Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
Guess you missed the pages and pages long thread on the males can be raped by women topic.Men talking about trauma are not taken seriously on this forum.
Guess you missed the pages and pages long thread on the males can be raped by women topic.Men talking about trauma are not taken seriously on this forum.
There are men who are fighting for men's rights. Like feminists, they keep watch for ways to make things better - they know which politician is more likely to vote for child care in the workplace, for shared or equal custody rights, death row inmates who haven't been given a fair trial and other issues in which the system is unfair to men. They have my full and honest support because we have so much overlap.
Guess you missed the pages and pages long thread on the males can be raped by women topic.
I support groups fighting for women's rights because they're right to do so and because women deserve equality -- not because I believe doing so will benefit men.
Am I right to read this as saying that you support groups fighting for men's rights specifically because you believe those groups also help with women's rights? That's certainly better with open opposition, but it seems a bit... weak as a grounds of support, if you get what I mean.
Actually I did. Link?
I'd like to see that, too.
ETA: I do remember a thread where it came up, but the relevant comments did not make pages.
Male victims are certainly worth discussing. There are a number of interesting social problems involved--like the under-reporting of incidents--but when it's raised in the context of a discussion about assault aimed at women, it's an attempt to change the discussion, minimize the problem, and support a contention that women are irrational for pointing out the degree to which the threat of assault affects their lives: "Hey, men get assaulted to, you don't see us whining about being on an elevator with a chick."
Who could have foreseen that a thread about a woman's impression of an encounter would morph into a thread about males just not getting enough respect?
Truly a radical development.
What would you think of someone in 1950 that in a discussion about lynchings in the South pointed out that there were some white people killed by black people? Those poor whites, who's looking out for their interests?
Males are victims at a far lower rate and the vast majority of males were assaulted by other males) doesn't mean it's any less destructive and painful. It does, however, change the nature of the discussion.
We do not have a societal epidemic of females sexually assaulting males.
There are times when this happens, and it's terrible, but it's dwarfed by the problem of females being victimized.
Start another thread about males suffering sexual assault. Again, it's a valid topic worthy of discussion, but it's use here is simply diversion.
Also, consider the possibility that when someone says, "This isn't really specifically a women's issue; it happens to men, too and is just as severe when it does," this is not a trivializing statement but an attempt to point out that the problem may be wider than its gender context.
This appears to be a knee-jerk reaction to the issue being brought up in this thread, rather than you actually following the discussion.
Entirely separate from the "Watson in an elevator" incident (by which I mean, as someone's glib response to the raw question "what do feminists want?"), the topic of equality and how to define it was brought up. In that context, it was also discussed whether feminism should reasonably cover both men's and women's rights, and whether treating women and men the same was enough.
Never at any point in this thread were men's issues used to trivialize the specific incident in the OP or women's issues in general.
So check the evolving discussion again, and see if your response wasn't a bit off-target in this case.
The idea that Rebecca felt scared seems to be an invention of the drama surrounding this issue, but was never part of the original complaint, maybe she should have felt scared (plenty of people seem to think so) but that as not part of her message- which has now been blow up out of all proportion.So you agree that Watson was justified in feeling scared.
The idea that Rebecca felt scared seems to be an invention of the drama surrounding this issue, but was never part of the original complaint, maybe she should have felt scared (plenty of people seem to think so) but that as not part of her message- which has now been blow up out of all proportion.
I usually like your stuff, but you are way reaching here.
The problem with lynchings in the South was that, overall, Black people were way more likely to be targeted than White people (or at least White people who weren't also Jews).
In modern times, men are way more likely to be targeted for violence than women. So it's not "some"; it's "most." Even sexual violence, if you count things that happen in prison and in the Catholic Church.
http://www.rainn.org/get-information/statistics/sexual-assault-victims1 out of every 6 American women has been the victim of an attempted or completed rape in her lifetime (14.8% completed rape; 2.8% attempted rape).
17.7 million American women have been victims of attempted or completed rape.1
9 of every 10 rape victims were female in 2003.
[...]
About 3% of American men — or 1 in 33 — have experienced an attempted or completed rape in their lifetime.1
•In 2003, 1 in every ten rape victims were male.
•2.78 million men in the U.S. have been victims of sexual assault or rape.
http://www.ncvc.org/ncvc/main.aspx?dbName=DocumentViewer&DocumentID=32369In 2005, 92 percent of rape or sexual assault victims were female
No, we don't. Mostly, males are the ones doing the assaulting. I accept that as a fact; it's been well documented. The only exception seems to be domestic violence. But mostly, when overall patterns of violence are looked at, it's men doing it.
[...]
However, when you consider victims, that's not the picture. There are lots and lots of male victims.
The problem with this is that it is false.
If you want only to concentrate on female victims for political purposes, we can deal with that. However, the statement that male victims are dwarfed by female victims is just wrong, in the sense of being inaccurate.
No. You just do not have an accurate perception of reality.
It may be a diversion, but if it is, it is for other reasons that you have presented.
The idea that Rebecca felt scared seems to be an invention of the drama surrounding this issue, but was never part of the original complaint, maybe she should have felt scared (plenty of people seem to think so) but that as not part of her message- which has now been blow up out of all proportion.
Also, consider the possibility that when someone says, "This isn't really specifically a women's issue; it happens to men, too and is just as severe when it does," this is not a trivializing statement but an attempt to point out that the problem may be wider than its gender context.
The typical counter-response that indicates that either the incidence or severity is greatly reduced for men in an attempt to distinguish between the two, is deliberately trivializing, however.
One more point -- we're talking about the discomfort felt when turning down inappropriate sexual advances in an isolated situation. However rare you think female-on-male sexual assault is (and you're wrong, but that is a topic for another thread), this is not uncommon at all.