RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
She could have expressed an opinion about the encounter and offered a suggestion that men consider that women might fee vulnerable in an enclosed space.The biggest issue was that it was in an enclosed space. Rebecca had every right to tell her (male) audience not to do that.
How did that work out?It was a request made that she didn't like, so she instructed her audience not to do it.
Some people (women in particular) had a different opinion. That's it. No reason to call anyone out at a conference. That's the good thing about dialectics. RW expresses her opinion. Other people express an opinion and we move society forward. People are allowed to have an opinion different than RW, right? People have the right to express that opinion, right?That's it. No reason to make more of it then that. The reaction was much more the story.
I've no idea what this is about. It looks like a hasty generalization and straw man but tough to tell.The idea that all the unsavory comments were left by only atheists/skeptics is laughable.
What Dawkins said was a bit silly, however I see many people using exactly the same argument whenever men complain about certain issues. "Dear Muslima" and "What about Teh MEnz" are the same argument. It didn't work for Dawkins, but somehow, I haven't see you make a video about the FtB/A+ members who use the same argument all the time.
"You have no right to complain about X because group Y has to deal with Z!!!!" Terrible when *they* do it, totally fine when *We* do it.
