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Die Reise einer Feministin in die Welt der Männerrechtsbewegung
Als die Filmemacherin Cassie Jaye sich daran macht, die Welt der amerikanischen Männerrechtsbewegung zu dokumentieren, beginnt sie ihre eigenen Überzeugung zu hinterfragen. Jayes Dokumentarfilm offenbart eine unbekannte Perspektive - auf Geschlechterfragen, Macht und Privilegien.
Avis de la communauté (5)
A highly confronting watch that challenged my viewpoint. The most interesting part is after watching a documentary on the Men's Rights advocates is telling someone about it and gauging their response which has been formed by populist media narratives.
I was told to watch this, so I had an idea of what to expect, but it went beyond my expectations. This is what I have felt for such a long time, gender equality should focus on all gender issues for women, men and even those who don't identify as either. It's a very good documentary and I will be following Cassie Jaye's carreer for sure. We need more like this, documentaries that try to view the issue from all sides, pushing us to think for ourselves and do a bit of research instead of following the media without questioning.
It's very one-sided propaganda. Funded by MRA and 95% of MRA ideas, views, opinions, and stories go unchallenged.
Males don't have autism more often than females, but research and bias has made it so it's been wrongly believed as such because females often present differently than males because of both biological and social influences. Testing is still done based on male-based research when diagnosing females. If you're going to complain about inequality don't use information that is very wrong and is actually inequality in the other direction. Men complete suicide more often than women because they choose more violent methods, like guns. Women attempt suicide at a much higher rate than men complete it, though. These are just a couple of parts of this endless misinformation.
Talks about legitimate issues and rights affecting men, such as having the highest suicide rate, being forced or encouraged into the dirtiest and dangerous jobs, having less education than women, and paying up to tens of thousands for children that aren't biologically theirs. The documentary also explores problems with feminist groups modern and historical, which have become more radical and shutting down debate, rather than gaining knowledge, learning about opposing arguments, and having calm debate. It's a bit of a biased documentary, but not by much, and only shows the reasonable side of men's rights activism. It also shows the ignorance of people that are being dismissive of other people and issues, on both sides of the debate. We also see the host of the documentary dismantle her own indoctrination from the feminist bias against men.