Men's Human Rights Movement

An MRA is a men's rights activist or men's rights advocate. The alternative term MHRA is interchangable with this term. An MRA is part of the men's rights movement.

resource: Men's rights activist

The phrase Men's Human Rights Movement (MHRM) was introduced in January 2013 as an extension of the shorter phrase Men's Rights Movement (MRM). The MHRM's increased focus on inclusiveness and human rights forms the basis of what is considered a second wave of the men's movement. A Men's Human Rights Advocate/Activist (MHRA) refers to any individual involved in self-advocacy or group-advocacy for male human rights.

resource: Men's Human Rights Movement


On Hollywood

Quotes from social media.

"Feminism is pretty much in every show or movie. It jumps out at you and tough to ignore. Even in the sports world, John McEnroe was asked to apologize when asked if Serena Williams was better than the men tennis players. "

"The female Ghostbusters- fail, Terminator Dark Fate- fail, Star Wars 7,8,9- failed trilogy, divided fan base and ran under Kathleen Kennedy and her feminist crew that destroyed the franchise. Harley Quinn: Birds of Prey- fail"

"Here’s the problem. These feminists are taking franchises made for men (outside of Charles Angels) and they are promoting their feminist agendas in it. Men are the majority of the box office because Women prefer romantic comedies and love stories. These feminists are taking franchises that were made by men and these feminists are going around pretending that they discovered it first which they didn’t but they obviously can’t make up their own ideas because they know it will tank in the box office so what do they do?! They promote their agenda in big franchises and men get annoyed with the women shoving the political crap in the guys faces and that’s why these movies bomb. Is Hollywood getting it yet??!!" see: Woke Broke Movies: Does Hollywood Care? by a brave Christian Toto.

"Best part of all, the women in the new movies to 'overturn' the 'issue' aren't even strong women at all.. These modern female characters are the equivalent to calling me the world's greatest boxer because my opponents always inexplicably have to forfeit the match and I just casually walk through the ranks to the world championship with no effort, training or complications of any kind."

"Pointing out the fallacies of feminism is as easy as shooting fish in a barrel. But it's worth examining the implications of today's movies and advertisements which feature a powerful kick-ass women juxtaposed against a dopey (and invariably White) male. In effect what they're promoting is masculinity. Except that women are the vehicle."

"The 2000s Charlie’s Angels movies worked because the stars – Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu – made fun of themselves. They knew they were playing ludicrous characters and embraced this. The new Angels, by contrast, are humourless and woke – adept at lecturing, sneering and putting down unreconstructed men. And no one – male or female – wants to be condescended to during their afternoon out at the cinema."

But do you really want to be reconstructed as a man? I sure in the hell do not. For unreconstructed masculinity is a term that feminists use to bash men. "It really does capture a lot, I think terms like this show the worst aspects of Marxist-influenced thought percolating up into feminist discourse. Marxist-inspired thinkers often had a religious-like attitude to industrialization and the promise it held for civilizing society."

"The unreconstructed man borrows from three different sources, the idea of a human who can be broken down or built up (imagine if the army complained your sons or daughters were 'unreconstructed' for comparison), the idea of humans as blank slates or products on a production line, and finally the notion of deconstruction. Given that masculinity and femininity are core parts of our identities, selves, social selves and so on, the notion of being 'refashioned' ought to create some alarm."

Last modified on 21 November 2021, at 10:09