Tag Archives: feminism

A Self-Respecting Feminist?

Yesterday’s comment section was, indeed, nuts, but when I went back and reread it several things jumped out at me.

First, the incorrect use and expectation of feminism. Let’s start with the definition of feminism:

  1. 1 :  the theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes

  2. 2 :  organized activity on behalf of women’s rights and interests

That’s it. Basically it’s about women being treated and having the same opportunities as men. It’s about keeping the standards and expectations the same for women and men. It doesn’t mean you always side with women and are always against men. It means a woman has the right to her own thoughts and opinions and actions – even if we disagree with them. The most obvious example of this rears its head in the Mommy Wars (Destructive, divisive wastes of time) that says: In order to be a feminist a woman needs to work outside the home. (ugly flip side: women who work outside the home are bad mothers. Ugh.)

Both men and women are guilty of this behavior, but they are soooo wrong and prove they don’t understand feminism. To me, as a feminist, I support women doing what they want and what works for them. Their choice is simply that – their choice. It’s not good or bad. It’s simply their decision. Supporting women’s choices is feminism.

To say, “You’re too stupid to realize that the “none of your business” answer BUTTRESSES the idea that she has something to hide. Which she probably does, and what she probably wants to hide is that any self-respecting “feminist” would have struck out on her own, but she was unwilling to give up the access to power for both of them.”

I actually found this comment interesting. There’s so much there. First, her “none of your business” answer means she’s hiding something? Okay, let’s say she is. What could she be hiding? Open marriage, sham marriage, calculated political move? That’s a big leap for me. Most people I’ve known who’ve experienced cheating feel a variety of things – heartbreak, betrayal, embarrassment. By going with the open/sham marriage and calculated political move we make the person cheated on an accomplice to the cheater’s behavior. We blame her for his actions. It’s sorta like, “You made me hit you.”

Now, none of this means that the commenter couldn’t be correct. The point is that he has absolutely NO WAY of knowing one personal detail of their marriage, and yet it was put forth with such certainty; not about what actually happened, but about who Hillary is – something he couldn’t possibly know. Somehow we make Hillary complicit in Bill’s adultery. In order to believe that we’d have to believe that, not only is she cold and calculating, but that she’s stupid – that she signed onto his affairs ignoring the political fallout that discovery would bring. Not very calculating.

Sure, she’s a public figure and a lot of this is fair game, even if it is disappointing to read comments like this. This is one of the biggest right-wing talking points out there. It feeds into… Hillary is cold (frigid?), calculating, overly ambitious narrative. There’s so much of this out there. I have a friend who says she’s been told she has a “resting bitch face”, something said to no man ever. We could spend hours discussing that one, and all roads would eventually lead to men telling women to smile – and if she doesn’t smile… well, then she’s obviously cold and calculating. Vicious circle.

We’re on that road here, folks. Basically, what was being said (and this isn’t really about one commenter. This hit a chord with me because it’s so pervasive.) Hillary did it wrong.

Second, this sentence: “Which she probably does, and what she probably wants to hide is that any self-respecting “feminist” would have struck out on her own, but she was unwilling to give up the access to power for both of them.”

Before getting into this, let me say: There is no one rule as to how a “self-respecting feminist” acts in this situation. It’s like a funeral. People grieve differently, and no one gets to judge that. If you’re going down this path (which really amounts to, yet again, telling a woman what to do and how to act) you might need to take a step back and ask yourself why.

This line (she should have left him) has been around forever. It’s tossed out there without much thought, so let’s think about it. She should have struck out on her own? So, she should have moved out of the White House and taken an adorable little apartment in Georgetown? Or maybe people mean she should have waited until Bill left office (two years later) and then left him? I’m sure her staying for those two years wouldn’t have been held against her. I’m sure people wouldn’t have said that she left him after benefiting from being First Lady. How calculating. But maybe she should have just publicly chastised him (it would have to be public, right? We’d have to know, right?, because no one would have called her a nag, a fishwife, a woman who couldn’t sexually satisfy her man. Starting to see how this works? Right there. That’s the point of this post – the no win situation.

The double standard is alive and well. Pointing that out isn’t me telling you to support or vote for Hillary, because the language being used is bigger than her. Believe me, I have been in situations where I’ve had to defend attacks against women I don’t personally like because the attacks are sexist and, in the end, weaken valid points.

FYI: This really isn’t a post about Hillary. Hillary is the example used in this post. Everybody got that? Hope so!

 

 

We’re Going To Have To Talk About Sexism Because It’s Surrounding Us

To say I’m disappointed is an understatement. I want this to stop – on all sides.

Gloria Steinem said:

“Women are more for [Hillary Clinton] than men are…First of all, women get more radical as we get older, because we experience…Not to over-generalize, but…Men tend to get more conservative because they gain power as they age, women get more radical because they lose power as they age.

And, when you’re young, you’re thinking, where are the boys? The boys are with Bernie…”

That’s completely unfair, and I dealt with this argument when I supported Obama in 2008. She did apologize, but that doesn’t undo what she said. And it sure as hell doesn’t help her candidate. With friends like these…

Madeleine Albright said:

“We can tell our story of how we climbed the ladder, and a lot of you younger women think it’s done,” Ms. Albright said of the broader fight for women’s equality. “It’s not done. There’s a special place in hell for women who don’t help each other!”

Again, not helpful. If I was a Bernie supporter this would make my support stronger. Way to go!

Women on women crime is 100% unacceptable. These two women are guilty of doing just that – and Hillary should call them out. They’ve divided women into categories by who they support. I will never accept that. But hey, I completely support a woman’s right to chose. There’s no place for comments like these. No. Place.

Then we have the BernieBros – yes, they are real, and they have always been around. Whether its an article on Hillary, Beyonce, Sarah Palin, rape, reproductive rights, most Reddit posts, they will be there. They are not unique to this Presidential campaign, but if you’re looking for examples of sexism in this campaign look no further than the comment section on any article about Hillary and Bernie. It’s rampant, and it probably has a lot to do with the way we’ve always gone after female candidates. Their tactics are extremely familiar.

Bernie called this behavior out. That’s great and I applaud him for that. More of this, please! Hillary, are you listening?

And I’m embarrassed to admit that DL contributed to this nonsense in 2008 – with our jokes about pantsuits and the Hillary Nutcracker. Yeah, I’m ashamed of my behavior over those posts and comments. I was guilty, guilty, guilty. It was just so easy – probably because it’s always been the first line of attack against women.

This morning, while listening to Al Mascitti, my jaw dropped several times. Here are some snippets:

The reason Gloria Steinem was successful was due to the fact that she was prettier than other “plain” feminist spokeswomen.

Bill Clinton talking about sexism after his relationship Monica Lewinsky isn’t credible.

Questioning if the Clinton marriage is a real marriage.

Hillary Clinton doesn’t have a melodious voice.

Personally, I think Steinem’s prominence had more to do with summing up feminist issues into easy sound bites and how far she pushed the envelope. She caught the media’s attention, sorta like the way Trump does. And… if her prominence had to do with her looks then who’s to blame for that? I’d say it was those who chose to cover her over other prominent feminists. See how that works?

His thoughts on Bill Clinton speaking about feminism… Is he saying that an adulterer can’t be a feminist? That confused me. I really don’t know what the point was. I hope he explains, because I couldn’t follow his logic.

As far as questioning a couple’s marriage, I find that distasteful. No one knows what goes on in someone’s marriage.

But the main thing that really bothers me is how Hillary is judged by her husband’s record. It makes her an extension of him and not her own person. That’s not fair, and it sure as hell never goes in the other direction.

Enough with the voice thing. Not kidding. It’s a no win situation for a women, and it’s not applied to men – whose voices, I guess, are the default position. Al did say he didn’t want to use the word shrill, but his use of melodious (pleasant sounding) makes the same point. Gotta admit, comments about voice and tone make me see red. Women will never win this BS battle, so can we knock it off? Pretty please?

Basically, everyone needs to stop this behavior. If we did, perhaps, we could discuss issues like Climate Change, reproductive rights, immigration, Police brutality, improving our education system, Foreign Policy (altho this was touched on in the last debate) our crumbling infrastructure – you know, things that our candidates aren’t discussing. Personally, I’d like to hear about these issues, as well as income inequality. Hopefully I get my wish because these things matter, too.

Income inequality is an important issue, but it isn’t the only one, and right now I’m not sure where the candidates stand on other issues that matter to me. That’s a problem for me. A BIG one. It’s probably the reason I can’t pick a candidate. I need more, because the office of President is about more, but you wouldn’t know that by listening to the debates. Guess I’m saying, I completely understand where each candidates stand on income inequality… can we start to include other things? There actually are other things.

Meanwhile, can we step up our game and drop the sexism on both sides?

And in the words of John Scalzi, “I’m guessing you thought I was way off on your political philosophy but right on the button about the other two. Just think about that for a while.” We’ll rewrite that as: “I’m guessing you thought I was way off on your political candidate but right on the button about the other candidate. Just think about that for a while.”

Young Women Are Not So Impressed by Hillary

Running against the Clinton story that Bernie’s support comes mainly from only bros, women under 30 in Iowa voted overwhelmingly for Bernie Sanders.

In Iowa this week, women 29 and younger voted for Clinton’s challenger, Sen. Bernie Sanders, by a stunning margin of roughly 6 to 1, much as young men did, according to the poll of voters arriving at precinct caucuses conducted for the television networks and the Associated Press.

The problem is not rejection of feminism – surveys suggest millennial women are the most staunchly feminist group of voters in America. They want to see a woman in the White House. Just not necessarily this woman.

Nemski’s back.

Nemski's back

Warning: “Choreplay” Isn’t A Cute Phrase, So Don’t Use It. Really, Just Don’t

Even as a stay-at-home mom who handles almost all the household work, the term “choreplay” irritates me. Haven’t heard it yet? Well, here’s what it means: Men can get more sex if they do chores around the house.

This NYT article makes a lot of good points, including the part about fathers and women’s voices in business. (Note to beer and car manufacturers: I’m the one who buys most of the beer in our household. I don’t drink beer, but I buy it for my husband since I’m the one who runs most of the errands. I’m also part of the car buying decision. So if your ad is sexist and I don’t like it, I won’t buy your product. Perhaps, you should cater to me, too. I swear, when I watch some of these commercials I know there aren’t women, in positions of power, making decisions, because half this nonsense would never be aired if there were.)

But here’s where the NYT’s article goes off the rails:

If that isn’t exciting enough, try this: Couples who share chores equally have more sex. As the researchers Constance T. Gager and Scott T. Yabiku put it, men and women who work hard play hard. One of us, Sheryl, has advised men that if they want to do something nice for their partners, instead of buying flowers, they should do laundry. A man who heard this was asked by his wife one night to do a load of laundry. He picked up the basket and asked hopefully, “Is this Lean In laundry?” Choreplay is real.

Choreplay is real?  I hope not.

Wash the dirty dishes, not because there are dirty dishes, but because men will be rewarded with sex for doing something that needs to be done? This is really a thing, and we need to nip this nonsense in the bud. Now I’m not saying that taking chores off your spouse’s plates can’t be romantic or appreciated, but the idea of men doing chores because it will pay off sexually implies that housework is women’s work – and that men doing laundry or dishes is somehow going above and beyond what is expected of them. Basically, it’s saying: Men shouldn’t have to do chores, so when they do they deserve a reward.

It also makes sex into a business transaction (just like the “good old days” when picking up the dinner check equated into a woman having to put out. Hey, I bought you lobster!). It reduces sex into something men want and something women must endure. “Oh hell, he vacuumed, guess I’ll have to give him sex tonight.”

Do men want women viewing sex as a chore? Because that’s the flip side. I would hope not. Sex, at least good sex (and I’m beginning to think that’s rare), is something both people should want and enjoy. It should not be a lie back and think of England, gotta cross this off my to-do list sort of thing, because well… he did do a load of laundry.  Buying into choreplay means buying into transactional sex – I did this for you, you do this for me. It paints the picture of sex being something only men want, and something women suffer in order to have the bathroom cleaned. And if men and women start buying into choreplay I see problems on the horizon. Seriously, who wants to equate sex with laundry? And if you find yourself doing this… stop. Just stop.

I remember whenever my father emptied the dishwasher he’d say, “Honey, I did the dishes for you.” Yeah, there’s a generational thing going on here (my Dad is almost 80), but my mother would always, and I mean always, counter with, “They aren’t my dishes.” My Dad did stop saying that, and it concerns me that “choreplay” seems to be moving us backwards instead of forwards.

So, can we please not buy into this choreplay nonsense? No one deserves a reward for doing things that need to be done. And no one deserves a partner who only has sex with us because we washed the dishes.

I Really Didn’t Want To Write About 50 Shades Of Grey

In May of 2012 I wrote a post about 50 Shades of Grey called 50 Shades of Agony. I admit to not finishing the book because, well, I couldn’t stand it. It was, without a doubt, the worst thing I’ve ever read. But I was clear that if the book “worked” for you, then enjoy. That’s the thing about fantasies, they’re personal and usually private.

I haven’t seen the movie, but will probably “hate watch” it once it lands on HBO. There’s simply too much talk for me not to watch it. My curiosity is probably due to the million or so articles written about the movie – and I don’t think that number is too far off the mark.

So what prompted me to finally write about 50 Shades of Grey? It began with a post over at Delaware Politics (Yes. I know.) by David Anderson titled: 50 Shades A Failure of Modern Feminism.

50 Shades just brought to light what in form or another is normal behavior for millions. What is more interesting to me is that it tears to shreds the emasculation of relationships by modern feminism. 50 Shades is not what I would call the road map to healthy relationships, yet it is popular to near record levels not scene since (ironically) the Passion of the Christ.

I found intriguing this article by frequent guest author, Jon Moseley. His premise is that 50 Shades are a perversion of the natural yearning of many women for real men. It speaks to the void in our society created in the last 70 years of the attempt to cleanse society of “a man’s strength and leadership”. He contends that it is a perversion of the healthy original filling the void left by remake of society by the left.

That’s quite a leap, and one not based in reality. And I find it interesting how we don’t apply these leaps to other movies. This is entertainment, fantasy (Hello? Every action/gangster/alien/war movie ever made) – granted, it’s not my idea of amusement, but to each their own. If this rocks your world, I’m A-okay with it. You go, girl/guy!

Before I continue let me share my thoughts on why I think 50 Shades of Grey became so popular. For those of you who don’t know, 50 Shades began as Twilight fan fiction, which means it started with a relatively large audience. (FYI: I didn’t like Twilight either, mainly due to its helpless heroine) Starting with an established readership is every author’s dream.

Since the book was released I’ve been in many (unexpected) conversations about it and the one thing that keeps coming up is that 50 Shades of Grey was most peoples first encounter with erotica. They simply didn’t know the genre existed. They know now. Add to that the ease of downloading books to your Kindle (and skipping the judgement and embarrassment of not purchasing “literature” in a very public bookstore) and you’ll understand why erotica is more popular than ever. In fact, after the release of 50 Shades sales of erotic novels increased by 30%. A 30% increase is the sound of discovery.

So… those are the reasons I think 50 Shades of Grey became so popular. True confession: I have turned many readers of 50 Shades of Grey onto better and more titillating erotica. Don’t judge me!

Now, let’s move onto how certain people have twisted fantasy into feminism’s failure.  I’d venture to say that if David Anderson was asked to name feminists he would name me -which then makes me wonder why he would ignore my take on this book?  He also ignored other feminists’ views. Here’s the deal with feminists and this book and movie. The majority of them think it’s a terrible book/movie, but won’t pass judgement on women who like it.

I’ll have to quote from the piece David Anderson links to. Brace yourselves for none other than Jonathon Moseley (yes, I say his name more than 3 times in this post, so brace yourselves!) and his titled post: 50 Shades of Wimpy Men Leave Women Longing

The feminists seeking to tear down traditional society by blaming all men for a mythical “rape culture” are now silent while Hollywood liberals simultaneously work hard to create one.

Love the word mythical and rape culture  – put in scare quotes, btw. Had to include that quote because it’s so precious and tells you exactly what we’re in for. And here’s another man who hasn’t read feminist’s writings. The mocking of 50 Shades of Grey in feminists places has been deafening.

More importantly, in regards to the genre, someone (Jonathon Moseley) hasn’t been paying attention. In his attempt to explain the romance genre he links to a post on “bodice rippers” as a way to explain the formula  But here’s the thing. He couldn’t have read the post he linked to. Hell, he couldn’t have even read the title, which is: Beyond Bodice-Rippers: How Romance Novels Came to Embrace Feminism.

If he had read his linked to article he would have read one of the most important statements, imo, regarding the appeal of romance novels: “romance is one of the few places where a woman is a subject in sex, rather than an object.” That is a powerful statement. I have watched porn, but be warned, I tend to ruin the experience (Don’t believe me? Ask Mr. Pandora!). I’m always asking him, “Why?” Why are they having sex? He just walked into the room and they started going at it? What is her motivation? She was just doing laundry, for god’s sake!  He may as well be using a blow up doll, because there’s no way that woman is enjoying this. Yes, I’m missing the point of porn – which is, for the most part, about women being the object (vessel?) of sex. And if that’s your fantasy, have at it, because that’s the flippin’ point of fantasies.

I have to get back to Jonathon Moseley’s article. I’m not happy about that, but…

Well, what are women longing for? Are women fed up with modern men with the texture of boiled cauliflower? Do modern, feminized, metro-sexual wimps leave women hungering for something more? Would women be just as happy with a man’s man chopping firewood in a lumberjack shirt, who isn’t afraid to speak his mind even if he ticks people off, even if he doesn’t own any handcuffs?

First… LOL! Lumberjack shirt? I’m dying here. Personally, I find Mr. Moseley’s definition of masculinity rather limiting. He simply doesn’t see an equal partnership between the sexes. Don’t believe me? Read on.

There is an authentic original of which BSDM is a corrupt variation. There is the proper role of a strong but kind masculine man. And then there is the perversion. In order for one thing to be “twisted,” there must have been an original that was straight and true. A man’s strength and leadership is something for a woman to trust in and lean on. The perversion caused by sin turns what God created into male chauvinists degrading women as second class.

Power to the fallen mind is mean and demeaning. Fallen men seek power to be superior over others. To God, power is kind. Power shelters and protects, and even gently corrects. The proper role of strength is not to seek one’s own interests, at least not exclusively. A strong gentleman becomes twisted into a male chauvinistic pig through the sins of selfishness and pride, a cold heart, and an inability to empathize with others and care about them as real people.

See? To him people that engage in BSDM (or as most people refer to it, BDSM, but I’ll use his version because it’s the least of his problems – along with the fact that, I’d guess, he hasn’t read the book or seen the movie) are corrupt and perverted. There’s something wrong with these BSDM people! Me? I think it would take an enormous amount of trust between BDSM partners.

And notice how he states that male strength is something women should trust and lean on. What about a man leaning on a woman for support? I have been with my husband for 25 years. There have been plenty of times each of us has leaned on the other for strength and support. Is Mr. Moseley married or in a long term relationship? I ask because I can’t imagine a man in a long term, committed relationship painting the sexes in such a stereotypical fashion. Also, his repeated use of the term male chauvinist/male chauvinist pig is so… dated. This is a man who hasn’t left the 70’s.

But his main point seems to be… women like 50 Shades of Grey because they want to be dominated by men, and feminism has erased the manly-man from existence. That’s a very convenient spin for a misogynist. It’s an excuse for bad behavior. Sorta like Robin Thicke… “Hey, you know you want it.”

There are many problems with Mr. Moseley’s post, but the idea that women have defaulted to BDSM because of the emasculation of men is ridiculous, and, like I said, convenient because it justifies bad behavior. It’s like women’s choices are 1) being submissive and deferring to men to take care of them, lest we mess with god’s natural order and burn in hell, or 2) handcuffs. There doesn’t appear to be any middle ground in Mr. Moseley’s world view. In his world, if a woman is better at handling a crisis situation she should step back and let the man handle it – even if he messes it up. This is so about stroking the male ego for Mr. Moseley.

I’ll move onto this bit of silliness from Mr. Moseley:

Women love to go dancing much more than do men. Yet when a man and a woman go ballroom dancing, the man takes complete and total control. Every split second, the man decides what will happen, which way they will turn, and what the next dance step will be. But no one in their right mind would imagine that ballroom dancing is a man being inconsiderate to a woman. On the contrary, having a man lead allows the two to get closer to each other and to move as one. Nearly always the man is ballroom dancing to please the woman who likes dancing more than he does.

First, not all women love dancing.

Second, not all men dislike dancing.

Third, ballroom dancing doesn’t exist on a man’s whim. There are actual steps that a man follows. Yep, he’s taking direction. He doesn’t simply pull a women into his arms and wing it. So the man is not taking “complete control” he’s following orders.

Fourth, I know five couples who took ballroom dancing lessons. Three of those were initiated by the men.

We’ll end with his closing statement:

The more an anti-God feminism attacks and tears down God’s patterns in male-female relationships, the more the fallen human heart invents twisted alternatives to try to fill in the gaping hole. Women instinctively want a strong man. And some of them can even grow hungry enough to accept a perverted version of masculinity if they cannot find the authentic original of a kind but strong gentleman as God intended.

Anti-God? What he’s saying is that strong women in equal relationships go against god’s will. Or, more simply… Jonathon Moseley doesn’t seem to understand male/female relationships. He’s all, “God says so, so submit, women.” Trotting out god to get your way, your dominance and superiority, is lazy. It requires no thought, and it sure as hell doesn’t involve women being partners in a relationship. He basically claims that women into BDSM aren’t there because they like it. They are there because there are no lumberjack shirt wearing men, so they have to settle for whips and chains. In Mr. Moseley’s world women are still objects. Sex happens to them, not with them. That’s sad.

As to his claim that “Women instinctively want a strong man” I don’t disagree. Men instinctively want a strong women. I leaned heavily on my husband when my best friend was dying of cancer. I completely fell apart. For those of you not familiar, I wrote about my experience here. He was amazing, but not in Mr. Mosely’s way. My husband stepped up. He took care of our children (feeding, grocery shopping, pick ups and drop offs, cleaning, laundry etc. – you know, women’s work and hardly “masculine” endeavors) and took care of me. When my husband’s father fell and ended up in the hospital for weeks and had to eventually go into a nursing home, I lived at the hospital and met with doctors and social workers and called every nursing home in the area until I found a place we were comfortable with. I took care of my father-in-law’s belongings and handled the movers and hired the cleaning company so we could move him. That is what a marriage/committed relationship looks like. It’s about never letting your partner drown.

In closing, if you have to pimp out your god to make your case for superiority then you, and your god, are pretty weak… men.

 

Can You Hear Me Now?

Last week Cassandra put up a post entitled #YesAllWomen and things got interesting.  The entire thread (and its evolution or… reduction?) is worth your time to read, but, for this post, I’m going to deal with my interactions with individual commenters – which means I’ll be taking the comments out of order to highlight the individual conversations.

I’ve debated on how to do this and decided to post comments in their entirety – which means this post will be ridiculously long, but quotes will not be taken out of context.  (FYI: I’ve placed the comments in blockquotes, so they can be easily identified.  Anything in blockquotes is a direct comment from the #YesAllWomen thread.  Everyone with me?)  Hey, look at this as your weekend reading!

Basically, I’m going to dissect these conversations.  I am also writing this post from my point of view (and only my point of view) – how I interpreted these responses as a woman.

I was actually surprised by how frustrated I became writing this post, and I shudder when I think of the forthcoming comments.  Mainly because I’m not sure if we can have this discussion without getting defensive.  I’ll also point out that while I am calling out certain people’s comments I am doing so in a attempt to see if people can relate to my reactions to certain words, phrases, tone, etc.  Again, this post is about how I interpreted comments… and I didn’t always interpret them nicely, so feel free to call me out.  But once you do that… do you think you could comment on my point; do you think there’s a conversation to be had?  If you do, then after you call me out, could you address that?

As I was writing this I kept a sort of diary.  At the end of each day I wrote these comments in this post:

I’m beginning to question the wisdom of writing this (June 4th)

I’m not even sure if I’ll even publish this post! (on June 5th)

What am I thinking?  This is going to be a blood bath!  (My blood – LOL!)  I’m not sure this will be worth it.  (June 6th)

So… if you’re reading this it means I ignored that little voice inside my head – the voice of… sanity?

Here goes…  Everybody ready?

The Dissection of a Post:

We’ll start with Davy since he wrote the first comment on the thread.  Here’s his comment:

“Rodger is an outlier even if the experiences above are not outliers.

I would talk to my daughter about predators because it is easier to protect one known person than to stop an unknown perpetrator.

Alcohol neither excuses his actions nor condemns her actions. But drinking does make her an easier target.

“Rape is a serious allegation” because “rape is a serious crime.”

I wish that we lived in a world where everyone could do whatever he or she wanted. But we do not. Not everyone is noble, and we must worry about criminals. No amount of education or re-education will stop violence against women (just as no amount will stop violence, period).

You can live in utopia, but the rest of us live in the real world.”

Here’s my response:

“If you read his manifesto, rape figures prominently. And if he had been able to execute his plan then rape, torture and killing was his end game. His plan included turning his apartment into a torture chamber. This was his intent. He was thwarted by a locked sorority house door.

And actually, Davy, as a man you live in a very different world than women. That’s your privilege.”

My first paragraph is in response to Puck, who stated,  “Anyway, the Rogers case is about murder, not rape.”  The last line is directed at Davy’s comment, “You can live in utopia, but the rest of us live in the real world.

Davy answers:

“@pandora: “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of [gender] is to speak openly and candidly on the subject of [gender].” But you qualify to join the discussion if and only if you are a member of the class of victims. If not, the privilege of being a member of the class of alleged perpetrators is an effective substitute for participation.

Thank you for telling me that I am “privileged” and my views do not (or barely) matter.”

I did not tell him that his views didn’t matter.  I told him that, as a man, he lived in a different world from women and that was his privilege.  And… he did fire the first shot.  I pointed that out:

And thank you for your opening comment that says that we live in an utopia while you live in the real world. Why is your comment considered not dismissive, while my comment is cause for outrage. I simply responded in kind.

You do know that if you were to comment on your experience as a high school boy dealing with society’s ridiculous standards of masculinity I wouldn’t be questioning or dismissing your experiences. I would, you know, listen – mainly because I have no idea what it’s like to be a boy and would defer to you, and your experiences, for guidance.

And I don’t get why (mostly) white guys get so bent out of shape about their privilege. As a financially secure, white woman I know that I have privilege. I know, for instance, that my son would never be Trayvon Martin. I know, simply by my appearance, that I am given the benefit of the doubt and a lot of preferential treatment. I accept that my privilege exists which makes me aware when others aren’t afforded the same consideration.

So why do some men (not ALL men) take talk of gender or race issues so personally? Especially when it isn’t about them.. [emphasis mine]

My response to Davy lists several points:

  •  Asking why my comment on privilege is dismissive, while his utopia comment was not.  I did respond in kind – mainly because if he hadn’t written that sentence I wouldn’t have mentioned privilege.
  •  I specifically point out that if he were to write about his experiences as a boy/man that I would listen – that I wouldn’t question or dismiss his experiences – because I hadn’t lived those experiences.
  •  As a white woman I acknowledged my privilege and how my privilege made me aware of others who aren’t afforded those same privileges.
  •  And finally, I asked why some men take these topics so personally, especially when it isn’t about them.

Did Davy address any of my points when he answered?  You be the judge:

Davy:  “To quote myself: “Rodger is an outlier even if the experiences above are not outliers.”

Rodger was a misogynist. No doubt there. But do you think he killed people because he was a misogynist or because he was ill?

The answer is important because, presumably, it determines how we stop (or at least try to stop) the next Rodger. Do you think educating a Rodger clone about how to treat other people (which includes women) would help him?

The focus on misogyny with respect to Rodger is counterproductive. The focus on misogyny in general is deserved.”

So, did Davy respond to, or acknowledge, anything I said?  Did he hear me?  (and sure, blogging isn’t the best medium, but we deal with this phenomenon several times in this thread.)  Or did he switch the subject and give me more questions – homework! 😉 – while not responding to my points and questions?

Did he even realize what he did?  And that’s an important question, because I’m beginning to think that a lot of this is unconscious behavior.

But I did answer his new question (And perhaps I shouldn’t have.  Perhaps I should have refused to move on until he addressed my points.  But I didn’t, which may make me part of the problem.)  Here’s the exchange:

Pandora:“Rodger was a misogynist. No doubt there. But do you think he killed people because he was a misogynist or because he was ill?”
I don’t think this is an either/or question. I think he killed people because he was a misogynist and mentally ill – although, we have no proof (yet) he was diagnosed as mentally ill – just that he had problems and was in some sort of therapy – but we have a boatload of proof he was a misogynist. (And I wouldn’t be the least surprised if he had mental problems. Then again, I think anyone who is racist, sexist, homophobic, hates Jews/Muslims/Christians, etc. has mental problems.)

In some ways it reminds me of the gun debate. Don’t talk about gun control because guns don’t kill people, crazy people do. And this can be applied across the board. Was Timothy McVeigh anti-government or just crazy? And if he was just crazy, then why erect all those barriers outside of government buildings. Why have metal detectors? Why specifically address who he attacked if he was just crazy? Why do we react to the motives of terrorists, and not just say, “Well, some people be crazy” and move on, since there’s nothing to be done.

And the same can be said about homophobes, sexists, racists, anti-Semites, etc.. If crazy people (I refuse to use the word mentally ill, since the vast majority of mentally ill people aren’t violent and are more likely to victims of crime) are just crazy, and there’s no link to other issues, then that allows us to not deal with issues we may find uncomfortable – issues that may force us to reexamine ourselves and change our behavior.

If gun enthusiasts admit there’s a problem with guns, then they’ll have to change their behavior. If racists (especially those who pride themselves on not using the “N” word, but generally feel and act as if whites are superior – because, ya know, biology – and the biology “argument” is a favorite among misogynists/sexists, as well) acknowledge that racism is a problem, then that would make them question their own attitudes. Same damn thing with homophobes and misogynists – even those that are considered benign. You know the ones who carelessly toss around the words f*g (I despise that word), slut, whore, etc.. And I’m starting to feel that the push back on eliminating these words and attitudes, by the people who use them, is due to asking those people to give up something they like to do.” [emphasis mine]

Davy: “@pandora: So you are questioning whether Rodger was mentally ill? Rodger was in therapy before he entered puberty. In the Fall of 2013, he was prescribed an anti-psychotic, which he refused to take. His family was worried that he might hurt himself or others. Granted, I am no doctor, and no one with authority has said that he was mentally ill; however, based on known facts (including those from his manifesto), I am pretty sure he was ill.

Rodger does not reflect what is wrong with America with respect to sexual violence. Labeling Rodger’s crimes as acts of misogyny draws attention from real acts of misogyny, especially those that go unreported on college campuses throughout our country.

For Rodger, if not misogyny, then something else: http://time.com/114354/elliot-rodger-ucsb-misogyny/.”

Hmm… did I question whether Rodgers was mentally ill?  Nope.  Not one little bit.  (See the bolded part of my answer above)  So why would Davy ignore what I actually wrote and pretty much say EXACTLY the same thing I said.

And so I answered:

@Davy

You asked me this question: “But do you think he killed people because he was a misogynist or because he was ill?”

My answer: “I don’t think this is an either/or question. I think he killed people because he was a misogynist and mentally ill”

As far as questioning whether he was mentally ill, I said (see sentence directly above this one) I thought he was mentally ill. What I didn’t do, and was careful not to do, was guess at a diagnosis since it bothers me greatly when people throw out terms like Asperger’s or Autism in these sorts of situations.

And your “I’m no doctor, and no one with authority has said that he was mentally ill…” statement is pretty much what I was saying. So we’re agreeing, no? Both of us think he had mental problems, but neither one of us can say for sure what exactly they were.

And while I agree that deeply disturbed people will find a reason to kill, I wish we’d stop (as a society) giving them flippin’ directions. I completely understand why Jews, Sikhs, Muslims, Doctors who preform abortions, minorities, women, gays, etc. feel nervous and frightened for various reasons, mainly because there are a lot of people saying horrible things and mentally disturbed people are following their directions… orders?

So, I don’t understand why we need to remove the misogyny from this discussion (especially when we haven’t removed other “reasons” for other killers. I do remember bullying being discussed, at great length, after Columbine. Should bullying not have been part of the conversation?). Misogyny is the reason he targeted who he did; it is the group (PUAs/PUAHate) he found that spoke to his “needs” and the one he felt at home in.

We seem to get this with “pro-lifers.” We know the vast, vast majority of “pro-lifers” would never kill a doctor who performs abortions or bomb a clinic, but we do know why these pro-life groups post the name, phone number and home address of these doctors. They are giving directions, quite literally, in this case.

Davy didn’t respond.  And no, I’m not calling him out for that, because people do have a life.  But I sincerely hope he comments on this post.

Before I move onto the next exchange I’d like to point out something that frustrated me.  I wrote several times about the man who killed people at the Jewish Community Center, and no one (and I mean NO ONE) questioned if he was anti-Semitic.  That was a sincere point, and one that people arguing against misogyny never (and I mean NEVER) addressed.  Why is that?  Surely there were vast similarities, and yet that point was never addressed.  Why?

Now we’ll move onto Dave, who I know is furious/frustrated/annoyed (pick one) with me.  Fair enough.  I’m frustrated with him, too.  Before we address Dave’s first comment we need to address mine, because they are linked.  Here’s my first comment:

“Because every women I’ve ever known has a prepared explanation/excuse for when “no, thank you.” isn’t good enough for the man asking them to dance or for a date. And every one of them holds their breath waiting to be called a bitch (or worse) after they say “no.” Every. Single. One.

I’m not saying all men behave this way, but every woman has dealt with men that do… many times.”

Please notice my “Every. Single. One.” statement.  Okay? Here’s Dave’s comment, which I’d say was in direct response to my comment since he went out of his way to use my words.  And if you have any doubt that he was responding to me… well, he quotes me in his very first line.

Dave:  “I’m not saying all men behave this way, but every woman has dealt with men that do… many times.”

And probably everyone of those men have or had a mother. Every. single. one. Armed with that knowledge, I would think that the collective motherhood would have banded together to teach their sons respect for women. Yeah, I know that some children may end up the way they are through no fault of the parents, but some aspects of this culture can and should be influenced by parents.

How about MARC (Mothers Against Rape Culture) to support mothers in educating their children? If you looked at the high school survey, one has to ask “where did they get such ideas?” [emphasis mine]

Can we stop pretending that my “Every. Single. One.” phrasing didn’t hit a chord with Dave – even though my comment was a general statement not directed specifically at any particular man.  Hell, I even added a disclaimer at the end of my comment:  “I’m not saying all men behave this way, but every woman has dealt with men that do… many times.”

And I even gave him a chance to clarify.

Pandora:  Um, Dave… why is the father missing from your comment?

Dave responds to me (quoting me again):

Dave:  Um, Dave… why is the father missing from your comment?”

Good question Pandora. The omission was deliberate. The first female relationship every boy has is with his mother. Mother’s understand what it is to be a girl having had girl experiences. Fathers can educate respect for people in general, but I think that mothers are in a unique position to be able communicate with her son from a female perspective and mothers have more of a nurturing capacity than fathers. Plus, in the world we live in, every boy has a mother but many do not have fathers.

If I’m being honest… I actually snorted at that reply (Sorry!  But I’m being honest here.).  I don’t believe his reasoning that the “omission was deliberate.”  And I have trouble believing that he would have written a similar statement on black and brown people – And probably everyone of those black/brown people have or had a white friend. Every. single. one.  (Not saying he would write anything like this (he wouldn’t!), but maybe it’ll help explain why women read his comment the way they did.) I think, for whatever reason, my “Every, Single. One.” comment annoyed him and he shot back.  Truthfully, I’m okay with that.  Blogging is a great outlet for kicking the dog.  I responded:

“Sheesh, Dave, I’m not sure I can handle another female-only responsibility! ;-)

While I agree that mothers can have a strong impact, mainly by sharing their experiences with their sons and pointing out unacceptable behavior, I do think that fathers and men have just as much impact (maybe more) by leading by example. Defining, understanding, etc. your masculinity comes, in part, by watching, and emulating, behavior. Men have a huge role to play in this.

I would love terms like “man card” and “be a man” or “grow a pair” to be eradicated from our language, but these terms (and many more like them) exist and put pressure on boys to… well… man up. See how pervasive that crap is?

Several years ago, I banned all gender specific slurs/insults/idioms from my home. I told my kids to improve their vocabulary and we have had very interesting discussions on these words and how they’re used to hurt/devalue an individual man and woman. These were great discussions. My son said the male words/phrases were designed to make men do something they weren’t comfortable with – that they were goading words designed to lessen individual choice. My daughter said the female words/phrases were designed to either shut up a women or tell her to act more like a man (grow a pair, have some balls). Both ended up deciding the words were basically manipulative and now they have these discussions with their friends. That’s progress.

And I don’t believe mothers have more of a nurturing capacity than fathers. Maybe 30 years ago, but that is rapidly changing. Which is a good thing.”

Did you notice my emoticon?  I shouldn’t have had to add it, but I did… so shame on me?  Did you read the rest of what I wrote – things that included males and females?  I hope so, because no one else acknowledged them.  So when it comes to being concerned about serious issues that affect men, all points (so far) go to me!  Which makes me wonder… why do men who have trouble with labeling things misogynistic never really focus on men (and their issues) but rather on women – and how women affect men?

Dave then responds to Cassandra (he quotes her), but includes me with his social conditioning reply:

Dave:““There’s alot of the usual bullshit in your response, Dave. Because once again, it is the women in the equation who are supposed to be solely responsible for the behavior their men.”

Nope, there is no such thing as a sole responsibility, sole solution, or sole anything else. While much of the so-called female roles are a result of social conditioning, there are biological aspects that cannot be dismissed. That’s not to say that fathers cannot or do not nurture. Nothing is absolute but gender tendencies remain regardless even in the absence of social condition. We are after all mammals and most mammals do not deal with social conditioning issues that we deal with. It is simply that men do not walk in women’s shoes and cannot comprehend with the same empathy as woman could. People resort to that refrain for many aspects of life, including (and especially) race, gender, LBGT issues, ad nauseam. Even so, without repeating what I said, I did not exclude fathers, I was pointing out the uniqueness of a mother and son relationship that provides an opportunity for mothers (who were girls at one point) to act in a more collective and collaborative manner to effect a cultural change such as MAD has accomplished. I am sorry you read that as excluding fathers and anyone else I may have failed to include.

Honestly, sometimes I think folks read for omission rather than commission. It’s binary thinking that the mention of one group automatically excludes all other groups. I’m surprised that someone didn’t bring up families where there is no female role model (e.g. same sex male parents), after all I must have excluded them as well. But really, I didn’t exclude anyone. I merely pointed out what I considered to be a unique opportunity that is presented in a mother/son relationship.”

We’re going to have to break this down a little bit.

Dave says:  “Nope, there is no such thing as a sole responsibility, sole solution, or sole anything else.”

Really?  Let’s remind ourselves of Dave’s initial statement where he focused on “sole” responsibility:

Dave: “And probably everyone of those men have or had a mother. Every. single. one. Armed with that knowledge, I would think that the collective motherhood would have banded together to teach their sons respect for women. Yeah, I know that some children may end up the way they are through no fault of the parents, but some aspects of this culture can and should be influenced by parents.

How about MARC (Mothers Against Rape Culture) to support mothers in educating their children? If you looked at the high school survey, one has to ask “where did they get such ideas?”

Now see… I see that as a sole responsibility thing.  And his closing question, “where did they get such ideas?”, makes me wonder if the correct answer is… their mothers?  (And I have no time for the “biology” argument.  We’ve heard that before when it comes to sexism/misogyny, as well as race.  So over it.)  And it isn’t Dave’s point about mothers’ roles, it’s the way he worded it that ruffled feathers.  It’s his initial comment.  It’s the way he quoted me (Every. Single. One.).  In my opinion, everything he wrote after his first comment was an attempt to deflect from that comment.  Fine.  We’ve all done that, but that doesn’t erase the comment.

And, you know what?  I would have loved to discuss why my “Every. Single. One.” statement hit a chord with him.  Perhaps both of us could have dug deeper and learned something.  Then again, maybe not, but it would have been an interesting discussion.

Getting back on track, I answered Dave’s binary comment by saying:

“It’s really not binary, Dave, especially when you assign homework to women, and when #not all men has become such a meme – so much so that I used it in my first comment because if I hadn’t I would have been inundated with comments saying, “Not all Men!” (You do know that #yesallwomen was created to counter this “not all men” outrage? And it’s interesting how no one has ever claimed that all men behave badly, but I’m beginning to think that entering a discussion with “Not all men!” is merely a way to shut the conversation down. Not directed at you, btw.)

It bothers me because, while we lump groups together (too much/not right, but we do) we’re supposed to view white men as individuals – and most of them weren’t crying “not all women” or “not all blacks, hispanics, asians, gays, etc.” They only joined the discussion when their individuality was questioned. Then there was a problem. The VA tech shooter = discussion of Korean parenting. Fort Hood/Boston Marathon Bombers = Muslim religion discussion. Eric Harris, Dylan Klebold, Jared Loughner, Adam Lanza, James Holmes = lone wolf mentally ill person.

Even when Elliot Rodger writes a manifesto telling us exactly why he did what he did (he hated women and the men who they gave their bodies to, because he was entitled to those women.) we dismiss his own words, discount the misogyny, and pronounce him as mentally ill individual – even though society and the internet are full of men who think (and say things) EXACTLY like him. Elliot Rodger’s actions were extreme, his mindset was not.

And, your “ad nauseam” comment signals to me that you’re tired of discussing race, gender, LBGT issues. I’m not sure you meant to come across that way, but that’s the way it read to me.”

Dave’s answer:

““you’re tired of discussing race, gender, LBGT issues.”

No, I’m not tired because I rarely if ever discuss them because people have told me “that because I am a man, I cant speak on behalf of women.” and people “have said that because you are not Black or Jewish, you cannot speak on behalf of Blacks or Jews.” And so like Ben, I can’t explain the experience of women to them.

“I actually dont know if that is what dave was saying”

That’s exactly what I was saying.”

Really?  Not to mention, I did form my ad nauseum comment in a way for him to clarify.  I told him how I read it, and said I wasn’t sure if he meant it to come across that way. Sometimes I wonder if throwing your hands in the air and walking away is a way to avoid discussing things.  I wonder about this because I’ve done it as well, and this post has me examining my behavior and every snarky comment I’ve written.  Yes, some were justified and in fun, but others were not – others were deflection and said simply because I had a problem with the commenter.

Back to Dave’s point about being told who/what he can speak about.  If you read any of my past posts, I’ve very clearly said that people need to LISTEN; that they shouldn’t charge right in and state their opinions, but rather, listen to other people’s experiences – people who have, you know, actually experienced these things.  Why is this request/demand so unreasonable?  Why is it considered over the top?  Why is listening equated with never being allowed to speak on a subject?

Yes, I did respond, by saying:

“You know… sometimes it isn’t all about you. Letting others tell you about their personal experiences and you asking questions and then contributing your thoughts is a discussion.

And it is interesting how posts (not only this one on this site) about women issues turn into threads about mens’ concerns.”

And here’s Dave’s final comment:

Geez! It was simply a comment that mothers (who are authority figures, role models, AND women) are uniquely positioned to provide some much need guidance to their sons in this particular area. As ben succinctly put it, they are “perhaps the BEST person” I did not, and neither did ben, suggest or imply that they were the only person or that they had the total responsibility. To infer a different meaning, intent, or implication in the comment is incorrect. If you don’t feel mothers are “perhaps the best” or “uniquely positioned” please feel free to disagree with that point. But don’t shift to an argument regarding what authority figure was omitted or because I failed to mention or discuss every authority figure.

I don’t think we were the ones shifting the argument.  Truly, I think Dave’s first comment was snarkily written – hey, it’s blogging.  I don’t think it was just simply a comment that we/I overreacted to.  And everyone has had an experience where their words were misunderstood.  Usually we handle this situation differently in the real world (yeah, blogging can suck!).  We tend to not accuse the person who heard us of being wrong.  We explain, and sometimes apologize for our poor wording.  Dave’s defensiveness over his initial comment was telling (Yep, there was a potential conversation there), and I wasn’t the one shifting (and expanding) the argument.

But this way of discussing women’s issues seems par for the course – Men, and their roles, are removed.  And that’s why Dave’s initial comment hit a nerve.  It always seems to be the woman’s job to civilize men – through what we wear, if we drink alcohol, if we “friend zone” men, where we walk at night or day, if we smile at a man (or if we don’t), if we are sexually active or “frigid” etc.

And with that Dave left the conversation… meanwhile, Ben entered.

“Wait a minute…. Pandora… you remind us (rightly) that the only proper authority on woman’s issues can be a woman. Why then, isnt the mother the best person to educate the son about how women ought/want to be treated? It isnt her responsibility alone… but based on what you’ve said here repeatedly, the father IS NOT the one who should be speaking on behalf of women. I think that is what dave was saying… i think

So that is to say….. Is the mother the BEST person… in a heteronormative 2 parent household…. to educate the son(s)… NOT the woman’s job…. or not to absolve fatherly responsibility…… but just the best one for that one specific job that conveys that specific set of education.
I actually dont know if that is what dave was saying… but now it is what I am asking. Im not tryin to GETCHA…. Im not trying to assign gender roles.”

Needless to say, Ben’s paraphrasing isn’t what I said – what I ever said.   I answer him:

Pandora:  I’ve said that a woman is the authority on her body, and only her body. I am not the authority of my daughter’s body. I believe in autonomy.

(And could you show me where I’ve said, “but based on what you’ve said here repeatedly, the father IS NOT the one who should be speaking on behalf of women.” I don’t believe I ever made such a claim.)

I’ve also asked that people listen to women’s experiences (which some days seems a bridge too far). It would be like you or me telling a black/hispanic person that their experiences with racism aren’t correct. We haven’t lived their experience, so our best bet is to be quiet and listen… not go off about biology or derail the conversation by making it about how “not all white people” are racist.

In the two person household you reference, both parents are in charge of raising children. There aren’t (or shouldn’t be) pink parenting jobs and blue parenting jobs.

Ben:  “Pandora… you have told ME… a few times… that because I am a man, I cant speak on behalf of women. you have said that because you are not Black or Jewish, you cannot speak on behalf of Blacks or Jews. It’s a fair principle that I hope you aren’t going to try to deny now.

I also dont recall me or dave saying anything was the mother’s sole responsibility. All I am saying is…. perhaps the BEST (not only…i am not saying only, please don’t respond to my comment as if i said only, it would be lame, incorrect, and counter productive) person to give insight to a young boy on how he should treat girls/women, is his mother. Sure, a father also should A) be the right kind of example (that is the most important part) and also give fatherly advice. that’s all im saying. [emphasis mine]

Really?  Did he read Dave’s first comment?  That was full of sole responsibility.  Dave says the omission was deliberate.  I have trouble believing that.  Could I be wrong?  Sure.  But that’s the way I, and other women on this thread, read his statement.  In all honestly, I have no idea why Ben joined the conversation the way he did.  What was his point?  Not kidding.  What was his point?

So I respond:

“And you can’t speak on those experiences, Ben (and neither can I). But I never claimed to speak on behalf of ALL women. But please provide a link to where I said what you claimed I said.

We’ve had many discussions where I have spoken for myself and have asked men to listen to women – I’ve even asked commenters to show the women in their lives some of my posts for feedback.

And you and Dave are placing the responsibility on the mother. You’re kinda going with the Sergeant Schultz defense ;-) while Dave mimics me with his “Every. Single. One.” has a mother and that these mothers need to band together and teach their sons to respect women. I asked him to clarify his statement because I sensed I hit a nerve with my first comment.”

Many men, not just Ben, seem to want to throw up their hands and say, “Who knows what women want.  I give up.”

And about that link to my comment…

of course i dont have a link to it, it’s somewhere back in the annals of DL. But it is true, and I hope someone would back me up here, because Pandora seems to have some selective amnesia…. that you have said people from a specific group have more of a “right” to speak on the issues facing that group, than someone from the outside.
Given that logic, a mother (woman) is more qualified than a father (man) to speak to a son (boy) on women’s issues, how women feel about certain things, etc.
You keep telling me what I’ve said, where one doesnt even have to search past threads to see it isnt what I’m saying. You have what you WANT me to be saying. you are arguing (kind of bullishly… as in a bully, not a male bovine) against the point you WANT me to be making. I’m sorry I’m being so uncooperative, but I dont think, nor have i ever said or implied…. (i actually think i disclaimed the point quite obviously)….. that only the mother should be anything, (other than the birther, of course) rather a BETTER resource on some topics.
Out of curiosity, what if the father is a misogynistic ass hole? Isnt it then the mother’s responsibility (to all the women her son will have contact with) to make sure he has a little influence as possible in how that boy grows up? It isnt FAIR…. but the alternative?” [emphasis mine]

“Of course” he “doesn’t have a link?  Someone back him up?  Google would be a good back up, no?  He’s claiming I said things, right?  But I thought I knew what he was referring to, and I said so:

“Sheesh, of course I have said that when a person from a specific group speaks about their life experiences (in being part of that group) that we need to shut up and listen to them. But that isn’t remotely what we’re talking about. We aren’t only talking about women when we discuss misogyny – we are talking about men and their behaviors (Not all men!). Removing them from the dialogue doesn’t make sense.”

Take a look at my last two sentences. “We aren’t only talking about women when we discuss misogyny – we are talking about men and their behaviors (Not all men!). Removing them from the dialogue doesn’t make sense.”  And that’s what’s missing from the misogyny conversation – the men.  And I don’t understand why?

FYI:  Misogyny isn’t a women’s issue.  It’s a men’s issue.  Please read that again.  Women are the objects of misogyny, men are the subjects.

Ben doesn’t respond to my comment, but later returns with this:

“I’d like to offer a new rule for all these lovely shades of bigotry. If many many people decide that “you” or “that person” is a bigot…. you’re (they’re) a bigot. Your free speech doesn’t protect you from being labeled horrible. Also, the motivations of a madman aren’t about “you”. If “you” feel personally attacked then “they” are called a misogynist, or a racist, or a homophone…. you should probably give some serious thoughts to your own views.

The problem here is, people are arguing against the points they WANT to be arguing against. No one is saying roger’s misogyny was the ONLY driver in this tragedy. Stop getting so defensive. It’s as if you (whoever is lighting their hair on fire over it) are sympathetic to his cause and perhaps feel guilty about your own sexism.
No one is saying misogyny wasnt an issue at all. No one is telling women to shut up. No one is putting all the responsibility on anyone. What people ARE doing is making this a Men VS Women argument which gets us. FUCKING NOWHERE.”

Far be it for me to point out that Ben’s “new rule” consists of ending the conversation, but, make no mistake, that is what it does.  In all honesty, I don’t think that was intention, but it is what he was doing.  And he’s wrong.  This isn’t a men vs women argument.  This is a discussion of misogyny – individual and systemic.  So yeah… #NotAllMen.

Here’s Ben’s last comment:

Yes cass. I try to derail the conversation… presumably by refusing to let other people tell me what I REALLY mean. what a jerk I am. you are such a hero for standing up to me.

What get’s to me the most, I guess I’ll address Pandora, is that I agree with 99% of what you say. The bit I disagree with is all around message delivery and how it comes across in this, very limited, medium. I pressed your earlier assertions about (I’m not quoting you, I’m just using air quotes) “who is more qualified to speak on issues relating to certain people” not to “show you” or “be the man”, but to make a point that, in the shared responsibility of raising children, a mom can… not should…. but can…. offer a unique perspective to her son, that the father can never give. Why the hell….. other than some people’s desire to only argue…is that a controversial/sexist statement? Do you think I’m trying to be misogynistic? Do you care?

Sigh.  And can I point out (yet again) that Ben calls out Cassandra, but not Geezer.  Why is that?  Seriously, guys, why is that?

And then he moves onto me (by name).  You know, I never said that a mom couldn’t add/offer a unique perspective, but somehow we’ve gotten here.  Yes, I’ve said that people in minority groups should be listened to when they speak of their experiences, but that wasn’t the discussion on this thread.

And, TO ME, the “mom” comment (which came complete with organizing a mom group) was used to place the responsibility on women.  Sorta like… if you want better men, women better start raising them.  That is what I kept hearing.  Perhaps it’s because I’ve been conditioned to hear it.  If you agree with my last sentence then I’d hope you’d examine your conditioning, as well.

His closing statement: “Do you think I’m trying to be misogynistic? Do you care?”

Oh, for crying out loud.  Did I call him, or say, or even imply, ANYWHERE, that he is a misogynist?  No.  And do I even care?  I’m tempted to say, “Not particularly” because that’s what that comment deserves, but it wouldn’t be true.  I do care.  I care about men and women – I do have a son and a daughter.  So I get it.  But this thread wasn’t about an individual man.  How many times do I have to say this?  How about I flip that statement and ask, “Do you care?”  I just can’t anymore.  So I’m going to move on.

Which brings us to Aint’s Taking it Any More (ATIAM).  He joined the discussion early, after MikeM2784 worried over what his young daughter would face as she grew up and I responded with my own teenage daughter’s experiences with misogyny/sexism.  Here’s ATIAM’s very first comment:

Pandora

Your writings suggest that you’ve morphed a legitimate problem into a lifestyle perspective. I read your rendition of your daughter’s pain and can’t help but feel that you’ve cultivated a victim.

Sex and age notwithstanding, there are shits in every corner of life that do inexcusably bad things for bad reason to others. Everyone has to deal with them. Giving those shits the power to make you feel hurt or bad, however, is the ultimate form of victim surrender. Take a page out of Maya Angelou’s life – learn to live life as it is not regret how it is.

Really?  Wow.  Now here’s a guy open for a discussion on misogyny!  Amirite? He’s not dismissive at all!  I’ve cultivated a victim? Everyone (everyone!) has to deal with sh*ts, so… suck it up?  Because I, not the boys/men behaving badly, am the one hurting my daughter?  Before I could respond, other commenters called him out and he responded again:

I have a 20 year old daughter. She went through all of the demeaning crap that young girls endure. She dealt with it relying on more courage that anyone could ever teach her. My scrawny son likewise endured the macho-abuse crap that boys have to deal with. None of it is good. None of it should be tolerated.

Like most parents my wife and I taught our kids the golden rule and, to the best of our ability, tried to live it every day. We also taught them to learn from everything in life – the good and especially the bad – in the hope that they would be better people for it.

I don’t know Padora’s daughter. I’ll gladly take your word for it. I did, however, read and re-read Pandora’s account of her teenage daughter’s troubles. My point was and is that we do nothing worthy as parents by allowing our children to see themselves as victims. I never ever said, though or meant that her complaints about abuse were petty or unrealistic. Nor did I say that parents shouldn’t teach and live respect. They should.

No disrespect intended. No malice intended.

That’s called back peddling while doubling down.  Not to mention he broke my cardinal rule:  Never make war on children.  (In fairness, he hasn’t been around long enough to know my cardinal rule, but now he does… so knock it off.)  And I would have been completely justified in calling out this bad behavior – in the harshest, nastiest way.  Did I do that?  Here’s my response:

“Your writings suggest that you’ve morphed a legitimate problem into a lifestyle perspective. I read your rendition of your daughter’s pain and can’t help but feel that you’ve cultivated a victim.”

Women would tell you that dealing with these problems aren’t a lifestyle perspective (what does that even mean?); that these problems are part of their daily life.

My daughter is 17, just finishing her junior year, and isn’t a victim. What she is is informed, mainly because we discussed all these situations over the years. She can spot red flags and is becoming extremely adept at avoiding toxic personal relationships. That’s a process, and one that begins with having open communication. If she’s not telling you what’s going on, or you’re dismissing/not understanding her uniquely female experiences then how is she supposed to recognize, handle or avoid a bad situation? How does actually addressing these specific situations create a victim? I would say it creates the opposite.

Everyone does understand that what my daughter encounters is what every woman encounters, in varying degrees, right? And yes, these situations are unique to women.

And talking to your children (I have a 20 year old son, as well) in the middle and high school years about this sort of behavior is crucial, mainly because it’s so blatant – most kids haven’t learned to hide their attitudes/behavior behind a phoney veneer. It’s textbook misogyny and quite easy to spot and address. And all of us should be calling it out.

Personally, I think I deserve a medal for my restrained response.  And how did he respond?

Legitimate Problem – abusive, unwanted advances made against women by men that are tolerated/excused by society

Lifestyle Perspective – anchoring your world view by pigeonholing everything in life through the lens of abusive, unwanted advances made against women by men that are tolerated/excused by society.

The world’s evils are not simply confined to misogyny. Every single day people confront other bad people who act on bad motives and who do bad things for bad reasons. Not excusing the bad people. That bad thing, that bad motive and that bad person neither define the world nor, hopefully, define their victim’s lifestyle or world perspective. To do otherwise is to acquiesce to victim status.

I do not dispute for a single moment the trouble your daughter, or my daughter, endured simply because they are women and simply because men cannot control themselves. Your point is acknowledged.

Point made: go back and read what you wrote. Every bit of it is saturated with the verbiage of a victim from the initial remarks, the responses and the descriptions. You called out one commentator for not including a reference to a father’s responsibility. You talked about battle phrases to be used in difficult situations and told us that every women has them at the ready. You pined on about your daughter’s struggles, her bravery climbing over the injustice, the tragedy she suffered. Reading it all lead me to conclude that the “writing” reflected a singular focus on misogynist behavior and, no less troubling, the emotional damage creating no more than a victim. The emphasis on victimization struck a chord and I felt compelled to comment.

Good day.

Let’s dissect this.  The perspective/legitimate misogyny definitions come across, to me, as an “it’s all in your head, non-reality based” comment.  It’s like saying, “Sure, there’s a problem, but your way of discussing/addressing it is delusional”

His next sentence is interesting too:

“The world’s evils are not simply confined to misogyny. Every single day people confront other bad people who act on bad motives and who do bad things for bad reasons.”

But… but… but… this was a post on misogyny.  That’s what we were flippin’ discussing.

And remember his closing statement from his previous comment?  “No disrespect intended. No malice intended.”  I should have called BS on this in my first reply to him. Disagree? Then take a look at his last paragraph in this comment… Wait!  Go take a look at all his other comments on DL.  His style is quite different.  It’s almost as if he has a different way of addressing women.  Okay, now we’ll look at his last paragraph:

Point made: go back and read what you wrote. Every bit of it is saturated with the verbiage of a victim from the initial remarks, the responses and the descriptions. You called out one commentator for not including a reference to a father’s responsibility. You talked about battle phrases to be used in difficult situations and told us that every women has them at the ready. You pined on about your daughter’s struggles, her bravery climbing over the injustice, the tragedy she suffered. Reading it all lead me to conclude that the “writing” reflected a singular focus on misogynist behavior and, no less troubling, the emotional damage creating no more than a victim. The emphasis on victimization struck a chord and I felt compelled to comment.

Good day.

Oh, I just bet it struck a chord.  Where we’ll disagree is which chord it struck.  I wrote about my daughter’s experiences.  I didn’t “pine” about her struggles.  I didn’t herald her “bravery” over “injustice”.  I didn’t cast her as a tragic heroine who has suffered.  I simply shared her extremely common experiences and how angry they made me. Obviously, that was a bridge too far.

And ATIAM’s conclusion about my “writing” (why was that word in quotes?) reflecting a singular focus on misogynistic behavior… Wait!  What?  This. Was. A. Post. On. Women’s. Issues.  Geez, if this had been a post on guns or homophobia would anyone say, “Why are you commenting specifically on guns/homophobia and not on how everyone has it bad?”  Of course not.  So why was discussing women’s issues on a thread about, you know, women’s issues wrong?

I’ll also point out that closing with the comment “Good day” came across, to me, as ending the discussion.  I found it dismissive.  But maybe that’s just me.  And it flippin’ could be me!  But we’ll never know unless there’s an honest discussion.

I responded again:

But this isn’t a thread on bad things happen to all people, is it? It’s a thread on #yesallwomen. If this was a post about how boys are bullied for not living up to society’s definition of masculinity then that’s what I would be discussing because… ya know… that would be the point.

And your projecting a victim-hood “lifestyle perspective” onto me and my daughter makes you part of the problem we are discussing.

Restrained response, no?  Rereading his comment I feel I would have been entitled to bring the hammer down – hard.  Does anyone disagree?  If you do, tell me why. Would I have been justified in calling out his parenting and his daughter?  That’s distasteful to me.

In fact, up until my head explodes (and I’ll address that later) all my responses were pretty restrained.  I made a lot of points – that were never acknowledged.  I asked questions that weren’t answered.  Instead, I spent a lot of time responding to male directed points and questions.  That was extremely frustrating.

ATIAM disappears for a while, but then jumps in with this comment in defense of Joanne Christian (who was indeed called out unfairly):

Joanne:

Don’t feel bad. It’s not you. Opposing points of view are bitch-slapped here.

First… bitch-slapped?  Really?  On a post dealing with misogyny he chooses that phrase?  Granted, those sorts of phrases are far too common in our culture, but given his previous comments I’d say his word choice was deliberate and quite victim-y.  Personally, his comment (TO ME!) had less to do with Joanne and more to do with him and how he felt he was treated.

Cassandra and I then write two comments about Joanne’s point on entitlement, where we agree with her but point out that misogyny is about entitlement.  Basically, we expand her point.

Here are our comments:

Pandora:  Entitlement was a key part, but entitlement is also a key part of misogyny. Misogynists feel entitled to women – to women’s time, conversation, bodies.

I’m actually curious, especially when Rodgers told us exactly what he was going to do and why he was going to do it, why people are discounting misogyny. Rodgers was quite clear in his hatred of women – said all women should be killed, with some kept in concentration camps for breeding purposes. He made it clear that he was going to a sorority house to kill women. He hated the men who were with women he felt entitled to, and hated the women for giving those men what he considered his due. All of this doesn’t lessen any of his other problems. But there was a specific reason he targeted the sorority house and not his old k-12 schools or a coffee house.

When that man shot up the Jewish Community Center no one said that anti-Semitism wasn’t the reason. No one said he wasn’t anti-Semitic because he killed Christians instead of his intended targets. So, I’m not getting the resistance to calling a guy who clearly stated his hatred of women a misogynist and lessening the role his misogyny played in the killings.

Cassandra:  I don’t get it, either. This guy had parents (who apparently tried to help him), multiple therapists and even multiple contacts with law enforcement. His entire “Manifesto” is fueled by his perceived rejection by women. His little brother was also a target for his killing spree. Pandora is right that the business of entitlement is a key part of misogyny. Joanne is right that some of this entitlement is cultural. All of which is an explanation and not an excuse. The culture changes when enough of us say that this is no longer acceptable.
The problem, though, is that those most attached to the misogynistic portions of our culture are the ones who are ground zero of the kind of dangers detailed above

ATIAM replies:

Well said.

Okay, that comment confused me.  Was he really agreeing with us?  You be the judge.  Here’s his next comment:

I speak jive.

If I understand Dave and Puck it is that the rabid over-emphasis on misogyny as the driver for Rodgers actions distorts the impact of everyday acts of misogynists. No one benefits from that discussion IF it is framed by the violent acts of an emotionally unstable person.

The point is that everyday acts/decisions, by otherwise well-meaning, rational people, operating within their own understanding of social norms can be lo less misogynistic and harmful to women and girls. Framing the issue with Rodgers as your poster boy, however, puts the whole discussion on a different footing. It is emotionally easy for the otherwise well-meaning, rational people, operating within their own understanding of social norms to intellectually distance themselves from Rodgers’ action and his attitude – i.e., that ain’t me and I would never do that, hence, no misogynist here.

Just translating here.

Rabid over-emphasis?  Talk about a dog whistle.  And I’d point out that Elliot Rodgers justified his over-the-top beliefs through every day misogyny.  He believed that women were inferior, that they were asking for it, that they dressed to provoke him, that they weren’t capable of making good relationship choices since they weren’t attracted to him – the ultimate “nice guy” and supreme gentlemen.  Like I said, Elliot Rodgers actions were extreme, his mindset was not.

I answered and asked for clarification (please notice how I’ve done this several times):

Now see… I’m having a problem (and perhaps it’s just me) with your words “rabid over-emphasis on misogyny” and “poster boy.”

And what behavior are you addressing when you say, “The point is that everyday acts/decisions, by otherwise well-meaning, rational people, operating within their own understanding of social norms can be lo less misogynistic and harmful to women and girls.” I’m not sure I understand the point of this sentence.

I can give you my personal experiences with (some) men who considered their actions well meaning and rational. If you’re interested…

Did I get an answer?  Nope.  Here’s what I got:

Pandora:

You are loco. Sharing your stories of opportunistic, offensive misogynist experiences would likely read like the chronology of my day. I know not how evil I am.

The reference to “rabid over-emphasis on misogyny” was a shot at those on this thread that can’t, and those reverently refuse, to see the forest for the leaves on the trees.

Let this thread die.

And with this comment (combined with his previous comments) my head starts to explode.  First, I’m loco.  Second, he’s not interested in my experiences.  Third, I reverently refuse to see the forest for the leaves because… I’m crazy?  This crazy/delusion/don’t live in the real world is a very prevalent theme, btw.  And he ends with “Let this thread die.”  Which pretty much means stop talking.

And I *sigh* responded:

Seriously, Aint’s Taking it Any More? I specifically, and with respect, asked you for clarification of your words. Your response is that I’m crazy? That sharing my “stories of opportunistic, offensive misogynist experiences would likely read like the chronology of my (your) day. I (you) know not how evil I am.”

I’m so biting my tongue to not respond in kind, because if I did I would be called out on my “tone”. What the hell have I written that would cause you take it personally and call me names?

And why are you only targeting what I say, and not Geezer and MikeM2784 and Steve Newton or John Young? Explain that. Go on. I’ll wait, because I’m sincerely interested.

Yep, that’s the steam starting to come out of my ears.  The men I listed in my last sentence were saying, far more directly, exactly what I was saying, and yet, their comments were ignored, or dare I say… deferred to?

And his wording about my experiences being “opportunistic, offensive” misogyny that would likely read like the chronology of his day is interesting, no?  Is he saying that I overreact to these experiences or that he’s a misogynist.  I’m gonna go with it being my overreacting, since that seems to be the “right” answer.  Anyone disagree?

So how does he respond?  Why, he was just being funny!

Pandora:

My dear – my humor was lost on you.

The thought of you sharing stories with me about misogynists had me laughing. I imagined my sweat filled brow, my trembling hands and beat red forehead glowing from my own guilt as you detailed those experiences.

Outside the humor, I wasn’t trying to pick on you. I took a shot at everyone. I did this because for the better part of a week this thread has kicked around small shit. The fact is that virtually everyone who commented agreed that misogyny is a problem, Rodgers’ writing was misogynistic, women are routinely subjected to unwarranted/unwanted and socially tolerated boorish behavior. Instead, the focus here has been on the periphery – the small shit: who could speak about it, a chicken/egg analysis of Rodgers’ conduct and upbringing, was it mom or dad’s job, who was better at it, my children this, your wrong, etc.

No offense intended.

So… it was my fault?  His “humor” was lost on me?  Go read his initial comments.  They’re hilarious, no?  And ATIAM’s claim that he took a shot at everyone?  I’m not buying that, but then again I remember the way he started out this thread.

And what is it with his closing tag lines?  No offense intended = Basically, Eff you if you can’t take a joke.  Let this thread die = it’s time to stop talking about this.  Just translating here = people who don’t agree (with Dave and Puck) don’t understand, so I’ll explain.  Good day = conversation over.   No disrespect intended.  No malice intended = blatantly untrue, but used to tell me I shouldn’t feel offended with what he wrote.  Even his first comment ends with: “Take a page out of Maya Angelou’s life – learn to live life as it is not regret how it is.”  Which says, to me, suck it up and live with it.

And the worst part?  I don’t even think he sees what he did.  And I’m sincerely hoping that what I’ve written allows him to see where I’m coming from.

And with that last comment my head has exploded:

Oh… so I didn’t get the joke? (And… “my dear?” Really?) You were just being funny when you called me loco? Sorry, I’m not buying that.

Anyone else wanna weigh in on Aint’s Taking it Any More’s reasoning? I would call it back peddling, since he avoided all of my questions. But maybe a guy could respond, since they haven’t been called crazy… or have been called out – at all. Not one little bit. Why is that?

Wanna know why I’m not buying “I’m just a funny guy” routine?  Could it be that I read his initial comments on this thread. Did he consider himself a jokester then?   Back peddling was an accurate term.  Basically, he was backed into a corner and now wants to pretend he was just kidding and that I didn’t get the joke.  Do you guys know how often women hear that excuse?  That’s a serious question, btw.

He responds, sticking to his humor defense:

You did miss the humor (my fault) . . . even after I confessed to it (your fault).

To answer your questions and – hopefully – end the discord:

1. You asked: I’m having a problem (and perhaps it’s just me) with your words “rabid over-emphasis on misogyny” and “poster boy.” My humorless answer: The discussion here, not on some other site, has hyper-focused on Rodgers’ misogynist writings. Rodgers was a mess on so many levels, and his spectacular downfall filled with so many value failures, that focusing solely on one aspect of his conduct is a mistake. He’s a lousy poster boy because his story is so lousy on so many levels.

2. You asked: And what behavior are you addressing when you say, “The point is that everyday acts/decisions, by otherwise well-meaning, rational people, operating within their own understanding of social norms can be lo less misogynistic and harmful to women and girls.” I’m not sure I understand the point of this sentence. My humorless answer: Misogyany is deeply ingrained. It takes many forms from the obvious brutality to wage disparity/product marketing/hand-shaking custom/etc. Ironically, your handle “Pandora” is very the Greek literary character from which most western misogyny flows.

3. You asked: And why are you only targeting what I say, and not Geezer and MikeM2784 and Steve Newton or John Young? Explain that. Go on. I’ll wait, because I’m sincerely interested. My humorless answer: See below.

Dave, Geezer, Steve, Mike, Puck, Davey, Ben, MikeM, Aint’s – you’re all loco. I think I got all of the guys. If they had offered to tell me stories, I might have more to say to them.

I’ll skip over the my fault/your fault (both sides do it) opening, since I’m still not buying the premise, and move onto (point #1) why, again, discussing Rodger’s misogynistic actions is “hyper” focused?  Why not just focused?  Rodgers was, after all, pretty damn clear in his motivations.  And I’d say that ATIAM’s use of adjectives (hello? rabid?) is what causes most people to question where he is coming from.

I have no idea what his point #2 is about, other than my handle is misogynistic so that makes me guilty of… misogyny?  There are a lot of nuances and details in Greek mythology, but 99.9% of people would associate Pandora with opening a box and not misogyny.  Why make that leap?  What was his point?

Point #3 is about… Sheesh, let me call other people out (for the first time) so she stops complaining (or perhaps… harping?) on this.  Okay, I called them out – and I even included myself so I must be serious (or rather… funny).  Conversation over.  

My head’s still exploding:

“Dave, Geezer, Steve, Mike, Puck, Davey, Ben, MikeM, Aint’s – you’re all loco. I think I got all of the guys. If they had offered to tell me stories, I might have more to say to them.”

Too little, too late. But you know that – and so does everyone else. And Steve DID offer you a story. And what did you have to say? Crickets. MikeM, worried (told a story) about his young daughter. What did you have to say? Crickets. Geezer called out misogyny several times and offered a story about his wife and daughter… more crickets.

Everyone sees what you’ve done here… even you. All the back peddling in the world won’t save you. For some reason you are invested in the way things are. Allow me to quote Steve Newton (who you ignored):

“The difference here, I think, is there will be millions and perhaps tens of millions of men who read Rodgers’ manifesto and fit into that second category: “You know, he was crazy, and I’d never do that, but man those women can do a number on a guy’s head, and I sorta know what he meant by all those stuck-up sorority bitches out there shaking it like it’s made out of gold or something.”

The number of men who jump up reflexively to distance themselves (sort of, and in the sense that the guilty flee when no one pursues) from Rodgers want to distinguish between what they consider to be inevitable or perhaps even acceptable levels of misogyny in our society and the misogyny that motivates a killer.

In the end, since they cannot distance themselves from misogyny, they need to distance Rodgers from it. He’s crazy, he’s not like us; it’s unfair to use him as an example

Perhaps you missed that comment – which, btw, was far more direct than anything I said.

And while I’ll admit to being angry and frustrated, and yes, emotional, I still had a valid point.  Can anyone tell me why guys defer to (or ignore) guys, but call women commenters out?  I can take a guess…

And, of course, he responds – just not to anything I said.  He’s sticking with his “I’m just a funny guy” excuse.  And please note, this is his last attempt to make good:

Last attempt to make good.

Pandora – you said: I can give you my personal experiences with (some) men who considered their actions well meaning and rational. If you’re interested…

You made an offer . . . . “if I was interested.” I found humor in the offer. Kind of like watching sinner in church. No one else has ever, in my entire life, offered to share tales of misogyny with me. The thing is that neither Steve, MikeM or Geezer or anyone else for that matter offered to tell me misogyny stories. You did. I responded.

Maybe I could share tales of misandry with you?

I did not respond to Steve. You are correct. Why you ask? Because I though our two pre-lost humor remarks said essentially the same thing: Rodgers can be a bad example.

Too little, too late – story of my life. No offense taken even if meant.

Finally, if back peddling is the worst thing I do today, then thank God cause this sinner is capable of so much more and enjoying it all the while.

BOOM!  Dare I use the word mansplaining?  Because from where I’m sitting it’s really prevalent on this entire thread.  And I’m with Steve Newton when he says that the guys on this thread reasoning is: “You know, he was crazy, and I’d never do that, but man those women can do a number on a guy’s head, and I sorta know what he meant by all those stuck-up sorority bitches out there shaking it like it’s made out of gold or something.”  I agree with this statement because, for some reason, you/some guys seem to have a vested interest in this killing not being linked to misogyny.  Why. Is. That?

So yeah, I exploded:

Still no response to Steve’s comment. Why is that? He’s called you out in no uncertain terms. Why not tell him that he’s raising a victim or that he has a “rabid” response? Go on… that was funny, wasn’t it? Geezer said he didn’t fully get his wife’s and daughter’s “stories” until #yesallwomen. MikeM worried about what his young daughter would deal with as she matured. Call their asses out. Call out their “stories” specifically. Go on. Call them out. It will be humorous, hilarious… no?

And the fact you think that your comments on this this thread were humorous… heaven help you. You ain’t funny or clever, or maybe you are in a “Make me a sandwich” sort of way – cause that was hilarious, amirite?

You are back peddling because you can’t defend your comments. Really, just own it. You targeted me, not the men who wrote the same damn things, and now you want to pretend I can’t take a joke, or understand your humor. Women can’t take a joke, amirite?

But even though I am furious I still have a point – a point that still hasn’t been addressed.  In fact, start counting up the points I’ve made that haven’t been addressed.

But then something interesting happens… wait a minute… what have we here? Dare I say, a victim?

Geezer says, in response to Ben’s “What people ARE doing is making this a Men VS Women argument which gets us. FUCKING NOWHERE.”

I disagree. It might not be getting us where YOU think we should be going, but I think this route is quite interesting.

ATIAM is no longer laughing.  He has a problem with that statement.  Somehow all this is no longer humorous, so he responds:

Geezer

How is it interesting? Do tell.

Is it interesting because too many commentators feign disgust and anger on nothing more than their own self-induced frothing?

Is it interesting because too many commentators are self-appointed, self-righteous, thin skinned know it alls that simply cannot tolerate other obviously uninformed points because they are different?

Or is it interesting because too many commentators have twisted words in ways that is nothing short of demon magic?

Is it interesting that instead of an intelligent discussion, too many commentators refuse read for comprehension preferring instead ignore the point made?

Is it interesting because too many commentators are happily hysterical at someone they don’t know, never met and have no ability, outside a few words on this site, to know their true intent or meaning?

Is it interesting because the game of gotcha practiced here by some commentators trumps spirited, genuine and otherwise worthwhile disagreement?

Is it interesting because the level of intolerance here is actually higher than Glenn Beck’s.

I thought this site was supposed to be interesting because, as adults, we get to express a viewpoint, kick it around with others with differing views AND God forbid broaden our intellectual horizon. Instead this discussion – and it really is only this one – is so mired in shit that it’s no better then an f’ing playground in the cattle yard.

Hey, I thought this was just funny.  I thought I needed to lighten up and take a joke.  None of this is serious enough to get upset over, right?  Cause… someone sounds upset and doesn’t seem to find this the least bit funny.  Why is that?  What changed?

I’ll finish with Puck.  (Disclaimer:  I know Puck in real life, and I’d be lying if I said I’m not having trouble understanding where he’s coming from.  I don’t get it.)  Here’s his first comment:

I don’t understand the consternation with the statement “rape is a serious allegation.”
Anyway, the Rogers case is about murder, not rape.

Rape is a serious allegation.  It’s also a serious crime.  But when society focuses on how boys lives will be ruined and buys into the meme that women lie about rape there’s a problem.  Both statements should be given equal weight, but they’re not.  And Rodger’s case was not only about murder.  It was about his plans for the women he didn’t kill.  He wanted to place the women he didn’t kill (based on their “hotness”) in concentration camps for breeding and torture purposes.  Should we really ignore that?

Here’s his next comment:

“I’m actually curious, especially when Rodgers told us exactly what he was going to do and why he was going to do it, why people are discounting misogyny.”

Rodgers is a garden-variety sociopath and it is offensive to link his sickness as part of a continuum with ordinary male/female relationships.

Does anyone actually think I linked Rodger’s actions to ordinary male/female relationships?  If you do, say so and explain.  Here’s the exchange (and yes, others were commenting):

Pandora:  This baffles me. No where is anyone calling out, or comparing him to, “ordinary” male/female relationships. I’m not the one making that leap.

Why is so important that this guy not be labeled a misogynist? That’s a serious question. Is it because people don’t believe misogyny is real?

Puck: ”I think he killed people because he was a misogynist and mentally ill”

If true, Rodgers’s brand of misogyny can’t be corrected by his father teaching him any better, or even by every boy’s father teaching them better. Because he is not part of a continuum with ordinary male-female relationships.

Pandora:  Why do you keep associating “this brand of misogyny” with “ordinary male-female” relationships?

Puck:  It is true that being a woman comes with certain potential vulnerabilities at the hands of men. But it also grants unimaginable power and control over men. The source of the vulnerability is the same thing that gives you the power; I don’t think you can have one without the other, and it is not possible to have neither. Vive la difference!

It is true that women generally have a greater risk of potential physical harm from violent men, and that sucks. But in terms of emotional harm, women give as good as they get, maybe better.

Oh… oh my.  I’m not even sure how to address that statement.  Anyone wanna weigh in?  He goes on, but I’m exhausted and my exhaustion isn’t directed at Puck.  This post is killing me.  So, I’ll just post his other comments and let others do the heavy lifting.

That is, of course, why the landscape of America is littered with shelters for (emotionally) battered men.

LOL… they’re called liquor stores…

Think of the iconic image of Humphrey Bogart at the bar with a bottle of gin (yes I know it’s fiction but it resonates).

He does have a point.  Men is crisis need to be heard and not dismissed as weak – you know, behaving like a women.

“Why is it so important to you that this not be labeled a misogynistic crime? ”

When that wacked-out druggie knifed Officer Sczerba because he thought he was a fanged monster attacking him, do we fret about public attitudes toward policemen? Or do we just shudder in horror and realize it was the drugs/mental illness at work and was not linked to any public culture or perception of police?

I did respond (as did others):

I’m really interested in the answer to this question, Geezer. I’d like Davy to answer, as well.

Also, if the guy who killed Officer Sczerba wrote a manifesto about killing police officers and was on “Cops deserve to die” websites, you know we’d be having that discussion.

And he ends with…

Given the nuances that we are trying (mostly unsuccessfully) to communicate here, how stupid is it to have this conversation on Twitter?

You know, when people were using Twitter to protest/overthrow governments I don’t remember it being dismissed as stupid.

Okay, I’m done and I’m sure people are pissed.  All I can say is that this is one of the most difficult things I’ve ever written.  Have at it.

In conclusion, I will say that the main point of my frustration was due to people derailing the narrative of the post – the way some men simply wouldn’t engage with anything I said, and instead, redirected me to their concerns.  The fact that I allowed them to redirect me and that I addressed their statements, answered their questions while they ignored mine makes me question myself.  I’ve a long way to go, baby.

 

Girls Rationalize Sexual Assault As… Normal?

First, let me start off by saying that I’ve witnessed the normalization of sexual assault first hand – through my experience and now through my 16 year old daughter.  It feels like an uphill battle.  My small victory?  Everyone at the Pandora household has stopped using gender specific words in a negative, and a positive, fashion.

But take a look at this study.  I doubt you’ll be surprised.

Sociologist Heather Hlavka at Marquette University analyzed forensic interviews conducted by Children’s Advocacy Center (CAC) with 100 youths between the ages of three and 17 who may have been sexually assaulted. Hlavka found that the young women experienced forms of sexual violence in their everyday lives including: objectification, sexual harassment, and abuse. Often times they rationalized these incidents as normal.

During one interview, referring to boys at school, a 13 year-old girl states:

“They grab you, touch your butt and try to, like, touch you in the front, and run away, but it’s okay, I mean… I never think it’s a big thing because they do it to everyone.”

I’d point out that objectification, sexual harassment and abuse affect almost all teenage girls (and teenage boys due to our skewed view of masculinity).  The comment by the 13 year old girl that says, “I never think it’s a big thing because they do it to everyone” is one I’ve heard my own daughter and her friends say.  Can you picture the expression on my face when I hear this?

The report lists 4 main reasons why young women don’t report sexual violence.  I’m going to deal with each point.

1.  Girls believe the myth that men can’t help it. The girls interviewed described men as unable to control their sexual desires, often framing men as the sexual aggressors and women as the gatekeepers of sexual activity. They perceived everyday harassment and abuse as normal male behavior, and as something to endure, ignore, or maneuver around.

At my daughter’s (and many others) school, the girls are not permitted to wear leggings, yoga pants, tank tops/sleeveless shirts and dresses/skirts that don’t pass the fingertip test.  Look, I’m fine with a dress code, but what I’m not fine with is the reason my daughter and her friends received when they questioned these rules – mainly about the leggings and yoga pants.  They were told that these items of clothing were distracting to the boys.

In essence, these young women were told that their attire is a trigger for young men; that if they dress a certain way then they are courting trouble… because boys/young men aren’t responsible for their actions?  I don’t believe that, and find it highly insulting to men/boys.  Keeping your hands to yourself is one of the first things we teach toddlers.

My daughter also runs track, and everyone should really check out the school supplied uniforms.  They break every flippin’ school dress code rule.  The shorts, and I use that term lightly, are so short that the girls are constantly tugging on them to cover their butt cheeks and the uniform top is a tiny tank top that flashes their midriff on a regular basis.  But on hot days when the boys pull off their shirts to run at practice, girls are told they cannot ditch their tee shirts and run in their sports bra because… you guessed it… that would distract the boys.

Seriously, is it too much to ask for those in charge to come up with another reason?  They can set any dress code they want, but could they please stop putting the responsibility for boy’s behavior onto girls.  This is part of the reason why girls/women buy into that “boys will be boys” crap and how girls/women come to blame themselves for someone else’s behavior.  It’s classic abusive behavior, taken straight from an abuser’s script: “You made me hit/grope you.”  Think about that.

In one of my daughter’s classes they discussed feminism.  The teacher asked the students, “Where do you see yourself in 10 years.”  Every girl (other than my daughter and one other girl – I’m so proud) listed being married with children first, and over 50% of the girls stopped with that.  Not one boy had marriage and children on their list.  And this is 2014.  I almost wept.  That conversation somehow spiraled into women’s attire (not men’s, mind you) and the age old “some women dress like they want to have sex” comment reared its ugly head.  Little Pandora said, “So what if they want to have sex?  That doesn’t mean they want to have sex with you.  This isn’t a game where the first guy that tags a woman gets to have sex with her.”  Have I mentioned how proud we are of her?

2.  Many of the girls said that they didn’t report the incident because they didn’t want to make a “big deal” of their experiences.  They doubted if anything outside of forcible heterosexual intercourse counted as an offense or rape.

This finding is heartbreaking.  Picture a boy/man walking up to another boy/man and grabbing his butt or genitalia.  Do you think that would be viewed as a big deal?  (And, yes, when this happens to a boy/man it’s assault.)  But what worries me is how the girls are dismissing this behavior as normal.  That’s a problem.  They don’t see it as something to be upset about.

3.  Lack of reporting may be linked to trust in authority figures. According to Hlavka, the girls seem to have internalized their position in a male-dominated, sexual context and likely assumed authority figures would also view them as “bad girls” who prompted the assault.

Ah… gotta love the Madonna/whore standard.  And why would they trust authority figures when these are the same people telling them that their attire is a distraction to boys/men.  The narrative is already set.  In stone.

4.  Hlavka found that girls don’t support other girls when they report sexual violence. The young women expressed fear that they would be labeled as a “whore” or “slut,” or accused of exaggeration or lying by both authority figures and their peers, decreasing their likelihood of reporting sexual abuse.

Nothing gets my blood boiling faster then when a girl/woman calls another girl/woman a “whore” or “slut” and the speed at which I shut that abuse down is faster than light travels.  I tell my daughter, “Don’t be one of those people.”  But when you think about what we tell girls, why would report sexual abuse?  After all, it’s their fault for dressing the way the do, flirting with a boy they like, boys will be boys, boys/men just can’t help themselves, etc.  Being groped is normal.

We need to tell girls and boys that touching anyone without their consent is wrong.  Basically, we need to give them a remedial course because this message is getting lost in translation.

Please. Just Stop

Seriously?

At least we know her mind won’t be preoccupied with haute couture.

Here’s the black-on-black ensemble she sported last month when President Barack Obama officially nominated her:

Somebody Spot Janet Yellen Some New Threads

(Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images)

And her battle gear of choice for today’s nomination hearing on Capitol Hill:

Somebody Spot Janet Yellen Some New Threads

(Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)

Mind you, nobody has ever accused HOH of being particularly stylish. But we do manage to switch up outfits on the reg.

OMG!  A women wore the same outfit within 30 days!  Not kidding.  Just stop.  And using the term reg?  Um… remind me again, who’s the loser?

My Valentine’s Day Gift To You – When Trolls Are Awesome!

So this happened

After some Reddit/4chan MRA babies tried to make #INeedMasculismBecause happen on Twitter today (co-opting the popular feminist meme, because EYEROLL), it blew up in their faces bigtime. The hashtag was gleefully hijacked by the normal, thinking humans of Twitter, who are currently churning out hundreds of tweets lampooning Men’s Rights talking points.

Here are some of my favorites:

8 Feb Jamie Kilstein Jamie Kilstein ‏@jamiekilstein # INeedMasculismBecause maybe one day there will be a male president.

# INeedMasculismBecause I talked to a girl once and treated her like a human being and she DIDN’T blow me in return for the favour.

#INeedMasculismBecause i am so bad at being likable that i’ve had to create an elaborate force field of imagined persecution to justify it

Go read and enjoy the trolling by smart, insightful people.  Personally, I think this is an amazing Valentine’s Day gift!

Iowa Supreme Court Rules: Okay To Fire Women For Being “Irresistible”

Wow.

Women in Iowa beware: If your boss thinks you’re really really ridiculously good looking, he can fire you. And it’s perfectly legal. The all-male Iowa Supreme Court refused to reinstate a lawsuit Friday, noting that a dentist didn’t break the law when he fired an employee who had worked for him for 10 years because he and his wife saw her as a threat to their marriage, reports the Associated Press. Melissa Nelson, the 32-year-old dental assistant was by all accounts a stellar employee. But her boss, James Knight, complained of her tight clothing, “once telling her that if his pants were bulging that was a sign her clothes were too revealing.”

I’m not even sure where to begin.  How about…

Yet again, we find men demanding that it’s the woman’s job to control their male urges.  That’s exactly what this ruling says.  Because: Dr. James Knight has admitted that he’s incapable of controlling his sexual urges.  And if what Dr. Knight claims about himself is true then I wouldn’t want to be one of his attractive patients under anesthesia.  Seriously, think about that.

And then there’s this:  “Dr. Knight acknowledges he once told Nelson that if she saw his pants bulging, she would know her clothing was too revealing,” the justices wrote.  First… eew.  Second, he actually admitted saying that?  Third, she should have sued him for sexual harassment.  Fourth brings us back to how Dr. Knight can’t control his sexual urges.

Enter the text messages, the wife and the pastor:

Six months before Nelson was fired, she and her boss began exchanging text messages about work and personal matters, such as updates about each of their children’s  activities, the justices wrote.

The messages were mostly mundane, but Nelson recalled one text she received from her boss asking “how often she experienced an orgasm.”

Nelson did not respond to the text and never indicated that she was uncomfortable with Knight’s question, according to court documents.

Soon after, Knight’s wife, Jeanne, who also works at the practice, found out about the text messaging and ordered her husband to fire Nelson.

You know, it takes two to text, but only one of the two lost their job.  Which brings us to the wife… Lord save us from stupid women.  Dear Mrs. Knight, the threat to your marriage (and I’m using that term loosely) isn’t Melissa Nelson – it’s your husband.

It’s also probably you, Mrs. Knight, because your solution to his problem tells me that you’ve bought into his “I can’t help myself” defense and will have to spend the rest of your life removing temptation from his path – lest he falls on top of them.  Makes you wonder how many temptations you missed so far, doesn’t it?

Now, how could we possibly make this situation worse?  I know, let’s add religion!

The couple consulted with a senior pastor at their church and he agreed that Nelson should be terminated in order to protect their marriage, Cochrane said.

On Jan. 4, 2010, Nelson was summoned to a meeting with Knight while a pastor was present. Knight then read from a prepared statement telling Nelson she was fired.

“Dr. Knight felt like for the best interest of his marriage and the best interest of hers to end their employment relationship,” Cochrane said.

Love the way Dr. Knight had to read a “prepared statement” and have his pastor play his wingman.  Also love the way he pretends to be saving her marriage, too – because the little woman couldn’t handle that on her own.  Love, love, love the way the male pastor agrees that the problem is the Jezebel and not the man who’s admitted to being unable to control himself.  Remember, both stated that there was no affair.  In fact, only Dr. Knight admitted to inappropriate sexual comments and the fantasy of a future relationship.

Frankly, Dr. and Mrs. Knight deserve each other.  My bet is that they end up in divorce court sooner, rather than later.  Oh, it won’t be Mrs. Knight filing for divorce.  No indeedy.  That woman shows no signs of intelligence and she’s already bought into the fact that her husband can’t control himself.  Oh no, my bet is that Dr. Knight will be filing for divorce as soon as he finds a woman who takes him up on his offers.  He’s obviously been looking.

Some Girls Are Just So Rapey

Todd Akin isn’t a bug in the Republican Party, he’s a feature.

Freshman Rep. Roger Rivard (R-Rice Lake) in December discussed a case with the Chetek Alert newspaper in which a 17-year-old high school senior was charged with sexual assault for having sex with an underage girl in the school’s band room.

He told the Journal Sentinel that his father had advised him not to have premarital sex, and he took that seriously.

“He also told me one thing, ‘If you do (have premarital sex), just remember, consensual sex can turn into rape in an awful hurry,’ ” Rivard said. “Because all of a sudden a young lady gets pregnant and the parents are madder than a wet hen and she’s not going to say, ‘Oh, yeah, I was part of the program.’ All that she has to say or the parents have to say is it was rape because she’s underage. And he just said, ‘Remember, Roger, if you go down that road, some girls,’ he said, ‘they rape so easy.’

“What the whole genesis of it was, it was advice to me, telling me, ‘If you’re going to go down that road, you may have consensual sex that night and then the next morning it may be rape.’ So the way he said it was, ‘Just remember, Roger, some girls, they rape so easy. It may be rape the next morning.’

They rape so easy?  Words fail.

Rep. Roger Rivard now says his words were taken out of context.  Hmm… wonder how you put “they rape so easy” into context.

Oh yeah, and Paul Ryan endorsed this guy.

Roger Rivard with Paul Ryan

I’m Telling You, We’re This Close To Burqas

A woman gets sexually assaulted by a police officer and the female judge gives her a lecture.

Department of Public Safety Officer Robb Gary Evans, 43, knocks back eight beers on a summer night in 2011, according to prosecutors, then drives himself to the Green Room, a bar in downtown Flagstaff, where he flashes his badge to get in without having to pay the cover charge.

He proceeds to ooze charm and sophistication throughout the nightclub, pinching one woman on her backside, according to a witness, then groping the victim, the friend of a friend.

She complains and he gets tossed out of the bar, whereupon our hero announces that he’s a cop and the bouncers would be arrested.

Groping her by putting his hand under her skirt and touching her genitals.  And then… “A trial is held in July, and a jury finds the groper guilty of sexual abuse, a Class 5 felony, punishable by up to 21/2 years in prison.”  Did he get prison time?  No.  Does he have to register as a sex offender?  No.  Mr. Class 5 felony received  probation.  The victim received a lecture by the judge:

“If you wouldn’t have been there that night, none of this would have happened to you,” Coconino County Superior Court Judge Jacqueline Hatch told the victim this week.

Yeah, it would have happened to another woman who dared to leave her house.  If women don’t want to be sexually assaulted then they need to stay home and stop tempting men.  And if they do leave their homes and an incident like this happens they need to stop whining.

After blaming the victim, the judge went on to explain that she wasn’t blaming the victim but that women must be vigilant against becoming victims.

“When you blame others,” she said, “you give up your power to change.”

Hey ladies, if you go out and some guy feels you up then don’t blame him for his actions because, if you do, then you’ve lost power.  I see burqas in our future.