Yeah... I'm not seeing Clementine actually doing anything that does any of the above listed things there. Men's Rights Activists (of the ROK/red pill variety)
Let's stop you right there.
Return of Kings is a pickup artist (PUA) website, and their contributors have written several articles explicitly saying they are not Men's Rights Activists.
The Red Pill is similar to PUA, but more generally about success in a conventional patriarchal environment.
Neither Redpill nor PUAs want to reform the conventional system of gender at all. They think it's a mug's game to try. MRAs *are* trying to reform the conventional gender system. You might not agree with how they are doing it or what problems they highlight, but it is a different ideology than PUA.
If you're going to write off a whole movement (hypocritcally, I might add, based on their shock jocks, but Clemmie doesn't invalidate feminism or render it a scawy threat), it would help if you knew what you were talking about.
I know what I'm talking about, because I actually looked into these groups myself and spent time with them talking to them, rather than simply getting my info from people like Clementine Ford who are automatically biased against it or who don't care to make the effort to find out the truth.
are quite frightening in their ideology and highlighting that isn't obstructing what I would see as legitimate men's issues.
It is when it's got nothing to do with the group highlighting them, if you mean International Men's Day here. IMD is not an MRA event, the founder, Jerome Teelucksingh, is not an MRA. Do some MRAs take part in it? Yes. Because they're men or concerned about men's issues.
If you were referring to the ironic misandry bit....yeah, it's funny how the MRAs are the big bad here, but it's Clemmie who regularly posts Kill All Men as a joke.
I take the point about International Men's Day, and perhaps she could have been more nuanced, but I didn't see her actually obstructing men's issues there either.
That would be the ideological obstruction I referred to. Constant dismissal of a particular idea, event or group by influential people will make it harder to gain traction.
The theme of IMD last year was tackling male suicide btw.
She's a newspaper equivalent of a shock-jock. They're not paying her to be calm and measured.
This excuse only applies to feminists, apparently.
As for "getting" a man fired, frankly, I thought good on her. He broke his employer's code of conduct, he should have known better. I'd be accountable if I broke my employer's code of conduct, too.
So then you agree Ford should also lose her job?