The problem with a gender war is that what goes around may also come around. It may be used today for winning elections and changing the hands of economic power. But it can also be reversed if taken too far. Regrettably, I think it’s going too far.

Today, misandry is in – even though feminists and gender activists continue to accuse men of misogyny. And yet within the next decade or more, misogyny could actually increase – as a reaction to the misandry that continues its shocking rise (as can be seen by the demonizing of masculinity in every sector of our culture, from education to the military, from the family to the workplace). This undeniable stereotyping of most men across America goes completely undetected by the The Establishment (or is ignored because misandry may really be the Establishment’s game).

So what happens when a turning point comes in the gender war? Will we turn to the sanctioning of females as the Establishment has for males? Will Title IX finally be forced to look at the other gender? Will schools end co-education so that males can finally focus without the broad-brush denigration and without the ADHD drugs required to be in a co-ed system? Will the media run stories that also point out how some women misbehave in our society and around the world? Will prisons begin to balance their gender populations instead of the 95:5 male-female ratio?

Or will misandry advance further? Worse, will there be a gender backlash that is more dangerous, more revolutionary?

I hope not. But we should ask these questions right now. For clearly the presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton has seized the advantage by using anti-male attacks to win – as Michelle Obama and Elizabeth Warren and many other gender activists wage a campaign against men to capture a majority of female votes. And even though I am not a Trump supporter (indeed, I find him loathsome), Clinton’s pivot to male sexual misbehavior (while leaving her husband’s unscathed) just turns me off. Amazingly, it is done so easily, by using the uncouth Trump as a lightning rod for making sweeping negative stereotypes about men.