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01-20-2009, 05:19 PM
Interesting discussion and very lively one at that with the usual heated banter but there were some very intelligent post to strengthen ones position or at the least make their position clear cheers to you MissMisa and Nyorin you might not agree but both your arguments were noteworthy and intelligent.
My response i will try to keep on track since i tend to get a little heated over these topics because to me the core basis not the radical feminism is very close to race rights as a Black American you can imagine my position on such a discussion. There is always an extremist side to everything and that side never represents what the core purpose of the a moment, an idea or a way of thinking is intended. I have been to 15 different countries and majority of them i stayed in for more than a month and i feel a countries social status quo changes as needed but sometimes it also requires a little push and early feminist were the ones responsible for that push here in the US. I have met women in Japan who very content with their lives and ones that are very unhappy. I have had friends move here from Japan because they disliked the culture norm (yes they are native Japanese) I have friends move to other countries from the US because of the same feeling. I dont feel there is anything wrong with feminism if its not taken to the extreme and expressed in the way that it was original intended not bringing down males or which sex is stronger or better but for the right to be treated a decent human. Make your own choices and stand by them if you think you are right. The one thing i will not tolerate is the several post where people basically said well if feminists would shut up things would be better its the same as saying well if a Latino, or black, or Asian would shut up things might be easier for them. That is as ignorant as saying Separate but equal which does not and never will work. Go with the flow or Fight the Power both choices are available to you why because somewhere in the past people fought for you to have that right weather its a woman or man. You have the rights you do because someone else put themselves out there under extreme prejudice and persecution so you can say "i like feminism" or "i hate feminism" you have that right because of them never forgot that or you wind up becoming just like those who you hate. |
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01-21-2009, 02:29 AM
Ante, very well argued and relevant points. Everyone on this thread should read them.
I'd also like to say I agree with Sinestra that it's a pleasure to be able to discuss these issues intelligently with everyone interested in the real social trends unfolding around us -- and that just waiting and hoping for the best is no strategy at all. Another example of how the feminist movement has gone astray is the Duluth procedures. This is a set of procedures police all over North America are supposed to follow when responding to a domestic violence report. Briefly, the police are instructed to arrest and remove the man, regardless of what they find at the scene and even if everyone on the spot says he did nothing wrong. The man is given five minutes to gather his personal effects (money and ID, but not furniture, keepsakes etc.) and led out in handcuffs. As the Wikipedia entry for the Duluth Model says: Quote:
And that is one way feminism is doing evil in the world. Its reputation is tainted as a result. I accept that feminism has been and is a force for good in other ways. 「辛かったろう」と言ってくれる |
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01-21-2009, 10:27 AM
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Maybe... But the dictionary definition doesn't change and I won't let you or the so-called extremists hijack the term (and the same goes for Islam/Muslim and Public services). Fortunately I have Academia on my side. |
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01-21-2009, 10:39 AM
Don't you think that Muslims have a bad reputation in this modern world? I know I do. I think that's what ante was trying to say. Feminism has a bad reputation amongst some because of a small percentage!
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01-21-2009, 01:11 PM
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Ofcourse there will be bad apples.... There always is! But one must look beyond. Just like you said, Sweden has come far but sometimes you ask yourself "is this crap really worth putting time/effort into" (like having a lady in the walk signs)? But still equal pay for equal work isnt true yet. Rapes are still beeing commited and so on...There is still a long way to go! |
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01-21-2009, 02:26 PM
Another widely influential slander by the so-called "women's movement" was the "Superbowl Sunday rape" story. In 1993 an outfit called FAIR began circulating the story that rapes spike 40% on Superbowl Sunday. "Don't remain alone with him during the game," FAIR warned.
This story was widely reported in the MSM and was a huge PR success for the women's movement. Problem is, it isn't true. The FAIR people had made it up. Slander like this continues to put good men in undeserved disrepute -- and undermines the legitimate work of people like the Mexican feminist somebody posted about above. You can read about the "Abuse Bowl" fraud: here 「辛かったろう」と言ってくれる |
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01-21-2009, 06:19 PM
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01-22-2009, 03:04 AM
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You're right about the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCS) -- it's a large-scale, two-gender study of crime, and it consistently finds that male perpetration is significantly higher than female perpetration of domestic violence. (I'll talk about the specific question of injury in a minute.) However, Geller and Steinmetz do not find this. Basically, the emphasis on "crime" introduces methodological problems: female victimization of men does not generate police reports, and asking respondents about "crime" elicits very different answers than asking about "domestic abuse" -- basically, women are likely to regard domestic abuse as a crime (as they should!) while men are less so. Now, BCD finds, as you say, that the rate of physical injury resulting from male partner violence is 3 times greater than from female partner violence. Also, women constitute three-quarters of the murder victims in domestic violence. However, the authors of BCD also point out that: Quote:
Anyway, Enkidu, thanks for a valuable contribution. You forced me to crack open the books and do my homework! 「辛かったろう」と言ってくれる |
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