^ This is the type of guy that leads women to become mysandrists . . . just in case anyone hadn't realized that.
Such behavior is antiquated. Yet it's prevalent and women have to deal with it often. I suppose it's like black people still being called nigger by the bumbling redneck racists in the world. Modern day trash spewed from lowly mouths and empty brains.
I don't share all the poster's opinions, but I agree with some of what he said. And I don't think that means I am spewing trash, or that I have either a lowly mouth or an empty brain. I also don't think I suffer from antiquated behavior, unless (maybe so!) it's now seen as antiquated for a man to be attracted only to women.
I've sometimes made women pretty mad at me, but they liked guys far too much for me ever to have turned them into man-haters. And it was not my views on feminism that made them mad.
I don't like women to try to act like men, either. As a normal man, I like women who act like women--i.e. nice people who are pleasant and interesting to be around, like all sorts of girly things that bore me stiff, really like men, have minds of their own--and are not carrying a chip on their shoulder.
Why does the posters' denunciation of laws that force employers to hire women even though male candidates might be better qualified, assuming there are laws which do that, deserve the insults you heaped on his post? Maybe you don't think preferential treatment of women exists. But if you think it does and yet are trying to defend it, you're only proving the OP's point.
There is no question that states continue to favor black applicants in their graduate admissions policies for state schools. I can't prove the same happens with female applicants, or in a private rather than public setting, but what I saw and heard in graduate school and in a couple law offices makes me strongly suspect it.
This poster is hardly the first person to claim that family law in general stacks the deck against men, does not strengthen families, and needs to be reformed. I'd go so far as to say that's pretty widely recognized by people who have studied the matter--including many women.