rustypouch
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2003
- Messages
- 6,745
I'd very much like to see the highlighted claim cashed out in observational terms, so that we could see exactly what observations justify it and exactly what potential future observations would allow us to revise our belief to say "in general, men and women now have equal social power in a given sphere". I'm not demanding that you personally do this but until someone does it the argument boils down to "well I feel like overall I get a bum deal, and that's evidence enough!". (Cue boilerplate list of feminist grievances).
I tend to think social movements work better with clearly defined goals. Demanding an eight hour working day is nice and specific. Demanding an end to an amorphous "male privilege" which is explained in terms of feelings and parables rather than hard data is going to be a much harder sell.
I tend to agree. Yes, it may have existed for old people, but it's been greatly reduced, and often not evident for people my age and younger, and there are many areas where women have things better. But as a 30-something white man, I'm often not allowed to express opinions on these things. Then when my opinions are acknowledged as existing, and that there are some areas where men are disadvantaged, these concerns are dismissed as unimportant.
As an example, this article : http://goodmenproject.com/featured-content/in-rape-culture-all-men-are-guilty-until-proven-innocent/
From the article:
Men who grumble about being “guilty until proven innocent” are demanding to be seen as individuals, separate from their perceived sex and the history that goes with it. That’s a tempting but unreasonable demand to make.
I find that very insulting. Would anyone accept this if it were directed to any other group? Change a few words around, and it's terribly bigoted:
For some reason it's fine to make these generalities.
Yes, I know not all feminists are like this, but there are enough out there to really turn me off.