Cassie Jaye | Boko Haram
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- Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
- In this segment of "Exploring Minds", Cassie Jaye discusses how main stream media's reactions to Boko Haram altered her perception of feminism.
#cassiejaye #genderequality #exploringminds
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Cassie Jaye is a filmmaker based in the San Francisco Bay Area and the Founder of Jaye Bird Productions. She has directed and produced over a dozen films and commercials, but she is probably most known for her documentary 'The Red Pill' and her TEDx talk about making the film.
'The Red Pill' chronicles her journey as a feminist learning about the Men's Rights Movement. The film was released worldwide in March 2017 and has garnered multiple awards including the Women in Film Award at Hollywood DigiFest. Despite much praise and recognition for shedding light on an aspect of Gender Equality rarely discussed, the film was also the target of many petitions, protests, and censorship by theaters who caved to pressure to pull the film from their screens. Two years after the film's release, Cassie candidly opens up to Michele about her life since 'The Red Pill'.
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Some years ago, I watched a documentary about female survivors of rape. If memory serves, it featured a woman from the Congo and actress Olivia Wilde conducting the interview. They were discussing the details and the resulting medical complications the woman suffered from as a result of the brutal assault. Apparently, the practice was literally used as method of waging war against the civilian population. The story was horrifying enough, but what caught my attention was how quickly Olivia shifted the conversation away from the woman recounting having to watch her husband and son(s) being hacked to death with machetes with, "Tell me more about your rape."
The acts perpetrated by these horrid people are bad enough, but the indifference of that interviewer towards the atrocious acts committed against young boys is disgraceful, to say the very least. How can these left wing nutjobs even sleep at night???
Robert Johnson- What was the name of this Documentary?
@@HoldenNY22 I think it's called, 'Olivia Wilde Is A Misandrist Twat'?
Go interview karen straughan and I’ll subscribe
My man problem is minor to what she's talking about here, but as an Asian man living in the west, I feel Asian men are pushed a side for Asian women issues. Simply put, when the media speak of Asian struggles, it's always about the women, from mental health to microaggression, etc. It's always about Asian women. "Who cares?" some might say. It affects social integration of Asian men into the greater American society.
It has nothing to do with Asian. It is standard male female scenario
@@divisadero8859 I know. I just wanted to spotlight Asian men perspective.
The main Men's service is Canberra is under a feminist organisation's umbrella. They run courses teaching men not to hurt women.
The main Men's support group for violence in the US never received any funding and the founder killed himself after being unable to help people that needed it.
@Blue collar Hero I'm not saying we do. We actually don't. I'm pointing out how tax funded women's organisations stay relevant by pretending to provide useful services.
The overlying question is why aren't more feminists like Cassie coming to their senses?
Because they're not feminists, they're misandrists.
Thank-you, over and over, to both you wonderful ladies for telling the rest of the story, the part the Left never tells.
Men, don’t expect change. Just keep being men, now your worth and please stay strong 💪
Men kinda do need to change though. Most of us are lost and need to find our way. Get rid of the performative masculinity and seek real masculinity. But we DON'T do it for women, it's for ourselves.
@@khan507 performative masculinity. thats a good way to describe it. men are men when they hold doors, cosign a female friend's car loan, fight off muggers for a woman they don't know but only if its for a woman if a man protects his dog from a bear it's "toxic mascuinity" because a womon isn't getting anything out of it.
but don't you dare _live_ masculinity because then you are comfortable being alone and that means WE have to work for it.
That is infuriating and men have no voice when it comes to these issues. At least women are allowed to complain when they dont like something that happens to their gender. However no matter how severe the injustices against men men have no voice.
Grateful for this thoughtful conversation shedding light on neglected men's issues. Appreciate your insights, Cassie!
Western civilization is dying because of women keeping silent when they see all this injustice happening around them.
You don’t give grenade to a child. Women got their grenade with the voting rights, now they play with this grenade.
watching these kind of stuff just make me pissed off.
let's reverse this. let's say 2 men are sitting and talking about women getting raped... you honestly think that would be accepted?
don't get me wrong Cassie is my favorite documentary maker. but like Boko haram....
people will never understand the fear and pain a man go through when listening to this...
saying women and children first when a boat is going down is easy and clear for women
for men it's just beyond scary....
Go Girl Cassie
Cassie is a beacon of hope.
They ruined my entire life already
Chivalry originated as a medieval code of conduct between knights to determine how they should treat each other based on their social standing, it has nothing to do with opening doors or paying bills for women.
The fact that she thinks this arrises from sexism and not racism is astounding
Huh? The fact that they burned the boys alive and left the girls go but no one cared until they kidnapped girls has to do with racism in which way?
@@92brunod she has no sources, showed no proof and no other article I found said they killed them en masse
@Blue collar Hero reach any farther and you’ll be on mt everest
@@syphilisma8293 Boko Haram attacked my village, burned down my neighbor’s house, and then came to mine. They told me to come out with my children, and then burned down the house with my husband inside. They took the women and children, and killed all the men
Stories of the men and boys who have perished during the conflict are not reported by the media, but are recalled by women currently residing in camps
In an Oxfam protection survey with communities affected by violence done last year, people reported 41% more killings of men and boys by Boko Haram than of women and girls; and the number is even higher among adults, with 77% more men killed than women.
Sources are hard to find because most news outlets don't care to report for obvious reasons:reliefweb.int/report/nigeria/missing-men-and-boys-nigeria-s-unfolding-tragedy
It's literally in her documentary. There are few sources because there was comparatively no news coverage of this outside of those villages.
That's literally part of the problem she mentions. No one, including activists and mainstream media, cared about the boys to cover it. The girls get kidnapped and the world is outraged. The boys are targeted and ignored. A double standard.