This actually isn't a remotely new idea - it's just not something that's really ever talked about.
We live in a society that is, in times of emergency and immediate danger, decidedly "Women and children first!". We are also mammals, that, with very few exceptions, leave the violence entirely to males - it's their biological role, their niche, and it's not really something we can do anything about.
Whilst none of us really want or like them, we do have these prescribed gender roles, but it isn't society that prescribed them - it's neurology, not sociology. The very large parts of our brains that are still chimps and lizards expect the females to squeeze out ickle babbies, and the men to die protecting those bundles of joy.
Feminism has always quite rightly pointed out that women have never had the same rights or freedoms as men, but it's not really for the reason they seem to think it is. It's not even really about the woman - it's about her precious womb.
Whereas modern Feminism especially portrays women as being caged in barbed wire, I'd say it's more accurate to say they've always been smothered in cotton wool and pillows - definitely trapped, definitely not free, but completely protected from that big, bad, outside world. Not something they ever necessarily wanted, but again, it wasn't really about what men or women wanted, it was about that special baby factory in the woman's stomach. Similarly, a man always typically been expected to 'own' his woman and child, but that also entailed providing for and protecting what was 'his' - he's always been legally obliged to do so in all circumstances, even if she was no longer his wife or mate; after all, he's the man, and that's what the male is supposed to do.
Where I personally take issue is when people tell me that I am somehow privileged because of this. No thanks, I'd rather not work and die for a womb. We can argue who has it worse all day, but ultimately we've all been screwed over in some way by the part of our brain that's still bestial.
VondeVon said:
It does highlight one of the conflict points, though. It might be argued that women are more valued (hence not being canon fodder, or ever put into games as canon fodder) but at the exact same time feminists like Anita are saying 'why'? What makes women so special that they shouldn't be mowed down alongside the men? Why are wives and daughters threatened instead of brothers or sons? (And that being so valued is just a flipside of inequality.)
And that leads to my problem with Anita specifically - I don't believe she acknowledges it at all. I don't think she believes women can ever be seen as 'special' by men, I don't think she recognises that side of things at all.
She has tunnel vision - she only sees the cases in which women are victims. All of those video responses she got, outlining this exact point, and all it really got was a thirty-second acknowledgement that, yes, maybe bad things happen to men in video games too. Maybe they die by the thousands for every one damsel in distress, maybe you valiantly mow them down to save that damsel, but, really, isn't the princess the real victim, here? At the end she dies, you know!
My point isn't that men have it bad, or worse than women - my point is that we're all fucked either way, we're either denying the part of us that's a human, or the part of us that's a lizard, and either way it's going to cause confusion on gender roles.
The part of us that's smart, the part of us that can build and invent things, knows that, really, men and women should be able to do the same things when they want to.
But the part of us that lived in caves still thinks there's a wolf at the door and if we don't stop bitching and do what we're supposed to do, then we're all going to disappear.