Our thanks to Martin for this.
Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.
A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:
Our thanks to Martin for this.
Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.
A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:
Our thanks to Stu for this piece in the current New Statesman. An extract:
“I’m sorry. But if I was an 18-year-old girl in Hollywood, and nothing was really working out for me, and Mr Harvey Weinstein asked me to come and watch him have a shower, I’d fucking watch him have a shower!” she says. “I’d watch him do anything as long as he didn’t touch me! There’s a lot of women who would do that. When they complain about things like that, they’re trivialising everything that those women who seriously have been abused have been through.”
Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.
A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:
Our thanks to Nick for this. The ambulance wasn’t blocking the road, and was in a parking space. The note:

Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.
A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:
Emily Maitlis is a presenter on BBC Newsnight. The double standards on male and female “objectification” in her piece on the BBC website are breathtaking, even by feminist standards.
Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.
A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:

Beer writer Melissa Cole is backing calls to put an end to sexist beer marketing. She claims that at one industry event in her 20-year career [J4MB: That’s damned nearly twice daily…] a man grabbed her breast. Even if true – which we doubt – does it give her the right to dictate to breweries how they name their beers? Of course not.
Miserable women are turning beer sour. Is nothing sacred? An extract:
Pictures of scantily-clad women and risqué names have long been used as a ploy by savvy brewers to entice punters to buy their beer.
But times have changed, bringing with it a backlash against the likes of ales called Top Totty and Dizzy Blonde.
It’s a row that has been brewing since at least 2012, when the former was removed from the bar at the House of Commons amid complaints.
Five years on, the battle against misogynist marketing is still being fought – as recently as October, an Irish brewery came under fire for its tagline “Dublin Blonde goes down easy”.
I happen to live near a public house in Bedford, which serves very good real ales. I don’t go in there any more because the landlady and one of the barmaids are two of the most miserable women it’s ever been my misfortune to encounter. The place would surely have many more customers if they left.
Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.
A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:
Enjoy (video, 0:55).
Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.
A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:


Our thanks to Martin for this. An extract:
Historically, vagina wigs were known as merkins and date back to the middle of the 15th century, according to the Oxford Companion To The Body.
Merkins, which can be traced back to 1450, are believed to have had two main uses at the time.
Some women who had public lice had to shave off their pubes entirely as a result of the condition, and opted to wear the furry toupees instead to cover their nether regions.
Prostitutes also resorted to wearing merkins after contracting certain STDs, such as syphilis or gonorrhea, when they wanted to conceal their symptoms.
Kaimin’s merkins were the result of a collaboration with hairstylists from New York City’s Prema Hair salon, with creative director Dale Delaporte overseeing the project.
Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.
A piece published on the website of Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them), the political party of which I’m the chairman, in February 2018:
Our thanks to Stu for spotting this (video, 31:13). It’s attracted over 9,000 views. The Desiree Burch section, including her interview of Mike Buchanan, is over 15:39 – 23:24.
Please support Mike Buchanan’s work on Patreon. Thank you.