Page 1 of 32 1 2 3 11 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 30 of 944

Thread: The feminism/equality thread

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    London
    Posts
    2,024
    Mentioned
    50 Post(s)

    The feminism/equality thread

    What I find sad is that an increasing number of men are behaving like women, or as if they've been somehow castrated by a culture of misandry.WHERE ARE ALL THE BALLS?I am extremely grateful for my male friends though. I couldn't go back to ebing surrounded by women; i'd feel like an alien.

    Admin edit: split from the relationships thread. Awkward split is awkward.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Ireland
    Posts
    285
    Mentioned
    1 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by AgentofChaos View Post
    In short... NO.

    WELP.

    I've come from a background where if I'm into someone, I'll generally put those feelings on the back burner in favour of protecting the friendship—it feels these days like guys are more likely to jump on things if they have the slightest attraction towards you, which is kind of lame. Especially when I haven't given any real indication that I'm into them ~that way~.

    What happened to the days of agonising for months on end over whether or not the other person likes you the way you like them before you ever dream of making a move? Pfft.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Grove street, home. At least it was 'til i fucked everything up.
    Posts
    14
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    That video's brilliant.

    I'm kind of in that agonising-for-months-on-end-over-whether-or-not-the-person-likes-you-the-way-you-like-them thing at the moment actually. It's kind of just happened and came out of no where. We've just become good friends and talk all the time but have seen other people and not actually discussed how we feel about each other. I completely fancy him and i think he fancies me, but it's actually kind of fun seeing how it all pans out.

    In many ways i think the most solid of relationships are born from a good friendship, i mean, if you're not friends how can you demonstrate a healthy level of authenticity? That said though, echoing Hula's sentiment, i tend to act as uninterested as possible in people i genuinely really like in order to protect the friendship or myself, such as now. Le sigh.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    147
    Mentioned
    1 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by AgentofChaos View Post
    In short... NO.

    A video bluntly stating why, due to the city I live in (same as video), I'm unable to have male friends.
    In university (in England) I had equal male/female friends. The guys knew I had a boyfriend, several of them had girlfriends, and none were the type to try an affair.
    Fuck this culture.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Ontari-ari-ario
    Posts
    5,667
    Mentioned
    253 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by icklekitty View Post
    What I find sad is that an increasing number of men are behaving like women, or as if they've been somehow castrated by a culture of misandry.WHERE ARE ALL THE BALLS?
    I see this kind of comment all over the place and I've no idea what it fucking means. "Behaving like women." Do you want men to behave like violent Neanderthals? Do you admire the "lad culture" but only when it is convenient and only from afar? Is the reason men and women are having difficulty relating because women can't figure out exactly what parts of the male psyche they'd prefer remain hidden?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Minneapolis
    Posts
    1,508
    Mentioned
    87 Post(s)
    ^Yeah, I was a little confused by that statement too. I can't even say whether I agree or not, because I don't understand it at all. In what way are men behaving like women?

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    147
    Mentioned
    1 Post(s)
    From past posts, I've noticed Icklekitty having issues with men not being domineering enough; and yet, she's a fan of pegging.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Ireland
    Posts
    285
    Mentioned
    1 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by Tea View Post
    From past posts, I've noticed Icklekitty having issues with men not being domineering enough; and yet, she's a fan of pegging.
    Those two concepts aren't necessarily linked. I've known gay guys who are submissive in day-to-day life but play the role of the top in bed. Power in bed and power everywhere else are two entirely different beasts.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    London
    Posts
    2,024
    Mentioned
    50 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by Hula View Post
    Those two concepts aren't necessarily linked. I've known gay guys who are submissive in day-to-day life but play the role of the top in bed. Power in bed and power everywhere else are two entirely different beasts.
    Completely agree. And pegging doesn't necessarily mean the man becomes submissive. It'd imply that the woman is usually submissive during regular straight sex. For me, it just means that he's adventurous, and the g-spot is there after all.

    By men behaving like women, I mean that they about how great you are but never ask you out (actions and words aren't related), they do the "relationship games" re: calling back, reading extraneous things into everything, or they generally act very needy/clingy and vague. These are traits I associate with women, and why I don't get on with most women. I also think this whole "girl power" thing has created a bit of a gender identity problem for men ("castrated by a culture of misandry". Lad culture is an offshoot of this problem - these are (by and large) NOT strong, confident men.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Minneapolis
    Posts
    1,508
    Mentioned
    87 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by icklekitty View Post
    By men behaving like women, I mean that they about how great you are but never ask you out (actions and words aren't related), they do the "relationship games" re: calling back, reading extraneous things into everything, or they generally act very needy/clingy and vague. These are traits I associate with women, and why I don't get on with most women. I also think this whole "girl power" thing has created a bit of a gender identity problem for men ("castrated by a culture of misandry". Lad culture is an offshoot of this problem - these are (by and large) NOT strong, confident men.
    Well, the problem is that there's a lot of mixed signals out there, because people all want different things. It's not like there's some united front of women who have agreed upon a definitive set of guidelines for how a man should act with a woman he's interested in. Some women like it when guys are direct, others don't. Some women wish that guys were more "sensitive" in their relationships, others may find that kinda lame. Just depends on the person. I think a lot of guys are trying to figure out that perfect balance, which of course varies depending on who they're interested in. It's tricky.

    Anyway, I hate it when women complain about some guy who won't ask them out. Just shut up and ask him out yourself.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    London
    Posts
    2,024
    Mentioned
    50 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by Mantra View Post

    Anyway, I hate it when women complain about some guy who won't ask them out. Just shut up and ask him out yourself.
    In my case I wasn't interested enough to ask him out. He just kept talking about it and I was all "ok, are you going to ask me out or what? get to the point or go away" and then he continued to talk about it without actually asking. So I walked away, irritated. It must be a specifically relationshippy thing, because I never experience this kind of insane behaviour in other realms. I suppose I can't blame someone for assuming that I would react like the majority, but it is super irritating. Perhaps it's a useful tool for filtering in the end.

    Quote Originally Posted by Tea View Post
    Serious replies to me teasing. Again, no anger. If you want to pick at it some more, feel free, but I'm not going to put anymore pointless posts in here.
    I wasn't picking at it, I just had to ask you several times before you answered, and I wanted to know because I didn't know what you meant.

    My "serious reply" wasn't aimed at you - it was a response to all the comments I got, and I wanted to talk about the topic some more. Joke leads inadvertently to discussion. Forum multi-achievement unlocked.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    An unfortunate place somewhere in the Southwest
    Posts
    2,000
    Mentioned
    68 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by Mantra View Post
    Anyway, I hate it when women complain about some guy who won't ask them out. Just shut up and ask him out yourself.
    Yup.

    Then again, I'm not huge on gender norms (i.e., I don't believe in them at all), so I don't buy into the whole "you have to act a certain way if you're this gender" stuff.

    As far being friends with someone of the opposite sex, I did it for a long, long time with my best friend while I had feelings for her. It sucked, but what are you going to do? She was/is my best friend and I wouldn't give that up for anything.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    87
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Anyway, I hate it when women complain about some guy who won't ask them out. Just shut up and ask him out yourself.
    Exactly, I made the first move with my husband, and it has worked out pretty well for me.

    On the topic of being friends with someone of the opposite sex: I believe you can do it if you really value the friendship. Every guy I have been friends with, I developed feelings for them. But I still continued being their friend. I'm just a hopeless romantic, so it is very easy for me to desire someone.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Los Angeles
    Posts
    783
    Mentioned
    12 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by AgentofChaos View Post
    In short... NO.
    Anyone think this is a result of how ridiculously dumb our culture is? Girls are raised to not want sex and boys are raised to want to have sex with everyone or they aren't really "straight" or "manly". What criteria is this using? If you've ever thought about having sex with that person? I'd bet a million the girls have had those same thoughts...... Why the hell would you define your friendship by that? Anyways I've had a ton of guy friends who have never even tried flirting with me. I guess I am just ugly :3. That being said all my close friends are very conscious of this horrible binary, so that might be why my experiences have been different.
    Quote Originally Posted by icklekitty View Post
    I also think this whole "girl power" thing has created a bit of a gender identity problem for men ("castrated by a culture of misandry". Lad culture is an offshoot of this problem - these are (by and large) NOT strong, confident men.
    AAAHHH! This girl power thing? Are you perhaps referring to the drive to be equal? I honestly see this as logically unsound as talking about reverse racism.

    I hate the idea that there is some inherent need for men to be nurtured into whatever definition of masculinity people have. I think the inherent problem comes from trying to strictly define masculinity to begin with. Feminism is not to blame here.
    Last edited by littlemonkey613; 12-16-2011 at 06:03 PM.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    London
    Posts
    2,024
    Mentioned
    50 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by littlemonkey613 View Post
    AAAHHH! This girl power thing? Are you perhaps referring to the drive to be equal? I honestly see this as logically unsound as talking about reverse racism.

    Bra-burning, girl-power misandry is NOT the same as the feminist quest for a deconstructive world of multiplicity. It is not a matter of toppling the order so as to replace it - that amounts to the same thing in the end.

    (Similarly, positive prejudice is not the same as true racial equality; equality is fair for all)

  16. #16
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Los Angeles
    Posts
    783
    Mentioned
    12 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by icklekitty View Post
    Bra-burning, girl-power misandry is NOT the same as the feminist quest for a deconstructive world of multiplicity. It is not a matter of toppling the order so as to replace it - that amounts to the same thing in the end.

    (Similarly, positive prejudice is not the same as true racial equality; equality is fair for all)
    I don't think bra-burning and misandry should be put in the same category, for obvious reasons. That implies that bra-burning takes things too far when in fact people that do that have a point and are actually right when they articulate why they think that clothing is oppressive and what not.

    Where is all this misandry? In the world I live in feminism is still taboo, embarrassing to be apart of and associated with something dirty for most people. People who actually want women to take over and dominate men is a very very tiny minority, furthermore trying to topple strict definitions of masculinity are often interpreted as misandry because they scare people who will lose their power in this male dominated culture.

    I would say in my experience 9.5/10 time what people interpret as male-hatred to me, is really just women trying to be seen as equal. People don't act the way they are "supposed" to act due to their gender and sexuality, and that scares people and gives them an easy target to blame society's problems on.
    Last edited by littlemonkey613; 12-16-2011 at 06:35 PM.

  17. #17
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    London
    Posts
    2,024
    Mentioned
    50 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by littlemonkey613 View Post
    People don't act the way they are "supposed" to act due to their gender and sexuality
    Exactly; people. Not women, all people.

    I never referred to women doing anything. It's the culture and the language. The "girl power" mindset just wants to topple the status quo, but everyone's still trapped in their roles (albeit they would be different roles). Western culture (Eastern culture too, but let's talk about ours as we know it better) is as much misandric as mysogynistic - and the country you live in is perhaps the best example of this (I don't doubt that you have it worse than we do here). Men need to be liberated as much as women; this world has made them just as insecure, nervous, and scared as women. It's not "us vs them". Feminism is not girl power and it is not about womens' rights, it's people power.

    "It is not a matter of toppling the order so as to replace it - that amounts to the same thing in the end"
    is a quote from The Sex Which Is Not One by Luce Irigaray.
    Feminism is about the discourse sexuality (masculine/feminine), not gender (man/woman) as it is being used popularly. Hence hence feminism, not womenism. In fact, as a branch of deconstruction, it seeks to dispel all binary definitions, where one sex is not defined by the other (indeed, to reach a point where there is no "one or the other"). Michel Foucault went on to write some truly amazing things about human sexuality (he's a brilliant cultural theorist overall).
    Griselda Pollock, who taught me, often said that her proudest achievement was being a successful wife, mother, and feminist. I am comfortable and open with my sexuality and yet I like to live my life as if it were 60 years ago. Hi, I'm a feminist (Of Actual Feminism) who would like a big strong man to take her away from this big bad world. And someone who has the confidence (or indeed balls) to be comfortable in their own skin and act in a way that I therefore find tolerable is hard to come by.

  18. #18
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Los Angeles
    Posts
    783
    Mentioned
    12 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by icklekitty View Post
    Hi, I'm a feminist (Of Actual Feminism) who would like a big strong man to take her away from this big bad world. And someone who has the confidence (or indeed balls) to be comfortable in their own skin and act in a way that I therefore find tolerable is hard to come by.
    Have you ever been called a hypocrite for this? I hear that kind of nonsense all the time. Bad example but like, "you can't want your boyfriend to hold the door open AND be a feminist." People that have that kind of idea drive me crazy and it shows they have no understanding of anything...

  19. #19
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Ireland
    Posts
    285
    Mentioned
    1 Post(s)
    Mayhaps we need a feminism/equality thread? Seems like there are more than a few people who'd weigh in.

  20. #20
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    London
    Posts
    2,024
    Mentioned
    50 Post(s)
    Yeah, sorry about this boner kill, especially as a lot of you have heard me yap about this before. A split would probably be wise.

    Quote Originally Posted by littlemonkey613 View Post
    Have you ever been called a hypocrite for this? I hear that kind of nonsense all the time. Bad example but like, "you can't want your boyfriend to hold the door open AND be a feminist." People that have that kind of idea drive me crazy and it shows they have no understanding of anything...

    Never, although I have encountered women like you who say "but-but...women need to fight for their rights!" and it's clear to me that you don't understand what feminism is. I see a lot of outrage, buy not theoretical evidence for why this discourse is wrong and the popular media adoption of the word "feminism" for something else is right. A strong and confident man isn't necessarily a "hold the door open type" - see the quote you originally cited from me about lads. Similarly, feminism fights for the woman who wants to be feminine and submissive as much as the one who wants to wear trousers (incidentally, I don't own any trousers) and be independent. Feminism doesn't block off any avenue of sexuality. It's about saying yes to multiplicity. Gay and transgendered rights are feminist issues. Whether men can wear make-up is a feminist issue.

    Would you have had a problem if I had wanted "a big strong woman to take me away from this big bag world"?

  21. #21
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    Bucharest
    Posts
    469
    Mentioned
    18 Post(s)
    This needs its own thread. I'd love to comment but I would derail the topic even more.

  22. #22
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    In Flanders' fields
    Posts
    641
    Mentioned
    9 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by Hula View Post
    Mayhaps we need a feminism/equality thread? Seems like there are more than a few people who'd weigh in.

    Yes, please, because I'd love to join in but this is the relationship thread so...

  23. #23
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Posts
    2,874
    Mentioned
    105 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by icklekitty View Post
    Gay and transgendered rights are feminist issues. Whether men can wear make-up is a feminist issue.
    THIS so hard.

  24. #24
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Ireland
    Posts
    285
    Mentioned
    1 Post(s)
    ^ YUP.

    I really do like that quote from Andrej Pejic about it not being okay for men to be seen as feminine because being feminine is apparently a bad thing. Funny, really, how it's okay for women to be tomboys or exhibit masculine qualities (for the most part—I don't imagine it's enjoyable to be called a lesbian because you comport yourself in a 'manly' way in what is, essentially, a man's world) but the second a man steps out of the confines of his gender, shit hits the fan. One of the worst things a person can be in this world is a woman.

    This is probably a random place to come out, but whatever—I'm trans. That means I identify by male pronouns even though I was born female. It feels like feminism is even more relevant to me now than ever because I know that sometimes men are the ones in the best position to lobby for equality. I've seen so many female-to-male transsexuals become complete chauvinist fucking pigs and distance themselves from their birth gender because even they think being a woman is a bad thing.

    Society is wonderful.

  25. #25
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Kabul
    Posts
    22
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Just popping in to say that I disagree with the equating of feminism with gender equality in the title of this thread. Popular feminisms still have a lot of misandry issues to deal with. Feminism was and remains a great paradigm for pursuing women's emancipation. Not so much for pursuing gender equity.

  26. #26
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Ireland
    Posts
    285
    Mentioned
    1 Post(s)
    'Feminism is a collection of movements aimed at defining, establishing, and defending equal political, economic, and social rights and equal opportunities for women.[1][2][3] Its concepts overlap with those of women's rights. Feminism is mainly focused on women's issues, but because feminism seeks gender equality, some feminists argue that men's liberation is a necessary part of feminism, and that men are also harmed by sexism and gender roles. Feminists are "person[s] whose beliefs and behavior[s] are based on feminism."[4]'

    So sayeth Wikipedia. I'm a feminist. I agree with the movement; I don't agree with the side of it that has come to the fore. It's like organised religion—is it the philosophy itself that's at fault, or the most vocal and influential figures representing it?

  27. #27
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Posts
    2,874
    Mentioned
    105 Post(s)
    Remy, wouldn't you agree that that's an antiquated view of feminism? Nobody here is saying that to be a feminist you must abscond from wearing high heels, marriage, the male penis, blah blah blah. I think as a society we have a lot of misandry issues to deal with, period, regardless of sex or gender.

    If shreena has an issue with the thread title, it can be changed. I don't have a problem expanding the subject to gender equality, especially since discussion will probably evolve to include GLBTQ issues.

  28. #28
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Kabul
    Posts
    22
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    I'm more of a facts-on-the-ground kind of person. I'm not interested in theoretical debates about what 'true' feminism, Islam or Christianity might or might not be. I'm interested in the actions of self-identifying feminists, Muslims and Christians (hence why I specifically highlight popular feminisms), because that is what ultimately has the greatest impact on people's lives.

    While I'm far from 100% in agreement with her, Quiet Riot Girl always has very interesting things to say about the relationship between feminism and gender equality.

  29. #29
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    London
    Posts
    2,024
    Mentioned
    50 Post(s)
    I agree with Remy that feminism and gender equality are separate but I'm not sure that the thread title needs to be changed...the only confusion might arise if people try to discuss racism etc here.....arguably these are shades of feminism too in that they fall under the wider bracket of deconstruction, but the two concepts are so intertwined that I think there's room for both. I agree that misandry is hideously overlooked, but rather than accept the asinine popular assimilation of feminism, it would be nice to have a space to refer to it in its proper sense.

    Basically, the very first thing I learned in sexual difference was:

    sex: male/female
    gender: man/woman
    sexuality: masculine/feminine

    Feminism is sexuality and gender equality - while equally and undeniably valid - is gender. I guess gender is the blanket term for a collection of sexualities, and in a way gender is the uber-binary of sexuality.

    It's conventional thinking to state that sex is the only thing that doesn't change (it's a medical term). Obviously sex binary is also disappearing, but I'm personally not sure if stuff like being trans or intersex falls under sex or gender. I'm totally open to be convinced either way.

    I also think Hula's point about how a man being feminine or being gay is so much more taboo than a woman being masculine or a lesbian (although the way it's accepted is fully irritating). Congratulations on coming to terms with your identity too, Hula. You're not the only trans person on this board, and while you're not going in the direction that I can actively offer help for (surprising number of links between mtw transitioning and having PCOS!), I totes support you.

  30. #30
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Los Angeles
    Posts
    783
    Mentioned
    12 Post(s)
    Quote Originally Posted by icklekitty View Post
    Yeah, sorry about this boner kill, especially as a lot of you have heard me yap about this before. A split would probably be wise.




    Never, although I have encountered women like you who say "but-but...women need to fight for their rights!" and it's clear to me that you don't understand what feminism is.
    That's not very fair. :/ I completely misunderstood what you were saying before and if I didn't make it clear enough in the above post I agree with everything you are saying. Your original post didn't make all your thoughts clear, my bad because I judged based on little context. I said before the door open thing was a really bad example. I would never even attempt to strictly define a "strong man" because I don't even know what that means to me. Bottom line, I don't disagree with you at all.

    My last post was supposed to imply that I support you and that anyone who thinks your being some sort of feminist hypocrite has it all wrong.
    You even quoted me when I said people instead of just women or whatever. It was a conscious decision for me to use people because I do understand what feminism is. It's actually my passion so its a bit disheartening to hear that someone thinks I don't know what it is. That's why I'm trying to clear the air here.
    Last edited by littlemonkey613; 12-17-2011 at 06:21 PM.

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions