Mike S. Adams:

One FAL member’s monologue follows: "Hello, my name is Mary Man-Hating-Is-Fun. I am 23 years old, and I am what a feminist looks like. Ever since I learned to embrace my feminist nature, I found great joy in threatening men's lives, flicking off frat brothers and plotting the patriarchy's death. I hate men because they are men, because I see them for what they are: misogynistic, sexist, oppressive and absurdly pathetic beings who only serve to pollute and contaminate this world with war, abuse, oppression and rape."

Other members of the FAL wore scissors around their necks and sang a song about castration.

David Huffman, a writer for the UNH conservative paper "Common Sense" was outraged by the, shall we say, mr-ogyny of the event. Huffman was asked to leave the public university event during the open microphone session. Despite the fact that he wasn't singing songs about castration, FAL members said he was making women feel uncomfortable. Perhaps it was because he wasn't singing about castration that these women felt uncomfortable.

Huffman pointed out that nowhere did the posters advertising the event say "Women Only." He was simply excluded from an event at a public university based upon his gender.

The evening of man-hating was simply an example of an extremist group promoting stereotypes and encouraging violence towards another group. This is the kind of thing that is tolerated in the name of campus diversity, simply because the targets are the "right" group (Read: Not blacks, women, or gays).

After hearing poems that talked about castrating men, read by women with scissors tied around their necks, Hoffman asked "How is this any different than hating African-Americans or Jews?" The answer is simple: It is no different in principle. But, of course, the FAL is not based upon principle. The organization is based upon blind hatred. [Emphasis added on unlawful items. --R]