If you believe that a person who has a vagina should be able to do what they want with that vagina then you are a feminist.
What if they want to use that vagina for evil, like to start a genocide or something?JanatUrlich said:If you believe that a person who has a vagina should be able to do what they want with that vagina then you are a feminist.
I have bolded the parts of my post you apparently missed.Crono1973 said:In other words, sit back and take the discrimination like a man?itsthesheppy said:I will say that the criticisms of such programs are undermined somewhat by being conjured largely, I've found, from individuals to whom the program gives no benefit. As in, white people.Schadrach said:Of course. The real question is, where does an actual difference in opportunity following those demographic lines exist? That's where the effort needs to be placed, and that's also why affirmative action as it is actually practiced is ridiculous, sexist, and racist, and also *maintains* the idea that those people aren't as capable, because they're not being held to the same standard.itsthesheppy said:While I agree that hiring lesser-qualified minority groups to grant them status is putting the cart before the horse, you have to at least recognize that there are fewer 'qualified' candidates for those positions because of the unequal manner in which we educate and prepare people for life.
There may be more 'qualified' white male candidates for Job A because white men are more likely to be privileged with the training and opportunity for Job A than other groups. Suggesting that the playing field is totally level is to suggest that there's more white men in these positions because being a white man somehow makes you more competent, which we know to be false.
So I feel the anger is a bit misdirected. While people rail against 'affirmative action', they rarely qualify that anger by suggesting comprehensive change to the systems that make such programs needed. Most just stop at the anger.
Speaking as a white guy, I don't bother to speak out against them. I instead endeavor to do my part to make this world one in which those programs will not be a necessity. Whining about them focuses the conversation on a symptom and not the disease. In fact all it does is reinforce the idea that minority groups have, that we white folks are always trying to keep them down, to maintain our comfortable majority and position of privilege. I feel effort is better spent ignoring things like affirmative action and instead focusing efforts on making them obsolete.
See, that's how we got here. People sitting back and not protesting.
Cheesepower5 said:What if they want to use that vagina for evil, like to start a genocide or something?JanatUrlich said:If you believe that a person who has a vagina should be able to do what they want with that vagina then you are a feminist.
Please elaborate on your revolutionary new definition for the word "patriarchy" used in the context of a feminism thread.Cheesepower5 said:You do realize we just objectively don't live in a patriarchy anymore, right?Kahunaburger said:That is, IMO, is the perfect example of why feminism is still important. Patriarchy screws everyone over.lunavixen said:exactly, women are victimised and treated like they are weak and need protecting and in some cases overly so, men are expected to stay silent and endure, the male victims of DV assault and sexual assault are often not seen or payed attention to, and it shouldn't be like that, even before I started doing my studies on this in late high school and uni I knew there was such a differential in the treatment, but until I started studying Criminology, I never knew just how substantial that difference is.Crono1973 said:Great answer, I didn't expect that.
You're right, people don't want to hear it. Men are just supposed to take whatever come to them and whatever comes to them is always less important than if the same had happened to a woman. Rape, genital mutilation, domestic violence, losing everyone you love in divorce court, etc...
Sexism still exists, but men no longer have total power of society.
I saw the bolded parts, you could do both. You do not discriminate AND protest when you are discriminated against.itsthesheppy said:I have bolded the parts of my post you apparently missed.Crono1973 said:In other words, sit back and take the discrimination like a man?itsthesheppy said:I will say that the criticisms of such programs are undermined somewhat by being conjured largely, I've found, from individuals to whom the program gives no benefit. As in, white people.Schadrach said:Of course. The real question is, where does an actual difference in opportunity following those demographic lines exist? That's where the effort needs to be placed, and that's also why affirmative action as it is actually practiced is ridiculous, sexist, and racist, and also *maintains* the idea that those people aren't as capable, because they're not being held to the same standard.itsthesheppy said:While I agree that hiring lesser-qualified minority groups to grant them status is putting the cart before the horse, you have to at least recognize that there are fewer 'qualified' candidates for those positions because of the unequal manner in which we educate and prepare people for life.
There may be more 'qualified' white male candidates for Job A because white men are more likely to be privileged with the training and opportunity for Job A than other groups. Suggesting that the playing field is totally level is to suggest that there's more white men in these positions because being a white man somehow makes you more competent, which we know to be false.
So I feel the anger is a bit misdirected. While people rail against 'affirmative action', they rarely qualify that anger by suggesting comprehensive change to the systems that make such programs needed. Most just stop at the anger.
Speaking as a white guy, I don't bother to speak out against them. I instead endeavor to do my part to make this world one in which those programs will not be a necessity. Whining about them focuses the conversation on a symptom and not the disease. In fact all it does is reinforce the idea that minority groups have, that we white folks are always trying to keep them down, to maintain our comfortable majority and position of privilege. I feel effort is better spent ignoring things like affirmative action and instead focusing efforts on making them obsolete.
See, that's how we got here. People sitting back and not protesting.
Considering the OP provided the definition to use, and it's been argued back and forth for the last 23 pages, do you really expect people to share the same perceptions of the definitions behind patriarchy?Kahunaburger said:Please elaborate on your revolutionary new definition for the word "patriarchy" used in the context of a feminism thread.
As opposed to feminists that tell men they must keep their dicks in their pants until required? Not a mean spirited come back mind you; I rather enjoyed this particular definition, but it's a bit simplistic in practice. A lot of feminists don't think women should be allowed to do certain things with their vaginas.JanatUrlich said:If you believe that a person who has a vagina should be able to do what they want with that vagina then you are a feminist.
Didn't stop to ask. I usually don't indulge people who'd rather be stabbed to death with a broken bottle than defend themselves. You know...whatchamacallit...oh yeah. Morons. (Very condescending, but well deserved.)Mortai Gravesend said:And who do you think disapproved of self-defense there? Feminists?Ramzal said:I've been attacked by a woman who attacked me with a glass bottle in the street, fought back and expressed that I did on these forums and was practically called out for my "behavior" for defending myself.
Do you believe that a person with a penis should be able to what they want with that penis? I am betting you have limitations that apply to penises but not vaginas.JanatUrlich said:If you believe that a person who has a vagina should be able to do what they want with that vagina then you are a feminist.
I have limited time and energy. I figure, arguing against affirmative action is a waste of time; it's complaining about a symptom and frankly, I sound like an entitled little jerk when I whine about discrimination, being that I'm a white heterosexual cisgendered middle class American. It's like... I'm complaining?Crono1973 said:I saw the bolded parts, you could do both. You do not discriminate AND protest when you are discriminated against.itsthesheppy said:I have bolded the parts of my post you apparently missed.Crono1973 said:In other words, sit back and take the discrimination like a man?itsthesheppy said:I will say that the criticisms of such programs are undermined somewhat by being conjured largely, I've found, from individuals to whom the program gives no benefit. As in, white people.Schadrach said:Of course. The real question is, where does an actual difference in opportunity following those demographic lines exist? That's where the effort needs to be placed, and that's also why affirmative action as it is actually practiced is ridiculous, sexist, and racist, and also *maintains* the idea that those people aren't as capable, because they're not being held to the same standard.itsthesheppy said:While I agree that hiring lesser-qualified minority groups to grant them status is putting the cart before the horse, you have to at least recognize that there are fewer 'qualified' candidates for those positions because of the unequal manner in which we educate and prepare people for life.
There may be more 'qualified' white male candidates for Job A because white men are more likely to be privileged with the training and opportunity for Job A than other groups. Suggesting that the playing field is totally level is to suggest that there's more white men in these positions because being a white man somehow makes you more competent, which we know to be false.
So I feel the anger is a bit misdirected. While people rail against 'affirmative action', they rarely qualify that anger by suggesting comprehensive change to the systems that make such programs needed. Most just stop at the anger.
Speaking as a white guy, I don't bother to speak out against them. I instead endeavor to do my part to make this world one in which those programs will not be a necessity. Whining about them focuses the conversation on a symptom and not the disease. In fact all it does is reinforce the idea that minority groups have, that we white folks are always trying to keep them down, to maintain our comfortable majority and position of privilege. I feel effort is better spent ignoring things like affirmative action and instead focusing efforts on making them obsolete.
See, that's how we got here. People sitting back and not protesting.
Fair enough now that I think about it. It was mainly stated that I was a terrible person for even laying a hand on a woman...regardless of her actions. Which is something that is often heard from EXTREME feminist on college campus rallies. I cna honestly say I don't know if they were a feminist now that I think about it. You're right. I assumed without asking. Now I know.Mortai Gravesend said:I can't say bringing that up as a point against feminism when feminists didn't necessarily do it seems much better. (And really... whoever it was was very likely not a feminist unless you're leaving details out that make it about anything besides gender)Ramzal said:Didn't stop to ask. I usually don't indulge people who'd rather be stabbed to death with a broken bottle than defend themselves. You know...whatchamacallit...oh yeah. Morons. (Very condescending, but well deserved.)Mortai Gravesend said:And who do you think disapproved of self-defense there? Feminists?Ramzal said:I've been attacked by a woman who attacked me with a glass bottle in the street, fought back and expressed that I did on these forums and was practically called out for my "behavior" for defending myself.
"Patriarchy" when used in the context of feminism is a specific term [http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/t/tobias-feminisim.html] that refers to (I'm oversimplifying here) a society that has gender roles that disproportionately place power in the hands of men and privileges stereotypically male things over stereotypically female things.DevilWithaHalo said:Considering the OP provided the definition to use, and it's been argued back and forth for the last 23 pages, do you really expect people to share the same perceptions of the definitions behind patriarchy?Kahunaburger said:Please elaborate on your revolutionary new definition for the word "patriarchy" used in the context of a feminism thread.
The US may have been a patriarchy during the nuclear era, but it certainly isn't anymore. The father figure hasn't been the supreme authority in our society for quite some time. But then again, that's my personal perspective, which will undoubtedly differ from others.
You don't seem to understand that "trying to do my part to make the world into one where affirmative action would be unnecessary" is a complete waste of time by itself because people who benefit from AA will always claim it is necessary.itsthesheppy said:I have limited time and energy. I figure, arguing against affirmative action is a waste of time; it's complaining about a symptom and frankly, I sound like an entitled little jerk when I whine about discrimination, being that I'm a white heterosexual cisgendered middle class American. It's like... I'm complaining?Crono1973 said:I saw the bolded parts, you could do both. You do not discriminate AND protest when you are discriminated against.itsthesheppy said:I have bolded the parts of my post you apparently missed.Crono1973 said:In other words, sit back and take the discrimination like a man?itsthesheppy said:I will say that the criticisms of such programs are undermined somewhat by being conjured largely, I've found, from individuals to whom the program gives no benefit. As in, white people.Schadrach said:Of course. The real question is, where does an actual difference in opportunity following those demographic lines exist? That's where the effort needs to be placed, and that's also why affirmative action as it is actually practiced is ridiculous, sexist, and racist, and also *maintains* the idea that those people aren't as capable, because they're not being held to the same standard.itsthesheppy said:While I agree that hiring lesser-qualified minority groups to grant them status is putting the cart before the horse, you have to at least recognize that there are fewer 'qualified' candidates for those positions because of the unequal manner in which we educate and prepare people for life.
There may be more 'qualified' white male candidates for Job A because white men are more likely to be privileged with the training and opportunity for Job A than other groups. Suggesting that the playing field is totally level is to suggest that there's more white men in these positions because being a white man somehow makes you more competent, which we know to be false.
So I feel the anger is a bit misdirected. While people rail against 'affirmative action', they rarely qualify that anger by suggesting comprehensive change to the systems that make such programs needed. Most just stop at the anger.
Speaking as a white guy, I don't bother to speak out against them. I instead endeavor to do my part to make this world one in which those programs will not be a necessity. Whining about them focuses the conversation on a symptom and not the disease. In fact all it does is reinforce the idea that minority groups have, that we white folks are always trying to keep them down, to maintain our comfortable majority and position of privilege. I feel effort is better spent ignoring things like affirmative action and instead focusing efforts on making them obsolete.
See, that's how we got here. People sitting back and not protesting.
Nah, no thanks. My time and energy are much better spent on trying to do my part to make the world into one where affirmative action would be unnecessary. No sense in wasting it hacking away at symptoms that, honestly, don't always misfire anyway. People seem to confuse the words "can" and "do" when it comes to affirmative action. It can create a situation where a lesser qualified candidate gets the position. It doesn't always, however, and in fact has most likely prevented a qualified candidate from being denied because of X, Y or Z.
Oh really? What rights do males have that females do not?Steinar Valsson said:In my opinion, nobody should be feminist. Everyone should be an equalist. Fighting for equal rights, the word femenist suggests that one is more for the rights of women in general.
Of course the rights of women are less, unfortunately, that those of males. But that does not mean you should fight only for the rights of one group, but try and fight for all. And those who are discriminated against should be the ones we fight for each time. Everyone should have equal rights, genders, colors, sexuality... It's only when you break the laws of your society that your rights are taken away, like the freedom of a rapist or a murderer. But it's not a crime to be a woman, black, gay and so forth.
That's my opinion, anyways.
Okay, you make a lot of claims here.Crono1973 said:You don't seem to understand that "trying to do my part to make the world into one where affirmative action would be unnecessary" is a complete waste of time by itself because people who benefit from AA will always claim it is necessary.itsthesheppy said:I have limited time and energy. I figure, arguing against affirmative action is a waste of time; it's complaining about a symptom and frankly, I sound like an entitled little jerk when I whine about discrimination, being that I'm a white heterosexual cisgendered middle class American. It's like... I'm complaining?Crono1973 said:I saw the bolded parts, you could do both. You do not discriminate AND protest when you are discriminated against.itsthesheppy said:I have bolded the parts of my post you apparently missed.Crono1973 said:In other words, sit back and take the discrimination like a man?itsthesheppy said:I will say that the criticisms of such programs are undermined somewhat by being conjured largely, I've found, from individuals to whom the program gives no benefit. As in, white people.Schadrach said:Of course. The real question is, where does an actual difference in opportunity following those demographic lines exist? That's where the effort needs to be placed, and that's also why affirmative action as it is actually practiced is ridiculous, sexist, and racist, and also *maintains* the idea that those people aren't as capable, because they're not being held to the same standard.itsthesheppy said:While I agree that hiring lesser-qualified minority groups to grant them status is putting the cart before the horse, you have to at least recognize that there are fewer 'qualified' candidates for those positions because of the unequal manner in which we educate and prepare people for life.
There may be more 'qualified' white male candidates for Job A because white men are more likely to be privileged with the training and opportunity for Job A than other groups. Suggesting that the playing field is totally level is to suggest that there's more white men in these positions because being a white man somehow makes you more competent, which we know to be false.
So I feel the anger is a bit misdirected. While people rail against 'affirmative action', they rarely qualify that anger by suggesting comprehensive change to the systems that make such programs needed. Most just stop at the anger.
Speaking as a white guy, I don't bother to speak out against them. I instead endeavor to do my part to make this world one in which those programs will not be a necessity. Whining about them focuses the conversation on a symptom and not the disease. In fact all it does is reinforce the idea that minority groups have, that we white folks are always trying to keep them down, to maintain our comfortable majority and position of privilege. I feel effort is better spent ignoring things like affirmative action and instead focusing efforts on making them obsolete.
See, that's how we got here. People sitting back and not protesting.
Nah, no thanks. My time and energy are much better spent on trying to do my part to make the world into one where affirmative action would be unnecessary. No sense in wasting it hacking away at symptoms that, honestly, don't always misfire anyway. People seem to confuse the words "can" and "do" when it comes to affirmative action. It can create a situation where a lesser qualified candidate gets the position. It doesn't always, however, and in fact has most likely prevented a qualified candidate from being denied because of X, Y or Z.
If you think that those who benefit from AA are just going to say "ok, things are equal now" then you are smoking something that you aren't sharing with the rest of the thread. It's like feminism, no matter how many advantages women get, they will never say "we are equal enough".
Right now we have people saying that women have taken over the workforce (Maria Shriver said 3 years ago that "it's a womans world now", link below and I saw a Time magazine cover a month or two ago saying similar) and women are still whining about equal pay.
It has been shown countless times that women get paid less because they take more time off work, work less overtime, are not as mobile and just generally choose less risky and less demanding jobs. That won't matter though because women still protest and because of that, things will change in their favor. Next thing you know cashiers at Wal Mart will be making more than stockers who do heavy lifting because Wal Mart is tired of getting sued and they know men are less likely to protest. I hate to say it but it's the squeaky wheel that gets the oil.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/maria-shriver/a-womans-nation_b_187244.html
Equal-ism probably does exist, and feminism is probably a subset of it.Steinar Valsson said:In my opinion, nobody should be feminist. Everyone should be an equalist. Fighting for equal rights, the word femenist suggests that one is more for the rights of women in general.
Of course the rights of women are less, unfortunately, that those of males. But that does not mean you should fight only for the rights of one group, but try and fight for all. And those who are discriminated against should be the ones we fight for each time. Everyone should have equal rights, genders, colors, sexuality... It's only when you break the laws of your society that your rights are taken away, like the freedom of a rapist or a murderer. But it's not a crime to be a woman, black, gay and so forth.
That's my opinion, anyways.
I expected this reply, and it still confuses me to this day. I accept the premise that stereotypical gender roles can have the sociological influence of either being desirable or undesirable given the contextual societies they derive from. As an example, being the bread winner in a capitalist society gives one greater freedoms given how the structure is set up and the lack of a "biological clock" seems to influence men in a greater degree to pursue monetary interests. But to couple that with a "negative" regarding custody in the same breath seems... out of place to me. Men are consistently pushed in society to maintain a working family structure and often stigmatized for their failures to do so even if beyond their control (considering the opposition to controlling their female partners).Kahunaburger said:"Patriarchy" when used in the context of feminism is a specific term [http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/t/tobias-feminisim.html] that refers to (I'm oversimplifying here) a society that has gender roles that disproportionately place power in the hands of men and privileges stereotypically male things over stereotypically female things.
So an example of patriarchy at work (again I'm massively over-simplifying here) is the whole "men are the breadwinners, women are the homemakers" norm (note: exceptions to a norm can and do exist but tend to be regarded as exceptions). Fallout from this norm includes the glass ceiling, women being underpaid, men being more likely to lose custody battles, and "stay at home dads" being stigmatized.