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ABOUT MEN, Men’s Insights, Men’s Issues, Uncategorized -
Check out this lovely fathers’ day advert by Wilkinson Sword — kids of all ages explaining how important their dads have been to them.
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Why did a national newspaper choose Fathers’ Day to publish this front page feature?
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An “Ex-boyfriend punch bag” advertised by online shopping sites is one of a series of…
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—This is article #43 in our series of #100Voices4Men and boys Just last week I sat with a good friend of mine in a restaurant. Her imminent…
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I recently saw on BBC iPlayer a film devoted to what is, for my money, the most…
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RT @MartinDaubney: To the @southbankcentre for a scheming meeting with my good pals from @insideMANmag
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RT @SurvivorsWY: What can a male survivor of sexual violence tell us about human kindness? http://t.co/zz235ywwTx via @insideMANmag
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The No. of young men with HIV has doubled in ten years, new diagnoses for gay and bisexual men is at a record high: http://t.co/8S7BJ8ERnu
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Men are far more likely than women to have their benefits stopped for unfair or unjust reasons, a survey by a UK-wide food bank charity strongly suggests. Why doesn’t anyone even seem to want acknowledge the fact, let alone do something about it? …
Men more likely than women to be cut off benefits due to “cruel” and “unfair” reasons, survey…
inside-man.co.uk
Men are far more likely than women to have their benefits stopped for unfair or unjust reasons, a survey by a UK-wide food bank charity strongly suggests….
From The Office, to In The Thick of It, ‘Biz Speak’ is regularly lampooned for its idiocy and pretentiousness. But it’s also used as a form of control, a way of obscuring reality, rather than revealing it. Here Karl Coppack explains why the abuse of language is far worse than abusive language. …
Why you can shove your office Newspeak right up your Memory Hole – insideMAN
inside-man.co.uk
From The Office, to In The Thick of It, ‘Biz Speak’ is regularly lampooned for its idiocy and pretentiousness. But it’s also used as a form of control, a way of obscuring reality, rather than revealing it. Here Karl Coppack explains why this abuse of language is far, far worse than abusive language.