She "pretends" to care about men's issues? What makes you doubt her sincerity when she composed that list of common ground Feminists and MRAs share?
Her actions.
Oh, really?
She composed a list of issues where Feminists and Men's Rights Activists are natural allies and should be working together to resolve, and was frustrated that people were interrupting her as she tried to read it, and that makes you think she's only pretending to care about Men's Rights Issues? Because she was protesting a lecture sponsored by A Voice For Men, and you suppose that means she's against men having rights?
It wasn't the first time she said it. It was a catch phrase of hers that she said many times at many events and in interviews.
Please post the evidence that supports your claim.
I have a hard time believing you watched interviews of Chanty Binx or read articles that quoted her given your extreme reluctance to listen to her at all. But maybe I'm wrong. Maybe you really did take an interest in Chanty Binx listened to her long enough to identify the catch phrases she likes to use.
Which one do you think has the best summation of her views?
Her initial reaction in the posted video was frustration that people kept interrupting her as she read her list of concerns Feminists and MRAs share that, in her opinion, they should be working together to address.
As I wrote above, she does this insisting it happen on her terms, within her framework of patriarchy, immediately after she interrupted an event she was invited to politely attend and instead she screamed at and protested it, and her group cheered after the fire alarm was pulled, ending the event. That you can take her at all seriously or see her "agreement that mens issues matter" says a lot more about you than me. Do you find Richard Spencer genuine when he says he likes black people and only wants to help them? Would you take Fred Phelps seriously had he said he isn't against homosexuality?
I don't think you put aside your preconceptions and negative views and actually listened to her.
I don't think you have checked your own bias. Have you watched Cassie's film yet? It may help you.
I watched before I commented, as usual with video links. I even paraphrased part of it in a subsequent post. Did you watch it all the way through?
The entire point of her talk was to encourage people to stop doing what you're doing here - refusing to listen because you dislike, or presume you will dislike, a speaker. The irony is, you linked to it in the same post where you once again vilified Chanty Binx. And when I said you should take Jaye's advice to heart and then watch Chanty Binx reading from her list, all you did was repeat your list of reasons why you dislike her and why you refuse to listen to her.
IMO Chanty Binx was being rude. But even if we both agree that what she did was wrong, your refusal to listen to her is entirely at odds with touting Cassie Jaye's TED talk on the importance of listening to your 'enemies'.
Cassie Jaye was talking to you as much as she was talking to anyone else. And she was telling you that putting aside your ego and opinions, and actually listening to what people like Chanty Binx have to say, is the better way to go forward. The question is, will you do it?
As much as Feminists may want to think Feminism primarily stands for equality, it very often seeks to oppose it.
You may want to acknowledge this. Your not doing so makes you look like an ideologue in denial of reality.
You haven't presented evidence your post describes reality.
How do you know how often Feminism seeks to oppose equality? What is the measure you're using? What are your sources of information, and how are they acquiring it?
Because she wasn't opposing equality, she was loudly pointing out areas where MRAs and Feminists can, and in her opinion should, work together to achieve it.
After she did her all to see to it such actual effort (CAFE) is shut down, and while demanding people listen to her instead of letting anyone else speak.
You have not commented on the shutting down of a "men's day" to call attention to these issues at York that Metaphor provided you a link to.
I haven't researched the issue at York. I'm still researching that MIAS controversy at Ryerson.
I don't typically comment on articles I haven't read, videos I haven't watched, or news stories I haven't checked against at least one other source.
Weird, I know.