Dehumanizing was the wrong word. It's big and scary. I'm just not sure what the little and not-so-scary word would be, maybe dismissive will work.
I'll back off a bit from the strong rhetoric, too, and try to speak mildly.
Look at the negative way many people have responded to Watson's original video. She shouldn't freak out (she didn't freak out.) Skeptics should never date! (she never said that.) But mostly, that they wouldn't feel creeped out in an elevator, so Watson shouldn't either.
I haven't had a strong opinion on her, the original precipitating incident, or the first couple of incidents. That's for a couple of reasons. One is that I wasn't there, either in the bar or in the elevator. (I also have enough experience with barroom dynamics, even conference ones, to know that they can be highly variable and labile.) Another is that I haven't found anything that reasonably warrants the extreme bruhaha.
There has been a bruhaha, however, and that interests me a great deal.
Telling her that she should respond according to their background, their personal experiences, and a situation that they are imagining, not experiencing - it's really dismissive.
I don't think that I have done that. I know that others have, and I am actually interested in the psychology behind that. It seems to me that a lot of hot buttons have been pressed, and this whole thing has grown way beyond any original incident.
As a woman, I've gotten a lot of this in my 45 years (I'm guessing we're close in age, as a quarter century man wouldn't have clear memories of the 70's)
I'm more of a half century man.
When you say "treat everyone the same" I hear it as a societal goal. That's where I am getting hung up.
Yeah, but I'm not saying that. Nobody elected me Pope. I don't usually make "should" statements.
The statements I am making are along the lines of "if you treat people one way, you might get this effect, and if you treat people the other way, you might get the other effect."
Also, note that the title of this thread is "What do feminists want?" Given that feminists are a diverse bunch, I've been able to come up with a reasonable general answer (and you've helped). The answer is "a lot more special arguments on the basis of sex and gender than Women's Liberationists wanted."
Because if we all started treating everyone the same, would men would get the same groping and surprise stranger-penis waggle?
See, here's the thing:
We do. Of course, there is the unwanted attention from women, usually stinking drunk who grope rub and just won't take no for an answer. When rebuffed, they frequently engage in physical violence. Note that there is a social taboo against a man's hitting a woman, but there is no taboo against a woman's hitting a man. I must admit that no woman has ever slapped me or poured a drink, but I have been punched and scratched and kicked on many occasions. I've never been put in the hospital or gotten more than a few contusions and lacerations that healed, but it was unpleasant. It has been especially unpleasant because I know that my job as a
mensch to figure out a way to get them home safely, so that I don't have to read in the paper the next day how they drunkenly ploughed into a sedan and killed a family of four.
I also know from observation that women are violent toward other women. I have seen enough instances of this. Pool cues seem to be a favorite weapon. Once I broke up a fight between two members of the FSU women's rugby team (I think it was over a third). That is my job as a
mensch and a man, and I used my eyes in what many feminists like to call the "male gaze" to full effect. Recounting this story once, someone who also went to FSU said to me, "I've seen those women. Man, are you brave!"
Also, of course, we get the surprise penis-waggling and groping and worse from other men, too. Case in point. I had a lover, whom I eventually married after 7 years (that didn't last long). She had two sons. It was only several years into the relationship that she told me both her sons had been anally raped at the ages of 8 and 10, respectively. The younger one will talk about it, but the older one never will, I think. (Also, as I think I have mentioned here before, I've been sexually battered. However, I was an adult, so I think it was easier for me to overcome, despite the fact that I couldn't get any counseling for it, all the normal groups were hostile.)
Now, I think you are an empathetic person, and you would care about such things if you were aware of them. You're not aware of them, or at least you are not aware of the extent. I think you may have observed some of these interactions, but I don't think that how men feel about them has made a big impression.
The reason for this is that men don't talk about these things a lot. Part of this is because of the shame they feel. However, part of this is that they know that if they did talk about them, everyone will be on their case. They know this because some men have tried, and they have gotten public reactions that are to what has been said about and to Rebecca Watson what a thermonuclear blast is to a snap-n-pop.
So they bury it. They "man up." That's really their only choice.
At the same time, if you collect a bunch of bad things that have happened to women, at the hands of men, and you just leave anything out of the picture, you have a good start at a feminist best-seller.
Anyway, to summarize. There seem to be two kinds of male reactions. (There may be others, but there are two I find particularly interesting.)
One is from men who dismiss concerns such as those related to Rebecca Watson. I estimate that these are the ones who are still hurting, who still have an ideal of fairness, and are knee-jerking reflexively. They haven't yet figured out that they aren't going to get any substantial sympathy or empathy. They're like the younger son.
The other is from men who do the "macho" pro-feminist, protective of women schtick. I estimate that these are the ones who have accreted scar tissue over their hurts. So they deal with that by posturing. They're like the older son.
Now, you may consider this presumptive. My evidence is that after I spend a lot of time in one place saying the obnoxious things that I do, that they talk to me. Sometimes it takes years. They're reluctant to talk to anybody, for good reason.
I also have to say that I don't do that much any more. I did it a lot, but it was unpleasant and heartbreaking.
Now if you are saying that you, specifically, want to treat women the same way that you treat men, I don't know how you treat anybody. It's an interesting concept, but too difficult to imagine the real world application.
I seem to manage it pretty well. Maybe it's radical? So what. I have never been one to pay a lot of attention to what I'm supposed to do.
Your last paragraph doesn't quite work. Because if only one out of 50 women think something is a problem, who is blowing up it into an internet drama?
The history was interesting. It happened at Huntsville, Alabama, where I used to live and work. The simple answer is that it got blown up in the blogosphere.
I'll find some links if you're really interested.