T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
257.1 | one question | BPOV02::MACKINNON | | Wed Aug 03 1988 09:44 | 9 |
|
I would only question one point in Helen's article.
Statistics show that woman are mathematically superior to
men. However, in childhood a girl's natural ability in
math is usually squashed in grammer school. So unfortunately,
they are not directed towards math related jobs such as
engineering. However, I am quite glad to see the trend is
changing, slowly, but it is changing.
|
257.2 | | FSLENG::MOOTREY | | Wed Aug 03 1988 10:13 | 8 |
|
Are you sure women are mathematically superior to men?
I read an article last night the claimed the opposit. Men
are mathematically superior to women. While women are more
superior in the "languages". But I guess it depends on how
you slice the statistics.
|
257.3 | not really... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Hey, pal, your days are lettered! | Wed Aug 03 1988 10:27 | 8 |
| My father did a study for his masters in education, and found that
women are only inferior to men in math because the system is slanted
against them (i.e. overt or covert encouragement is often given
to boys to excel in math and science, while it is often given to
girls to excel in the language arts).
-Jody
|
257.4 | Does It Cut Both Ways? | FDCV16::ROSS | | Wed Aug 03 1988 11:06 | 12 |
| RE: .3
Jody, are you saying, then, that females *may* be equal, or superior,
to males in math, but this fact doesn't manifest itself because of the
"system"?
Using this logic, could it also be argued that, perhaps, males *may*
be equal, or superior, to females, vis-a-vis, languages or social
studies, but this fact doesn't manifest itself because of the system?
Alan
|
257.5 | A long stretch. | WOODRO::M_SMITH | Building a Better Yesterday! | Wed Aug 03 1988 11:26 | 22 |
|
.0 >
.0 >
.0 >
.0 >The rise of economically autonomous women is a new phenomenon that is in
.0 >reality very old. For more than 99 percent of human evolution, we
.0 >existed as hunters and gatherers, and women in those cultures enjoyed
.0 >enormous clout because they probably brought back 60 to 80 percent of the
.0 >food. At least that's the case in most contemporary hunting-gathering
.0 >communities, such as the Kung bushmen of Africa, whose lifestyle is
.0 >thought to mirror that of earliest Homo sapiens.
Trying to equate the behavior of the entirety of earliest Homo Sapiens
to the behavior of one tribe of bushmen in Africa seems like a rather
large leap in logic to me.
If the women bring back 60 to 80 percent of the food, what do the
men do, sit around the campfire and drink beer?
Mike
|
257.6 | Elementary, My Dear Watson :-) | FDCV16::ROSS | | Wed Aug 03 1988 12:03 | 10 |
| RE: .5
> If the women bring back 60 to 80 percent of the food, what do the
> men do, sit around the campfire and drink beer?
Mike, the answer should be obvious: the men think of more and more
ways to oppress the women, so their methods can, in turn, be copied
by men in the rest of the civilized (and not-so-civilized) world. :-)
Alan
|
257.7 | not exactly | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Aug 03 1988 12:30 | 6 |
| The men hunt while the women gather vegetable products. In general
the portion that the women gather is larger than the portion the
men get in hunting.
Bonnie
|
257.8 | bulk rate | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Wed Aug 03 1988 13:26 | 3 |
|
so what exactly does 60 to 80 % mean. is that just bulk or is
that nutritional value?
|
257.9 | Get me a beer honey, will ya? | MAMIE::M_SMITH | Building a Better Yesterday! | Wed Aug 03 1988 14:10 | 4 |
| I think I'd rather sit around the campfire and drink beer made from
the 80% the women gather!
Mike
|
257.10 | food | DANUBE::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Aug 03 1988 14:25 | 1 |
| 60 - 80% of the total calories
|
257.11 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Hey, pal, your days are lettered! | Wed Aug 03 1988 16:18 | 5 |
| re: .4
yes, I am.
|
257.12 | apparently lots of people agreed with you... | TLE::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Wed Aug 03 1988 17:33 | 11 |
| re: .9
There is a theory that the incentive for the human switch from
hunter-gatherer societies, which had functioned extremely well
for hundreds of thousands of years, to farming societies was
the desire to have more grain to make beer.
This is a serious scientific theory with solid archaeological
evidence behind it.
--bonnie
|
257.13 | Beer Facts | MPGS::POLLAN | | Wed Aug 03 1988 20:20 | 22 |
|
This subject bearly warrents any type of reply. The historical
perspective can not be simplified to the point of we hunted
you gathered and now we drink beer. Are you people serious?
There is a whole bulk of history left out. I'll touch on as
much as I can. The hunters wander and the gatherers end up
defending. Therefore you get castles in serfdom and wanderers
who settle further and further away from home. This came to
allow the cast system to set up taxes. Also more education but
war. Then religon purged people. Then industrialism isolated
people into working class and rich. Now parity of the sexes
has destroyed family life for the most part. Instead of equal
rights having a desired effect of making everyone happy it has
cost society the ultimate price................family decay.......
Let's get married have children get divorced go our separate ways
and the next generation will suffer over our freedom.
This view may not be popular today but the future will look back
and sum it up this exact way.
Ken P>
|
257.14 | it will catch up with us | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Thu Aug 04 1988 10:37 | 26 |
|
i'd have to agree with .13
the article seemed to condone the "return" to an extended
family. that may work in a tribal society where everyone knows
that they are all in the struggle for life together and the
children represent survival of their tribe, so each individual
would feel a shared responsibility of raising the children.
their was no extraneous B.S.
in society today, i don't see any such feeling for raising
the children. well, certainly not wide spread. society is such
a complex beast these days that children need solid reference
points to learn from. they need both a male and female role
model. i think single parenting should be avoided, and women
who choose to single parent are depriving their child of a
balanced upbringing simply because they selfishly want to have
children.
the increased divorce rate and the raising of children in
day care centers by strangers has decayed the family nucleus
which is where we traditionally learnt our values.
(i write this out quickly without much thought - so if asked
i'll deny everything)
Bob
|
257.15 | Just questions, nothing more... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Aug 04 1988 11:50 | 27 |
| RE: .13, .14
Since you both seemed to say (pretty much) the same thing, I'd
like to ask you some questions:
Do you think women were selfish for wanting equal rights with
men? Do you think that those of us who desperately wanted equal
opportunities (and felt the same longings that men feel for
education and professional achievement) should have sacrificed
those goals (and dreams) for the sake of the family while men
continued to enjoy those opportunities?
Do you think that very many men who strongly *wanted* careers
would have been willing to give them up for the sake of the
state of the family? (I'm not talking about men who would
*rather* have stayed home, but men who felt a strong desire
to be out in the working world.)
Do you think that there is something inherent in women that
would have made it "better for everyone" if many/most women
had been prevented from fulfilling their potential (and their
dreams) as individuals for the sake of the family? Do you
think it would have been fairer somehow to hold women back
than to have held men back if the end results had been the
same?
Just asking...
|
257.16 | | BIGD::DM_JOHNSON | Morality curtails entertainment | Thu Aug 04 1988 12:24 | 1 |
| I thought dinosaurs were extinct. Aren't they?
|
257.17 | Slight disclaimer here... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Aug 04 1988 12:41 | 11 |
| Oh, by the way, (authors of .13 and .14) -- I'm not trying to
attack you or to second guess you about your individual philosophies
on this subject... My questions were not meant to tell you
what you meant, but rather to ask *you* what you think about
all this.
Also, I was wondering if you fully understood what the alternatives
to 'parity between the sexes' might have been (and if you saw
anything that could be considered unfair in the scenerios that
I suggested.)
|
257.18 | UH OH | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Thu Aug 04 1988 13:13 | 23 |
|
well, lets see.
first i think the whole question of equality is rather silly.
we're not equal, we're different. this is not to say one should
be valued higher than the other. both sexes should be afforded
every opportunity to do what they want and achieve their potential.
we are all in this together and the most prosperity will come from
the most people reaching and using their potentials. so to cut
off opportunities for over half the population just because of
some ignorant biases is just plain stupid.
secondly, i've always felt that if you start a family, you can
best serve the community by raising your kids properly, and the
best way i see is with both a mother and father. now of course
sometimes this is not possible and you have to do what you can,
but i've always thought it was selfish for a person to consciously
decide they wanted to raise a child alone, thus depriving that
child of every having either a father or mother. also, i'm
not saying single parenting is doomed to failure, but i would
say its more stressfull for both parent and child.
(hope i'm not getting myself into trouble)
Bob
|
257.19 | | FRAGLE::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Thu Aug 04 1988 13:34 | 33 |
| re equality:
yeah that's a difficult word. I prefer congruent (math term meaning
of equal value but not the same), myself.
re .14, .18 Bob
You're only getting yourself into a _little_ trouble :). Pardon
me if this seems like baiting but the comment about single parenting
is a tough one to let go. Consider the following (real) scenarios:
You are pregnant. The man who is "in this" with you beat the crap
out of you recently (after the incident which caused the pregnancy),
but is willing to marry you. Do you marry him and have the baby?
He will beat you and probably the child again. Do you abort? Do
you have the baby by yourself? Do you then give the baby up for
adoption or keep it yourself? Which is more moral and why?
You are pregnant. You want the baby, but the father does not, nor
is he willing to marry you. Do you: 1) abort, 2) have the baby
and give it up, 3) have the baby and raise it yourself, or 4) find
someone else to marry and raise the child together? Why?
You have two kids and a wonderful husband who leaves you (the kids
are 3 and 7, or so). What do you do?
Perhaps these are your "some circumstances" when single parent-hood
is unavoidable, but they are quite common (from what I remember,
these scenarios account for the bulk of single mothers). Once you
have sex, even once, with adequate birth control, you risk having
this happen to you, unless you are a man.
Lee
|
257.20 | Another Category | FDCV16::ROSS | | Thu Aug 04 1988 14:26 | 17 |
| RE: .19
Lee, the scenarios you've given why a woman may be(come) a single
mother are certainly true.
However, recently there has evolved a new reason for some women
becoming single mothers: they want a child, but do not want to
have to deal with marriage/relationship/men.
These women make a conscious decision to become pregnant, either
through artificial insemination or via sex with a man whom they feel
possesses the proper genetic background for her baby.
Perhaps, it is to this category of women that Bob is directing his
comments.
Alan
|
257.21 | ????? | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Thu Aug 04 1988 14:41 | 11 |
| One question I have is, if those cultures were so great how come they
vanished ? And if the Kung bushmen of Africa are the only ones living
close to that culture, how come they didn't progress ? If the outside
world didn't come to them they wouldn't even know there is a world
outside of their own. If women gathered 80% of the food, how did men
gain the power that women claim men have ? She implies that the broken
homes we have today are a good thing. Some how the pain experienced in
so many divorces, doesn't make it look as a positive thing. I like to
know what the other experts have to say about her report.
Jim
|
257.22 | | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Thu Aug 04 1988 14:45 | 18 |
|
re.20
yes. that is what my poor wording was supposed to convey.
re.19
those are tough situations all and require hard moral decisions
and i don't think its my place to preach morality to people, though
i can't resist saying two things.
any man who beats a woman is not a man
and any husband who abandons wife and kids is far from wonderful.
"if i was afraid of being called a hypocrite, i'd never speak."
Emerson
i say this because i probably had some moral preaching in the
other notes.
Bob
|
257.23 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | They say it's mostly vanity... | Thu Aug 04 1988 15:45 | 31 |
| I believe there are other hunter-gatherer societies left in the
world besides the Kung. As for why most of the world switched to
agriculture, there was an earlier suggestion that it was to produce
beer; I kind of like that one, myself. Seriously, I believe that
is a subject of debate among anthropologists. I have run across
some theories, but, unfortunately, I don't remember any of them.
Oh well.
I have actually run across the suggestion that many of the "inevitable"
social ills of humanity are actually non-existent in hunter-gatherer
societies. In such societies, no one owns possessions, other than what
they can carry with them; there is no resulting competition for wealth,
and greed for possessions is pointless. It was apparently after the
invention of agriculture that we began to see the rise of powerful
classes of people, massive inequality, and the corresponding oppression
of the powerless, including such wonderful institutions as slavery. In
hunter-gatherer societies, the people do have a generally leisurely
life; their "work week" is short, and yet they are better fed than the
people in many agricultural societies, with hunger non-existent.
I'll admit that this picture is rather utopian, and I suspect that life
is not quite as wonderful for these people as some have claimed. I
personally would not choose to trade my life for theirs. I remember
seeing a PBS documentary on a tribe of hunter-gatherers in the Amazon,
and while their life could be pretty idyllic, it also had its dark
side; blood feuds were common, and many people were killed. I don't
think that this is typical of hunter-gatherer societies, but, even so,
I guess it shows that there can be problems under any social
arrangement.
-- Mike
|
257.24 | No wonder I've always wanted to farm. | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Thu Aug 04 1988 17:24 | 20 |
|
RE:13&14 Right on!
RE:15 Who says that men want to work for sucess and recognition?
Most of the men I know work so as to be able to provide for their
families. If being more sucessful means more money (providing a better
life for the people who you love) then you work as hard as you have
to sa as to become more sucessful.
RE: The last few. As I see it, the reason we went from hunter/gatherers
to farming is because of progress. When we learned that the things
we could gather could be cultivated we did so. I think (hope) that we
will be farmers again. Not because I want to see women be treated
as unequal, but because it represents a time when people are working
mostly for the sustaining of life rather than the destruction of
life.
See ya'll on the farm!
Mike
|
257.25 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Aug 04 1988 18:23 | 64 |
| RE: .24
Did you say something about working hard to provide for the
people that we love? Gee, that sounds familiar! I've been
working hard as provider (for my son) for 17 years, and it
is definitely an important part of my life. However, I like
the things I've been able to do at Digital (and it's worth
more to me than just the money or my standing as a provider
for my family.) Maybe other people don't feel this way,
but I certainly do. Having interesting, challenging work
to occupy my time at work matters a great deal to me, as a
matter of fact.
You made a comment about wanting to go back to the "farmer"
times. Can I assume that you are saying you would like to
go back to what things were like before the women's movement
(that is, before the onset of attempts at 'parity between
the sexes'?) Please correct me if I'm mistaken in this.
If you *are* saying that you would like to go back to those
times, consider this: Most of us would probably agree that
the most important people involved in these issues (about
family, divorce, etc.) are the children. I agree with that
myself, completely.
However, we need to remember that ~50% of the children that
we care so much about (and consider to be our future) are
female. If we were to sacrifice women's rights for the sake
of "the children" (i.e., "the family," "marriage," etc.)
then we'd be sentencing ~50% of our precious children to
adulthoods where they would NOT have equal rights.
On a personal level, any woman might be willing to give up
her chance at equal rights for the sake of her family, but
when one looks at the entire scope of the issue -- asking
~100 million women (and many, many MORE future women) to
give up their chances at equal rights in order for everyone
to be "happy" again (like Beaver and his family) -- then the
price becomes awfully high (especially if one stops to realize
that going back to the 'old way' is not the only option open
to us.)
If the family is on the decline because of the ways in which
women's and men's roles have changed over the past 20 years,
then it sounds to me like marriage *and* family life are going
to have to change, too (i.e., adapt in order to survive.)
If we lament about the old days and refuse to allow institutions
like family and marriage to grow and evolve along with the
humans who engage in such things, then these institutions will
suffer all the more (and *all* of us will be to blame for it,
speaking in a general sense.)
Instead of thinking about how the old ways were ruined, it's
time to think of what we can do to make the family and marriage
better (taking the changes in men and women into consideration.)
Again, I'm talking on a cultural level (because I'm sure that
all of us present are doing the best we can to make our families
and/or marriages the best that we can.)
There is no turning back. As a species, we can either make
the future better for ourselves or we can grieve for things
that will never come back. I think we owe it to the children
to try to move forward (and make things better for their world.)
|
257.26 | responsibility | MPGS::POLLAN | | Thu Aug 04 1988 20:28 | 29 |
|
18>Bob I agree with all your words
25> Digging into this issue is one of the largest quagmires in the
philisophical jungle. Attached are every issue that's hot.
We have abortion,equal rights 'sexism' on and on. I'm not
shy about these issues. In .13 I am not trying to send
equal rights backward at all. caring families come in all
different flavours. The most tastey being extended but
almost as good is the nuclear. To throw an analogy of an
extreme case where a man beat a woman is a justice matter.
Abortion is still a crime under any but most perilous
situati0ns . Weaving a stable home life may be a complcated
matter in todays society but it comes with the promise
when you marry and have child. You are responsible!!!!!
Live up to that.................
Ken P.
|
257.27 | That's not what I said at all | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Aug 05 1988 12:28 | 23 |
| RE 25: If you reread my note it states specifically why I would
like to go back to the times when farming was the backbone of our
culture. I state specifically, "not so as women are treated as
unequal." I have a 17month old daughter at home and I want her
to have the opportunity to do whatever she wants INCLUDING staying
at home and raising a family. In many cases that is not an option
for many people who would prefer to do so because of economic
restrictions. Men and women are not the same, so they should not
be treated the same. In my family, my wife and I work together
to provide a nice atmosphere for our family. That is #1 priority
with us as I am sure it is with you. To me, equal rights have to
do with treating a person with respect, and dignity not worrying
about calling someone a fireman or firewoman or fireperson. Also
I think anyone who looks at a housewife as a second class citizens
are fullof garbage and second class citizens themselves. PLease
reread my note and see that I am not trying to take anyone's rights
away from them, rather make society see what really is important
(the sustaing of lives rather than the destruction of the same).
It was Ben Franklin who said, "As soon as the United States gets
away from agriculture as its main focus in society, it will start
down the path of evil"
Mike
|
257.28 | Discrimination = Equality | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Fri Aug 05 1988 13:44 | 26 |
| To treat people as equal, (equal by todays definition) is in many
cases discriminative. If we were to treat handicapped people as
equals without considering their needs, then we would not bother,
working towards bringing down the bariers that discriminate against
them. If we treat women as equal to men in all cases, then we could
eliminate the womens class in the Boston Marathon, and other atheltic
events. How many women would like that idea. Women and men are
different, but have the same value. The problem today is, there's
a quackery of "you can do anything you want to", as a result we
have cardiac patients that have to wait for a secound ambulance
crew to show up because the woman on the first crew is unable to
lift them. Plus even when she can, the male EMT thats with her has to
take the bulk on most calls. If you want to see discrimination
talk to a male nurse. I don't know how it is today, but years
ago my cousin became a registered nurse. In the hospital he worked
for, he was never assigned to a medical/surgical floor like the female
nurses. He was always on call to move heavy patients, and equipment,
like an orderly. He also, was not permitted to work on female patients.
He eventually became frustrated and left nursing. In some cases
disrimnation is right, and in some cases its wrong. Lets be clear
when we talk about equality, because sometimes discrimination creates
equality.
Jim
|
257.29 | Good Point | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Aug 05 1988 14:16 | 6 |
| RE: -1 Good point. For a few months I was the only male in my
group. Whenever something heavy had to be moved guess who they
came to? Did I mind? Of course not, it was the gentlemenly thing
too do.
Mike
|
257.30 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Fri Aug 05 1988 15:23 | 16 |
| re .28: My God! You mean that someone is hiring people for a job
requiring strength WITHOUT SETTING MINIMUM STRENGTH LIMITS?
Please - don't say "she couldn't lift X because she is a woman."
If you want your emergency personnel to be able to lift 200 lbs.
then put it in the job requirements. True, this would probably
eliminate more women than men, but if a woman _can_ lift the weight
then give her the bloody job. (No pun intended...)
Re .29: You sound like a decent sort, Mike. I hope that "gentlemanly"
translates to "willing to help others" rather than "willing to help
the little ladies," though! (I'm one of those feisty types who'd
rather lug my own boxes around than ask for help, but that's a personal
preference of mine.)
-b
|
257.31 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | They say it's mostly vanity... | Fri Aug 05 1988 16:47 | 18 |
| I think it is unfortunate that people sometimes feel it is necessary to
translate statistical differences between groups, which are usually
overlapping among the members of those groups anyway, into some kind of
iron-clad rule. Men, in general, have more of a certain kind of brute
strength than women do. So what? To cite the earlier example of the
Boston Marathon, I could not even *finish* the race, let alone defeat a
female marathoner. In most types of races, from the shortest ones to
the marathons, the best female times and the best male times are very
close; and both of these winning times are much better than I will ever
do.
If it is wrong to treat all people the same way (and I believe it is),
then it is also wrong to treat all people within a category (such as
gender) the same way simply because there exist statistical differences
between members of the various categories. Why not judge people as
individuals?
-- Mike
|
257.32 | It's necessary at times | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Aug 05 1988 17:12 | 16 |
| RE:-1 I would hope that on a one to one basis, all (being realistic
let's say most) people would treat one another on an individual
basis. When you are talking about about a certain gender of people
it is impossible not to stereotype no matter how fair or unfair
it is. While I agree that there is overlapping in just about
everything when it comes to genders, these overlappings tend to
be exceptions rather than the rule. There is nothing wrong with
being one of these exceptions, however, they might find the alot
of times when rules are made for the masses, they get overlooked.
You strive for the best for everyone, unfortunately this can't be
accomplished much of the time so you try to do what's best for the
most. I hope I've made my thoughts clear as to why I feel it is
necessary to make translate statistical differences between groups
(in this case gender).
Mike
|
257.33 | Impossible or difficult? | PSG::PURMAL | 1 2 3 4 5 senses working overtime | Fri Aug 05 1988 21:14 | 10 |
| re: .32
Impossible is a very strong word, why is it impossible not
to stereotype when talking about a certain gender. To bring the
female ambulance situation back, saying that women don't have the
strength to be ambulance attendants is a stereotype. Saying that
90% of the female applicants fail to meet the strength requirements
isn't using a stereotype.
ASP
|
257.34 | It has to be done in discussions about the masses. | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Mon Aug 08 1988 09:46 | 14 |
| RE:-1 In that situation (as I said before) it should be done on
a one on one basis. I'm talking about when you are having a discussion
about a gender as a whole as we are here. Yes, there are exceptions
to every rule, however, when you are discussing the whole gender,
whether it be male or female, there are steroetypes. I commend
the person who has never made a stereotype about the opposite sex.
I wonder if that person is out there. If they are, I suggest that
maybe they either have a very short memory or a very selective memory.
1) With regards to the ambulance attendants. Should we take the
chance of someone not getting medical attention in time because of
the 10% of the women who could lift the 250 lb person?
|
257.35 | Apples and Oranges, Glad They Both Exist | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Aug 08 1988 09:55 | 34 |
| re:28
Your right, she wasn't able to lift the patient because she was
a woman, she just wasn't strong enough. She was hired for the
job because she was a woman. The private ambulance companies have
to meet affrimative action quota's in order to get the contracts
from the city, which causes the true discrimination I'm talking
about. How do you think the patients family felt towards that
person and the ambulance company for hiring her ? How do you think
she might of felt.
I talked to the fire chief in the town I live in now, about physical
requirements for firefighters. He said that there are a number of
requirements, and one included carrying a 125lb dummy down a ladder.
Being that we have a woman on the volunteer department, I would assume
she passed the test. Good for her. My point is as someone mentioned,
that people be treated as individuals, and that is why we have a
womens and mens class in the Boston Marathon.
The feminist movement has gone from the individual, to the masses of
women, and that has resulted in unfairness towards the individual.
re:someone else, (I'm to lazy to look).
Yes I couldn't run the first two miles of the Boston Marathon, but
I'm not a world class runner, so don't compare me to the woman who are
world class runners. If comparisons must be done, compare them to
their male counterparts. 200 men crossed the finish line before
the first women did. The first place man crossed some 18 minutes before
the first woman. It dosen't take away the amazing time the women
put in, but eliminate their class and have them run against the
men. Wouldn't that be unfair? Especially with the prize money going
to only the first three places, I don't think the women would like
it and neither would most people.
Jim
|
257.36 | Back to the farm | MAMIE::M_SMITH | Building a Better Yesterday! | Wed Aug 10 1988 10:00 | 11 |
| Re: Someone earlier.
You want us all to go back to the farm? Is that what I heard? In terms
of equality, I couldn't think of a better place for that to happen.
Because of the nature of the work to be done, men's and women's roles
would be very clearly defined. The men doing the heavy work out
in the fields and in the barns while the women are doing the lighter
but endless work in and around the house. In terms of survival,
you are engaging in wishful thinking.
Mike
|
257.37 | Garbage In; Garbage Out | BETSY::WATSON | No_Mad | Fri Aug 19 1988 11:22 | 30 |
| > ......................................................... A peculiarity
>of the farming lifestyle is that men and women functioned as an isolated,
>economically dependent unit. Marriage was "till death do us part" for
>the simple reason that neither partner could pick up half of the property
>and march off to town.
I doubt very much that men and woman stayed together for this "simple
reason". Is it so difficult to accept the fact that MANY, MANY couples
have stayed together "till death do us part" because they WANTED TO?
> ................................. A man is going to think a lot harder
>about leaving a woman who picks his vegetables than leaving a woman who
>is the vice president of Citibank, because she can fend for herself and
>vice versa. Indeed around the globe, wherever women are economically
>powerful, divorce rates are high.
If he's going to leave her, it won't matter if she picks cabbages in a
field or counts cabbage in a bank. Also, I'm glad to hear that divorce rates
are highest "wherever women are economically powerful". Great news. I'll be
sure to tell my daughters that they will NEED money=power so they can walk
out on any relationship when they so desire. I mean, relationships are to
be taken lightly, aren't they, here in the "Ailing Eighties"?
The entire article reeks of over-simplistic, male-bashing, tear-apart-the-
central-family views - Let's Get Back To Our Roots - all for the "Betterment
of Society".
Rubbish.
Kip
|
257.38 | Here's another men, woman type article. | SALEM::AMARTIN | The Armed Citizen = ME! | Sun Sep 11 1988 04:12 | 54 |
| I didn't want to start another note so I felt that this was as good
a place as any.
As we all know dear Abby is somewhat "biased". Wether or not you
want to think that is your own business. The reason I stated this
is because the other day i noticed an article that...well....didnt
show her "true colors".
This, of course, is copied without permission but what the heck.
Men, Women locked in the prison of stereotypes.
Equality Day
For every woman who is tired of acting weak when she is strong,
there is a man who is tired of appearing strong when he feels
vulnerable;
For every woman who is tored of acting dumb, there is a man who
is burdened with the constant expectation of knowing everything;
For every woman who is tired of being called an "emotional female,"
there is a man who is denied the right to weep and to be gentle;
For every woman who is called unfeminine when she competes, there
is a man for whom competition is the only way to prove his masculinity;
For every woman who is tired of being a sex object, there is
a man who must worry about his potency;
For every woman who feels "tied down" by her children, there is
a man who is denied the full pleasure of shared parenthood;
For every woman who is denied meaningfull employment or equal
pay, there is a man who must bear full financial responsibility
for another human being;
For every woman who was not taught the intracacies of an automobile,
there is a man who weas not taught the satisfactions of cooking;
For every woman who takes steps toward her own liberation, there
is a man who finds the way to freedom has been made a little easier.
Personally, I could add a couple of others to this but what would
it prove? You get the picture, dont you?
When Mel read this, she thought that it should be presented in a
spacific file. I will not enter it there, for I feel that it is
better placed here.
Take it for what you feel its worth is......
Melissa and Al Martin
|