on the other hand she was blandly and routinely disrespected by an individual in the course of a small business transaction.
All she left out was everything in between.
Horrors!
And the colour for irony is...?
Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
on the other hand she was blandly and routinely disrespected by an individual in the course of a small business transaction.
All she left out was everything in between.
barracuda wrote:That's funny to you, I guess. But you know what? I never get disrespected by people whose services I am paying for. Never. But it must happen to you all the time, right Charlie? Because you're a woman. That's why you're so fully filled with inappropriate irony (inappropriate, because the emotional state of irony has almost nothing to do with your statement. Exactly how is your response, "Horrors!" ironic in some way? Try "sarcasm" next time. They're two very different things. As I'm certain you know. It was likely just an oversight on your part.)
on the other hand she was blandly and routinely disrespected by an individual in the course of a small business transaction.
All she left out was everything in between.
Canadian_watcher wrote:Okay all you lovers of me,
Here's another real life experience:
Canadian_watcher wrote:norton ash wrote:I don't do business with dummies.
Bullies should be avoided too.
A person standing up for themselves is not a bully, no matter if they are male or female.
OP ED wrote:(you picked THE KLAN??? REALLY???)
But really, your evidence that women are a "privileged group" resides where exactly?
...
btw, for future reference:
OP ED, as it happens, is not a feminist. [OP ED hates women]
OP ED, as it happens, is not a socialist either. [OP ED hates pinko layabouts]
However, OP ED, as it happens, does often support positions created and maintained by self-identifying sub-sections of both "groups" although OP ED could and would argue that both groups exist more in the imagination than in any active reality, especially as anything other than potential propaganda value to their omnipresent detractors.
norton ash wrote:The Bechdel Test is a way of examining movies for gender bias. The test poses three questions: Does a movie contain two or more female characters who have names? Do those characters talk to each other? And, if so, do they discuss something other than a man? An astonishing number of light entertainments fail the test. This points to a crucial imbalance in studio comedies: distinctive secondary roles for women barely exist. For men, these roles can be a stepping stone to stardom.
Canadian_watcher wrote:apparently you didn't see it that way. Can you tell me how you would have dealt with it if you had three people coming to apply for a job with you and one of them:
a. was late
b. laughed at you for asking them why they were late
c. asked to talk to your 'boss?'
A National Institute of Justice study in 1997 put the number of college women reporting a rape or attempted rape while at college at between 20% and 25%, but campuses remain reluctant to deal with the issue head on. (The figure for such assault on women in the general population is about one in six.) Some 25% percent of American college males admitted to sexual coercion of some form, but there's little outrage.
OP ED wrote:ahem. that is. contrary to Stephen's continued proclamations that ALL women are a privileged class,
OP ED knows from personal experiences that the routine removal of evidence and blame when assaults and harrassments [such as C W described] happen is thoroughly institutionalized to the point of standard-operating-procedure in most or all institutions and businesses.
OP ED has personally been "encouraged" by company lawyers to not tell the plaintiff's lawyers and investigators things OP ED had just told them about because OP ED was supposed to be "a team player" and to be concerned about OP ED's "future prospects" for upward mobility in said company. After said company was forced by the existence of recordings of harassing behavior to settle this matter, these lawyers informed us that the big bosses would be okay, would not be punished or pay for their settlement personally, as said company makes certain to set aside funds to cover for such "indiscretions" on the part of managers. they even write them off on their taxes.
What OP ED is saying is that one of the top twenty employers in America plans in advance for its managers to commit acts of sexual harrassment and moderate assault on its female employees. They have people whose full-time job is to "encourage" people who might otherwise tell the truth to be "team players" instead and not to let "those sorts of bitches" hurt the company. [or its bottom line]
OP ED has a hard time understanding how someone, like you Stephen, otherwise intelligent and clearly probably living in the very same actual world as OP ED, can make his living without encountering this sort of imbalance in justice and see it as such.
How can someone speak English their entire life without realizing that the genderbiases are built into the language itself?
[one does not need to be a linguistics major to grasp the basics of this concept]
sigh. jesus.
OP ED is not a feminist, but some people make OP ED consider switching its identification preference.
[thee glass slipper is on thee other foot]
REFUSER
From the Lebanese mountains
To the Kenyan village of El Doret
We are practicing self-defense
Versed in Karate, Tai Chi, Judo, and Kung Foo
We are no longer surrendering to our fate.
Now, we are the ones who walk our girl friends home from school.
And we don't do it with macho. We do it with cool.
Our mothers are the Pink Sari Gang
Fighting off the drunken men
With rose pointed fingers and sticks in
Uttar Pradesh.
The Peshmerga women
in the Kurdish mountains
with barrettes in their hair
and AK47's instead of pocket books.
We are not waiting anymore to be taken and retaken.
We are the Liberian women sitting
in the Africa sun blockading the exits
til the men figure it out.
We are the Nigerian women
babies strapped to out backs
occupying the oil terminals of Chevron.
We are the women of Kerala
who refused to let Coca Cola
privatize our water.
We are Cindy Sheehan showing up in Crawford without a plan.
We are all those who forfeited husbands boyfriends and dates
Cause we were married to our mission.
We know love comes from all directions and in many forms.
We are Malalai who spoke back to the Afghan Loya Jurga
And told them they were "raping warlords" and
She kept speaking even when they kept
trying to blow up her house.
And we are Zoya whose radical mother was shot dead when Zoya was only a child so she was fed on revolution which was stronger than milk
And we are the ones who kept and loved our babies
even though they have the faces of our rapists.
We are the girls who stopped cutting ourselves to release the pain
And we are the girls who refused to have our clitoris cut
And give up our pleasure.
We are:
Rachel Corrie who wouldn't couldn't move away from the Israeli tank.
Aung San Suu Kyi who still smiles after years of not being able to leave her room.
Anne Frank who survives now cause she wrote down her story.
We are Neda Soltani gunned down by a sniper in the streets of
Tehran as she voiced a new freedom and way
And we are Asmaa Mahfouz from the April 6th movement in Egypt
Who twittered an uprising.
We are the women riding the high seas to offer
Needy women abortions on ships.
We are women documenting the atrocities
in stadiums with video cameras underneath our Burqas.
We are seventeen and living for a year in a tree
And laying down in the forests to protect wild oaks.
We are out at sea interrupting the whale murders.
We are freegans, vegans, trannies
But mainly we are refusers.
We don't accept your world
Your rules your wars
We don't accept your cruelty and unkindness.
We don't believe some need to suffer for others to survive
Or that there isn't enough to go around
Or that corporations are the only and best economic arrangement
And we don't hate boys, okay?
That's another bullshit story.
We are refusers
But we crave kissing.
We don't want to do anything before we're ready
but it could be sooner than you think
and we get to decide
and we are not afraid of what is pulsing through us.
It makes us alive.
Don't deny us, criticize us or infantilize us.
We don't accept checkpoints, blockades or air raids
We are obsessed with learning.
On the barren Tsunamied beaches of Sri Lanka
In the desolate and smelly remains
Of the lower ninth
We want school.
We want school.
We want school.
We know if you plan too long
Nothing happens and things get worse and that
Most everything is found in the action
and instinctively we get that the scariest thing
isn't dying, but not trying at all.
And when we finally have our voice
and come together
when we let ourselves gather the knowledge
when we stop turning on each other
but direct our energy towards what matters
when we stop worrying about
our skinny ass stomachs or too frizzy hair
or fat thighs
when we stop caring about pleasing
and making everyone so incredibly happy-
We got the Power.
If
Janis Joplin was nominated the ugliest man on her campus
And they sent Angela Davis to jail
If Simone Weil had manly virtues
And Joan of Arc was hysterical
If Bella Abzug was eminently obnoxious
And Ellen Sirleaf Johnson is considered scary
If Arundhati Roy is totally intimidating
and Rigoberta Menchu is pathologically intense
And Julia Butterfly Hill is an extremist freak
Call us hysterical then
Fanatical
Eccentric
Delusional
Intimidating
Eminently obnoxious
Militant
Bitch
Freak
Tattoo me
Witch
Give us our broomsticks
And potions on the stove
We are the girls
who are aren't afraid to cook.
"Refuser" is published in Eve's newest work - I AM AN EMOTIONAL CREATURE: The Secret Life of Girls Around the World, just released in paperback from Villard Trade Paperbacks.
Eve Ensler, a playwright and activist, is the founder of V-Day, a global movement to end violence against women and girls. In conjunction with I AM AN EMOTIONAL CREATURE, V-Day has developed a targeted pilot program, V-Girls, to engage young women in our "empowerment philanthropy" model, providing them with a platform to amplify their voices.
wallflower wrote:Canadian_Watcher thanks for this thread and all the tending you've done to make it happen.
I haven't quite gotten the hang of keeping up with threads here and am late to the pile up. My understanding of your behavior in the entirety of the tread is that you've been responsible. Some topic attract collisions and explosions, and misogyny, in fact topics connected to feminism often flame out.
I find news of sexual assault very disheartening and I'm ashamed to say that I turn my head away from the news.
This is particularly true about news of sexual assault of children. I can't remember whether or not I linked to an article in The Nation earlier, "Cleveland, Texas and Gender Jim Crow" http://www.thenation.com/article/159550/cleveland-texas-and-gender-jim-crow
Earlier in the month CNN ran a piece by Toby Simon "Why is sexual assault tolerated on campus?" Simon is a former Dean of Student Life at Brown. While at Brown she did a survey and found that sexual assault was one of the main reason student transfered to Brown. Simon notes:A National Institute of Justice study in 1997 put the number of college women reporting a rape or attempted rape while at college at between 20% and 25%, but campuses remain reluctant to deal with the issue head on. (The figure for such assault on women in the general population is about one in six.) Some 25% percent of American college males admitted to sexual coercion of some form, but there's little outrage.
Outrage is important, but it's essential to find ways to reduce such violence. Better understanding misogyny is useful to begin to find appropriate responses to this pathology of violence.
Newsweek had a report http://www.newsweek.com/2011/04/03/the-military-s-secret-shame.html on male soldiers being raped and sexually assaulted in the military--some 50,000 male veterans screened positive for "military sexual trauma" last year. The gist of the article is the military is only beginning to confront the issue. The question was raised about getting rid of Don't Ask Don't Tell and the point made that rape is about power more than it's about sex. That is an important distinction, but the lines are also probably a bit fuzzy. At least I suspect that part of the problem of college campuses dealing with sexual assault has to do with sexual assault has to do with perceived fuzziness along the line of sex and violence.
Stephen interjects to remind us that male on male violence is a problem in this world. You have just done so, too. Yes, thank you both, it is. I can see that both of you are concerned about violent males among us. I am, too.
The demonization of feminine qualities is as old as the hills - both men and women pay for displaying those qualities. In spades. So far though, it has only been the female and queer communities who have made ending violence a pivotal part of their resistance to tyranny.
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