"Right so you think that a reasonable large tract of the public in England would genuinely believe that a fathers group existed for fathers to get together and murder their own/each others children. I see.
I have to say I find your view of our country disturbingly warped. "
Nice strawman.
I think the fathers would be aware of possible negative media perception, that will be accepted, at least on some level, by 'ordinary' people. Ethnic minorities have already received a rather unpleasant tarring in the last few weeks regarding sexual abuse. Even if negative media is not generated the men may believe that their interference will unspokenly be perceived as something that is to be wary of.
Odd that a feminist can rant about the nebulous concepts such as 'the patriarchy' and the effects of 'social conditioning', but when a man describes a similarly hard-to-define situation that primarily affects men, he's dismissed.
Actually it's not odd, it's hypocrisy. And feminists wonder why they have such an uphill struggle.
"Our local church has a group for men to get together and chat and guess what there are no groups of women kicking up a fuss and no-one trying to get them banned on the basis that they must be evil."
In other words, a completely different and irrelevant situation to the one being discussed.
"*reasonably
I am not sure that engaging with someone with such a terribly odd view of our country is the right thing to do. Do you get out much? Most people in the UK are perfectly fine, normal, polite, law-abiding types. I think it would do you good to go out and mix a bit. Pubs are a good place to start - find a quiet one and sit yourself at the bar and before you know it you'll be making lots of new friends"
Ah, I see we've now descended from the irrelevant to the personal. Finished scrapping out the barrel yet, or is there more to come?
And did you find that invisible post by vizzie or did you just pull the certainty or your 'nicked chair' comment out of your [ahem]?