Bitches be mean. Ladies be crying. Let’s give them MORE responsibility! Clearly, they can handle it.

Among the anti-feminist bloggers whose pieces I always take the time to read, must be counted the American lady who writes under the name ‘JudgyBitch’. She’s just published a characteristically insightful, feisty, and funny piece, inspired by the nonsensical article (‘Women make better decisions than men’)published online by a Canadian business school, DeGroote, about which I myself wrote a piece yesterday. Enjoy this taster of JudgyBitch’s output, then subscribe to her blog, and prepare for some treats:

http://judgybitch.com/2013/03/31/bitches-be-mean-ladies-be-crying-lets-give-them-more-responsibility-clearly-they-can-handle-it/

 

 

 

 

Women make better decisions than men

Pandering to women in the business world, regardless of the damage being caused to the only wealth-creating sector, shows no sign of abating. Universities have for many years been riding this anti-meritocratic gravy train, and I thought I’d seen it all in the 14 months since I launched Campaign for Merit in Business https://c4mb.wordpress.com. But an article published by ‘A Voice for Men’ a few days ago really takes the biscuit (link below):

http://www.avoiceformen.com/mcmaster-university-and-men/mcmaster-university-girlz-iz-mo-betta/

The focus of the article is a piece titled, ‘Women make better decisions than men’, posted online by the DeGroote School of Business, at McMaster University (Canada):

http://www.degroote.mcmaster.ca/articles/women-make-better-decisions-than-men/

It surely won’t be too long before the piece is ‘pulled’, before DeGroote suffers too much reputational damage (in case they do so, I’ve put the content at the end of this piece, for posterity). The piece refers to a ‘study’ co-authored by Professor Chris Bart, Professor of Strategic Management at DeGroote. The content of the article is so laughable – it even cites a ‘study’ (Joy et al) published by a militant feminist campaigning organisation, Catalyst – that I simply had to post a couple of comments. Nothing unusual so far. But I was struck by how many other people also made critical comments, many of them very perceptive. Almost all of these people are unknown to me. It’s clear that public consciousness about the sheer idiocy of claims such as, ‘Women make better decisions than men’ is inexorably on the rise.

In case DeGroote pulls the piece, here it is, for posterity:

Women make better decisions than men

Julia Thomson | Hamilton, Ontario | Posted: March 25, 2013

Women’s abilities to make fair decisions when competing interests are at stake make them better corporate leaders, researchers have found.

A survey of more than 600 board directors showed that women are more likely to consider the rights of others and to take a cooperative approach to decision-making. This approach translates into better performance for their companies.

The study, which was published this week in the International Journal of Business Governance and Ethics, was conducted by Chris Bart, professor of strategic management at the DeGroote School of Business at McMaster University, and Gregory McQueen, a McMaster graduate and senior executive associate dean at A.T. Still University’s School of Osteopathic Medicine in Arizona.

“We’ve known for some time that companies that have more women on their boards have better results,” explains Bart. “Our findings show that having women on the board is no longer just the right thing but also the smart thing to do. Companies with few female directors may actually be short-changing their investors.”

Bart and McQueen found that male directors, who made up 75% of the survey sample, prefer to make decisions using rules, regulations and traditional ways of doing business or getting along.

Female directors, in contrast, are less constrained by these parameters and are more prepared to rock the boat than their male counterparts.

In addition, women corporate directors are significantly more inclined to make decisions by taking the interests of multiple stakeholders into account in order to arrive at a fair and moral decision. They will also tend to use cooperation, collaboration and consensus-building more often – and more effectively – in order to make sound decisions.

Women seem to be predisposed to be more inquisitive and to see more possible solutions. At the board level where directors are compelled to act in the best interest of the corporation while taking the viewpoints of multiple stakeholders into account, this quality makes them more effective corporate directors, explains McQueen.

Globally, women make up approximately 9% of corporate board memberships. Arguments for gender equality, quotas and legislation have done little to increase female representation in the boardroom, despite evidence showing that their presence has been linked to better organizational performance, higher rates of return, more effective risk management and even lower rates of bankruptcy. Bart’s and McQueen’s finding that women’s higher quality decision-making ability makes them more effective than their male counterparts gives boards a method to deal with the multifaceted social issues and concerns currently confronting corporations.

The International Journal of Business Governance and Ethics is available online.

How do people make decisions?

  • Personal interest reasoning: The decision maker is motivated by ego, selfishness and the desire to avoid trouble. This method is most often exhibited by young children who largely tend to be motivated to seek pleasure and avoid pain.
  • Normative reasoning: The decision maker tries to avoid “rocking the boat” by adhering to rules, laws or norms. Stereotypical examples of groups that use this form of reasoning include organizations with strong established cultures like Mary Kay or the US Marines.
  • Complex moral reasoning: The decision maker acknowledges and considers the rights of others in the pursuit of fairness by using a social cooperation and consensus building approach that is consistently applied in a non-arbitrary fashion.

Why should boards have more female directors?

  • Boards with high female representation experience a 53% higher return on equity, a 66% higher return on invested capital and a 42% higher return on sales (Joy et al., 2007).
  • Having just one female director on the board cuts the risk of bankruptcy by 20% (Wilson, 2009).
  • When women directors are appointed, boards adopt new governance practices earlier, such as director training, board evaluations, director succession planning structures (Singh and Vinnicombe, 2002)
  • Women make other board members more civilized and sensitive to other perspectives (Fondas and Sassalos, 2000) and reduce ‘game playing’ (Singh, 2008)
  • Female directors are more likely to ask questions rather than nodding through decisions (Konrad et al., 2008).

Call To Action

Television Editors – Live interviews with Chris Bart can be arranged using the DeGroote School of Business’s broadcast studio. Call Julia Thomson 905-525-9140 ext. 24871 to schedule airtime and book a live feed from campus.

‘Justice for Men & Boys’ is already twice as popular as the Ulster Unionist Party!

My thanks to the good folk who run a blog site http://ukgeneralelection2015.blogspot.co.uk/ concerned with the run-up to the May 2015 general election. They’ve just sent us the following link to the popularity of the websites of British political parties:

http://ukgeneralelection2015.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/party-political-websites-popularity.html

The website of our political party, Justice for Men & Boys http://j4mb.wordpress.com is receiving twice as many ‘hits’ as the website of the Ulster Unionist Party (‘UUP’) which is very pleasing, given the UUP was launched in 1905 – 108 years ago – and our party was launched less than five weeks ago. The only way is up…

A forthcoming appearance on ‘Woman’s Hour’

On our YouTube channel we now have video and audio files of nine of my recent radio and television appearances, seven of them with the BBC:

http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKhX1c3ow6BrzdzP3ydpeZQ/videos

Perhaps the highlight, in terms of audience numbers, was last week’s interview with Jeremy Vine, whose BBC Radio 2 show regularly attracts audiences of 6 – 7 million listeners. The next day I much enjoyed being interviewed by the highly respected journalist and broadcaster Julia Hartley-Brewer for her show on LBC, London’s leading commercial radio station. She was very professional throughout and, impressively, she’d gone to the trouble of reading our consultation document in advance. In the interview, after mentioning a number of the proposals in that document, Julia stated the following:

I’m very surprised to say this, Mike, but I have an awful feeling you may have a point, scary as it is!

I was pleased recently to be invited to appear on BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour, in the episode due to be recorded and broadcast over 10:00 – 10:45 next Thursday, 28 March. The programme has been broadcast since 1946, and it’s long been a taxpayer-funded mouthpiece for feminism in general, and for militant feminism in particular. The Wikipedia entry on Woman’s Hour:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woman%27s_Hour

I see from the BBC website that the presenter next Thursday will be the militant feminist Jenni Murray, who’s been a presenter on the show since 1987. She was quoted in the Independent (link below) as having once said that marriage is ‘legalised prostitution’:

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/jenni-murray-woman-of-the-hour-419127.html

I’m much looking forward to meeting Ms Murray, and hopefully one or two other militant feminists, too. Harriet Harman would be my first choice, obviously, but I could name a dozen other prominent militant feminists I’d be equally happy to debate with.

Not many people seem to be aware that there’s a BBC radio programme for men, Men’s Hour. There’s a very good reason why not many people are aware of it. I refer you to a blog post I wrote in May 2012 (link below). It concerns a Radio Times interview in which Ms Murray praised both the show and its presenter, Tim Samuels:

http://fightingfeminism.wordpress.com/2012/05/18/mens-hour-an-endorsement-from-a-radical-feminist/

I end this email with an appeal for donations to our party Justice for Men & Boys (and the women who love them). None of the people associated with the party, including myself, obtain any personal income from donations. 100% of donation income is directed towards campaign costs. We’re aiming to raise at least £15,000 to finance deposits for the top 30 Conservative marginal seats we plan to contest in the May 2015 general election. You can make a donation through this link:

http://j4mb.wordpress.com/donate/

Thank you for your support. We’re working hard to make the future brighter for men and boys, and the women who love them.

Viviane Reding: Why we need a United States of Europe now

For some time the prime mover behind European Union efforts to bully major European companies into appointing more women to their boards has been an odious militant feminist, Viviane Reding, Vice-President of the European Commission. We’ve covered her nefarious activities at some length on this blog. Ms Reding’s own website http://ec.europa.eu/commission_2010-2014/reding/index_en.htm led me to an EU press release from November 2012, http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_SPEECH-12-796_en.htm. It concerns a speech in which Ms Reding made the following statement:

A United States of Europe is the subject of my talk today. A United States of Europe – a powerful, ambitious, and probably controversial vision of the future of our continent. I am sure that we will have a lively argument about my postulate afterwards: namely that to find its way out of the current financial and debt crises, we must now embark on the road to a United States of Europe.

A United States of Europe with people like Viviane Reding at the helm. What a grim ‘vision of the future’.

A discussion with a feminist blogger on ‘Radio 5 Live’

Last night I had the pleasure of engaging in a discussion on Radio 5 Live with the feminist blogger Holly Combe (link below). Within an hour of my appearance yesterday on Jeremy Vine’s BBC Radio 2 show (6 – 7 million listeners) I was called by people working for three other radio shows. The first was for a late night programme on Radio 5 Live, the second (about 09:30 today) a regional BBC radio show, and the third a leading commercial radio station, lunchtime today. I’ll be putting all the pieces up on our YouTube site, but for the moment here’s the discussion with Holly from last night’s show, from around 52:05 – 1:00:00:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01r55v1

Mike Buchanan’s appearance on ‘The Jeremy Vine Show’

Mike Buchanan appeared on Jeremy Vine’s show on BBC Radio 2 this lunchtime, debating with Laura Bates of The Everyday Sexism Project. The programme regularly attracts 6 – 7 million listeners.

The discussion (and ensuing comments from listeners etc.) lasts from 34:45 – 1:00:30 from the link below. We’ll be putting the piece on Mike’s YouTube site shortly.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01r4ycj

Mike tells us he’s had a constant stream of highly supportive phone calls and texts (from men and women) since the piece was broadcast. Less than an hour afterwards he’d been booked to speak on two other BBC radio shows in the next 24 hours, as well as a major commercial radio station tomorrow lunchtime. We’ll post the audio files on Mike’s YouTube site as soon as we can.

Hits on all three blogs have gone through the roof :

Justice for Men and Boys http://j4mb.wordpress.com

Anti-Feminism League https://c4mb.wordpress.com

Campaign for Merit in Business http://fightingfeminism.wordpress.com

 

A modest contribution to a phone-in debate on BBC Radio 4’s ‘You and Yours’

On Tuesday I received an intriguing text message from a valued supporter. It read ‘R4GDITBNOW!’ I hastily opened the safe and checked the code book, whereupon I realised I was being alerted to a ‘live’ BBC Radio 4 programme about ‘gender balance in the boardroom’ , a prime concern of Campaign for Merit in Business https://c4mb.wordpress.com. Quick as a flash – well, after making my midday cup of Earl Grey, obviously – I turned on my radiophonic apparatus. The valves took a few minutes to warm up, but eventually the apparatus was firing on all cylinders. Here’s the full programme, and my modest personal contribution is from about 35:10 – 40:10. I gained the impression that the ladies in the studio would have preferred one not to have contributed to the debate, to be honest…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrRPkQOnYx4

Laura Bates’s appearance on the International Women’s Day edition of ‘Daily Politics’

I’m looking forward to a discussion tomorrow with Laura Bates on the Jeremy Vine show, on BBC Radio 2. On International Women’s Day, on 8 March, there was a discussion about feminism in the modern era on the BBC television programme Daily Politics, hosted by regular anchor Andrew Neil. Laura was one of the two key women in the discussion. She was the founder of ‘The Everyday Sexism Project’ http://www.everydaysexism.com and still runs the site.

The other key woman in the discussion was the sociologist Catherine Hakim, originator of Preference Theory (2000). She made some insightful points, and I wish she’d been given longer to speak. It’s a pity she didn’t seize this golden opportunity to point out the damage caused to Norwegian businesses by gender quotas, or to point out that four in seven British men are work-centred, while only one in seven British women is – which largely explains the gender balances we see in parliament, at the top of major corporations, and elsewhere.

The video footage of the discussion (with a little preliminary material) is below, from approximately 15:12 to 25:40. Enjoy:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b01r7npp/Daily_Politics_08_03_2013/

 

Mike Buchanan’s forthcoming appearance on the Jeremy Vine show

Tomorrow (Thursday) Mike Buchanan will be appearing on the Jeremy Vine show on BBC Radio 2, which regularly attracts more than six million listeners. The show runs from 12:00 to 14:00, and we’ll later put up a link to the iPlayer audio file.

He’ll be given the opportunity, we understand, to outline the thinking behind the establishment of the new political party. Then he’ll have a discussion with Laura Bates, who runs the Everyday Sexism Project. Our next post will be about a discussion held on International Women’s Day, last Friday, on the BBC TV show Daily Politics. Ms Bates appeared with the sociologist Catherine Hakim.