The “manosphere” is the term typically given to male opposition to feminism’s lies, hate, and misandry. But many women who are speaking out against feminism can legitimately be considered an integral part of the manosphere.
A list of these women can be found in my article Women of the Manosphere.
This article profiles just one these wonderful women, Erin Pizzey.
Erin Pizzey is a giant in the men’s rights movement: after founding the world’s first women’s shelter in 1971 and having feminists make bomb and death threats against her for revealing that women also commit violence against men, Erin became a world-renown men’s rights activist, while still advocating for both sexes affected by domestic violence.
After founding her women’s shelter, Erin observed that that 62 of the first 100 women who came into the refuge were as violent as the men they had left. After she wrote a book, Prone to Violence that told the truth about female violence, feminist extremists hounded her out of the country:
“Over the 12 years that I was running the refuge, if I went to speak there were screaming feminists outside. I tried to publish a book called Prone to Violence, we finally did get it published, but I had to have a police escort all round England and there were death threats and bomb threats. And the final moment came for me, after struggling for all those years, when the bomb-disposal unit came to my house because there was a suspect package and so everything that came to me had to go to them first because they were concerned about my safety and the safety of my family. And that’s when I left England and went into exile for something like 15 years.” [source]
Among a variety of other books, Erin wrote two that dealt with domestic violence or the craziness of the feminist movement, The emotional terrorist and the violence-prone (“In this important book, suppressed in England, Pizzey argues that not every battered woman is simply a victim.”) and This Way to the Revolution: A Memoir (“… her story is a compelling one, vital to any understanding of a more revolutionary age and burning issues that still resonate today”.)
In 2013, Pizzey joined the editorial and advisory board of the men’s rights organization A Voice for Men, serving as an Editor and DV Policy Advisor and from January to August wrote thirteen articles for the group’s web site.
Finally, Pizzey was interviewed for and appeared in the 2016 documentary film The Red Pill by Cassie Jaye about the men’s rights movement.
Thank God for Erin and women like her! They are literally one-in-ten-million!
For other articles about other Women of the Manosphere.
By Stephen Bond on February 3, 2023.
Exported from Medium on February 28, 2023.