What constitutes Misogyny?

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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby Canadian_watcher » Fri Mar 04, 2011 5:04 pm

Jeff wrote:I believe the root of misogyny is fear of women, and that was first planted thousands of years ago in our priestly dread of the natural world.

Heidi Laura, Lars von Trier's "misogyny consultant" on Antichrist:

...The male authors all seemed to agree on one thing: woman is intrinsically more connected to nature than man. This is why man rightfully fears woman: just like nature, she is beyond control.


I just noticed the bolded phrase in the text. I don't like it. I guess she *is* an expert on misogyny!

Women are no more tied to nature than men and are not beyond control, as our society illustrates. It seems this woman has internalized a lot of the age-old propaganda she studied.
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby Canadian_watcher » Fri Mar 04, 2011 5:04 pm

Wombaticus Rex wrote::popcorn:

Props to Nordic for staying calm under examination. Please continue. I definitely see lots of unconscious (??) sexism in your language but you've also got a lot of shit for things you've actually never said anywhere in this thread, too.

Been a very instructive thread, Canadian_Watcher did good by this. Convo needs to happen.


thanks, dude.
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.-- Jonathan Swift

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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby compared2what? » Fri Mar 04, 2011 5:09 pm

Fuck. My first waking thought of the day (which occurred on the subway; I'm slow in the morning) was: OMG, I owe Nordic an apology for not making it clear that I was not only NOT saying he was a misogynist, but also NOT saying that he was self-indulgent, vain, irritable, or overly emotional.

That was supposed to represent the kind of critical things that are very frequently said about women (but very rarely said about men) by people who are displeased by what they say and write. It wasn't supposed to (and doesn't) represent my real views of Nordic or of the post.

My apologies for a sloppy and potentially offensive construction. I got no excuse for it. It was late and I wasn't thinking. But I sincerely didn't mean it like that and hope (though frankly, not all that much) that it wasn't read that way.
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Mar 04, 2011 5:14 pm

We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

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I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby crikkett » Fri Mar 04, 2011 5:44 pm

compared2what? wrote:Fuck. My first waking thought of the day (which occurred on the subway; I'm slow in the morning) was: OMG, I owe Nordic an apology for not making it clear that I was not only NOT saying he was a misogynist, but also NOT saying that he was self-indulgent, vain, irritable, or overly emotional.

That was supposed to represent the kind of critical things that are very frequently said about women (but very rarely said about men) by people who are displeased by what they say and write. It wasn't supposed to (and doesn't) represent my real views of Nordic or of the post.

My apologies for a sloppy and potentially offensive construction. I got no excuse for it. It was late and I wasn't thinking. But I sincerely didn't mean it like that and hope (though frankly, not all that much) that it wasn't read that way.


You were attacking his rhetoric. I think this thread was designed to provoke a comment like Nordic's, that would then be called out by someone like you. It was inevitable. It could have led to an entire Thurber-style flame-war of the sexes but you did such a great job that you stopped it cold.

I'm sorry Nordic took it personally. It's obvious to me that he loves his daughter and all the women in his life. He just didn't back down from his statement, even after your warning. So he lost the debate, a TKO.
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby DevilYouKnow » Fri Mar 04, 2011 5:48 pm

A woman is the ultimate arbiter of a heterosexual man's worth. Millennia of institutionalized oppression of women is parsimoniously explained as so many efforts to curb this natural power women wield over men. Sometimes subtle, sometimes extremely obvious, as when women are genitally mutilated, denied any say in choosing their life partner and told to always walk 3 metres behind him, their female attributes obliterated behind a chaador or abaya. The latter, very overt misogeny is not coincidentally more commonly seen among those men whom (global or local) society has placed near the bottom of its pecking-order.

(As an aside, it is possible to debate what is more misogynistic, garment such as the chaador or abaya, or its polar opposite, the capitalism-driven modern Western obsession with youthfulness and sexiness).

So misogyny is driven by fear, and it's a rational fear of a real power women have. Any man who was a "nerd" in his youthful years will know how the implicit and explicit rejection of one's desirability as a male by a united womanhood can leave lifelong scars. Oh, just admit it.

Physical violence from bullies is nothing compared to a vicious comment from a girl. There's nothing in the world a teenage boy fears more than the laughter of a teenage girl.

In the adult world, net worth or salary is a convenient summation of a man's qualities as recognized by society, but more importantly it's a number that makes a woman's task of evaluation easier. The woman is the final arbiter. A man can never really escape the feeling of being assessed and judged by women, though many do their best to render the gaze of women impotent by subjugating them to male domination.

This is also why many men hate gays: women have no power over them. It's really just envy. :)

Canadian Watcher wrote:Women are no more tied to nature than men and are not beyond control, as our society illustrates. It seems this woman has internalized a lot of the age-old propaganda she studied.

Agree.
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby compared2what? » Fri Mar 04, 2011 6:02 pm

BTW, Nordic -- I know you don't like me, you make that quite clear. I don't dislike you, though. And that really wasn't a personal attack.

I do frequently disagree with you. On substance. That I do not, cannot and have no reason to deny. Furthermore, wrt this dust-up: Sorry, but I stand by my assessment of your post as sexist and thoughtless. For the reasons stated. Although I'd like to emphasize that "your post" means "your post" and not "you."

And to be honest, since you don't have to agree with me about that and it's not like there's any penalty for it -- as the utterly undisturbed friendly feelings for you expressed by everyone on the thread, including those who agreed with my post, have already demonstrated -- I really don't think that's so obviously excessively harsh and harmful and intolerable an opinion that it's self-evidently indecent and horrid of me on its face to have expressed it. So: Sorry about that. But not sorry enough to retract it.

Beyond that, please feel free to continue disliking me, obviously. I mean, there was a long, long time during which I was regularly disagreeing with you in very unqualified though not personally insulting or hostile terms (and usually in polite ones). But it's not like that was because I'd failed to notice that you didn't care much for me and my dissenting views. It was more because I noticed and thought: "Oh well. He's got a right."

Of course, being human, eventually I got fed up with your evident disdain and occasional acts of in-bounds-for-a-guy aggression and stopped making much of an effort to be courteous. Which is nothing to be proud of, btw. So I'm not. But I'm also not enough of a hypocrite to pretend I've never done a single thing to you. I can think of at least two occasions in the last seven or eight months or so on which I was decidedly nasty to you, in fact. Very nasty, in one instance. And there may be a couple I'm forgetting, too. So whatever your reasons for disliking me were to begin with, at this stage of the game, I couldn't even honestly say that as far as I was aware I'd never done anything to merit it.

Okay? There are no hard feelings on my part. It wasn't personal.*** And a diminution of hard feelings on your part is neither required nor justified, afaic. So rock on.

I got a little more, maybe. But that's it for the personal stuff, I believe.

______________

*** ON EDIT: The whole point of those last several paragraphs is that I don't blame Nordic for taking it that way, in light of my having flamed away at him way too personally for anyone to forget once before. In case that's not clear. Having written which, I'm astonished anew that it's very close to literally not possible for me to fucking think of just saying that until after I'm looking at several hundred unnecessary words. Because that's exactly what I was trying to convey. Oh, well. Has its pros and cons, I guess.
Last edited by compared2what? on Fri Mar 04, 2011 6:13 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby 82_28 » Fri Mar 04, 2011 6:06 pm

DYK, you could say that. However there are multitude exceptions, except in probably scarce quantities.

For me to be sexually turned on, as a man, I need to know I have a friend. I have never ever used a woman and by way of being an adolescent male, I did wind up probably using a great many a girl. I am still very good friends with all but one of the girls who wound up dumping me in my life. The other women I've "been with" unfortunately are all just water under the "male bridge". It's just the way it goes.

But you get to a point in life where you realize how many women have been mistreated that you begin to wonder if you did the same. Here's a bit of email sent between me and a beloved "ex" just yesterday about a baby "we" aborted some 13 years ago concerning her baby she had in December:

Me: What's she having surgery for? What's the seriousness?

Crazy that it physically hurts. Honestly, I can imagine and totally understand. But, I am so glad I do not have kids and probably never will. Sorry for the late 90's between you and I. We'd have a kid in high school now! Jesus H Christ. Sorry I didn't show up. I was an early 20's douchebag.


Her: She has pee pee coming out of her belly button!!

We have one of the top 4 surgeons in the world doing the surgery. Someone told me the difference between Major and Minor surgery is… Minor surgery is when it is happening to someone else.

So I guess it is pretty non-invasive, but any time you put an infant under anesthesia it is risky.

It is so crazy, I love her so much I just don’t know what do with myself.



I know sometimes I do think about that too…. But neither you nor I could have handled a kid at that time.

We could barely pay rent it wouldn’t have been fair.

It was a very good decision and I have never regretted it. No reason to apologize.

I am 32 now and it is hard as hell!


Me and my GF were on the bus the other day and there were UW boys on there talking about having sex and "I'll just wash that shit out when you're done" type shit. I wanted to slap them around for talking about women that way. I guess I'm getting old.
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby Nordic » Fri Mar 04, 2011 6:09 pm

He just didn't back down from his statement, even after your warning. So he lost the debate, a TKO.


LOL! See, right there, that's a clear display of a difference between men and women. Men see backing down as a weakness. Some even see apologizing as a weakness.

Unlike many men, I'll back down if I'm wrong, but I'm not. :angelwings:

I understand if there are some women who have problems with men, as in they've been victimized horribly by them. I've been subjected to racism from both African Americans and Native Americans for the simple fact that I'm white, blond, and blue-eyed. I get it. I think it's kind of sad, but I get it. I know I'm not the one who hurt them, or their fathers and mothers or their ancestors, but I understand how they would feel like I'm the enemy because I'm genetically the member of the group that victimized them.

People do horrible things to each other, and often it's men doing horrible things to women.

As far as what I'm writing having subconscious sexism emedded into it somehow, maybe it's not me but the language itself.

I do acknowledge that men and women are actually different from one another, as I stated earlier. Some people don't seem to want to accept that biological fact. It's kind of like dogs and cats, on some level we're just never gonna figure each other out!
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby Nordic » Fri Mar 04, 2011 6:12 pm

compared2what? wrote:BTW, Nordic -- I know you don't like me, you make that quite clear. I don't dislike you, though. And that really wasn't a personal attack.


I'd say "actions speak louder than words" but we only use words here, so ........

I will try to like you more in the future. I really will.

This is, after all, just an internet forum, and if I were to meet you in person who knows how I might feel about you? I like to think I would really like everybody here, in person, with perhaps the exception of Sepka. :)
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby wintler2 » Fri Mar 04, 2011 6:32 pm

23 wrote:I rarely see hate as the motivator for someone's abusive conduct towards someone else.
Instead, I see insecurity... fueled by the most predominant catalyst for abusive action: fear.
Fear deserves our attention more than hatred, IMO. As the primary instigator of abusive treatment.

Ah but what drives the insecurity & fear? i think it is awareness of needing to coerce, frustrated desire to control/parasitise women.

Men fear women to the extent that they oppress them, as a bad slave owner fears his slaves more than a good one. If i expect women to validate me as an attractive male, and they don't, then i might grow to fear and even hate women as "stuck up bitches". The women have done nothing but make their own mind up, but i'll blame and hate them because they don't play by my rules.
Womens uncontrolability/sinfulness/naturalness/alienness is just men rationalising their own treatment of women as Other and Less Than.
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby Stephen Morgan » Fri Mar 04, 2011 6:58 pm

This'll be a long one, because I've been doing stuff all day, which for the long term unemployed like me is very inconvenient. Therefore I offer a mammoth post on the subject of misogyny, sort of, responding to other people talking about misogyny-not-really.

Wombaticus Rex wrote:Really, I think treating the noun "women" as if it has any inherent, objective qualities is right where it starts.


Women is a word of specific use, as is men. As we've seen you use the word men, I will consider you a hypocrite and disregard the rest of your statement.

JackRiddler wrote:Where it starts is surely in childhood conditioning - differential treatment and valuation based on sex, well beyond anything that could be come from biological differences alone. Categorical fallacies are always a part of the answer, but the categories are generated in the first place by a social consensus.


Well, on the one hand there is plentiful evidence of inherent biological difference in the brain having and effect on behaviour from toddlerhood. On the other hand I firmly believe anyone can change their brain through the application of conscious effort. Of course, this is nothing to do with misogyny. Maybe with how misogyny, were it not almost extinct in the west, were to come about in individuals, but this is not in itself misogyny.

barracuda wrote:Here's a question - is this misogyny?

http://news.mensactivism.org/

Or this?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Men's_movement

Because if you plan on debating Stephen, this is the territory, or something very close. I'm pretty certain he'll have some qualifications regarding these particular links, but the general thrust is represented there.


I've come across all these websites being linked to before. Would you like more links? I'll put some at the bottom of the post, I've got a list somewhere from when I was most active in the online anti-feminist community. If you can find any I haven't seen they'll be new ones. I hear mensnewsdaily has shut down. Good, bunch of Tories. Unfortunately so has ukmm, which had a refreshing tendency to focus on specific issues.

As for those above, the second is just a wiki page. A quite objective assessment, simply listing significant writers, issues which the men's movement focuses on, that sort of thing.

The first, I think he probably used to post on soc.men on the Usenet. I say this because it was always being harrassed by feminists, having originally been set up, as was alt.feminism, when soc.women and soc.feminism went moderated and restricted discussion of gender issues. Certain posters, after hearing once too often the argument that women are less violent than men, that women commiting Domestic Violence must be acting in self-defence and so on started posting stories about women commiting violent crimes, and as far as I can tell haven't stopped since. This focus on trivia is clear on that site. Cite studies on domestic violence, child custody, wage disparities, cite egregious imbalance in the media, but don't post endless stories about some woman in Oklahoma killing her kid &c., it's unproductive.

Also the link at the top of the thread to "The thinking Man's Minefield", has a page called "what is a misogynist". For anyone who want to see what an alleged misogynist thinks one is. I have no opinion on it.

barracuda wrote:All's I know is some other women better chime in, 'cause as a guy, I can hardly claim authoriativeness in my response.


Are you not a human capable of reasoned argument? The ideas of a woman on the nature of misogyny are no more valid than those of a man, or even those of a misogynist. You can't claim authoritativeness only because you have only your own opinion, which doesn't embrace all possible views and eliminate those in conflict with established fact, not because of your self-assumed male inferiority.

Canadian_watcher wrote:sure, sure.. but who gets the money from the cosmetics and fashion industries. Even women are quick to believe that it is other women. Is it? I don't know that.. I can't find the info.


Pharma cos., shareholders, politicians they lobby, models they hire, film stars who advertise their stuff, Ukrainian doctors who murder new-borns then lie to their parents about their death to harvest body-parts, American hospitals which sell foreskins to have the fibroblasts extracted for use in face creams... saying it's women or saying it's men is nonsense. It is simply rich people. The same people who make money from any other industry.

I'm sorry now that I pointed that out, since two of you were eager to jump on the 'women pimp themselves' bandwagon.


Women pimp themselves, men pimp their cars. Both waste their money, look like idiots and shorten their life expectancy by doing so. Me, I stick to prettifying my desktop.

Canadian_watcher wrote:I looked at the site you linked to. That is not misogyny, IMHO. How could anyone deny the very profound effect absent fathers have on their sons? I agree that the nurturing boys need can not come exclusively from mothers/women. They need fathers. I agree that men are left in a vacuum .. what does it mean to be a man? It has become impossible for them to know that answer. Some might respond to that as if it is a positive: "Great! We can reform men! We can end violence and possessiveness!" Bullshit. Men need fathers or other strong male role-models and I'm not talking about Gordon Gekko or any rap stars or football players here.

But now we're getting into male-centered issues, which isn't what I'm asking about.


Men need self-respect and self-discipline just like women do. Biological fathers are the most reliable source thereof, and one of the main issues of the men's movement is that of access for fathers to their children, restraint of women's right to take their children to far off parts, stopping the belief that men are checkbooks to provide "child support" rather than proper support for children, a presumption of joint custody whenever possible, and so on. Organised feminists have uniformly opposed these moves.

I agree with everything written above, in fact, except that it isn't related to misogyny. The rappers and Gordon Gekkos of this world are the misogynists, although as they also hate most men the term loses some of its meaning. But they hate women, on the surface at least, for being women and men for other reasons. But they shouldn't be viewed as the wrongful father figures, but the wronged sons. They are the diseased minds produced by a diseased situation in their youth.

Canadian_watcher wrote:To be more specific about the first link.. I'll select the post about the CDN infanticide ruling first off.

My personal feeling about the validity of the defense of infanticide aside, the fact is that that defense exists in law. The law was not created by women, but by the ruling class, which at the time of the law's creation was made up of men, exclusive of one woman, I believe (Agnes MacPhail). http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-188057879.html

The web site you linked to makes it seem like this is 'just another way women have it over men' seeing that it is an men's advocacy web site.


It is an example of a defence women have in court that men don't. Clearly it is unjust to be particularly lenient specifically because you kill your own children. Certain members of the Men's Movement have the compulsion to catalogue such things, it gets very annoying. But the website is less sexist than you assume, they don't care if it was women who made the law, that doesn't concern them. Only that they don't like the law.

The second article I'll address from that site is: Miss. mom charged after son's body found in oven

There is absolutely no mention of a father in this article, so what this has to do with men's activism is beyond me, unless of course it is to simply portray women as demons. This article achieves that, handily, for those who are unable to separate the actions of one woman from those of the rest of the female population.


Bingo, ish. Like I say, what started out as an attempt to disprove the angelic nature of women has become a compulsion for some, there is no logical reason for this story to be on that site, it just is.

Why did I start the thread if not to debate Stephen? To debate the rest of you. Stephen is a lost cause, any woman can see that. The rest of you though, that's different.


As with barracuda above, I reject the contention that woman have better vision that men. You, my dear, are a sexist. So is barracuda.

JackRiddler wrote:Practically speaking, the intent sometimes may be benign. The effect is to encourage self-hatred among real human women and to get men and women generally measuring real women as wanting against the image. It's also ironic because super-man images don't (as often) translate into standards that men are supposed to meet. They aren't (as much) set up as ideals for the gender generally. But the super-woman images are specifically gendered and applied as the ideals to strive for.


You don't think the selfless hero thing is set up as an ideal for men generally? You think the action girl is a more important psycho-social motif than the badass wisecracking action hero? Or would you be any more accepting of a film poster with a fat miserable girl on it? This isn't misogyny, it's advertising. IT is a great crime which is a pollutant to the psyche of all mankind, but it isn't specifically targetted at women.

compared2what? wrote:Hatred of women as a cultural characteristic -- ie, in a misogynist culture, women are regarded as lesser, degraded, and simply not-quite-right-or-normal beings by most people, both male and female.


In which case we don't live in one, as far as I'm concerned. I suppose I could be parlaying my own attitude to women onto society as a whole.

Sexism = discrimination against women by the culture or an individual that's not necessarily representative of strongly held views if the latter. I mean, it might be. But it might just be situational, too. Like a battle-of-the-sexes-type thing, or whatever.


Sexism = defining a word which means discrimination on the basis of sex to mean discrimination AGAINST WOMEN on the basis of sex.

23 wrote:Image


Hmm. Is that actually a woman or a sex-doll?

Searcher08 wrote:Stephen's views might be really different than the vast majority of posters here, however, within the debate paradigm (cos that is where you want this, rather than exploration), describing someone as a 'lost cause' in this context comes across as "I cant engage him in debate without being pw0n3d". Seriously - he thinks that because he has thought about it, not because he is some Archie Bunker character.


I get that a lot.

compared2what? wrote:A misogynist culture is one in which it's so normal to look down on women that no man need feel shame for complacently answering a question about misogyny with a post that represented women exclusively in terms of hackneyed stereotypes (ie -- nurturing and pleasant companions, objects of male sexual desire, emotionally needy and/or bitchy).


I'm curious as to what you think about me. Not my political positions, but rather the interpersonal approach which I take to my interlocutrices, which I believe may be a real word.

wallflower wrote:Wow as a middle-aged white American male I know I'm stepping on thin ice trying to participate in this thread.


Don't worry, dear. This board is extremely hostile to women and therefore you obviously have nothing to worry about. While we're on the subject of who we are, I'm a young white English man with a fondness for rational argument and a disdain for formal education.

Economic systems seem excruciatingly designed to disfavor women.


In what sense? Ignoring the article in the other thread about how women are less likely to be unemployed, more likely to be university educated and so forth, ignoring that a capitalist system is designed to disfavour all poor people, in what way is out current economic system specifically designed to disfavour women?

As a guy I am too often oblivious to misogyny.


Alternatively as someone obviously caring about gender equality, as do we all, and who thinks women are worse off than men due to his cultural indoctrination, as don't we all, you may be overly zealous in seeking out misogyny, seeing it where it isn't and mentally objecting so as to lessen your subconscious guilt at being born into the alleged oppressor class.

Third, looking at gender as a fundamental way of negotiating through the world, misogyny may entail strongly identifying male gender with good and any other identified with bad.


I would argue that feminism, a gendered name for a gendered concept, reinforces the practice of seeing oneself primarily as a member of ones sex, the oppressed sex feminism supposedly seeks to liberate or the oppressor sex pressured to join up with feminism, a romantic notion to be Schindler. I don't see myself primarily as a man, not a woman, I see myself as a socialist, an poor person, a Christian, a football fan, a linux user, and several other things before being a man. A man I am but the mere fact of not being a woman isn't the defining aspect of my life.

Searcher08 wrote:The case of the Sky Sports reporters who were fired in the UK, who were a pair of deeply repulsive frikken tools
reveals a lot about this. The side of it I most detest is around information, and how they ignored anything from a particular female colleague, even if it was to their advantage, it had to come from their boss. Fuckers.


I'd just like to point out the most important, largely over looked aspect of that controversy: we finally found a linesman who proerly enforces the offside rule. The fact that she's a female linesmen is irrelevant, to me if not to the people who buy pictures for page 3 in some newspaper I don't read.

I also passionately disagree that woman cannot be misogynists (to me that is coming from the same bollocks that says black people cannot be racist).


I offer barracuda as an example, a man-hater par excellence, so much so as to exclude men from the same level of cognitive development as women, but also male.

barracuda wrote:
Nordic wrote:There are men in my life I trust 100%.


Of course there are. But generally speaking, do you trust men?


I don't trust men, women, or you. Jesus normally, although I occasionally wonder what he might be up to. Myself, sometimes.

Right, back at the top I said I would post links. Some of these I don't approve of at all, others I quite like, ejfi for example.

http://feministhate.tripod.com/id35.htm
http://www.ihatewomen.com/
http://www.rulymob.com/
http://www.menweb.org/
http://www.menstribune.com/
http://www.fact.on.ca/news/news0303/mnd030311.htm
http://www.infowars.com/articles/nwo/ro ... lation.htm
http://www.backlash.com/book/sexism.html
http://web.archive.org/web/200008172324 ... /~s323363/
http://www.coeffic.demon.co.uk/
http://counterfem.blogspot.com/
http://hereticalsex.blogspot.com/
http://petepatriarch.wordpress.com/
http://www.jtest28.com/Anti-feminismpage.html
http://www.ejfi.org/
http://www.sonic.net/~msnyder/per/
Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that all was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, and make it possible. -- Lawrence of Arabia
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby Canadian_watcher » Fri Mar 04, 2011 7:32 pm

Nordic wrote:I do acknowledge that men and women are actually different from one another, as I stated earlier. Some people don't seem to want to accept that biological fact. It's kind of like dogs and cats, on some level we're just never gonna figure each other out!


Yes, I agree. It's important not to lose those differences. When women say they want to be treated as equals to men, they don't mean that they want to be like men. They want their uniqueness from men to be understood as being as important as those things men celebrate in each other. And by celebrate, I mean pay respect to in both $$ and non-$$ format.

The babysitter's wage and status versus the plumber's wage and status.
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.-- Jonathan Swift

When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him. -- Jonathan Swift
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby barracuda » Fri Mar 04, 2011 7:41 pm

Are you not a human capable of reasoned argument? The ideas of a woman on the nature of misogyny are no more valid than those of a man, or even those of a misogynist. You can't claim authoritativeness only because you have only your own opinion, which doesn't embrace all possible views and eliminate those in conflict with established fact, not because of your self-assumed male inferiority.


I believe that American blacks know better than middle-class whites what it is to live as a black in this society, and for that reason, have a far more authoritative opinion on just what constitutes racism. The misogyny question is roughly analgous.

I offer barracuda as an example, a man-hater par excellence, so much so as to exclude men from the same level of cognitive development as women, but also male.


I simply exclude them from any claim of the same social experience that women have. It's hardly a revelation.
The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
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Re: What constitutes Misogyny?

Postby hanshan » Fri Mar 04, 2011 7:44 pm

barracuda wrote:
Are you not a human capable of reasoned argument? The ideas of a woman on the nature of misogyny are no more valid than those of a man, or even those of a misogynist. You can't claim authoritativeness only because you have only your own opinion, which doesn't embrace all possible views and eliminate those in conflict with established fact, not because of your self-assumed male inferiority.


I believe that American blacks know better than middle-class whites what it is to live as a black in this society, and for that reason, have a far more authoritative opinion on just what constitutes racism. The misogyny question is roughly analgous.

I offer barracuda as an example, a man-hater par excellence, so much so as to exclude men from the same level of cognitive development as women, but also male.


I simply exclude them from any claim of the same social experience that women have. It's hardly a revelation.



Sheesh. Who knew?




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