Mel Feit: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "'''Mel Feit''' was the most visible Men's Rights advocate of the 1980s, barring maybe Warren Farrell. He founded the National Center for Men and was frequentl...")
 
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'''Mel Feit''' was the most visible [[MRA|Men's Rights advocate]] of the 1980s, barring maybe [[Warren Farrell]].  He founded the [[National Center for Men]] and was frequently featured in television programs about men's issues.  He also participated in a debate that has become semi-famous in the MRA community in 1992, between the virtual founder of the [[PUA movement]]: [[Ross Jeffries]], and a male feminist.  Mel wore a woman's dress during the debate to highlight how women discriminate against male dress that doesn't signal male utility and disposability.
'''Mel Feit''' was the most visible [[MRA|Men's Rights advocate]] of the 1980s and 1990s, barring maybe [[Warren Farrell]].  He founded the [[National Center for Men]] and was frequently featured in television programs about men's issues.  He also participated in a debate that has become semi-famous in the MRA community in 1992, between the virtual founder of the [[PUA movement]]: [[Ross Jeffries]], and a male feminist.  Mel wore a woman's dress during the debate to highlight how women discriminate against male dress that doesn't signal male utility and disposability.
 
==Philosophy==
Mel had a more male liberationist streak than most other famous MRAs, and he was more known for advocating androgyny than other MRAs.
 
==On Dating==
Mel Feit screamed to women in a television program that men feel discriminated everyday by women by virtue of women being [[sexual selector]]s.
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