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-   -   What does feminism mean to you? (https://www.thisisbigbrother.com/forums/showthread.php?t=335392)

MTVN 04-02-2018 07:56 PM

Why are you temporarily able bodied :suspect:

Niamh. 04-02-2018 07:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 9850390)
Why are you temporarily able bodied :suspect:

I was wondering this too :suspect:

user104658 04-02-2018 07:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 9850390)
Why are you temporarily able bodied :suspect:

Surely because the horrible reality is that, eventually, we all go downhill :worry:.

Redway 04-02-2018 07:59 PM

Temporarily able-bodied?

Brillopad 04-02-2018 08:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jack_ (Post 9850376)
You are, rather ironically as a feminist, using a minoritising view towards an issue of social exclusion there. Rather than a marginalised group being the product of societal attitudes and structural oppression, it is their fault and their problem - 'made very little effort to assimilate. Hardly that surprising'. That's nice.

You've also, unsurprisingly, completely missed the point of my post. I recognised my privilege as a white, (temporarily) able-bodied male immediately, and agreed that those arguing that a man's position on issues of female oppression are only valid to a certain extent - do in fact have a point. I was merely noting that a few of the posters (and yes, you are one of them) who were making such arguments, are also ones who routinely feel it is their place to pass judgement on, denigrate or even minimise the discrimination and marginalisation that other groups face - of which they have no personal stake or experience in. Like I said, you cannot have your cake and eat it too. You cannot argue that it isn't a man's place to talk about feminism and then ten minutes later as a heterosexual non-Muslim start saying that Islamaphobia is not a problem, or that the LGBT+ community need to "get over" something. Either you wish people to recognise their privilege before passing comment on social injustices - which is a perfectly legitimate request - or disagree with the sentiment entirely. You don't get to pick and choose which social causes you and others get to comment on. That's a high horse you need to step down from.

So you think it’s a reasonable comparison do you, comparing the plight of a minority group with very diferent views on many things, including the equality of women, to 50% of the indigenous population.

How wholly unacceptable for any Western woman to feel opposed to an even more sexist culture coming to our country and trying to tell Western women how to dress and and how to a act. Women should for ever play the martyr hey! Not this woman. Maybe male attitudes like yours are precisely why 50% of the population are still having to fight for their rights.

Jack_ 04-02-2018 08:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 9850390)
Why are you temporarily able bodied :suspect:

It's a term that emerged from scholarship on the social model of disability, as a means of attempting to break down the distinction between "disabled people" and "able-bodied people". The basic notion is that if we see ourselves as only temporarily able-bodied - that we can and could be impaired at any time - we can begin to empathise and come up with solutions to help those that society has disabled, quicker than if it were something we could not relate to. It's usage is contested and it's not something I use often, but in the context of acknowledging my privilege I felt it was appropriate.

Jack_ 04-02-2018 08:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brillopad (Post 9850438)
So you think it’s a reasonable comparison do you, comparing the plight of a minority group with very diferent views on many things, including the equality of women, to 50% of the indigenous population.

How wholly unacceptable for any Western woman to feel opposed to an even more sexist culture coming to our country and trying to tell Western women how to dress and and how to a act. Women should for ever play play the martyr hey! Not this woman. Maybe your attitude is an indication of why 50% of the population are still having to fight for their rights.

All this reply tells me is that you didn't read my initial post properly at all, because the plight and injustice that women face is not all the same. Women are not one homogenous group, the various intersections of social identity all have a profound impact on one's social standing and any discrimination and marginalisation they may experience. I would encourage you to watch and read the material I provided and then get back to me, because you have misinterpreted my post completely.

Brillopad 04-02-2018 08:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jack_ (Post 9850482)
All this reply tells me is that you didn't read my initial post properly at all, because the plight and injustice that women face is not all the same. Women are not one homogenous group, the various intersections of social identity all have a profound impact on one's social standing and any discrimination and marginalisation they may experience. I would encourage you to watch and read the material I provided and then get back to me, because you have misinterpreted my post completely.

I was responding to one paragraph of your post as I made clear. Even women of a higher social standing still experience sexism from their male counterparts. Sexism crosses all social boundaries so it still affects 50% of the population one way or another. Are you trying to suggest it doesn’t.

A good example is all those professional actresses who have recently come out to expose the sexism in Hollywood. It’s everywhere despite it allegedly being a progressive society. It’s seems some are too focused on minority groups (the more fashionable cause) to even acknowledge the plight of 50% of its own.

Maru 04-02-2018 09:01 PM

Quote:

Individualism: A New View Of Feminism

From a talk presented for the Institute for Humane Studies, at Marymount University, Arlington, Virginia, on June 22, 2001.
by Wendy McElroy

Women are the equals of men and should be treated as such.

For most people, the foregoing statement is the core of what feminism means. But what is equal? How is equality defined?

For example, does it mean equality under existing laws and equal representation in existing institutions? Or does it involve a socio-economic equality -- a redistribution of wealth and power -- that, in turn, requires new laws and an overturning of existing institutions. It could involve cultural equality by which women are accorded the same level of respect as men with sexual harassment laws, for example, enforcing that respect.

The manner in which the word "equality" is defined is a litmus test by which different schools of feminism can be distinguished from each other.

Throughout the 19th century, the mainstream of American feminism defined "equality" as equal treatment with men under existing laws and equal representation within existing institutions. More revolutionary feminists protested that the existing laws and institutions were the source of injustice and, as such, could not be reformed. The system had to be swept away before women's rights could be secured.

In simplistic terms, the two more revolutionary traditions were socialist feminism, from which contemporary radical feminism draws heavily, and individualist feminism, which is sometimes called libertarian feminism. These two traditions differed dramatically in their approaches to equality.

To socialist feminism, equality was a socioeconomic term. Women could be equal only after private property and the economic relationships it encouraged -- that is, capitalism -- were eliminated. Equality was also a cultural goal. The 19th century parallel to the 20th century rebellion against 'white male culture' -- against pornography, for example -- is to be found in the 19th century social purity crusades over such issues as temperance. The social purity campaigns attempted to impose 'virtue'-- that is, to impose a morally proper behavior upon society through the force of law -- in much the same way that modern feminism attempts to impose political correctness.

To individualist feminism, equality was achieved when the individual rights of women were fully acknowledged under laws that identically protected the person and property of men and women. It made no reference to being economically or socially equal, only to equal treatment under the laws that governed society in such a manner as to protect person and property.

In an ideal society, the legal system would make no distinction based upon secondary characteristics, such as sex, but would protect the rights each individual equally. Women would neither be oppressed by nor receive any privileges under the law. This society does not exist. As long as the law distinguishes between the sexes, women need to stand up and demand their full and equal rights. No more, no less. This demand forms the political crux of individualist feminism.

This article focuses on the two revolutionary forms of feminism, which are diametrically opposite to each other ideologically and define the two extremes of feminism: radical feminism and individualist feminism.

Speaking in 20th century terms, how do they define equality? For radical feminism, equality is socio-economic and cultural. That is, the class distinctions between the genders must be eliminated so that men and women can enjoy social, economic, political and sexual parity. To achieve this, it is necessary to sweep away patriarchy, which is a combination of white male culture and capitalism.

For individualist feminism, equality still means equal treatment of men and women under laws that protect person and property. Individualist feminism says nothing about whether the resulting wealth should be spread equally between the sexes. That kind of division could only be achieved through the imposition of law, through State intervention over people's lives and property. This is precisely what individualist feminism opposes -- the use of force in society.

Let me provide an example of why this last statement is as revolutionary. Consider the issue of marriage. Mainstream feminism says, "Reform divorce laws to make them just." Individualist feminism says, "the very existence of marriage/divorce laws is an injustice because the State has no proper authority over what should be a private contract between individuals."

The word "just" has appeared. Briefly, I want to consider how the two forms of feminism approach the concept of justice.

Radical feminism approaches justice as an end state; by which I mean, it provides a specific picture of what constitutes a just society. A just society would be one without patriarchy or capitalism in which the socio-economic and cultural equality of women was fully expressed. In other words, justice is a specific end state in which society embodies specific economic, political and cultural arrangements. It says employers shall pay men and women equally, no one should publish pornography, sexual comments in the workplace must be outlawed.

By contrast, the individualist feminist approach to justice is means-oriented: that is it refers primarily to methodology. The methodology is "anything that is peaceful." The only end-state individualist feminism envisions is the protection of person and property -- that is, the removal of force and fraud from society.

Otherwise stated, justice is not embodied in a specifically defined end-state: whatever society results from the free and peaceful choices of individuals are, politically-speaking, a just society. Aspects of the society may not be moral and individualist feminists may use education, protest, boycott, and moral suasion -- the whole slate of persuasive strategies -- to affect change. What they will not do is use force in the form of government law to restrict peaceful choices.

The conflicting concepts of justice between radical and individualist feminism highlight one of the key differences in their approach to social problems: namely, the willingness of socialist or radical feminists to use the State. This difference is not surprising when you realize that the radical feminist ideal of justice *can* by established by the use of force, by the State. You can, for example, impose a specific economic arrangement on society. You can arrest people for over-charging or for bad hiring practices. But you cannot use force to impose a purely voluntary society: it is a contradiction in terms.

Leaving theory, I want to provide a sense of the unique history of individualist feminism within America.

As an organized force, feminism can be dated from the abolitionist movement that arose in the early 1830s. And the two dominant ideological influences on the feminism that arose were Quakerism and individualism. Many courageous women advanced the status of women prior to that date. For example, in the 17th century, Anne Hutchinson led the first organized attack on the Puritan orthodoxy of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. But these women spoke out as individuals rather than as part of a self-conscious movement dedicated to women's rights.

Abolitionism was the radical anti-slavery movement that demanded the immediate cessation of slavery on the grounds that every human being was a self-owner: every human being had a moral jurisdiction over his or her own body.

Gradually, abolitionist women began to apply the principle of self-ownership to themselves. The abolitionist feminist Abbie Kelley observed: "We have good cause to be grateful to the slave, for the benefit we have received to ourselves, in working for him. In striving to strike his irons off, we found most surely that we were manacled ourselves."

Within abolitionism, women's rights stirred hot debate. Perhaps the strongest advocate of women's rights was the libertarian William Lloyd Garrison, editor of the Liberator, who insisted that anti-slavery was a battle for human rights, not male rights.

Then, a watershed event occurred: the 1840 World Anti-Slavery Conference in London, England. The abolitionist feminism Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who attended the 1840 World Anti-Slavery Conference in London, was embittered by the dismissive treatment women received from the less-enlightened Englishmen. Garrison, who also attended, had been so outraged that he withdrew from the floor to the curtained off section to which the women were relegated.

Later, with the Quaker Lucretia Mott, Stanton planned the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention to discuss women's rights. There, women's suffrage resolution was introduced: "Resolved, that it is the duty of the women of this country to secure to themselves their sacred right to the elective franchise." The resolution met strong resistance from Mott and other members of the old guard of abolitionist feminists who were deeply opposed to using government to solve social problems. But it passed.

Unfortunately for the American individualist tradition -- in all its manifestations -- the Civil War erupted. If 'War is the health of state', as Randolph Bourne claimed, then it is the death of individualism. There are many reasons for this; one of them being that individualism is, at its roots, an anti-Statist ideology, and war involves an increase in State power that never seems to roll back to its prewar level when peace is declared.

After the war, the key issue for feminism became the Constitution; women wished to be included in the wording of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments that aimed at securing freedom for blacks. The Fourteenth Amendment introduced the word "male" into the United States Constitution. The Fifteenth Amendment assured that the right to vote could not be abridged because of "race, color, or previous condition of servitude." It made no reference to sex. The abolitionist women felt betrayed. Susan B. Anthony wrote, "We repudiated man's counsels forever." This became a pivotal point at which mainstream feminism became alienated from men.

At this juncture, the feminist movement diversified, with the mainstream focusing its efforts into a drive for woman's suffrage. Other feminists were suspicious of political solutions to social problems.

Individualist feminism found expression within a variety of social movements, especially free love, free thought, and individualist anarchism. There, these feminists functioned as a radical segment, where they represented and pursued the interests of women.

The most important vehicle was the free love movement that sought to separate the State from sexual matters such as marriage, adultery, divorce, and birth control. Free love demanded that such matters be left to the conscience and contracts of those involved. Consider free love, very briefly...

In 1889, a woman who had just risked her life in a self-induced abortion wrote to the libertarian periodical, Lucifer the Light Bearer, pleading:

"I know I am dreadful wicked, but I am sure to be in the condition from which I risked my life to be free, and I cannot stand it...Would you know of any appliance that will prevent conception? If there is anything reliable, you will save my life by telling me of it."

The woman wrote to Lucifer -- published and edited by Moses Harman -- because, in the late 1800s, it was one of the few forums openly promoting birth control. Moses Harman insisted that woman's self-ownership fully acknowledged in all sexual arrangements.

Unfortunately, Harman ran counter to the Comstock Act (1873), which prohibited the mailing of obscene matter but did not define what constituted obscenity. Whatever it was, it specifically included contraceptives and birth control information. A witchhunt ensued.

Against this backdrop, Harman began his "free word" policy by which he refused to edit correspondence to Lucifer that contained explicit language. Harman maintained, "Words are not deeds, and it is not the province of civil law to take preventative measures against remote or possible consequences of words, no matter how violent or incendiary." He openly discussed birth control.

In 1887, the staff of Lucifer was arrested for the publication of three letters and indicted on 270 counts of obscenity. One letter had described the plight of a woman whose husband forced sex upon her even though it tore the stitches from a recent operation. It is a very early analysis of forced sex within marriage constituting rape.

Harman's legal battles against the Comstock laws continued from 1887 through to 1906, his last imprisonment during which he spent a year at hard labor, often breaking rocks for eight hours a day in the Illinois snow. Harman was 75 at the time."

Interestingly, when the authorities came to arrest Harman in 1887, his 16-year old daughter Lillian was not present. She was in jail herself, having been arrested for engaging in a private marriage -- that is, a marriage that consisted of a private contract, without Church or State involvement. At that ceremony, Moses had refused to give his daughter away, stating that she was the owner of her person.

The Harman episode is not a tale of individualist feminism because he championed birth control. A number of traditions did that. Harman was an individualist feminist because of the ideology and methodology he used. He based his arguments on women's self-ownership and extended this principle to all arrangements, sexual and economic. He refused to use the State in personal relationships because he considered it to be the institutionalization of force in society. He actively opposed laws that restricted peaceful behavior.

Moses Harman -- along with Voltairine de Cleyre -- are the most prominent figures from the 19th century. In their own time, such figures as Harman were well recognized by contemporary radicals. Emma Goldman in her autobiography "Living My Life" credited him with being a pioneer who made her birth control work possible. In 1907, when George Bernard Shaw was asked why he did not tour America, he replied if the "brigands" could imprison Moses Harman for expressing basically the same views set forth in his play Man and Superman he did not care to come to America and test his luck. It is a travesty that he is forgotten today.

So with a small taste of history, let's move back to theory.

Arguably, the most important concept in feminism today is "class." There are men, there are women, they are separate classes...or so the theory goes.

The foregoing statement is different than the tradition "war between the sexes." That war refers to the fact that, in the same circumstances, men and women often want different things and, so, come into conflict. For example, on a date men are typically said to want sex whereas women are said to seek a relationship. This is not the conflict to which I am referring. I am talking about a war of the gender.

A class is nothing more than an arbitrary grouping of entities that share common characteristics as determined from a certain epistemological point of view. In short, what constitutes a class is defined by the purposes of the definer. For example, a researcher studying drug addiction may break society into classes of drug using and non-drug using people. Classes can be defined by almost any factor salient to the definer.

For radical feminists, gender is the salient factor. Many fields of endeavor use biology as a dividing line. For example, medicine often separates the sexes in order to apply different medical treatment and techniques. Women are examined for breast cancer and men for prostate problems. But medicine does not claim that the basic interests of men and women as human beings conflict or even diverge. The sexes share a basic biology that requires the same approach of nutrition, exercise and common sense lifestyle choices. In short, although the biology of the sexes differs, they share the same goal of good health, which can be defined and pursued in roughly the same manner.

By contrast, radical feminism advocates a theory of fundamental class conflict based on gender. It claims that males not only share a biological identity but also a political and social one. The political interests of men are in necessary conflict with those of women.

The concept of class conflict is widely associated with Karl Marx, who popularized it as a tool to predict the political interests and social behavior of individuals. Once the class affiliation of an individual was known, his or her behavior became predictable. To Marx, the salient feature defining a person's class was his relationship to the means of production: was he a capitalist or a worker? This is a form of relational class analysis that describes a class in terms of its relationship to an institution.

Radical feminism has adapted this theory. Catherine MacKinnon refers to the analysis as "post-Marxist." By this, she means that radical feminism embraces many aspects of Marxism but rejects its insistence that economic status, not gender, is the salient political factor that determines a class. Thus, radical feminism incorporates such Marxist/socialist ideas as "surplus labor" through which one class is said to use the free market in order to commit economic theft upon another class. (An example of surplus labor in radical feminism is unsalaried housework.) The classification 'male' becomes so significant that it predicts and determines how the individuals within that class will behave. Thus, radical feminists can level accusations of "rapist" at non-violent men because they are beneficiaries of 'the rape culture' established by patriarchy.

To prevent the oppression of women, it is necessary to deconstruct the institutions through men control women -- institutions such as the free market

This class analysis makes no sense within the framework of individualist feminism that declares all human beings to have the same political interests.

Individualism has a long and differing tradition of class analysis. The salient factor by which people are categorized is whether he or she uses force in society. Do they acquire wealth or power through merit and productivity or do they use aggression, often in the form of law, to appropriate wealth and power from others? Expressed in the most basic form, individualist feminism asks, "are you a member of the political or productive class?" This, too, is a form of relational class analysis because it asks, "What is your relationship to the State?"

Individualist feminism class analysis does not predict the behavior of individuals. Both men and women can use the political means. An individual can change his or her class affiliation at will, abandoning the use of force and adopting the economic means instead. In short, classes within individualist feminist analysis are fluid. This is not true of radical feminist analysis that is based on biology. Within radical feminism, classes are static.

This difference has many implications. One is that individualist feminist class analysis offers no predictive value. Just because an individual has been a member of the political class in the past says nothing about whether he or she will continue to be so in the future.

This fluidity has a further implication. Namely, there is no necessary conflict between the genders. The fact that men have oppressed women in the past says nothing about whether they will oppress women in the future. Whether an individual man is an oppressor or a friend depends on whether he uses the political means and this is a matter of his conscious choice. Men are not the enemy.

Conclusion

Radical and individualist feminism constitute the two extremes of the feminist movement. One advocates state-control; the other, self-control. One considers men to be the enemy; the other embraces men as valued partners. But the most important feature of the ideological divide is individualist feminism's insistence on applying the radically personal principle "A woman's body, a woman's right" across the board to all issues.
For most men who are feminists, they are of the individualist/libertarian variety, as this was the version they were sold on. So I don't think male pushback is due to social constructs of dominance as much as the "newer" form is a new version seemingly being snuck in it's place.

LukeB 04-02-2018 10:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BBUK-Fan (Post 9849239)
Feminism is a load of women that take things too far and try to trash men. Feminists are just a hate group really and say it's all equality but it's trashing men

https://78.media.tumblr.com/d72f0d77...jqyco2_400.gif

RileyH 04-02-2018 10:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LukeB (Post 9850839)

:joker::joker::joker:

RileyH 04-02-2018 10:50 PM

https://78.media.tumblr.com/db19bc7d...jqyco3_400.gif

thesheriff443 05-02-2018 02:53 AM

A woman will judge another woman.

A house wife will judge a stripper.

A mum will judge her daughter

A daughter will judge her mum

Women don't see all women as the same.

Ashley. 05-02-2018 03:23 AM

Equality. That's it.

Women who believe they are owed more in the world than men, aren't feminists.

Ammi 05-02-2018 05:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toy Soldier (Post 9849996)
But WHICH black people? WHICH women? The whole premise relies on the idea that all black people / all women have the same ideas, would go the same way, would set the same agenda. That they are the same, that they think the same things, have the same traits and ideas. I find that entire concept problematic in itself... That is the sort of thinking that LEADS to sexism. The concept that all members of "a grouping" have the same agenda is a form of prejudice in itself, whether that supposed agenda is a positive or negative one.

...I have no answer for which black people or which women, TS...because that’s kind of complicated in itself although it’s also quite simple as well...:laugh:...no, women don’t all have the same ideas and thoughts of how feminism and that equality that so many of us hope for can progress as it has to ...because the ‘goal’ as it were, has not yet been reached...and yeah, it’s obviously the thing for it all to keep that progression and minimise hindering if possible...just touching on Black lives Matter again, as being a similar thing..?...well not exactly BLM but what Spike Lee said when he talked about the Oscars and diversity in Hollywood and acting roles...and how it was important to have more black representation in that ‘decision making’/on the ground level as it were...of who gets parts and who doesn’t, and what ‘dictates’ and sets agendas, as it were, whether a part/character which has previously been portrayed as a white or as a male even, I guess would be more keeping with the topic...?...I mean if those rooms, those Hollywood rooms of decision making with these things have been mostly and predominantly ‘white’...then surely, the black voices become those that are important to have because white voices have prevented diversity, is what he’s saying...so then, we go around in circles..:laugh:...because then, are we not giving those white voices and white decision makers etc, equality because the progress and diversity that we seek and hope for would mean giving the black voices the greater voice and say as it were, to try to ‘level’...yeah it doesn’t feel equal to me in what I feel feminism is, but maybe it’s a ‘necessity’ though, that sometimes things can’t always feel equal but they’re necessary...I’m not saying..that’s the best way, or that’s not the best way etc in my opinion...it’s just really that what Liv has said has set those old thoughts going again in opening up another percpective that I personally hadn’t been considering so much before but I think is really valid as well...

user104658 05-02-2018 08:24 AM

OK but then it becomes a bit of a checkbox, doesn't it? Tile insistence that women must lead the discussion... But, inevitably, as women are obviously individuals, it doesn't take much searching for a male to find a female opinion that mirrors their own. So say, for example, you and me had the same or a similar view on a feminist issue that was in direct contradiction to another female's view... It wouldn't be OK for me to say "I don't agree with that, I think ________" because that would be a male disagreeing with a female opinion on feminism (and thus going against the rule that only females may lead the discussion, and so invalid and easily dismissed)..... But it WOULD be OK for me to say "I don't agree with that, I agree with Ammi" because you are female so the counter opinion is now validated? Even if once you peel back a layer, it is EXACTLY the same opinion? It doesn't really make sense to me.

Likewise with BLM, some black people agree with the movement and others do not. It would be a huge - and actually racist - stereotype to say "you must agree with the BLM message because you are black" to a black person. And therefore, all a non-black person has to do to express skepticism of BLM, is say that they agree with a black person who expresses skepticism of BLM.

It all seems a bit convoluted and driven by some sort of "rules system" that I'm not sure anyone ever actually agreed to. It would surely be much quicker to just consider all opinions on all subjects to be equally valid, and then explain why you believe an opinion to be misguided or incorrect.

Maybe that's where the problem lies. People mistakenly believe that acknowledging that an opinion is valid is the same thing as agreeing with that opinion or thinking that it is in any way factually correct. Which isn't the case.

In other words... If I talk **** about a female issue that I clearly have misunderstood, tell me that I'm doing so, by all means. Don't tell me that I'm not allowed to have an opinion in the first place because of some arbitrary birth attribute... Because whilst no, it isn't the same as functional or historical sexism / racism and doesn't "affect me the same way" as those things, it IS still exactly the same mindset as the one that lead to -isms existing in the first place.

Judge the opinion. Discuss the opinion. Try to find common ground. Don't get hung up on the other details. SURELY that is the entire point.

Ammi 05-02-2018 08:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toy Soldier (Post 9851342)
OK but then it becomes a bit of a checkbox, doesn't it? Tile insistence that women must lead the discussion... But, inevitably, as women are obviously individuals, it doesn't take much searching for a male to find a female opinion that mirrors their own. So say, for example, you and me had the same or a similar view on a feminist issue that was in direct contradiction to another female's view... It wouldn't be OK for me to say "I don't agree with that, I think ________" because that would be a male disagreeing with a female opinion on feminism (and thus going against the rule that only females may lead the discussion, and so invalid and easily dismissed)..... But it WOULD be OK for me to say "I don't agree with that, I agree with Ammi" because you are female so the counter opinion is now validated? Even if once you peel back a layer, it is EXACTLY the same opinion? It doesn't really make sense to me.

Likewise with BLM, some black people agree with the movement and others do not. It would be a huge - and actually racist - stereotype to say "you must agree with the BLM message because you are black" to a black person. And therefore, all a non-black person has to do to express skepticism of BLM, is say that they agree with a black person who expresses skepticism of BLM.

It all seems a bit convoluted and driven by some sort of "rules system" that I'm not sure anyone ever actually agreed to. It would surely be much quicker to just consider all opinions on all subjects to be equally valid, and then explain why you believe an opinion to be misguided or incorrect.

Maybe that's where the problem lies. People mistakenly believe that acknowledging that an opinion is valid is the same thing as agreeing with that opinion or thinking that it is in any way factually correct. Which isn't the case.

In other words... If I talk **** about a female issue that I clearly have misunderstood, tell me that I'm doing so, by all means. Don't tell me that I'm not allowed to have an opinion in the first place because of some arbitrary birth attribute... Because whilst no, it isn't the same as functional or historical sexism / racism and doesn't "affect me the same way" as those things, it IS still exactly the same mindset as the one that lead to -isms existing in the first place.

Judge the opinion. Discuss the opinion. Try to find common ground. Don't get hung up on the other details. SURELY that is the entire point.

..that’s the thing though, TS...all of what you’ve said I agree with also...and then how do we get there...I mean, how does ‘feminism’ get there...I do think it’s really valid to feel women should have the greater voice as it were and to set the agenda...but then that could, not deliberately but just by its nature...prevent from the greater voices of men, who are great and much needed allies and any progress they could offer...and I guess that goes back to feelings of feminism and the things which still have to be ‘equalled’ being such a slow thing since the start of a movement...

thesheriff443 05-02-2018 08:58 AM

We have two women at the top, in politics, in this country and Germany, we have women at the head of police , women at the top in medicine, but in other country's woman are still classed as second class also Indian women that have to walk behind their husbands.

If you look at any aid appeal since the 80,s it shows femal children and young girls walking miles for water where are the useless men

GoldHeart 05-02-2018 09:25 AM

I don't like the word "Feminism" , but I believe in equality for both men &women.

Sadly the word has been twisted and tainted , that's why we now get new words like "feminazi" as there's some people who moan and winge and seem to have a Superiority complex :bored: .

You don't fight for equality to then be utterly sexiest and demeaning towards men :facepalm: .And then be hypocritical if it's done back to you .

lime 05-02-2018 09:35 AM

Feminism to me as a 46yr old woman means equality and making sure women have equal rights..sure there are idiots out there that campaign for things that have nothing to do with feminism
What's frustrating for me is that a group of women maybe 30 or so talk kak and they are accussed of hijaking feminism.....I find it the other way round in that that those who highlight those who talk kak are the one's hijaking feminism..just because I am am a middleaged white woman doesn't mean...that all middleaged white women hold the same opinion as me

Livia 05-02-2018 11:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thesheriff443 (Post 9851219)
A woman will judge another woman.

A house wife will judge a stripper.

A mum will judge her daughter

A daughter will judge her mum

Women don't see all women as the same.

A house husband will judge a stripper

A dad will judge his son and his daughter

A son or daughter will judge their dad

Men don't see men and women as all the same either.

I'm not sure what you're trying to demonstrate.

Livia 05-02-2018 11:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GoldHeart (Post 9851412)
I don't like the word "Feminism" , but I believe in equality for both men &women.

Sadly the word has been twisted and tainted , that's why we now get new words like "feminazi" as there's some people who moan and winge and seem to have a Superiority complex :bored: .

You don't fight for equality to then be utterly sexiest and demeaning towards men :facepalm: .And then be hypocritical if it's done back to you .

It's just a word. And it weakens women's fight for equality when we stop talking about the issues and muddy the waters with semantics.

Niamh. 05-02-2018 11:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Livia (Post 9851507)
It's just a word. And it weakens women's fight for equality when we stop talking about the issues and muddy the waters with semantics.

Exactly, keeps the eye of the ball so to speak

thesheriff443 05-02-2018 11:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Livia (Post 9851505)
A house husband will judge a stripper

A dad will judge his son and his daughter

A son or daughter will judge their dad

Men don't see men and women as all the same either.

I'm not sure what you're trying to demonstrate.

That women judge woman, one size does not fit all in terms of individual opinions.

Niamh. 05-02-2018 11:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thesheriff443 (Post 9851514)
That women judge woman, one size does not fit all in terms of individual opinions.

By that logic there would never be any groups at all because everyone s different :laugh:


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