Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we all also realize that there are many factors that contribute to racism.
Now walk into a room and tell a group of ethnic minorities that racism "isn't about them."
Definitely do this and report back, OP!
:popcorn:
Haha, minorities are scary, angry, and incapable of discussing controversial opinions. Nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we all also realize that there are many factors that contribute to racism.
Now walk into a room and tell a group of ethnic minorities that racism "isn't about them."
Definitely do this and report back, OP!
:popcorn:
Haha, minorities are scary, angry, and incapable of discussing controversial opinions. Nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we all also realize that there are many factors that contribute to racism.
Now walk into a room and tell a group of ethnic minorities that racism "isn't about them."
Definitely do this and report back, OP!
:popcorn:
This is so true.
Misogyny is so much more socially accepted than racism. If a black man was attacked by a white man in front of my office building today, the whole city would riot. If a woman was raped, people would question whether or not it really even happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we all also realize that there are many factors that contribute to racism.
Now walk into a room and tell a group of ethnic minorities that racism "isn't about them."
Definitely do this and report back, OP!
:popcorn:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I attended an all boys private school 10th -12th grade. I never heard or saw that what is represented in this article. I guess women believe Porkie’s, Animal House, Revenge of the Nerds, etc are a documentaries.
How long ago? I attended public high school in the late 80s and, in the early 90s, went to college with guys who'd gone to all-boys schools. (This was in the midwest, fwiw). I heard and saw stuff that was pretty close to that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a passage in the article talking about how gross out humor among boys -- poop jokes and such -- can evolve into saying crude things about women. That felt very familiar to me. I'm almost 50 years old now, so maybe things have changed. But when I was a teenager, maybe into my early twenties, I'd say the crudest stuff about women and others just to get a laugh from my friends. I absolutely didn't mean any of it -- it was just word games that got a laugh.
But now I can see how those jokes just feed into something worse. If nothing else, it would reinforce the worldview of those guys around me who truly believed that women were lesser than men.
I'm 40 and had the same experience. It was just talk, no one actually took a girl to bed and did the angry dragon or whatever nonsense we joked about.
But I found the most disapointing part of the article to be the absolute lack of desirable male traits such as protection, leadership and honor. Those were things we all strongly believed in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How nice of a woman to decide for boys what is and is not "acceptable masculinity" .![]()
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Can we get a male author to tell girls how to be feminine next?
Men have been doing this for centuries and continue to do so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How nice of a woman to decide for boys what is and is not "acceptable masculinity" .![]()
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Can we get a male author to tell girls how to be feminine next?
What are your particular complaints? Because I'm a man and don't see any particular behaviors criticized by the author that I'd regard as desirable or even acceptable in a man.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we all also realize that there are many factors that contribute to racism.
Now walk into a room and tell a group of ethnic minorities that racism "isn't about them."
Definitely do this and report back, OP!
:popcorn:
Anonymous wrote:I think we all also realize that there are many factors that contribute to racism.
Now walk into a room and tell a group of ethnic minorities that racism "isn't about them."
Anonymous wrote:I attended an all boys private school 10th -12th grade. I never heard or saw that what is represented in this article. I guess women believe Porkie’s, Animal House, Revenge of the Nerds, etc are a documentaries.
Anonymous wrote:
So misogyny isn't rooted in hatred of women but in the failure to realize that women, both individually and collectively, deserve respect and the right to be treated other than as a means to an end? That doesn't make me feel a whole lot better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a passage in the article talking about how gross out humor among boys -- poop jokes and such -- can evolve into saying crude things about women. That felt very familiar to me. I'm almost 50 years old now, so maybe things have changed. But when I was a teenager, maybe into my early twenties, I'd say the crudest stuff about women and others just to get a laugh from my friends. I absolutely didn't mean any of it -- it was just word games that got a laugh.
But now I can see how those jokes just feed into something worse. If nothing else, it would reinforce the worldview of those guys around me who truly believed that women were lesser than men.
I'm 40 and had the same experience. It was just talk, no one actually took a girl to bed and did the angry dragon or whatever nonsense we joked about.
But I found the most disapointing part of the article to be the absolute lack of desirable male traits such as protection, leadership and honor. Those were things we all strongly believed in.
our society would be well-served by acknowledging the natural differences, on average, between boys and girls and harness boys natural competitiveness into something good rather than squash it and allow the worst instincts to take over
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How nice of a woman to decide for boys what is and is not "acceptable masculinity" .![]()
![]()
![]()
Can we get a male author to tell girls how to be feminine next?
What are your particular complaints? Because I'm a man and don't see any particular behaviors criticized by the author that I'd regard as desirable or even acceptable in a man.
Thank you to the pp for getting it.
There is some thought that if you say something often enough, you'll start to believe it (reinforcing neural pathways etc.) and so there is a danger that could manifest itself subtly in how you think/act towards women. Also what if your wives/daughters/nieces overhear you saying things like this? Is it acceptable to you?
OP, it's an interesting topic since it implies that this type of masculinity can not only manifest in misogynistic behavior but also other types of negative behavior. Meaning that it's potentially a broader concern than just misogynistic behavior.