T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
212.1 | | MANANA::RAVAN | Tryin' to make it real... | Thu Feb 25 1988 10:25 | 37 |
| The difference is whether the purpose of the club is for private
entertainment or for some public or professional service. My beliefs
are:
o In your own home, you may be as exclusive as you wish. You can
invite anybody you like to your parties, and exclude anyone you
like, regardless of race, sex, age, physical appearance, IQ, eye
color, etc.
o Private social clubs - *small* private social clubs - seem to
me the next step up from this. If you and several of your friends
decide to meet at a club instead of in somebody's house, I'd think
you ought to have the same privileges of including or excluding
whoever you like.
o Once a club becomes large enough that the members do not all know
each other and are not friends, or (as was mentioned in a news report
the other day) when a club becomes commercial, as in commonly serving
meals, business lunches, etc. to guests of members, then I feel that
excluding people due to sex, race, etc. becomes highly questionable.
I freely admit that it can be difficult to draw the line. I also
admit that I'm rather fond of the image of the oak-panelled old
Victorian men's clubs, and it wouldn't particularly bother me to
have a Victorian womens' club to belong to. But I'd want such clubs
to have strict rules *against* negotiating business deals on the
premises!
(Side note: It occurs to me that there is a category of exclusive
organization that doesn't seem to be as controversial as the
male/female or race/race clubs: the "novelty" groups. There's the Jim
Smiths, I believe, open to anyone whose name is Jim Smith. And clubs
for redheads, obviously discriminatory to blondes. Do these bother me?
Nope. Why? Because these are just for fun, in which case anybody who's
excluded can go start their own club!)
-b
|
212.2 | | MORGAN::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Fri Feb 26 1988 11:58 | 17 |
|
I believe they are totally within their rights to have private
clubs. Private clubs are just that private, they offer a member
some escape from the hub bub of the world. What right do you have
to infringe on someone else's privacy, as to stipulate what goes
on with an organization ? Do you see men crying about not being able
to join women's organizations ? No !! What goes on behind those closed
doors has no effect nor bearing on your life.
So why are some women so insistent on affecting a group of men right
to privacy ? does your privilege to know about things outweight
anothers right to privacy ? I doubt it. So aside from making a name
for herself and trying to put another notch in the feminist war against
men why is this woman fighting to get in a mens club ? What real
purpose does it serve ?
Bob B
|
212.3 | girls and lawmakers | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Fri Feb 26 1988 12:49 | 22 |
| re .2 I agree. You can't mix the sexes on everything.
Maybe one reason why women want to get into men's clubs
is to meet men. Also to share the resources in such clubs
that might not be available elsewhere.
Still, such desires to intrude Men's clubs are just that
-- intrusions. God knows we don't have enough of our "own
space" already. The laws that have forced "fairness" are
ludicrous. Women can't leave us alone.
As Men we can form our own clubs. We just have to watch
out for those people who want to be troublemakers. They
often stoop so low as to "force entry" by getting the leg-
islators involved. When communication fails run to the law-
makers. Run to the lawmakers. Run to the lawmakers.
Of course I am just talking out of my teeth again for no
group of people has ever done that to men.
Russ
|
212.4 | How private are we talking, here? | MANANA::RAVAN | Tryin' to make it real... | Fri Feb 26 1988 13:08 | 25 |
| Re .3: "to meet men" - well, it isn't a reason *I'd* do such a thing.
"To share the resources in such clubs that might not be available
elsewhere" - now *that* certainly qualifies. Even so, if it truly is a
private club, demanding to share the resources is like demanding to use
a neighbor's swimming pool; it's nice if they offer, but you have no
right to demand it.
If it *isn't* really a private club, that's different. So, before this
goes any further, could you please define what you mean by "private
club"? I tried to do so in .1, because that's where I see the problem
occurring. Very few people (that I know of) want to force their way
into somebody's truly private social gatherings.
So. Is there an upper limit on the number of members in a private
club? "I'm going to have dinner with 10,000 of my most intimate
friends..." Is there a limit on the purposes such clubs could have?
"All the stockbrokers in my company have a little club that we attend;
it's for men only, of course, but we do discuss most of our business
there." Is there a limit on the sources of funding for such clubs?
"We demand that the government subsidize our attempts to keep from
having to associate with <name your favorite group>."
Please define your terms...
-b
|
212.5 | Size dodesn't matter :-) | WAV14::SOHN | Waitin' for Opening Day | Fri Feb 26 1988 13:48 | 24 |
|
I don't think that size has anything to do with it (see .1).
It has to do with excluding someone from opportunities not provided
elsewhere, especially when there are business concerns involved.
Examples:
All-male chess club, which contains elite players (read: best in area/
country/world) who play almost exclusively at the club. Women players
(assuming there was not a separate women's division in chess) would
be being discriminated against since they would not have the same
opportunity to play against the best, and to learn and improve from
that experience.
All-male Harvard B School grad club. Women would be restricted in their
networking/making and maintaining of business contacts by their absence
at the club and its gatherings.
Just another man's opinion.
Eric
|
212.6 | let's treat everyone fairly. | COLORS::MODICA | | Fri Feb 26 1988 15:44 | 8 |
|
At first I didn't see anything wrong with exclusive clubs. But
the more I think about it the more worried I become. Carried to
the extreme I worry about society becoming more fragmented with
less social interaction and possibly as a result less tolerance
of one another. So I guess I'd like to see everyone have an
equal opportunity to join whatever clubs or organizations
that may interest them.
|
212.7 | boys and lawmakers | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Feb 26 1988 21:27 | 24 |
| re .3 I agree. You can't mix the races on everything.
Maybe one reason why blacks want to get into white's clubs
is to meet whites. Also to share the resources in such clubs
thatn might not be available elsewhere.
Still, such desires to intrude White's clubs are just that
-- intrusions. God knows we don't have enough of our "own
space" already. They laws that have forced "fairness" are
ludicrous. Blacks can't leave us alone.
As Whites we can form our own clubs. We just have to watch
out for those people who want to be troublemakers. They
often stoop sol low as to "force entry" by getting the leg-
islators involved. When communication fails run to the law-
makers. Run to the lawmakers. Run to the lawmakers.
Of course I am just talking out of my teeth again for no
group of people has ever done that to whites.
Let's keep those women in their places, at home, barefoot, and
pregnant. Damn uppity women, don't know their place.
-- Charles
|
212.8 | 'Men are *capable* of the most "feminine virtues" - Eisler & NOW's Universe' | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Sun Feb 28 1988 01:42 | 22 |
| re .7 Considering that you embrace the ideological foundations
of radical feminism, I can't imagine any 'male' spaces
that your focused group won't be able to intrude.
Russ_who_knows_a_poor_excuse_for_an_analogy_when_he_sees_one,_or
let's_have_unisex-bathrooms_haircuts, boy-girl-scouts, locker-rooms
shared_Kingsize-for-sis+brother_bed,_Tort_laws_WITCH_ads_sexism
in_DEC,_pests_for_librarians,_words_put_in_other's_mouth's,_no
*real* feminists_say_"you're_right"_,NOW_controling_Media's_
'Women's_Issues"_,Mary_Daly_sez-so_DO_,'Child_vs_Childfree"_
Abortion_cause_my_career_over_his_wish,Afirmative action_legis-
lated_for_all_Corp_ladder_positions_since_MCP's_are_MCP's,Goddess
over Jesus,Earings_and_make-up_for_men,and,and....................
|
212.9 | | RANCHO::HOLT | I live in a mouse hotel... | Sun Feb 28 1988 02:38 | 5 |
|
uh oh, you guys with the earings... you might want to do
a gender sanity check...-;
Hey Mr T, what's that in your ear there, big guy?
|
212.10 | capable and willing | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Sun Feb 28 1988 05:56 | 173 |
| Re: .8
Excuse me Russ, I claim to be a "radical feminist". You clearly have
chosen to let some other self proclaimed radical feminists define what
*you* mean by the term. I choose to stick to a strict constructionist
definition. Feminsim, according to the dictionary I keep on my desk is
"the theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the
sexes". I realize that you have chosen, for your own purposes, to use a
different definition, but this is the one I, and the majority of self
proclaimed feminists that I know use. I claim to be radical because I
actually act based on my beliefs, and try to convince others of their
correctness. I understand that not everyone believes that that is what
makes a radical, but if you can define "feminist" to be "man hater", I
can define radical to be activist. You of course are free to disagree
with my definition of myself, but please don't use *your* definition to
define what *I* believe.
By the way, I don't believe you'd know an analogy if it came up
and bit you. (Apologies to Frank Zappa). What I posted was not an
analogy, it was a satire.
As for your list:
Unisex Bathrooms
Unisex Haircuts
Boy-Girl-Scouts
Shared Locker Rooms
Kingsize beds for brothers and sisters
Tort laws (equal rights laws)
WITCH ads
Sexism in DEC
Pests for librarians
Words put in other's mouths
No *real* feminsts agree with me
NOW controlling media's "Women's Issues"
Mary Daly sez, so do
Child[less] vs Childfree
Abortion because my career is more important that his wish
Affirmative action applied to the entire corporate ladder
Goddess over Jesus
Earrings and make up for men
and, and ...
It seems to be a tactic of yours to mix lots of appeals to emotion
with hyperbole and a small amount of substance. I'm going to reply
to the substance, and ignore what I think is hyperbole. If you feel
I've left anything out that deserves a reply, please let me know
and I'll get back to it.
Unisex Bathrooms
This is a straw man argument, and has been dealt with adequately
before.
Unisex Haircuts
I support the idea that men and women should be allowed to wear
their hair however they like. I personally wear my hair straight,
in a ponyt tail, and approximately waist length. A very good
friend of mine wears her hair approximately one inch long. You
have a problem with this?
Boy-Girl-Scouts
I don't have any fundamental objection to this. Do you?
Shared Locker Rooms
You wish. Another straw man.
Kingsize beds for brothers and sisters
Some brothers and sisters aren't rich enough to have even a
king sized bed to share. They make do with a cot. What's your
problem? Or do you automatically assume that they would have
sex with each other? What does that say about *you*?
Tort laws (equal rights laws)
Fine idea.
WITCH ads
Equal time, I'm all for it.
Sexism in DEC
I hate it. I'll fight it wherever I see it. How about you?
Pests for librarians
Hello? How did this sneak in here?
Words put in other's mouths
"Aggravatin' ain't it." [anyone wanting the full text of the
joke to which this is the puchline, let me know. I should warn
you, it's dirty... it has to do with being put in the same
situation you put others in.]
No *real* feminsts agree with you
Hello? Who set Russ Pollitz up as the "Feminist Purity Board"?
NOW controlling media's "Women's Issues"
Straw man. Cite evidence please.
Mary Daly sez, so do
Hello? I haven't the slightest idea *what* Mary Daly has to
say about this argument, so it seems hardly relevant.
Child[less] vs Childfree
Ahhh... I begin to see what you're driving at. Being Childfree
is evil? Sounds suspiciously like "barefoot and pregnant" to
me... What's wrong with choosing not to have children? Next
thing you know he'll be wanting to outlaw birth control...
Abortion because my career is more important that his wish
Damn right, except I'd say "my right to control my body is more
important than his wish for me to have a baby". I'm afraid we'll
just have to agree to disagree about this one, the abortion
issue has lots of other topics devoted to it, I propose we don't
clutter this one further with abortion arguments.
Affirmative action applied to the entire corporate ladder
What's the problem? I prefer to say promotion on merit not on
race, creed, color, sex, national origin, or sexual preference.
But if you want to lump that all under "affirmative action"
that's ok with me. Do you favor allowing discrimination in hiring
or promotion based on sex?
Goddess over Jesus
Goddess as well as Jesus and Allah and Ahura-Mazda and Ra
and Adonai and I don't know and none of the above. I support
your right believe "Jesus over The Goddess" just as firmly as
I insist you allow others to believe "The Goddess over Jesus".
Earrings and make up for men
Yes, I wear an earring, and sometimes I wear make up. Does this
threaten you in some way?
and, and ...
and! and!
"But to have a full kit of auditory patterns curved to real emotions we
do need to listen. We need to listen, with inside matching on our own
part, to those whose phrases match their inner state. We are lucky if
we listen less to lecturers and experts, more to farmers, mechanics,
truck drivers ... laundresses, and children out of school."
-- Sidney Cox "Indirections"
"He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that."
-- John Stuart Mill "On Liberty"
Despite all this, I don't believe that Russ has replied to my implied
criticism of his earlier note. In what way are all-male clubs different
from all-white clubs? I respect the right of people to free association
but I agree with the trend of recent rulings to say that when a
club becomes more than a social institution, and begins to confer
political, legal, or financial advantages to its members then civil
rights statutes apply.
-- Charles
|
212.12 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Sun Feb 28 1988 20:35 | 5 |
| Re: .10
Thank you, Charles. We needed that.
Steve
|
212.13 | Ever hear of "Separate but Equal"? | BETSY::WATSON | No_Mad | Mon Feb 29 1988 11:55 | 36 |
| re: .10 <OPHION::HAYNES >
> Boy-Girl-Scouts
.10> I don't have any fundamental objection to this. Do you?
Not as long as the girls stay in their organizations. And the same applies to
Scout leaders.. what kind of role model is a woman for teenaged boys? None.
> Affirmative action applied to the entire corporate ladder
.10> What's the problem? I prefer to say promotion on merit not on
.10> race, creed, color, sex, national origin, or sexual preference.
.10> But if you want to lump that all under "affirmative action"
.10> that's ok with me. Do you favor allowing discrimination in hiring
.10> or promotion based on sex?
There already are instances of hirings and promotions based on race, creed,
color, sex & national origin, with very little to do with merit. This will be
the downfall of our nation. Giving away the store is not the way to gain more
customers.
"Sexual preference" is a bogus term.
> Earrings and make up for men
.10> Yes, I wear an earring, and sometimes I wear make up. Does this
.10> threaten you in some way?
Threatened is not the term. Try disgusted.
Private clubs are just that: Private. If a man chooses to socialize with his
own kind (read those with whom he identifies) then leave him alone. He will be
more apt to get along with those who would desire to interfere with his right
to privacy.
Kip
|
212.14 | | ASIC::EDECK | | Mon Feb 29 1988 12:10 | 24 |
|
ref .4
From what I remember from a Boston Globe article yesterday, a
"Private Club" in Mass. is defined as follows:
1) Less than 100 members
2) No accomidations for regular meals
3) No meeting rooms, etc. available for hire by outside groups
4) Most membership fees not paid by corporations
Any club that does not meet the above MAY be covered under the new
law. At the present, liquor licenses are being granted to clubs
that do not follow the above, provisional to (or maybe just "pending?")
a case being heard in the Supreme Court.
The legal theory being argued is that any time an organization makes it's
accomidations available to the public for profit, it comes under the
antidiscrimination laws.
Ed E.
|
212.15 | once more into the breech | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Mon Feb 29 1988 22:08 | 83 |
| > what kind of role model is a woman for teenaged boys? None.
Right. Boys should be taken away from their mothers as soon as they
enter their teens. They need strong masculine role models lest they
become contaminated by feminine values and turn out less than the
masculine ideal they could be. Women are clearly unsuitable as scout
leaders because they have breasts and lack penises. Clearly some
women are *physically* capable of everything required of a scout
"master" but their low testosterone levels mean they are spiritually
unsuitable.
> There already are instances of hirings and promotions based on race, creed,
> color, sex & national origin, with very little to do with merit.
I personally think that what you say is factually correct, and I
personally feel that it is bad. Unfortunately I believe that in
the past there have been grave injustices in this area and that
affirmative action, while "wrong" in the abstract and the steady
state is needed to correct the past history of injustice.
On the other hand, I believe that perpetuating discrimination against
these groups is completely unacceptable, regardless of the merits
of giving them preference. Don't you agree?
> This will be the downfall of our nation. Giving away the store is not
> the way to gain more customers.
I'm glad to see that the Pope isn't the only one infallible when
speaking on doctrine. Personally I feel that intolerance and an
obsession with imposing our way of life on others will be the downfall
of our nation.
> "Sexual preference" is a bogus term.
Wrong.
Now that we've established the high moral tone of this discussion...
> Threatened is not the term. Try disgusted.
[Please picture me sitting here with a tolerant and slightly
patronizing smile on my face.]
How sad. You must spend a lot of your life being offended and disgusted
by things you see around you. Do you speak any foreign languages,
or just english?
> Private clubs are just that: Private. If a man chooses to socialize with
> his own kind (read those with whom he identifies) then leave him alone. He
> will be more apt to get along with those who would desire to interfere with
> his right to privacy.
As I said, I strongly support people's right to associate freely, this
is guaranteed by the constitution (The right of peaceful assembly). The
problem is, that civil rights (equal protection under the law) is also
guaranteed by the constitution, and I happen to agree with our courts
balance of free assembly and equal protection. You seem not to, that's
your right, and your choice, I doubt either of us is going to convince
the other on this subject.
The "right to privacy" (freedom from unreasonable search and seizure)
however is being fairly narrowly interpreted. I personally think that
it's too narrowly interpreted, witness Harwick vs Georgia and the
potential challenge to Wade vs Roe.
By the way, the courts did NOT find that "separate but equal" was
inherently unconstitutional, merely that implemetation of it was
being used to systematically discriminate. The objection was not
to the theory of "separate but equal" but against the practice of
"separate and unequal". It was a triumph of pragmatism over theory,
a concept foreign to strict constructionists like some of the more
recent Supreme Court nominees.
"It is a fact of history that in every age of transition men
are never so firmly bound to one way of life as when they are
about to abandon it, so that fanaticism and intolerance reach
their most intense forms just before tolerance and mutual
acceptance come to be the natural order of things."
-- Bernard Levin "The Pendulum Years"
-- Charles
|
212.16 | Small groups=privacy, large groups=discrimination | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Calm down, it's only 1's and 0's | Tue Mar 01 1988 14:59 | 41 |
| I agree that people have a right to form whatever social groups
they want, inclusive or exclusive of whomever they want.
But only for social groups. If I am holding a dinner party in my
home, I can invite or not invite whomever I wish. However, if I
essentially open a bar, call it a private club, and deny membership
to (blacks, women, men, Chicanos, etc.), this is a narrowly disguised
attempt at discriminating against a certain group. I believe this
was tried in the south after the "separate but equal" laws were
proclaimed illegal and discriminatory. Just open a bar, call it
a private club, and only issue memberships to whites. This way
you don't have to serve blacks. This is what much of the so-called
men's clubs are - an organization that meets for business oriented
dinners and excludes women. That is discriminatory. On the other
hand, a small group of men who start a club, buy whatever they want to
have in their clubhouse, and COMPLETELY FUND IT THEMSELVES, are
well within their rights - not much different than my private dinner
party analogy.
I think there are several keys here that make the difference. For
me to consider it a truly private club, it must be
1) Small. .14's definition including less than 100 members sounds
reasonable.
2) Self-supporting. If a small exclusive group is going to form,
I don't want to see it funded by the government, a college or
university, or a corporation(s).
3) Club facilities only available to club members, and possibly
their guests.
The only difference between this and what .14 posted as printed
in the Boston Globe is "no accommodations for regular meals". If
a small group forms, buys a clubhouse that includes a kitchen, and
serves their members meals, it could still be a private club. For
that matter, my home has accommodations for regular meals. I maintain
that I have the right to invite or not invite whomever I choose
for dinner.
Elizabeth
|
212.17 | Pick a number, any number | BETSY::WATSON | No_Mad | Wed Mar 02 1988 12:40 | 16 |
| re: .16
> -< Small groups=privacy, large groups=discrimination >-
> 1) Small. .14's definition including less than 100 members sounds
> reasonable.
I can agree with you on all points except this arbitrary number someone has
picked out of the air. Why should there be a limit on how many members
constitutes a private "club"?
Anyone can use semantics and not refer to their organization as a "club", if
there's a problem with that term.
Simply put, Private is Private.
Kip
|
212.18 | | ASIC::EDECK | | Wed Mar 02 1988 16:36 | 11 |
|
ref .17 (100 member criteron):
True. The 100 member limit IS arbitrary. I think the more important
things are not allowing member's dues to be paid by businesses,
and/or not allowing meeting rooms and other facilities to be rented
by outside groups. Also, I thought the legal point
that once one invites the public to use the facilities the club
comes under public accomidation laws, was interesting and might
have some applications to discussions on property owners' rights
(in other conferences).
|
212.19 | Don't tread on (fill in the blank) ! | CSC32::S_HALL | TANSTAAFL..... | Thu Mar 03 1988 13:48 | 28 |
|
You folks are nibbling around the real issue, but haven't put
your finger(s) on it yet.
The problem is the erosion of rights by governments. The
government should have NO say about whom someone does or does not
associate with.
The Anytown White_Racist_Bigots_And_Males Association should
have every right to determine its own membership. I wouldn't
want in, but a club I'm in might want to limit membership based
on, say, income, or blood-type or any of a hundred other factors.
A club designated as Men Only needn't be a bastion of anti-female
sentiment. It might be un-interesting to as many men as were
attracted to it because of the men-only status.
The point is, whether one subscribes to such a club's values
(or any club's values), it's their business, and involving the
government to force the membership in one direction or the other
is wrong.
My $.02 worth.... :^)
Steve h
|
212.20 | private vs. organized discrimination | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Calm down, it's only 1's and 0's | Thu Mar 03 1988 19:49 | 25 |
| Re .19
I agree - the government should have *no* say in whom someone
associates with, or does not associate with. Thus I agree that
the Anytown White_Racist_Bigots_and_Males Association has every
right to exist and determine membership. If they want to have such
a club, that's ok with me, even if they want to restrict it to AB
positive blood types as well. Just keep it out of other people's
way, and don't expect other people to pay for it.
The problem comes in when they are being used for buisiness purposes.
If membership in a club determines your success in your job, buisiness,
or schoolwork, *then* it is a form of organized discrimination against
a particular group.
The other problem comes in when it is a narrowly disguised resturant
or bar. If they are opening their doors to the public, they have
to obey the laws regarding public establishments. However, if they
keep it truely private, they can do whatever they wish.
Elizabeth
BTW, the 100 number is arbitrary. The idea is "keep it a small
group".
|
212.21 | Private is still Private | BETSY::WATSON | No_Mad | Fri Mar 04 1988 08:34 | 27 |
| re: .20
> The problem comes in when they are being used for buisiness purposes.
> If membership in a club determines your success in your job, buisiness,
> or schoolwork, *then* it is a form of organized discrimination against
> a particular group.
Not necessarily so. When people congregate to further their success(es) it
can still be done so "privately". You can't tell me who I have to associate
with or share my expertise with. I don't think it should be considered
"discrimination against a particular group" if members of my group choose to
not include you or anyone else.
> The other problem comes in when it is a narrowly disguised resturant
> or bar. If they are opening their doors to the public, they have
> to obey the laws regarding public establishments. However, if they
> keep it truely private, they can do whatever they wish.
We are in agreement 100% on this aspect. The key word here is "private". Yes,
they can do whatever they wish.
> BTW, the 100 number is arbitrary. The idea is "keep it a small
> group".
Again, putting any limit on the number of people allowed is in itself
discriminatory. (The government should also have no say in this.)
Kip
|
212.22 | a personal opinion! | SALEM::MELANSON | | Fri Mar 04 1988 10:37 | 13 |
| I agree that there are some operations (clubs) that do some damned
shady things that are destructive, sexist, racist etc.. but for
the most partI dont believe this is the case. The thing that worries
me is sooner or later the one's (clubs) that do produce good results
and are not deviant will be exploited.
I did not start this disscussion to produce arguments about sexism,
just to findout what feedback was available on the topic.
thanks
jim
|
212.23 | | INFACT::VALENZA | Oddfellows Local 151 | Sun Mar 06 1988 07:50 | 27 |
| There are two issues involved here: the legality of sexist private
clubs, and the morality of belonging to a sexist private club. These
issues are related, but nevertheless distinct.
As for the morality of joining such a club, consider what someone said
on the MacNeil-Lehrer television program a few weeks ago. He was asked
why anyone would want to join an all-male private club. He gave a
completely sexist response. Suppose, he suggested, someone wanted to
light up a cigar; if there were women around, he would have to worry
about offending her. As a man who finds cigar smoke offensive (or
cigarette smoke, for that matter), I am amazed at that statement.
Gender has nothing to do with courtesy, nor does it have anything to do
emitting foul and unhealthy odors. I cannot conceive of a legitimate,
non-sexist reason for joining this type of club. I happen to enjoy the
company of women, and would never consider excluding women from any
social activity merely because of their gender.
As for the legality of such clubs, no one is trying to prevent anyone
from associating with whoever they wish in private, even sexist clubs.
The issue is that certain "private" clubs are not really private, and
in fact participate in discrimination against the excluded group in an
arena far beyond the club per se. What is complicated is determining
when an association is truly private, and when it is not. If there is
a valid set of criteria for determining this distinction, then I am
totally in favor of banning discrimination by the pseudo-private clubs.
-- Mike
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212.25 | why bother? | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Mar 18 1988 15:24 | 28 |
| Re: .24
"So prejudicial hiring procedures are good, as long as the basis
for the bias is acceptable?"
Right. Would you like to know if I've stopped beating my wife?
I did not say anything about "prejudicial hiring procedures". If you
follow recent supreme court rulings on affirmative action, you will
discover that they are treading a very fine line. On the one hand,
racial discrimination in any form is unconstitutional. On the other
hand, affirmative action to redress past injustices has been repeatedly
challenged, and upheld. Rightly so, I believe. Recently the court has
been seen to encourage affirmative action that does not directly harm
the other party. For example, in hiring, rather than just saying that
you must hire 40% blacks until racial equality is acheived, some cities
have said, we will hire the same number of whites as we have been, but
we will increase TOTAL hiring by hiring more blacks. Current
affirmative action policies are much more complex than your simplistic
"prejudicial hiring policies" would imply.
It's absolutely trivial to point out the injustices in the current
system, and NO solution is perfect. What is difficult is choosing
among all these hard alternatives.
There are no simple answers.
-- Charles
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212.27 | Care to comment? | MSDOA1::CUNNINGHAM | | Tue Apr 05 1988 13:27 | 18 |
| I think it would be helpful to look at one of the more obvious but
previously unstated reason all-male clubs came into existance.
I have no figures to support my guess, so feel free to disagree.
A husband is about to go out of the house to have a few drinks with
his buddies. He loves his wife and doesn't want her to worry about
his seeing other women. So, he meets his buddies at an all-male
club. She isn't worried about competition, and is more supportive
of him going out.
One might argue that wives are not that jealous, and men are not
that considerate of their feelings. Maybe not today, but in the
past I bet there was more of this. As for my wife, she does have
a jealous streak, and I can assure you she would feel more comfortable
if any club I joined was "male only".
DRC
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212.28 | re: .27 .. some facts, more opinion. | BETA::EARLY | Bob_the_hiker | Thu Apr 07 1988 13:02 | 46 |
| re: .27
Sounds good ! Has anyone convinced their wife or SO of this ' so
very plausible ' rationale (opinion) ?
I, too, can make some guessesm except that the firstpart is based
on facts (as best as I can recall).
Not too very long ago in Massashusetts, their were several classes
of liquor licenses. ONE of those clases was a "Bar" (still is).
And Tavern (where they also served food; license was cheaper than
a bar).
The major impact for women, is that they were not PERMITTED in the
bar, but they were permitted in a Tavern (if escorted by a man).
After all, no DECENT woman would be seen alone in those places (I
guess it was assumed that any that were alone, weren't decent, and
thus 'fair game').
If movies are any guide (probably wrong as heck); they portray the
old "tribal days" of men sitting around discussing village business
drinking "holy water" made by the medicine men to help them "enhance"
their abilitiy to make rationale decisions (???) for the rest of
the tribe.
Another aspect, which carries over to 'modern mens clubs', is that
women are simply regarded as being good anough for the "Auxiliaray"
whatever, who do the cooking, cleaning, caring while the menfolk
attend to the business at hand.
So much for historical guesses. Any more ?
Today, a different form of "Men's Group" is forming (I'm in my second
one; and both were initiated in very liberal church -UUA). The
difference though, isn't to run business, but to understand -or
attempt to understand- our thought/feeling/rationalizing process
without the other sex being there.
But then, this group isn't a drinking group, either.
Another aspect of the modern "mens group" is that some groups MAY
be simply a "mens social club", for, by, and limited, to men. As
close as my SO and I are; there are things I need to know that other
men won't share if a woman is present.
RWE
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