It hurts EVERYBODY though. Women are only hurt the slightest of margins more, if at all, we have no way of knowing for sure. There are multiple people with good ideas that are closed out of running for election because they either don't have nice enough records, capital, aren't a part of our two-party system, or are in the shithouse with them, or the people in charge have been in charge forever and have a monopoly on voters.There's a few women that are a part of that too, I might add. So if anything, it's more an example of Congressional Privilege, which I think everyone will agree on.But call it male privilege if you want.theNater said:You didn't, and I'm not claiming that you did. See, it's not the voter apathy I'm saying looks normal. We both know that voter apathy hurts everybody. But what I'm not sure you've recognized is that it hurts women more than it hurts men. It's hard to see the differing level of harm because it's always been there. That's what looks normal; those levels of harm.Redryhno said:When did I say or imply it was normal?
So long as I get to call male educators getting turned away in favor of female educators, mothers getting preferential treatment in nearly every situation, social settings favoring protecting women over protecting everybody, and, most importantly, women restrooms getting more attention when it comes to cleaning and upkeep all just a few examples of female privilege.