There are probably quite a few people we could get on here.

And depending on who it is, we could advertise around Reddit and maybe get some more subscribers.

Just off the top of my head:

  • John Barry is a psychology researcher with the Male Psychology Network who helped establish the male psychology section of the British Psychological Society. He could probably talk about the male mental health crisis, among other things.

  • Rob Whitley is another psychology researcher who has worked with CAFE / Men and Families on their counseling and mental health services for men.

  • Justin Trottier started Men and Families, which runs a male domestic violence shelter out of Toronto, and offers a wide range of services for men across Canada. He has previously done an AMA on the men's rights sub.

  • Harry Crouch runs the NCFM and has done interviews about men's advocacy in the past.

  • Someone from the National Parents Organization. They're responsible for almost all the progress we've made when it comes to child custody discrimination over the past 10 years.

  • John Hamel is a domestic violence researcher who directed the famous PASK study. He is the editor-in-chief of the journal Partner Abuse and has been very vocal about the disconnect between public perceptions of domestic violence, and what formal research tells us instead (I'm not trying to one-up menslib but I feel like this guy would be much better to talk to about domestic violence than the guy they had a while back who pushed something similar to the Duluth model).

  • Erin Pizzey started the world's first domestic violence shelter for women, and has been an active proponent for male victims. There is a podcast interview with her here.

  • Warren Farrell, who is kind of the original "left wing male advocate".

  • @the_dadvocate, @matchoowly, or someone like that on TikTok. Maybe we could get a shout-out on their channel for an AMA, which would help advertise the sub. They could talk about the problems they run into on social media for daring to say that "men aren't evil", and discuss what they've done to overcome those biases and deal with platform censorship.

Thoughts?

I'm not sure what the political convictions of any of these people are. Trottier might be right leaning. But he has worked with progressives in the past, including with Warren Farrell. Depending on what the aim is that might not matter too much though.