| # | Film | Duration | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 17 | Introduction | 04m 24s | Outlines how men are the creators of family and how fathers are essential for successful upbringing of children, yet are often maligned on our TV screens and in film as unnecessary or dangerous. |
| 18 | Child Abuse 1 | 31m 53s | Exploration of child abuse – particularly physical and sexual – in the media and wider society. How men are singled out for blame and hysteria about abuse in the news. • The taboo subject of female sexual abuse of children • Typical image of a paedophile • NSPCC attacks on men • False accusations of sexual abuse made by women against men • Double-standard in reporting of sexual abuse and the application of law • The prevalence of abuse committed by mothers compared with fathers • Child abuse in the womb from mothers’ drinking, smoking and drug-taking |
| 18 | Child Abuse 2 | 30m 09s | Further examination of female paedophiles looking at mothers who abuse. In depth look at some of the activities of the NSPCC and their attack on men and family. • The campaign of government and charities to divide men from children • Post-natal depression and it’s effects on men as well as women • The campaign of government and charities to divide men from children • The negative effects of denying children essential interaction with adults, particularly men • Why family is the key to child safety and not further child protection laws and services • More on child abuse in the womb from mothers’ drinking and smoking |
| 19 | Fathers’ Rights | 32m 22s | Explores the lack of legal rights for fathers in the UK and the treatment of fathers in the family court. Also looks at the poor choices made by mothers and the use in law of the term “best interests of the child” to deny fathers adequate rights. • F4J • Fathers’ inadequate rights in what is often called a male-dominated society • Fathers’ lack of protection from the law and mothers’ disregard of the law |
| 20 | Fatherlessness | 26m 51s | Why is fatherlessness such an issue in our society? Explores the causes of fatherlessness and how it is encouraged and exacerbated by government and charities. • The essential role of fathers to successful upbringing of children • The numerous negative consequences of fatherlessness • Government pursuing aspects of a Marxist model of society with excluded fathers, single mothers and children in childcare • Society primed to expect aberrant behaviour from men • NSPCC and their negative impact on family • Men and women increasingly becoming divided and dissatisfied with each other |
| 21 | Divorce and the Toxic Woman | 09m 07s | On the vindictiveness and greed of women during divorce and why this behaviour is supported by the legal industry, business and government. |
| 22 | Paternity Fraud | 18m 12s | On the enormous prevalence of paternity fraud and society’s indifference to it because the principal victims are male. • Paternity fraud and family-breakdown • A man’s right to know • Female promiscuity |
| 23 | Reproductive Rights | 39m 18s | Outlines some radical ideas concerning responsibility for pregnancy and childbirth and the lack of options and rights open to men with respect to controlling their fertility. Looks at how the lack of choice available to men leads to family breakdown. • Women and the contraceptive pill • Male pill and it’s impact on men’s rights • Fathers duped into fatherhood • “Casual sex into Cashflow sex” (Amy Alkon) • Single mothers and choices |
| 24 | Irresponsible Mothers | 21m 10s | Addresses the selfish behaviour of many mothers that has led to fatherlessness, damage to children in the womb and other child abuse. Looks at the media presentation of fathers as irresponsible and “dead-beats” compared with society’s failure to call irresponsible mothers to account. • Fatherlessness and its effects on children’s safety and achievement • Foetal Alcohol Syndrome • Forced fatherhood • Child Support Agency (CSA) |
Interviewees from the above films:
Stephen Fitzgerald, Director of the Mankind Initiative Men’s Charity.
Angry Harry, Psychologist and Men’s Rights activist, angryharry.com.
Erin Pizzey, Author and Domestic Violence expert. Opened the world’s first domestic violence shelter in London and is a patron of the Mankind Initiative Men’s Charity. Author of the book “Prone to Violence”.
Michele Elliot, Director of Kidscape, a children’s charity, and author of the book “Female Sexual Abuse of Children”.
Professor Colin Francome, Professor Emeritus of Medical Sociology, Middlesex University. Author of the book “Improving Men’s Health”.
Oliver Curry, Evolutionary Psychologist at the LSE and contributing author to Demos, the independent think tank and research institute.
Mary Alabaster, Head of Maternal Mental Health, Essex Primary Healthcare Trust.
All interviews recorded in 2004




















