At times when I listened to the space, I often (at certain channels) heard these men say: "it's men against women","we men this we men that","we as black and white men haver to stand together and take back the power" again women.It’s a huge difference in something being for black men as a whole and something being for pro black men.
Weird shyt like that. And it mostly came from a guy named Mr. Fantastic824.
When I heard that crap I was like, they are about they to do the same thing with Black men, as these feminists have done with Black women.
This is some of his dumb content.
The Growing Racial and Ethnic Divide in U.S. Marriage Patterns - PMC
The United States shows striking racial and ethnic differences in marriage patterns. Compared to both white and Hispanic women, black women marry later in life, are less likely to marry at all, and have higher rates of marital instability. Kelly ...
![www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/static/img/favicons/favicon-48x48.png)
"Lesbian mothers helped create a foundation of single parent families which challenged the gendered stereotypes of motherhood and hood. They helped single mothers liberate themselves from the constrictions of the traditional nuclear family with its built-in heteronormativity. […] In Separate Roads to Feminism: Black, Chicana and White Feminist Movements in America’s Second Wave, Benita Roth explains how the history of racism in the U.S. played an important part in creating this divide. Instead of arguing about a woman’s right NOT to bear a child, these minority women focused on how to combine motherhood with feminism and equality. They wanted to change the assumption that single motherhood was a pathology and/or a punishment. Single mothers of all ethnicities could relate to this conversation. […]."
Transforming Motherhood: Single Parents' Liberation In The 1970s
Transforming Motherhood examines the experiences of single mothers from the early 1970s until the mid-1980s. Because most accounts of single motherhood in these decades focused on single motherhood as the cause of social problems, most of the discourse about single motherhood is framed on the...
Wayne State University Dissertations.1409)
"Public rhetoric often decries a societal retreat from marriage – that it is an increasingly obsolete institution (Time Magazine/Pew Research Center 2010). The 1950s have been described as the “golden age” of marriage in the United States and marriage has declined since the 1960s (c00ntz 2000/1992; Cherlin 2009/2004). In this paper, we take a longer view of the history of marriage by sex and race, describing trends among those never married at age 35 and age 45 and older, and historical median ages at first marriage using Decennial Census data. We find that the 1950s and 1960s were an anomaly for men and women given the high proportions married at young ages. Race differences are particularly interesting, as black women were more often married than white women prior to World War II, yet since the 1980s, have been increasingly less likely to be married."
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