T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
301.2 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 01:35 | 16 |
| My guess is that the button was introduced as a means of
getting their event mentioned in the paper.
As it was, they only got two tiny paragraphs (even with the
'nifty slogan.')
Sounds to me like they knew what they were up against.
There's a WORSE one that I know about (that ought to worry folks.)
"Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" had an entire MOVIE built around
it. I'd be much more concerned about that one, if I were a
man.
It's probably even on VIDEOTAPE by now. (Oh my God.) This
one could really catch on, if people aren't careful! :-}
|
301.3 | | PHAROS::WILSON | Walking around in squares... | Mon Oct 31 1988 07:44 | 9 |
| RE: .2
Suzanne,
So if they used this button to get their event mentioned in the
paper, then "the end justifies the means" ?
|
301.4 | Buttons/Bumper_stickers are not serious literature... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 08:04 | 27 |
| RE: .3
Well, I guess I fail to see what is so horrible about the
"means" that it needs to be justified.
Yes, the button is in extremely poor taste, in my book. However,
I've seen bumper stickers in much WORSE taste (yet I've never
seen them brought up as some kind of serious issue.)
Buttons and bumper stickers are pretty much the same thing.
The ones that are in poor taste are MADE that way to attract
attention of some sort. They aren't meant to be taken seriously.
If you want to start making deadly serious issues out of buttons,
then I have a whole bunch of buttons/bumper_stickers that I
can put you to work protesting.
You can start with "Support mental health or I'll kill you."
How's THAT for an actual death threat? (Another one: "I speed
up to run over small animals" for those who advocate animals
rights.)
There are quite a few that make VERY derogatory remarks about
both women AND men. Shall we get into a serious discussion
about those, too?
Or is this note just another excuse to bash feminists?
|
301.5 | | PHAROS::WILSON | Walking around in squares... | Mon Oct 31 1988 08:29 | 15 |
| Suzanne,
Obviously, you are a reasoning individual who doesn't take such
"bumper sticker" statements at face value.
But, I'm afraid we're entering an age in which sloganeering is
replacing well-reasoned arguments. Part of this can be blamed on
advertising, I think, in which the constraints on time and space
necessitate brevity.
WHat do many people remember from a very serious issue, namely,
this presidential campaign? "Read my lips. No new taxes." It frightens
me to think how many people are swayed by nifty slogans.
What do you think?
|
301.6 | ... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 09:04 | 18 |
| RE: .5
Wes, let me put it to you this way:
If a group paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for TV time
to promote the slogan "Dead Men Don't Whine," I would take it
as a serious issue.
Even if I got literature, and a slogan like that was in the
letterhead, I'd be shaken up.
As a button (or a bumper sticker, or a T-shirt) -- it's just
very difficult to consider nasty slogans on those items as anything
but questionable (to poor) taste.
I'm not into wearing buttons like that, so I can't speak for the
people who *do* wear them. All I can tell you is that it has
nothing (really) to do with the feminist movement as a whole.
|
301.8 | | HELIO::PELLEGRINI | | Mon Oct 31 1988 09:42 | 10 |
| Yes, buttons and bumper stickers normally should not be taken
seriously. A button with a derrogatory slogan bought at a five
and dime counter reflects poorly on the individual wearer. However,
when such an item appears to be sanctioned by a specific group (as
in distributed/made available), it reflects on that organization.
Wearers of a button reading "A Woman's Place is in the Mall" may
offend, but it is the individual wearer who is accountable. A button
stating "Dead Men Don't Whine" that is distributed by a feminist
organization reflects on that organization, just as a political
sticker reflects the party distributing it. Therein lies the problem.
|
301.9 | Not all feminists even *go* to these meetings/conventions... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 09:56 | 14 |
| RE: .8
Such buttons may (possibly) reflect on the PART of the organization
that sponsored the individual function (which, in this case,
was the group in Canada) or it may just reflect on the person(s)
who made the buttons available for sale there that day.
In no way does it reflect on women who DO NOT WEAR such buttons
(nor sell them, nor make them available in any way) even though
they are feminists.
If you think that it DOES, then that conviction reflects badly
on you.
|
301.11 | Then we don't have a problem, do we? | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 11:01 | 8 |
| RE: .10
Well, Eagles, you see someone (hear and now) saying that I
do not wear such buttons (nor have I ever even SEEN such a
button.)
So that should be enough for you. Right?
|
301.12 | The rest of the story..... | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Mon Oct 31 1988 11:22 | 10 |
|
Since I am a man I felt it important to bring up a "saying" by Men
that isn't very flattering to Women:
"LIFE IS A BI*** THEN I MARRIED ONE"
And yes I have seen that on both buttons and bumper stickers!
Dave
|
301.13 | The Double Standard Wammie | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Oct 31 1988 12:00 | 7 |
| RE:12
What do you think would happen if a male organization (if there
were any allowed) distributed a button with that saying on it ?
They would be sued by organizations such as NOW.
Jim
|
301.14 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 12:33 | 6 |
| Re: .12 & .13
Well, to be fair, only wear them at functions which sell the
ones mentioned in .0.
Greg
|
301.15 | That's the REAL double standard to be seen here... | GALACH::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 13:22 | 14 |
| RE: .13
That is such an easy claim to make.
If NOW had that kind of power/inclination, there wouldn't be
so many buttons/t-shirts/bumper_stickers out RIGHT NOW that
have even WORSE insults against women on them.
The double standard that I keep seeing is the one where some
men ask women not to judge them by the actions of other men
who rape/beat/kill women ...
YET -- if one feminist makes a button (or forces a male club
to admit women,) then ALL FEMINISTS EVERYWHERE ARE TO BLAME!
|
301.16 | ONE feminist? | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:09 | 6 |
| and as a continuation...
Men don't want to be judged by the actions of a few, BUT WE
STILL ARE.
Greg
|
301.17 | for Leaders only | MCIS2::POLLITZ | Feminist expert | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:10 | 7 |
| In all seriousness folks, it would be in the best interests of
Americans (and *both* political parties, I might add), if the
feminist organizations could just get their consciousness's
together to the point where we don't have to engage in these
continual conversations (about how men seem to be put down, etc).
Russ
|
301.18 | Same Thing Only Different | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:11 | 5 |
| re:15
I agree with you except in this case it wasn't one individual, it
was an organization.
Jim
|
301.19 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:20 | 8 |
| Re: .17
That makes sense. In cases like these, women of more logical
frames of mind should be joining the men in abhoring such idiotic
activities. Likewise, men should join the women in abhoring the
idiotic activities of some men. Otherwise, this will go on forever.
Greg
|
301.20 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:22 | 23 |
| RE: .16
Actually, Greg, the sad thing is that all men are *not*
judged by all/most women for the actions of the relative
few.
Some men only *think* they are because they *already* judge
all women/feminists on the actions of the few (and assume
that women are doing the same thing to them.)
If you don't believe me, ask yourself why YOU wrote your
note (about men being judged) as a blanket statement about
what happens to all men (with *no allowance* for those of us
who definitely do NOT judge all men by the few -- as if such
women don't even exist) while *I* *did* specificy that I was only
referring to *SOME* men (who judge women by the few.)
Obviously, I *am* aware that not all men perform the actions
that I dislike in the few. You do NOT seem to be aware that
you cannot make blanket statements that apply to all feminists,
though.
Or, ARE you aware of that? I'd really like to know.
|
301.21 | In addition to the men who have already joined us, that is... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:26 | 9 |
| RE: .19
Ok, Greg, you jumped in before me and showed that you DO know
that not all feminists can be described in blanket statements.
(At least that is what I *think* you were implying.) :-)
How would you suggest that some feminists and some men get
together?
|
301.22 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:31 | 29 |
|
RE: .20
I replaced the genders in your note, and it is still completely
false and illogical, but here it is:
----------------
Actually, Suzanne, the sad thing is that all women are *not*
judged by all/most men for the actions of the relative
few.
Some women only *think* they are because they *already* judge
all men/masculists on the actions of the few (and assume
that men are doing the same thing to them.)
If you don't believe me, ask yourself why YOU wrote your
note (about women being judged) as a blanket statement about
what happens to all women (with *no allowance* for those of us
who definitely do NOT judge all women by the few -- as if such
men don't even exist) while *I* *did* specificy that I was only
referring to *SOME* women (who judge men by the few.)
Obviously, I *am* aware that not all women perform the actions
that I dislike in the few. You do NOT seem to be aware that
you cannot make blanket statements that apply to all masculists,
though.
Or, ARE you aware of that? I'd really like to know.
|
301.23 | or the mods for that matter... | MCIS2::POLLITZ | Feminist expert | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:33 | 6 |
| re .21 "...not all feminists can be described in blanket statements."
A few days ago "over there", all men were, and where were
you to defend our interests?
Russ
|
301.24 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:47 | 30 |
| RE: .22
Greg, I'm sorry if you didn't see the logic in my note --
hey, I have a Bachelors Degree in Logic, not in English, after all
-- but what it boils down to is that some men are completely
incapable of hearing statements *from* feminists without
assuming that they are judging all men by the few (no matter
how many times women specifically STATE that they are talking
about some men.)
Must be a mental block of some kind. :-)
At the same time, *I* am able to see that NOT ALL MEN have
this mental block! There are some men who KNOW that we do
not judge all men by the few (and those men often try to help us
to explain it to the some men who have the mental blocks.)
But to no avail.
Your switching the words around does not account for the
fact that it is STILL ME who is saying that I *know* that
it's only *some* men who judge all feminists as the same.
I'm still waiting for you to state (explicitly) that you
*understand* that all feminists cannot be lumped into the
same categories (based on what small numbers of feminists
might do.)
Next, I'd like to ask you if it is possible for you to
BELIEVE a woman when she says, "I do not judge all men
based on the few!" (and has evidence to support it!)
|
301.25 | Lighten up! | HELIO::PELLEGRINI | | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:48 | 9 |
| RE: .4, .6, .9, .11, .15, .20
I see a lot of hostility here, with accusations flying everywhere.
Didn't the base note say that this ONE particular organization had
distributed the button? I don't recall seeing ALL FEMINISTS being
labeled as supporters of this statement. Yet you seem to jump at
that interpretation right off the bat. You must have pretty strong
shoulders to carry that chip around.
|
301.26 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:51 | 9 |
| A policy I think is wise is:
People should support women's sexism struggles up to the point
where THEY become sexist.
People should support racial minorities' racism struggles up
to the point where THEY become racist.
Greg
|
301.27 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:56 | 7 |
| Re: .24
I would like to know what kind of evidence you were referring
to in your last paragraph. Also, I think you know very well exactly
how I consider women.
Greg
|
301.28 | I'm only asking who you should believe in this case... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 14:59 | 17 |
| RE: .26
Ok, Greg, I'll buy that.
However, what if the strategy (of the group that one is struggling
against) is to call you "sexist" and/or "racist" before you
ever make it even CLOSE to equality?
What if they call you racist simply because you got closer to
equality than they WANTED you to get?
Would you believe that you are not being racist because you KNOW
you aren't being racist (or should you accept what the group above
you is telling you in order not to SEEM racist by disagreeing
with them?)
Not an easy question, is it?
|
301.29 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 15:04 | 6 |
| Re: .28
The policy I stated was for each individual to apply to
themselves. There is no way to control the actions of others.
Greg
|
301.30 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 15:14 | 14 |
| RE: .29
Ok, I'll buy that, too.
So, as one moves FORWARD in the struggle for racial or sexual
equality -- since one cannot control the actions of others
(and one has only one's own heart to search for the truth about
whether or not one's pursuit of equality has since become
racist/sexist,) -- then it would seem that one should ignore
and/or not_believe those who try to convince one that one's
actions have INDEED become racist/sexist when one knows full
well that they have not.
Right?
|
301.31 | you sound like Perry Mason | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 15:21 | 12 |
|
RE: .30
I received a mail message calling me sexist. I think that
such things deserve consideration. I thought it over. I considered
my motivations and style of delivery which was called sexist. Realized
that there were a couple of things which could be mis-interpreted,
and altered them a bit. Other than that, the person had no
justification for the claim and I dismissed it as foolishness. I
think that was an acceptable method of handling things.
Greg
|
301.32 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 15:37 | 36 |
| RE: .31 [Perry who?] :-)
Greg, you sorta missed the point I was trying to make. (Musta
been all those "ones" instead of saying "you" or "me.")
What if someone called you racist for believing in the civil
rights movement (because they said they could show you a group in
the movement that said offenseive things about whites)?
What if you did some research and discovered that the "offensive"
things were taken out of context (so that their meaning had
become twisted into something else)? What if some of their
OTHER messages were still important to the movement (but
outside pressures were trying to discredit the whole movement
based on a few distorted facts about this group, or even some
other group, perhaps, that you didn't know personally.)
Would you let someone convince you that you were "racist" for
still believing in your cause ANYWAY (despite the persistent
negative campaign that had been launched against other factions
of the movement?) Would you disavow any connection at all with
the entire movement (assuming that you were quite active in
it) simply because other people would blame you for the actions
of others (and would pass on the slurs against those others
to you?)
If the negative campaign against the movement got so good that
you were literally *bombarded* (at times) with accusations of
being racist, would you let them drive you away from what you
knew to be right?
Or would you stick to your own beliefs (knowing in your heart
that you were doing what you sincerely believed to be right?)
I'm suggesting this strictly from the point of view of an alleged
minority here! Do you understand what I'm trying to say?
|
301.33 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 16:29 | 16 |
| Re: .32
People have to have confidence in their points of view, but
not so much that they hold them impervious to logical opposition.
I have that confidence in my views. My views HAVE changed since
I entered notes because there is such a vast array of intelligent
discourse. However, they have mainly stayed intact.
I could not desert the people who shared my views unless I
had SOLID evidence that made those views unworkable. Calling me
a racist or sexist is not sufficient to do that. If someone could
prove to me with SOLID evidence that I was something despicable,
I think it would send me into an endless loop. That is a situation
of which I could not predict the results.
Greg
|
301.34 | "If" is an illusion | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Oct 31 1988 16:54 | 7 |
| RE:32
You use the phrase "what if" allot. "What if" is an illusion, it
dosent exist. The original note of the buttons "dead men don't
whine" being sold at a feminist convention is not an illusion,
but reality. It happened.
Jim
|
301.35 | There are good reasons for the anger | DSSDEV::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life. | Mon Oct 31 1988 17:12 | 50 |
|
> 5. What would happen if the gender's were reversed? Say it was a
> convention for men and an equally insuilting button about women was
> available?
>
>
> Arpad
I thought about this last one a while. I think that it is really
important for strate, white men to understand that it is not an
"equal" comparrison to turn the tables on a minority. The reason why
I do not feel this is fair is because the "power" quotient is not
being considered. That button is anger (justifiable, in my opinion),
and is an attempt to gain power from the people who are not giving any
power up. If a man were to wear a button that said the same thing
about women, that would be a person in power maintaining the
oppression that keeps him in power. The dynamics are very, very
different, and I think that should be taken into account. One group
(women) is struggling against oppression--conscious or not--from
another group (men), and that other group is struggling to maintain
that oppression and that power. To "support" a button like that
is akin to rooting for the underdog.
To go on record: I consider myself to be a feminist, and I don't like
that button. I don't think that it accomplishes anything accept
polarization. However, I think that I would ask from nonfeminists
that, even if they disagree with the method chosen by the activist,
that they consider the anger behind the action. That anger is real
and it's justified. Men can continue to ignore and pick apart the
actions of feminists, but I think that it would be wise to recognize
the kind of anger that is going on behind a button like that, and what
that anger might lead to if it isn't taken care of.
A lot of women are very pissed about living in a society like this
(and gay men and lesbians and bisexuals and Blacks and Hispanics and
anyone who doesn't fit the almight white, het, able-bodied, young,
Protestant male), and I think that we would all be better off if we
could accept the anger that minorities and have and then work to get a
better understanding of how to dissipate that anger in more
constructive ways.
Hey, if women were making rapid enough progress, they wouldn't feel
the need to resort to "cheap shots" like that button. Pass the ERA
and see how many buttons like that you'd see.
There are good reasons for that anger.
--Gerry
|
301.36 | Specifics time | MCIS2::POLLITZ | Feminist expert | Mon Oct 31 1988 17:38 | 8 |
| re .35 "I consider myself to be a feminist..."
Do you accept the stated positions on issues by
Friedan, Millett, Greer, and Steinem?
Yes or no.
Russ P.
|
301.37 | Parable | HOTJOB::GROUNDS | CAUTION: Yuppies in road | Mon Oct 31 1988 19:25 | 5 |
| Maybe the political parties should print up buttons and hand them
out to their delegates:
"Dead Democrats/Republicans don't vote!"
Of course if either party was in the minority...
|
301.38 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | L'enfer, c'est les autres | Mon Oct 31 1988 19:36 | 137 |
| Archaeologists in Greece have just uncovered this recent dialogue that
Plato himself wrote! The dialogue is between Socrates and Vaxnoteo:
Vaxnoteo: Dear Socrates, can you settle a dispute between me
and one of my fellow VAXnoters, Personalnameo?
Socrates: Dear Vaxnoteo, I am hardly wise enough to settle
any disputes between such intelligent men as you.
Vaxnoteo: You are too humble, Socrates. Please, have some more
wine, and we will discuss the issue that is on my mind.
Socrates: Very well, Vaxnoteo. Anything for an old friend.
Vaxnoteo: The problem that concerns me is whether or not certain
acts are legitimate in the name of anger. Consider the button that
I saw some slaves in Athens passing out the other day. They said
"Dead Slave-owners don't whine." I feel that such a button is
acceptable because it is the legitimate expression of anger by an
oppressed group. I think that we should excuse excesses by such
groups. My friend, however, was most offended by the button. How
do you feel about this, Socrates? If the anger is legitimate, does
it follow that these buttons are acceptable?
Socrates: That is a difficult question indeed. Let me answer your
question with a more general question. Assuming that someone's
anger is legitimate, does it therefore follow that *any* possible
expression of that anger is legitimate?
Vaxnoteo: I would say so.
Socrates: Well, then, consider an extreme example. Today, Joe
Feezlewax is fired by his incompetent boss over some trivial matter.
He discovers that his wife has been cheating on him, and now she
wants a divorce. Someone who wasn't paying attention hits his
chariot from behind. Would you say that Joe Feezlewax has a
legitimate reason for being angry?
Vaxnoteo: Of course.
Socrates: Suppose he is so angry over these events that he goes out
onto the market and starts shooting arrows at people, totally at
random. Do we excuse this behavior by saying that Mr. Feezlewax has
a legitimate reason for being angry?
Vaxnoteo: Well, in that case I would say not. But that is an
extreme example, Socrates. You cannot compare shooting someone with
the mere wearing of a button. Not only that, but who ever heard of
an Ancient Greek with a name like Joe Feezlewax?
Socrates: You are, of course, correct Vaxnoteo. But does our
example not prove, then, that legitimate anger _per se_ does not
justify all conceivable actions committed as an expression of that
anger?
Vaxnoteo: I suppose not.
Socrates: So why is shooting someone in the name of anger wrong,
but wearing an offensive button not wrong?
Vaxnoteo: Because one is a violent act, and the other is merely an
offensive expression of legitimate anger.
Socrates: It is, offensive, then?
Vaxnoteo: Yes, it is offensive, but it is excusable.
Socrates: So offensive acts are excusable by anger, but violent
acts are inexcusable in all cases.
Vaxnoteo: Exactly.
Socrates: All right, then. Now consider the following example.
You visit your friend Joe Feezlewax, to ask him if he'll accompany
you to town to worship the gods, and he snaps at you and pushes you
away from his door. What would your reaction be, assuming that you
know all that has happened to him today.
Vaxnoteo: Well, I would understand how he felt. And you still
haven't explained to me how an Ancient Greek could have a name like
Joe Feezlewax.
Socrates: You would understand how he felt, but would you not also
be annoyed at what he had done to you?
Vaxnoteo: Of course.
Socrates: And would you like an apology from him later?
Vaxnoteo: Yes, I would feel that he owes me an apology.
Socrates: Do people normally apologize for something if they have
done nothing wrong?
Vaxnoteo: I would say not.
Socrates: Then we agree that, while Joe's actions were
understandable, he still did something wrong.
Vaxnoteo: I suppose so. But once he apologizes, I forgive
him.
Socrates: When someone apologizes, and you accept the apology,
does it not mean that both of you agree that the person did
something wrong?
Vaxnoteo: I would say so.
Socrates: Does your acceptance of his apology mean that your
initial anger or resentment at his behavior was wrong?
Vaxnoteo: No, of course not.
Socrates: So you would forgive him, you would understand why he did
it, but you would still recognize that he did something wrong.
Vaxnoteo: I am afraid that you are correct.
Socrates: So a behavior that is otherwise wrong is not made right
by anger; although the degree of the offense may be minor and
potentially forgivable, it is still wrong.
Vaxnoteo: Correct.
Socrates: So all of us are responsible for our actions, regardless
of extenuating circumstances. But the price of that responsibility
depends on the degree of the offense.
Vaxnoteo: I am afraid you have proved your wisdom once again,
Socrates. Have some more wine. Let us discuss another subject,
such as the nature of the Ideal State.
Socrates: Thank you, dear Vaxnoteo, but I...
[fragment is broken off here]
-- Mike
|
301.39 | I *am* talking about reality here... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Oct 31 1988 21:25 | 21 |
| RE: .34
> "What if" is an illusion, it dosent exist.
Not true. The "what ifs" in my note to Greg about racism were
meant as a direct parallel to events that REALLY DO HAPPEN
(on a fairly regular basis) to feminists.
> The original note of the buttons "dead men don't whine"
> being sold at a feminist convention is not an illusion,
> but reality. It happened.
Those women got together to fight against the REALITY of
OPPRESSION (which really happens, too.)
As I said earlier, I don't support the wearing or selling of
such buttons. However, I *also* don't consider the buttons to be
such a significant feature of that ONE EVENT (somewhere up in
Canada) that feminists *everywhere* should have to take the heat
for it from those who seek to discredit the feminist movement
as a whole.
|
301.40 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Mon Oct 31 1988 22:16 | 18 |
| Re: .39
>Those women got together to fight the reality of oppresion.
Now ya see, that is what I oppose in your notes. You seem
to be saying that the buttons are justified, even though they are
aimed at men in general. Sure you said that you don't support the
buttons, but you are unwilling to actually condemn what is clearly
a sexist act. It wouldn't matter if their goal was world peace,
their sexism is not justified.
You can say as much as you want about how insignificant the buttons
are, but the fact is that the image of the true feelings of those
who wear them (or defend them) is permanently attached to the slogan
on the buttons. I don't think that creating ill-will is in the
better interest of any oppressed group.
Greg
|
301.41 | what's the big deal? its "only" a button | HACKIN::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, Realtime Applications | Mon Oct 31 1988 22:46 | 19 |
| Why are these buttons seen as espousing the views of the organization
which sponsored the conference? If this was anything like conferences
I've been to, it very well could have been (and probably was) some
business person who thought that some women who would think they are
"cute" simply because they are extreme and be willing to pay $$$ for
them.
I could open up a button stand and have that, and much worse, buttons
for sale at some computer convention. I can't imagine people thinking
that the views printed on the buttons were those of the computer
community.
After seeing some of the buttons you can buy in Greenwich Village in
N.Y.C. I have a hard time getting shocked/perturbed by buttons or
bumper stickers anymore. I'd view these buttons ("dead men don't
whine") the same way some people view pornography (agggg, not that
topic! :^)
Jim
|
301.42 | | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Tue Nov 01 1988 00:00 | 12 |
| One note I read reminded me of a true story...
I knew of a person once, that came into an office area spouting
that they had a "such & such" degree in psychology, as if to say,
"I understand the mind, how it works, and can thereby discredit
anything you might say, and 'logic' you lay claim to..."
That person was well known and tagged as an educated idiot and the
joke of the department.
Just thought I'd share that story....
Dwight
|
301.43 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Nov 01 1988 01:42 | 88 |
| RE: .40
>>Those women got together to fight the reality of oppresion.
> Now ya see, that is what I oppose in your notes. You seem
> to be saying that the buttons are justified, even though they are
> aimed at men in general.
How did you get all that from my statement that the women had a
justifiable reason for merely GATHERING TOGETHER? Are you trying
to say that they were wrong to even GATHER for a just cause
if the possibility existed that buttons_against_men might be
present as well (even though most of the women who attended
the conference might not have even KNOWN that the buttons would
be there?)
Greg, if I tell you that I do not support the buttons, why do
you insist that I *am* supporting the buttons? Are you trying
to tell me that you are a better judge (than I am) about what
it is I am *really* thinking and feeling (no matter what I say?)
> Sure you said that you don't support the
> buttons, but you are unwilling to actually condemn what is clearly
> a sexist act. It wouldn't matter if their goal was world peace,
> their sexism is not justified.
Well, if I were to attend a conference on world peace and I
saw some person commit an act that was rather non-peaceful, I
wouldn't scrap my whole participation in the worthwhile cause
because of one small incident that bothered me. I would
consider such an over-reaction on my part as being highly
self-indulgent (and just plain silly.)
I have told you a number of times already that I do *not* support
buttons that say "dead men don't whine" (as being in poor taste,)
but I do not share your conviction that the buttons are "clearly
sexist." Without knowing specific persons who would produce,
sell, or wear such a button, I'm not in a position to judge what
the meaning/intent of the slogan really is. Unfortunately, I don't
happen to have any built-in prejudices against these people
that I can use to PRE-JUDGE THEM ALL (as to what their true
opinions and feelings are) without ever having met them.
Nor do I have such pre-set ideas about what they think that
I would be willing to completely disregard everything they
might say to me as not being what they REALLY meant (and how
they REALLY feel.) I happen to think that they know their
*OWN* ideas and feelings better than I know them. Novel idea,
I know.
> You can say as much as you want about how insignificant the buttons
> are, but the fact is that the image of the true feelings of those
> who wear them (or defend them) is permanently attached to the slogan
> on the buttons.
When did you make this break-through in the field of psychoanalysis?
Can you honestly tell what a person TRULY thinks and feels by one
four-word button (whether the person actually WEARS the button
herself or merely refuses to condemn total strangers for allegedly
selling the buttons somewhere in Canada?) If so, I'm impressed.
> I don't think that creating ill-will is in the
> better interest of any oppressed group.
Well, I notice that SOME members of the oppressive group don't seem
very concerned about creating ill-will with the *oppressed* group.
But then, why should they? They already have power over the other
group (and there isn't a reason in the world why SOME of them should
be generous with that other group unless the group does something to
make some members of the oppressive group feel they deserve it.)
Those members can *afford* to condemn people for a simple
tasteless button (letting the oppressed sweat it out as to how
they are going to overcome their oppression without accidently
offending those members in some NEW way with an insignificant act
that could easily be blown up into some kind of major issue.)
And you wonder why a group like that would come to resent SOME
MEN enough to wear a button that insults them... :-)
Well, as a member of the oppressive group, it's not important
for you to understand it (or to empathize with people who might
be driven to feel this way about their oppression.)
You have the easy job when it comes to issues involving sexism.
You can just sit back and arbitrarily condemn those who are
doing the struggling (leaving the attempts at understanding
and empathy to those MANY MEN, thank heavens, who DO care.)
|
301.44 | Pour Rire | PHAROS::WILSON | Walking around in squares... | Tue Nov 01 1988 07:45 | 7 |
| RE: .38
A fine bit of whimsy there, sir.
Tell me, did the archaeologists discover, along with this long-lost
dialogue, any buttons that read, "Live Spartans Don't Whine!"?
|
301.45 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Tue Nov 01 1988 08:40 | 18 |
| Re: .43
Doggone it Suzanne. Don't start up with the verbose replies.
Most of us don't have time for that.
If you would READ what I said, I SAID that I realize that you
SAID that you don't support the buttons. However, you keep offering
excuses for those who wear them. That reminds me of the time that
Ronald Reagan was endorsed by the Ku Klux Klan in 1980. All he
said about it was "I don't support the views of the Ku Klux Klan".
That came across as "I really do support them, but I must make this
politically necessary denial".
Quite frankly, if you find no problem with the buttons, and
are willing to make excuses for those who purvey such sexism, the
discussion can come to an end. I have nothing left to assert.
Greg
|
301.46 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Nov 01 1988 10:24 | 18 |
| RE: .45
Greg, I wasn't making excuses for the folks up in Canada.
I was addressing the fact that you took my words and told me
what I *really* meant when I said them (which is, of course,
what you've done again.)
Well, I have nothing left to say to you on this either (since
you have obviously been trying to show me that your condemnation
of these folks was based on assumptions you made because of your
predeterminations about them, and that you think it is FAR easier to
make judgments about total strangers from your own pre-set
ideas than it is to take the time to find out the real truth
about human situations by *listening* to people and then actually
*believing* what they say to you.)
Understanding and empathizing are (admittedly) much more difficult.
|
301.47 | A few things | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Tue Nov 01 1988 11:41 | 29 |
| RE: women/feminists- All women are not feminists. The fact is that
MOST women are not feminists. My wife (and most of the women I
know) would hate to be called a feminist.
The buttons don't bother me because they were obviously "tongue in
cheek" propaganda. I can laugh at something like that because I
know it is not meant to be taken literally. (I once saw a girl
who had a bumper sticker on her car that said, "Life's a bitch and
so am I")
Another thing that has really bothered me about this note is the
"oppressor and oppressee" terminology. Women with the same education
and the same job experience as men get paid $1.01 for every $1.01
that the man makes. I do not know very many men who are trying
to oppress anyone. They are busy trying to make a go of it for
them and their families. I get real tired of hearing how men are
trying to oppress women.
Last one: THe feminist issue is not the race issue. I, for one
take different stances on each and they are not parallel.
The real last one: The one thing about the feminist movement that
I don't understand is that the women in this movement want their cake
and eat it too. They want the choice to be able to stay home and
raise a family or to go to work and earn a living. Whereas I can
understand this I can't help but wonder about where the men's choices
are.
Mike
|
301.49 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Tue Nov 01 1988 12:22 | 10 |
|
What is the definition of a feminist?
In what ways are women oppressed by men?
Deb
|
301.50 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Tue Nov 01 1988 12:33 | 14 |
| Re: .49
I'd like to know the answer to that first question myself.
I tend to refrain from calling myself one, because the most visible
examples of people who call themselves feminists seem to be supportive
of views which call for female-superiority rather than gender equality.
I can say, quite freely, that I support any and all women's struggles
for equality.
As for the second question, SOME women are treated badly by
SOME men. Of course, to a lesser degree, SOME men are treated badly
by SOME women.
Greg
|
301.51 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Nov 01 1988 12:45 | 47 |
| RE: .47
Mike, you overlooked the fact that I did NOT use the terms
women and feminists synonymously (for the very reason that
not all women are feminists.)
Unfortunately, thanks to the negative campaign about feminism
that I have alluded to in this note, there are a TREMENDOUS
NUMBER of WOMEN who believe in all the same things I believe
in (as a feminist) but who would rather be boiled in oil
than call themselves by that name (because of the negative
connotations that have been given to it.)
To be honest, I was one of those women (who believed in equal
rights but STRONGLY RESISTED being called a feminist) until
about a year ago.
In regards to your comment about women "wanting to have their
cake and eat it, too" (by having the choice to either stay
home or work) -- NOT ALL WOMEN have that choice!
The part you are missing is the fact that we have traditionally
been stuck in ONE ROLE (which has been "at home.") Where the
CHOICE part comes in is in saying that we want the opportunity
to work *outside* the home, too.
There are still enough men who *want* their wives to stay at
home (and they keep finding women who are happy *staying* at
home) that it appears the 'at home' choice will be with
us for as long as couples keep finding it economically feasible.
The rest of us will work (some of us will have to do it whether
we want to or not.)
So where does the "having your cake and eating it" part come
in? Simple. It doesn't.
What are men's choices now? Well, for one thing, men can have
the kind of wife who stays home (or the kind of wife who can
bring in enough of an income to SIGNIFICANTLY affect the family's
financial well-being.) I call that a choice!
I've known men who wouldn't CONSIDER having a wife who worked,
and I've known men who wouldn't consider one who didn't.
There are advantages and disadvantages to both, evidently.
It isn't only WOMEN who benefit from having more work opportunities.
|
301.52 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | | Tue Nov 01 1988 13:43 | 2 |
| Gee, and all this time I thought it was the female side of
the human species who were more apt at whining.
|
301.53 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Tue Nov 01 1988 14:24 | 15 |
|
Suzanne, I think you missed the obvious answer to Mike's
question (re: women have a choice of working full time
or of being a full-time homemaker. What choices do men
have?)
Mike, men have a choice of working full-time or of being
a full-time homemaker.
Deborah
|
301.54 | Dead women don't wine | NOVA::VACCHELLI | | Tue Nov 01 1988 15:10 | 13 |
| I don't think you have to worry about these feminist terrorists.
I don't mean to offend the feminists either but that type of fanatical
behavior in any group would bother me. It is a total turn off and
I want to know where they can get off making insinuations about
a man being a better person for being dead. Bumper stickers and
buttons that are bought in the stores I believe are to be taken
in light. The reason for these women passing out these buttons
at a convention are more dramatic. It all sounds very callous and
unappealing to me for any women to be so spiteful whether she is
a feminist or not. Dead women don't wine either.
Katrina
|
301.55 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Tue Nov 01 1988 16:58 | 11 |
| Deborah,
That's bull and you know it. The majority of men have been out
working full time to provide financially for their families for
hundreds of years now, whether it was on the farm or another type
of business. Women have worked hundreds of years to sustain their
families in different ways. Both jobs are equally as important.
The men are not trying to change the traditions and alot of women
aren't either.
Mike
|
301.56 | what is your solution? | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Tue Nov 01 1988 17:33 | 6 |
| Re: .55
Are you suggesting that it be made illegal for women to work
out side the home?
Greg
|
301.57 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Tue Nov 01 1988 17:58 | 22 |
|
Mike, you may consider my reply 'bull'. That's your opinion.
You stated that women have the option of staying home with their
families, or working full time. Then you asked what choices men
have. I simply suggested that men have the same options.
Traditionally, roles HAVE been more clearly define, as you suggested.
This is not the past. I am NOT suggesting that supporting a family
in not important. Nor am I suggesting that nurturing a family is
not important. Furthermore, I am NOT suggesting that women should
be forced to work (or stay home) or that men should be forced to
stay home (or to work).
I am simply stating that each gender has a freer choice in the
matter.
Deb
|
301.58 | | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Tue Nov 01 1988 19:33 | 4 |
| Seen this one???
"My X-wife is in the trunk"
|
301.59 | turn it around! | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Wed Nov 02 1988 05:25 | 14 |
|
Can we lighten it up a bit? try this:
Since "dead men don't whine"
how about...
"dead women don't bitch"
Lord,both terms are just plain bad and really don't effect the question
one way or the other. All I know is, if I see that particular feminist
group at a convention you can be sure I will NOT whine! :-)
Dave
|
301.60 | I still don't understand | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Nov 02 1988 09:35 | 6 |
| Mike,
I've asked you this before but never gotten an answer. Why issues
of discrimination by race and gender different?
Bonnie
|
301.62 | why are race and gender issues not parallel? | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Nov 02 1988 11:59 | 7 |
| Eagles,
In a previous discussion Mike appeared to say while it was wrong
to discriminate on racial issues it was not wrong to discriminate
on gender issues. I asked him why and he has never answered.
Bonnie
|
301.63 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Wed Nov 02 1988 12:06 | 25 |
| For the large part, the two types of discrimination can be
considered similar, but there are some distinct differences.
They are similar in that:
1. Both experience(d) denial of voting rights.
2. Both experience(d) denial of some access to jobs.
3. Both experience(d) lesser representation in government.
4. Both experience(d) stereotypical derision in the media.
5. Both are identifiable on sight (providing for easier discrimination).
Some differences are:
1. Only women (as a class) experience rape (usually).
2. Only Blacks were murdered and lynched on frequent occasions
simply on the basis of their classification.
3. While it may be argued that women experienced a level of slavery,
it was certainly not of a comparable magnitude, severity or
brutality.
There are many more differences and similarities, but I'd
say the two are some 70% similar. So, for a non-specific discussion,
they can be considered similar.
Greg
|
301.64 | Here goes | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Wed Nov 02 1988 12:46 | 31 |
| Bonnie,
Sinmply put women are different than men whether they be black or
white. There are traits that are inherent to women and traits that
are inherent to men both physical and mental regardless of color.
How these traits are used and accepted are very different among cultures.
My point is that most families I know (ours included) don't give
a darn about the feminist movement. They just do what they have
to do to pay the bills so as to provide for their families. Of the
working mothers I know, a good majority of them would be home with
their kids if it was financially feasible. I think it's quite
ridiculous to focus on trivial little things such as mens clubs
and things of this nature. There are too many other important
things to worry about to waste time on these things.
No Bruno, I'm not saying that we should bar women from the worklplace,
I think we need to look at the forgotten women, the women who want
to raise families but can't due to economics.
Deborah, What I was saying in regards to your note is that men have
almost never had that choice. To bring it up like it's an easy
viable choice is not really fair for the majority of men. If a
man was trying to find a person to become his wife and mentioned
that he wanted to be a househusband I am sure he would not have
an easy time finding a women to go along with him. It is interesting
that since women have found a prominent place in the workforce they
are not living as long.
Mike
|
301.65 | | COMET::BRUNO | The Shropshire Slasher! | Wed Nov 02 1988 12:58 | 5 |
| Re: .64
OK, once we 'look' at those forgotten women, what do we do?
Greg
|
301.66 | Bingo | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Nov 02 1988 13:20 | 4 |
| re:65
Ask the feminist, they caused the problem.
Jim
|
301.67 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Nov 02 1988 13:48 | 15 |
| in re .65 Huh????? where do you get this from?
and Mike, I appreciated that who does or does not get into clubs
is really of very little significance to the average working man
or woman.
However, feeling that it is okay to bar women from some things
just because they are physically different from men does spill
over in to the lives of working women, who are working just to
make ends meet. Attitudes like that are reasons why adequate
child care is hard to find, why salaries are lower for jobs
traditionally given to women, and why women tend to get less
education.
Bonnie
|
301.68 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Wed Nov 02 1988 13:49 | 21 |
|
Mike, would you be kind enough to give some examples of 'inherent
mental traits' that are gender specific?
Could you also explain where I said (in my previous note) that
choices were easy to make, and easy to implement?
And finally, could you clarify your comment that what I said was
"bull". Are you suggesting that men do not have the option of
being full-time homemakers, if that is their career choice? Are
you saying that there is a gender-factor that makes it possible
for women to stay home, but not men? Does it have to do with
testoterone levels? Perhaps I missed something in high school
biology.
And finally, would someone please define the term "feminist"?
Perhaps those of you who are throwing the word around could explain
what you mean by that word.
Deborah
|
301.69 | I'm In A Hateful Mood | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Nov 02 1988 13:54 | 6 |
| re:68
Well from my prospective:
Feminist are woman who bitch about being women and blame men for
because they are.
Jim
|
301.70 | | 56733::MODICA | | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:13 | 9 |
|
RE: .62 and .66
Bonnie, I've got to ask; how can you ask Mike that question when
you yourself are a moderator of a conference that discriminates,
or if that term is too harsh, makes distinctions, based on sex
only?
P.s I don't mean this in an antagonistic way.
|
301.71 | | 29067::WOLBACH | | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:16 | 9 |
|
Well, I didn't skip THAT particular biology class, Jim. If your
statement is correct, women can rightfully blame men, since it is
the male who determines the sex of the child.
Deborah
|
301.72 | thoughts on being a feminist | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:29 | 14 |
| in re .70
If you read that conference you will find that one of the issues
that I am out spoken on is that discrimination is wrong no matter
who does it.
To me a feminist is a woman who is in favor of choices for women,
that they should get support for those choices from those who
are close to her and from society in general. That women should
be able to hold a job, stay and home with children, go to school,
etc etc with the same degree of freedom that a man can. That women
won't be denied opportunities just because of gender.
Bonnie
|
301.73 | | 29067::WOLBACH | | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:45 | 14 |
|
Bonnie, are you saying that you do not feel as strongly about
choices (and support) for men?
Your first paragraph implies that you support freedom of choice
and equality for both sexes.
But you next statement reads as if you actively support only
women...
Deb
|
301.75 | X & Y Are Different | 27781::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:50 | 8 |
| RE:Deborah
Ok men detremine the sex of the child, but some of us men and women like the
difference others don't. The ones that don't are feminist.
I'm still in a hateful mood, please don't take me to seriously.
Jim
|
301.77 | no | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:51 | 7 |
| The second paragrah was a definition of feminist - which term
specifically relates to women.
Personally I am in favor of freedom of choice and equality for
both sexes, for all races, for handicaps etc.
Bonnie
|
301.79 | not so... | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:56 | 9 |
| in re .75
Jim,,
I very much like the differences between men and women, I would
hate to be in a world with no men. You may have felt that was funny
but it really isn't true.
Bonnie
|
301.80 | Same Thing Only Different | 27781::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Nov 02 1988 15:57 | 8 |
| re:77
If you treat all equally you end up discrimnating.
If you treat a handicapped person equal to others you end up with
the barriers we've been trying to tear down, like stairs.
I think "respect" should be the adjative used with equality.
"Equal respect".
Jim
|
301.81 | Needed Fix | 27781::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Nov 02 1988 16:00 | 4 |
| RE:78
Must be because SOAPBOX has been down for so long.
Jim
|
301.82 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Wed Nov 02 1988 16:00 | 9 |
|
Thanks for clarifying that, Bonnie. I think you and I are very
similar in our beliefs. Well, with notable exceptions, most of
our beliefs!
Deb
|
301.83 | are we arguing over semantics | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Nov 02 1988 16:20 | 4 |
| Equal respect, equal opportunity, equal pay for equal work,
equal education, equal access to public buildings.....
Bonnie
|
301.85 | Feminist = bad | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Nov 02 1988 17:18 | 19 |
| I think I have to agree with Eagle. When I hear feminist, I
immediately get angry and defensive. The word has come to mean
beating on men and only doing that which benefits women. I have
said many times that I am in favor of equality. That does not mean
helping a woman over a man or vice versa. That means looking at
the desires and qualities of each equally.
As for a man staying home and the woman working, I do believe that
this man would be looked down on by society in general. The movie
Mr. Mom seemed pretty accurate in its portrayal, until it fell into
the Hollywood trap of ending the movie with "...and they lived happily
ever after.". I know that I would not mind staying home and caring
for the children, were I to have them, as long as my wife's income
were able to maintain the household in the same manner as mine would.
I believe that I could find enough to keep busy with. If not,
I could always get a part-time job, or start a business at home.
Ed..
|
301.86 | Win-Win | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Wed Nov 02 1988 18:08 | 17 |
| Bonnie's earlier definition of a feminist appeared to be restricted
to women - that is, men could not be feminists. I know Bonnie well
enough to know she doesn't really believe this - I presume it was
just the particular angle the question was approached from.
My personal definition of a feminist is someone who supports
women as a group, and I further don't see that being a feminist
makes one automatically UNsupportive of men. Some are, some aren't.
It never ceases to amaze me that so many people think of such things
as a zero-sum game, in that just because one side "wins", the other
side "loses". I want to see a world where both sides win, and I
absolutely believe that is possible. As such, I speak out whenever
one side attacks the other on the mere supposition that they are "the
enemy", whether this is in fact true or not.
Steve
|
301.87 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Wed Nov 02 1988 18:29 | 8 |
| Thanks Steve,
you are correct in your interpretation of what I wrote, I do believe
that men can be feminists and I don't think that being a feminist
means that the person is for putting down men, but for uplifting
all people.
Bonnie
|
301.89 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Corrupt Xref line!!! | Wed Nov 02 1988 23:50 | 12 |
|
re -.1
Arrgh. Gimmee a break. I don't need any wymmun to help me
manage my money..
And yes, it will get harder, more competitive, more
easier for everyone to end up a street person. Hey,
thats capitalism (or perhaps, Reagonomics).
Its only fair to make the playing field level. Self assured
go getters have nothing to fear.
|
301.90 | Feminist Have a Stigma ToLive With | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Thu Nov 03 1988 07:29 | 10 |
| The reason I become defensive when I hear the word feminist is
because, I don't associate the word with the everyday woman who is
out trying to make a living. I associate the word feminist with the
women like Gloria Stienem, Jane Fonda, Eleanor Smeal, and the women
who were selling the buttons talked about in .0. Women who
I feel are men haters more than womens rights activist. My wife
would hate being called a feminist, because she doesn't want to
be looked as being the type of feminist I mentioned.
Jim
|
301.91 | Question | PHAROS::WILSON | Walking around in squares... | Thu Nov 03 1988 07:33 | 12 |
| RE: .83
Bonnie,
Should the need for a wartime draft come about, do you favor the
government drafting equal portions of women and men to fight the
war?
Just curious...
Wes
|
301.92 | feminism=negative | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Thu Nov 03 1988 13:20 | 23 |
| I have to agree with Jim on what he has said. I don't think anyone
who is for people (both men and women) is a feminist. A feminist
is a person (usually a women) who's interests lies totally on what's
in it for the women. I think people who are for both men and women
are most normal people. I think labelling this as being a feminist
is sexist. It implies that this is a feminine trait of wanting
everyone to have what they want.
It seems to me that if feminism is looked upon negatively there
must be a good reason for it. It couldn't be that the more visible
feminists (Gloria Steinem (sp), Jane Fonda (yuk), etc) have done
more to the detriment of there cause than to the benefit of it.
Could it?
Maybe most women don't want to be feminists because they enjoy being
treated differently than men. Maybe most of them do have an
instinctual quality that makes them want to stay at home and raise
their own children. I'm not saying all but most. What if we are
letting the minority of women dictate what the majority should do.
Something to think about.
Mike
|
301.93 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Thu Nov 03 1988 14:37 | 11 |
| in re .91
Yes I believe that if there were a draft both sexes should be drafted.
Even if women don't make good combat soldiers due to size and weight
the number of back up personel to each combat soldier is something
like 20 to 1. I see no reason why women should not take a equal
role with men in the case of a war.
Bonnie
|
301.94 | negative to whom? | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Thu Nov 03 1988 14:47 | 34 |
| Mike
My dictionary says that feminism is the advocacy of social political
and economic equality for men and women. That is the definition
that I use when I say that I am a feminist.
I firmly support the right of women who wish to stay home with
their children to do so. I also support the right of women who
want to go out to work to do so.
Mike, people are more than their instincts, more than their hormones
and body parts. We also have brains and minds. What ever instincts
women have in re children (and I believe that men have them also)
they also have mental abilities that may or may not be best served
in staying home.
I worked part time teaching college when my children were small.
Now that my children are teenagers I work full time. The period
in most women or men's lives where they will have small children
needing full time care is quite short. Even women who choose to
stay home and are completely fufilled by that with small children
may well find that when the kids get into highschool or leave home
that she will be more statisfied with a job.
Mike when I hear you talk about instincts and women being suited
best for staying home and caring for children I feel like I am
being reduced to my reproductive organs and instincts as far as
my value as a person is concerned. My mind and my education and
my abilities on that level are also important. I feel devalued
when these parts of me are ignored or denied.
Bonnie
|
301.95 | Not When I Was In The USMC | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Thu Nov 03 1988 15:16 | 19 |
| RE:94
Bonnie I don't know where you got your 20 to 1 ratio, becasue
when i was in the USMC all were considered grunts (rifle men)
and the numbers of support personal to grunts was more like
1 to 20. Either way I don't feel men or women should be drafted,
unless the US is under a direct threat. Even if that were the case
I wouldn't want my daughter going to serve in front line combat,
exactly becasue she wouldn't have a chance of survival based on
her size and strenght.
I don't think Mike or any of the men here are advocating women should
stay home and keep their mouths shut. The issue is the feminist
that are making the headlines and are leaders of feminist groups,
are not the women like you, but they seem to be the male bashing
types that sell buttons with "dead men don't whine" and try to
justify it, but will bitch and bring legal action against male
organizations for mearly wanting to be a male organization.
Jim
|
301.96 | answer to 95 | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Thu Nov 03 1988 15:37 | 46 |
| The 20 to 1 is remembered information from articles in news magazines
that I have read in the past. I once said something in soapbox
that the ratio was 10 to 1 support to field soldiers and was corrected
that I was way way too low. My point is that women can fill all
kinds of non combat positions even if they aren't physically able
to go into combat. Also I believe that women in the some of the
services are being taught combat skills so as to be able to defend
themselves and their positions should the lines be over run.
If you are asking me my *personal* feelings about draft/army, I
am for religious reasons a consciencious objector, tho I also support
a non peace time draft. But that is separate from how I feel a draft
should be if we were to have one again.
Most groups have their extreme and out spoken members, whether
the group is the right wing or left wing, male or female. If we
are to condem all movements because of the most extreme members
of the groups then we will make no progress and very real wrongs
will never be corrected. Should we give up on ecological movements
because of extremist groups like the "Greens"? should those who
disapprove of abortion on religious grounds stop expressing their
feelings and speaking out because some people bombed a clinic?
should Black civil rights never have been passed because there
were violent groups and leaders? Some people are angrier about
a particular situation, some people have been hurt worse, some
people may be out for their own gain. I don't have enough
information to speak for the motives and sincerity of the
women you refer to.
Most women who work have run into some kind of job related
discrimination. I think this is wrong and would like to see it
stopped. I don't think that I have a right to discriminate in
turn against men. It is the average woman who loses out in
education, in salary, in promotions etc. when gender is used
as a reason to discriminate.
and I don't know that men who say that women have an instinct
for child care and should/want what ever to be home really don't
want all women to leave the work force or shut up...all I know
is when my reproductive organs and instincts are used as a basis
for making decisions about what I should be doing to the ignoring
of my mind it makes me feel devalued.
Bonnie
|
301.97 | | LIONEL::SAISI | | Thu Nov 03 1988 15:59 | 26 |
| Some ramblings...
What may seem like a double standard to some people is really
just oposing opinions expressed by *different* women. You
will not get a single issue that all women agree on. Even an issue
that most women agree on, or else women would be a large force in
politics.
The women who are members of the Chilton gardening club, are not
the same women who are applying to men-only gun clubs "to prove
a point". I myself am dismayed at women who want things both
ways. That is why it upsets me to hear women with professional
careers say, (aghast) "I'm not a feminist." They are reaping the
benefits.
I do think that it is unfair that a father has such a hard time
getting custody of his kids, and am surprised that this is not
a feminist issue, if indeed it is not.
Linda
p.s. Did it occur to anyone that the media does not always focus
on the issues, and that goes a long way towards creating stereotypes?
I find the button in question to be sick humor of the same ilk as
"ex-* in trunk". If it were meant seriously it would be scary,
but it obviously isn't.
|
301.98 | I agree with alot of what you said | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Thu Nov 03 1988 16:25 | 32 |
| Bonnie,
You will get no argument from me that women are more than their
instincts, hormones and body parts. I also know that they have
brains and minds. I happen to believe that most women are better
equipped both mentally and physically to raise children than most
men are. I also think that men have some of these instincts, but
are not as well equipped as the women. I think that children are
best served when raised by their own mother. (I know this is arguable,
but this is the primary reasoning for my arguments, its all to do
with the family, not men or women.) I hold a women whose a housewife
in high regards. I know that years ago they weren't appreciated,
however, I believe that has changed substantially today. It is
probably the most valuable job that ANYONE could have. In this
scenario that means that the man has to provide for his family.
So while I'm not advocating discrmination on grounds of sex, I think
that since women still want to be able to raise their own kids,
we have to make sure that the husbands can provide for these families.
I also agree that a woman needs other interests besides her family
and that when the kids get a little older she may want to get a
job.
Bonnie, my intent was not to reduce women to body parts and instincts.
If this was the impression I gave, I apologize. To me, mothering
is very hard and many times it seems to be a thankless job. So
know that I hold someone who is capable to do this in high regards.
I think alot of women could do this and alot of men would have a
hard time of it. It says something very positive about women (in
my eyes).
Mike
|
301.99 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Thu Nov 03 1988 16:28 | 10 |
| Mike,
Thankyou :-)
and yes I know that motherhood can be hard work (I do have five
kids afterall) tho in our family my husband is as involved a parent
as I am (sometimes more so!), so to me it depends more on the makeup
of the person than a general rule.
Bonnie
|
301.100 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Nov 03 1988 16:37 | 17 |
| RE: .98
> So while I'm not advocating discrmination on grounds of sex, I think
> that since women still want to be able to raise their own kids,
> we have to make sure that the husbands can provide for these families.
Without discriminating on the basis of sex, how do you propose
that we accomplish this ("making sure that the husbands can
provide for these families")?
Are you suggesting more money for everyone (or just parents,
or husbands in particular?)
Or do you have some other idea besides 'more money'?
Thanks for explaining this,
Suzanne........
|
301.101 | Not Always Discrimination | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Thu Nov 03 1988 16:41 | 15 |
| re:97
> Most women who work have run into some kind of job related
> discrimination. I think this is wrong and would like to see it
> stopped. I don't think that I have a right to discriminate in
> turn against men. It is the average woman who loses out in
> education, in salary, in promotions etc. when gender is used
> as a reason to discriminate.
In the years I have been working ,the only women I have seen complain of
discrimination have done so as an excuse for not handling the job. My
boss has been called a chauvinist by women who would have been let go
if they were men. Funny thing is when some of them have left an worked
for female supervisors they have tried to come back.
Jim
|
301.102 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Thu Nov 03 1988 16:43 | 7 |
| Jim,
That is totally unfair. Discrimination in the workplace is quite
real. To categorically dismiss all claims of discrimination as
people who can't do their job is unworthy of you.
Bonnie
|
301.103 | I Have Experienced It | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Thu Nov 03 1988 16:49 | 6 |
| I'm not dimissing clams of discrimination, we all experience it.
But the women I have worked that have complained of discrimination
were the ones who couldn't handle the job. The others who have handled
the job think the boss is overly fair to them that have not.
Jim
|
301.104 | a few (?) thoughts... | CLT::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Thu Nov 03 1988 16:57 | 52 |
|
It's too late in the day for my brain to profitably engage in
long-term logic exercises, so what I want to do is offer my
perspective on some of the issues raised.
Whether or not I'm a feminist, I've done my best to offer the
same level of cooperation, support, and opportunities to the
people I've worked with - male and female. Their political
views and other beliefs only entered into the formula when it
prevented them from working effectively as part of a team (I'm
speaking mostly from my management days, here).
Many of the women I've worked with and for have called themselves
feminists. I've never never run into a situation where their
beliefs in any way diminished their ability to perform or
to work with others in the group. On the other hand, I have run into a
number of situations (about 8 that I can think of offhand) where
males have expressed an unwillingness to cooperate, support, and
otherwise work with a colleague who was female, simply because they
were a female. (This is out of a sample group of about 85 people
who I've worked with since 1976.)
My experience with people (male and female alike) who are
self-professed feminists has been one of openness, trust,
and flexibility. Maybe it's just the people I met, or maybe it's
the way I project my own views. I'm too close to it to try and
extrapolate anything...
When I get right down to it, a lot of what I see missing in
male-female interaction is a willingness to cooperate, to create
win-win situations. The people I've worked with that have been the
most successful (both in and out of work) have been able to see
people as individuals, not as symbols of a policy or as a threat.
I'm concerned about equality for women for several reasons - I still
talk to many people (both male and female) who feel that women should
restrict their lives in some way because they are females, because
I want to see my wife treated fairly, and because I want to see my friends
treated fairly.
Change may be painful, and it takes a lot of energy. Why waste the
energy debating a slogan on a button? I'd rather invest the energy
into making sure that everyone gets a fair shot. This isn't a game
with two teams - this is a game with one team, and the object is for
everyone to have the opportunity to be an equal partner.
Enough of the soapbox. I just wanted to let people know the way I look
at things. It may make some of my future (and I promise, shorter)
notes, easier to understand.
Ron
|
301.105 | Long live the Patriarchy | MCIS2::POLLITZ | Feminist expert | Thu Nov 03 1988 17:40 | 8 |
| re .70 The nice thing about that Matriarchal Conference (strict
definition applies) is knowing just how nice the modest
Matriarchal Conf's elsewhere are!
With Patriarchal Conf's coming out just fine too!
Russ P.
|
301.106 | Attitudes | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Fri Nov 04 1988 08:47 | 21 |
|
Attitudes are important, and I don't want to sound like a person
who has a negative attitude when it comes to working with womem.
One of the most talented people I have worked with is a Russian
woman, and I can't waite for her to return from Israel. She's been
gone over a year on a leave of absence, and there isn't a week that
goes by that someone in our department doesn't say, they can't wait for
her return. We all miss her.
The biggest obstacle in working relations is attitude. If a person
feels that their going to be discriminated against because of gender,
race or religion before they even start working, then anything that goes
wrong will be blamed on discrimination. At the same time if a person
has an attitude that a person will be incompetent becasue of sex,
race, or religion, they will nitpick every thing the person does
inorder to justify their negative feelings. I have seen men nitpick
the performance of a woman, and these guys are themselves struggling
on their work. The two negative attitudes are what I see as the
major obstacle in work relations. I feel bad for people who have
these attitudes, becasue their generally not happy within themselves.
Jim
|
301.107 | Discrimation is used unjustly at times | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:03 | 24 |
| Suzzanne, I don't know how we can address the problem of getting
working women who want to stay home to be able to do so. It almost
seems like you have to start talking about a tax credit or something
to that effect to address the problem. I'd like to hear anyone elses
ideas if they have any.
Bonnie, I have seen discrimination used as an excuse for incompetence,
or just plain "I don't give a darn" attitudes more than honest
discrimination. Not saying that discrimination does not exist,
it is overused. As a matter of fact I read an article in the paper
yesterday that said just that. It talked about the overuse of the
word harming the people who really had a complaint because it is
used so much where it is not applicable. I think everyone is in
a minority of some kind of another which has affected how someone
has looked at them sometime in their life.
I have a question going back to the mens club issue. Do you honestly
believe that these clubs were used to make an example of, or really
because of the so called "business reasons" the feminists claimed.
I happen to think it was to make an example of them and the "business
going on" was just the most convenient and effective vehicle to
get into these clubs.
Mike
|
301.108 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:11 | 17 |
| Mike,
The supreme court of the united states bought the business reasons
argument, I have to rely on their well known thoroughness in
researching issues. This is not to say that individual women may
and probably have used the ruling in a spiteful or frivolous fashion.
However, as I said in the long note I entered recently on unanswered
questions I think that in many cases men excluded women from clubs
for essentially frivolous reasons. One example I gave was the Jaycees
which are an organizaton of small business people and town officials
working together to improve the economic climate of towns. I fail
to see that the Jaycees had anything positive to gain by excluding
female business people and town officials.
Bonnie
|
301.109 | Another viewpoint on feminism | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:17 | 64 |
| This note was copied from womannotes with permission of the author.
_____________________________________________________________
I always felt that feminism meant the belief in equal rights
for women and men. ... But if you want another definition,
let me quote from a talk given by Margaret Atwood, a Canadian
author best known nowadays for her latest novel
_A_Handmaid's_Tale_ . It was transcribed by Judy McMullen from
a talk Ms. Atwood gave:
I felt and still do feel that Feminist issues are not just
for women. They are human rights issues just as war should
not concern men alone though it's mostly men in the front
lines. I find men who react to women's issues or women's
studies with the standard paranoia, "Why do you hate men?" and
so forth, understandable but ignorant. A university is not a
place where ignorance should be encouraged. I look forward,
however, to the time when both feminist groups and wars will
no longer be with us, having become obsolete.
Here's another answer.
Any woman who can read and write is a feminist. People
chained themselves to fences and starved and were beaten up
and killed to get you that right.
Any woman who has legal rights over her own children is a
feminist. Remember the origin of the word "family". It comes
from Roman "familia" which meant the total group of people
controlled by a male householder including women, children and
slaves.
Any woman who is allowed to vote is a feminist. We've only
had that right here for 52 years [I believe this speech was
given in Canada].
Any woman or man who believes in equal pay for equal work
is a feminist.
Any man who doesn't believe it's his God-given privilege to
beat up or kill his wife or sexually molest his children is a
feminist.
Any woman or man who is against rape and violent
pornography, who isn't turned on by movies of women being
strangled, disemboweled and hung up with meat hooks, is a
feminist.
Any one, woman or man, who thinks a man should be judged as
to his worthiness by qualities such as a sense of humour,
admirableness of character, helpfulness in a tight spot, moral
integrity, inventiveness, creativity of any kind,
courteousness and courage, and not just as a money-making
robot, is a feminist. Because if women are forced to depend
on men for food, that is how they will tend to evaluate men
and no man I've ever met really likes to be loved just for his
bank account.
Hands up for the feminists in this room.
|
301.110 | Living Wage | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:19 | 16 |
| Re:107
Mike,
> Suzzanne, I don't know how we can address the problem of getting
> working women who want to stay home to be able to do so. It almost
> seems like you have to start talking about a tax credit or something
> to that effect to address the problem. I'd like to hear anyone elses
> ideas if they have any.
Its called the "Living Wage". The late Dick Martel wrote about it
in Soapbox. When child labor laws went into effect, woman had to
stay home in order to look after the children. The living wage
was intoduced to enable fathers to support the family on one income.
I don't remember all the details of his article, but it was
interesting.
Jim
|
301.111 | | LIONEL::SAISI | | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:41 | 10 |
| Jim,
I think that is a really good summary of the situation, (.106).
I have not seen cases of discrimination where it seriously hurt
the woman's career (luckily); it is more of a perception thing,
subtle put-downs of a woman's abilities, motives, or character.
It is hard for me to accept that women would abuse the system,
but I believe you that it happens. It would have to be something
extremely serious and clear cut before I would take personnel type
action. Otherwise it could hopefully be worked out with the person.
Linda
|
301.112 | I'm A Humanist | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:46 | 9 |
| re:109
Bonnie, why don't we call them humanist instead of feminist if that
article is a true discription of a feminist ? The problem is that
labels don't say everything about a person, and unfortunately the
word feminist has taken on a negative stigma, becasue of the negative
campaigning of the latest feminist leaders. Its going to take alot
of positive things to change the stigma attached to feminist.
Jim
|
301.113 | | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:47 | 7 |
|
.108
Just cause the supreme court "buys" something, doesn't make it right,
maybe legal, but not always right...
Dwight
|
301.114 | Sometimes Webster is a little outdated | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:57 | 15 |
| Bonnie,
I like Jim's idea. Humanist sounds more like the things which
you wrote. What a word is supposed to mean and what it really means
are two entirely different things. Since the extreme feminists
went off the deep end and gave the word that meaning it is very
hard to change that. The feminists need to get the modeerates to
the forefront and tell the extremists to give it a rest. It reminds
me of the saying "I can't hearing what you are saying because what
you are doing is screaming so loud."
Dwight,
Right on.
Mike
|
301.115 | Part of the problem may be in the perceiver | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Fri Nov 04 1988 10:38 | 13 |
| Jim and Mike,
I brought up several examples before of how other groups have
extremist members (ecology,civilrights,anitabortion,etc) but
those extremist members have not been used as a brush to tar
or discredit the entire group. If you two find humanist a more
comfortable term then so be it. However, I would urge you and
any other men reading this series of notes to try and remember
that most of the time when a woman or man refers to themself as
a feminist they are referring to the same kinds of things that
I have been talking about here.
Bonnie
|
301.116 | In particular, "secular humanist" | SKYLRK::OLSON | green chile crusader! | Fri Nov 04 1988 10:45 | 8 |
| Its extremely interesting to me to see Mike Wannemacher mention
that "extreme feminists went off the deep end and gave the word
[feminist] that meaning..." I personally think that [inaccurate
but short descriptive phrase follows] many "religious" people have
done exactly the same thing to the word "humanist". Just depends
upon where you're sitting, I guess.
DougO
|
301.118 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Fri Nov 04 1988 10:49 | 9 |
| in re .113 Dwight
My comment about the supreme court's decision was not in relation
to whether it was 'right' or not...only that they felt that there
was sufficient evidence to support the claim of discrimination.
The evidence was apparently sufficient or they would not have so
decided.
Bonnie
|
301.119 | Hey Fella's I'm A Feminist | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Fri Nov 04 1988 12:02 | 6 |
| re:115
OK. Then I guess I'm a feminist. My wife will bust a gut when
I tell her this one.
Jim
|
301.120 | Achievements of Feminism | MCIS2::POLLITZ | Feminist expert | Fri Nov 04 1988 12:15 | 42 |
| Actually, I find "Christian" a better term than anything I have
heard here of late.
However for the record, let me now give credit where credit is due.
Feminism: Accomplishments-
"Feminism has real and significant achievements to its credit.
Feminists have played a major role in opening doors to women in
employment, education, and sports. Feminism has provided a guiding
philosophy to many women in their prolonged and bruising penetration
of the corporate and academic worlds (1). Feminism has provided
enough of a supporting framework to sustain many women through a
difficult period of complete uncertainty about their sex roles.
Feminists formed an important part of the constituency for abortion
rights at the start of the 70's. They were responsible for desperately
needed attention given to the crime of rape. They have thrown the
spotlight on the syndrome of battered women. Feminists have played
a highly effective role in the grass roots attempt to introduce
humanity and common sense to medical practice in America. They
have relentlessly hammered home the inadequacy of all intellectual
disciplines that fail to take into account a female point of view.
History, anthropology, sociology, psychology, sociobiology,
primatology,and literary criticism will never be quite the same.
Feminists have destroyed the plausibility of oversimple explanations
for our partly arbitrary sex role. Perhaps above all, feminism
has helped to tear open the deceptively uniform surface presented
by the mystique of femininity to reveal the cornucopia of needs,
talents, and aspirations within.
- Nicholas Davidson
Sources:
(1) Marshall, Megan, 'The Cost of Loving: Women and the New Fear
of Intimacy' (NY: Putnam 1984)
Davidson, Nicholas, 'The Failure of Feminism' (Prometheus, 1987)
Russ P.
|
301.121 | Female Schism | RUTLND::GIRARD | | Fri Nov 04 1988 13:02 | 8 |
| Funny, I never thought a -ism could be accredited with
acomplishments. It's as if men sympathetic to the cause
of women rights had no role, while in reality they had a
major role.
The real threat to women doesn't come from men but from
women.
|
301.122 | | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Nov 04 1988 13:04 | 17 |
| I don't care what anyone says, I am not now, have never been, and
never will be a feminist. I hate the word. Why must only the feminine
attributes be considered good? Can a man not be fair to his children?
I strongly disagree with ANYONE who says that the woman is better
at raising the children than the man. There is absolutely no proof
to justify this. Only the courts and women will push this principle.
I am a person who tries to be fair to everyone. I am a christian,
and believe in the policy of "do unto others as you would have them
do unto you". The so-called Golden Rule.
Feminist will always mean man-basher to me. You can thank Gloria
Steinam and all of the other women who have done their level best
to make discrimination in favor of women acceptible.
Ed..
|
301.123 | Ok you macho feminist you.:') | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Nov 04 1988 14:09 | 18 |
| RE: .119 Jim, you have me in stitches. Yo know they can cure that
now!;')
RE: Ed. I think most people know what a feminist truly is. It
has been made that way by the people who were at the forefront of
the cause. The things which have been described as what feminism
really means is really propaganda. The feminists are telling us
that if you believe that it's not okay to beat your wife and if
you don't like to watch movies with women being terrorized and
butchered, then yes, you too are a feminist. Leaving us believe
that if you like these things, you are just a typical male. I am
definitely NOT a feminist, however, I believe the enjoyment of the
above mentioned things is sick and deranged behavior.
RE: Bonnie, If it's the perceiver, then it's many men and women
as has been shown in these notes.
Mike
|
301.124 | look again Ed! | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Fri Nov 04 1988 14:27 | 16 |
| RE: Ed .122
Ed, read your Bible,I have made a study of it for 15
years and was a licensed southern Baptist preacher. There is more
about equality (between all people) that anything else. The label
of feminest is just that a label. Jesus did not die just for the
"White anglo protestants". He died for all people including women.
As a creation of God (women) they deserve just as much love and respect
as you do. Since there will always be that segment of the population
that believe they are more equal than others we ,as christians,
should be on the side of the oppressed. If you remember your history,
it was not that long ago that women had to fight for the vote. If
you believe that ALL people are equal before God then womens rights
ought to be one of those things you fight hardest for.
Dave
|
301.125 | Replies to .121-.123 | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Fri Nov 04 1988 14:35 | 97 |
|
re .121
"Funny, I never thought a -ism could be accredited with
"acomplishments. It's as if men sympathetic to the cause
"of women rights had no role, while in reality they had a
"major role.
No, the men sympathetic to the causes of womens rights
are considered to be supportors of feminism. and of course
men played a role in the gaining of rights for women tho
I have a problem with using the word 'major' which implies
to me that they had greater than 50% of the responsibility.
Both sexes played major roles, women to speak out, to push
barriers to education, voting etc, and enlightened men to
change the laws that were barriers to women and to encourage
them in their struggles.
"The real threat to women doesn't come from men but from
"women.
Could you please explain this further? When have women denied
other women the right to vote? the right to attend college?
the right to equal pay for equal work? the right to equal
what evers...when have women raped and abused other women on
the scale that men have...etc etc etc...
What threat do women pose to other women?
in re .122
" I don't care what anyone says, I am not now, have never been, and
" never will be a feminist. I hate the word. Why must only the feminine
" attributes be considered good? Can a man not be fair to his children?
" I strongly disagree with ANYONE who says that the woman is better
" at raising the children than the man. There is absolutely no proof
" to justify this. Only the courts and women will push this principle.
Um, the only person in this string of notes that has been saying that
women are better at raising children than men is a man.
and feminism does not mean that only feminie attributes are considered
good, it means social, political and economic equality of men and women.
"Feminist will always mean man-basher to me. You can thank Gloria
"Steinam and all of the other women who have done their level best
"to make discrimination in favor of women acceptible.
I'm really sorry that you feel that way, inspite of evidence that
you are not correct.
in re .123
" RE: Ed. I think most people know what a feminist truly is. It
" has been made that way by the people who were at the forefront of
" the cause. The things which have been described as what feminism
" really means is really propaganda. The feminists are telling us
" that if you believe that it's not okay to beat your wife and if
" you don't like to watch movies with women being terrorized and
" butchered, then yes, you too are a feminist. Leaving us believe
" that if you like these things, you are just a typical male. I am
" definitely NOT a feminist, however, I believe the enjoyment of the
" above mentioned things is sick and deranged behavior.
Mike do you mean that you are dismissing all the things I have said
as 'merely propoganda'?
Has it occured to you that (as was mentioned earlier in this note)
you may be a victim of media distortion and media concentration
on a small vocal group? That more feminists are like myself than
the image the media publishes?
and the speach that I printed did not say that 'if you like these
things you are just a typical male" I am absolutely amazed that
you read it that way. It saddens me to realize just how far apart
we are that you interpreted the words that way. I understood them
to mean that the typical male is really supporting feminist
causes without realizing that is what is meant by them.
"RE: Bonnie, If it's the perceiver, then it's many men and women
"as has been shown in these notes.
Well, Mike, shall I then call myself a humanist and get the conservative
Christians all over my case? What other word would you use?
Bonnie
p.s I'm leaving for a dr appointment so you all have the rest of
the afternoon to pick my note appart. :-)
|
301.127 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Fri Nov 04 1988 14:53 | 52 |
| The negative campaign about feminism has been brought about
by people who have done a hatchet job on both the word
"feminism" (and the people who dare to refer to themselves
as "feminists" in spite of the way the word has been twisted
by anti-feminists to mean something that it never HAS meant
and never WILL mean.)
The dictionary definition of feminism tracks my own feelings
about it fairly closely. The explanation of the whole women's
movement that I read in my encyclopedia comes off as more
radical (believe it or not) than many of the feminists I have
heard (when it comes to describing why the women's movement
was started.)
Reading this conference the past couple of months has really
helped me to get a handle on what the negative campaign against
feminism is all about (which I appreciate a lot.) After seeing
what the real objections are to feminism (and how many of them
are misconceptions, etc.,) I am more assured than ever before
than feminism is the right choice for me (as an ideology.)
People's definition of "humanism" (the GOOD definitions of it
and not the hatchet job versions of THAT label that have become
common in the past 10 years or so) sound pretty close to what
I feel as a feminist.
So, by rights, I could call myself a humanist OR a feminist
(or both.) I sort of call myself both.
I like the word "feminist" -- not because I think the ideals
are those that can only be held by women, but because it honors
the women who have fought and died for the past 200 years to
make possible the increased opportunities that we enjoy today.
It is my opinion that both men and women benefit from these
changes in our culture (and that both men and women can have
the same basic beliefs about equality.) Many, many, many,
MANY men and women share the beliefs that I have about equal
opportunity (whether they call themselves feminists, humanists,
or whatever.)
I don't hold it against anyone for not wanting to be CALLED
a feminist (because of the treatment the name has received from
detractors,) but I recognize what I consider 'feminism' when
I see it (and I see it a LOT!) The increase in the number
of people who share these views has jumped dramatically in
the past 15 years or so (and it is very gratifying.)
Calling myself a "feminist" is a personal choice for me (and
I reserve the right to define it in the positive way that it
was intended originally, because very high ideals are still
present in the movement today among its grassroot members.)
|
301.128 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Fri Nov 04 1988 14:57 | 15 |
| RE: Mike W. (on tax credits to help more women stay home)
Isn't it true that husbands with wives that do not work
already get a tax credit (in the form of an exemption for
the wife?)
What other kind of tax credit are you suggesting (and could
it also be applied to help women who *are* the heads of households
and breadwinners in their families?)
Is there some way that you feel working women should be helping
other women to stay at home if they want?
Thanks!
Suzanne...
|
301.129 | | LIONEL::SAISI | | Fri Nov 04 1988 15:00 | 27 |
| I will take a guess at how women have been threatened by other
women. This is not an opinion that I hold, or that I am saying
anyone here holds (although I suspect a few do):
Previously a women had the wonderful and fulfilling role of wife
and mother and could enjoy the love and support of a man who
would provide for her for all of her days. Now feminists have
ruined it all.
There are a few problems with this scenerio:
1. What if the man dies, or stops loving his wife, or abuses his
role as head of family?
2. What if the woman does not find motherhood and being a wife
all her life fulfilling? (aka the feminine mystique)
One thing that I do not understand is why, if there are still people
around who feel this way, don't those men and women get together
and have a good old-fashioned marriage and let everyone else do
what they want with their lives? It has been suggested (by no less
than Ronald Reagan) that women entering the work force have caused
an economy where only 2 career families can survive. I have not
seen any proof of this. Just because a and b coexist does not mean
that a caused b.
Linda
|
301.130 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Split Decision | Fri Nov 04 1988 15:23 | 18 |
| re: "humanism, Humanism"
Any Philosphy B.A.s here? I recall (dimly and in fragments)
that the term is used to describe a particular philosophy.
From this angle, using it in a new way (i.e. to describe
one who supports "fairness"/"equalness" for all people),
tends to make communication a bit more difficult (if such
a thing is possible).
Personally, since I never got further than Philo. 101, I kind
of like the "new" definition, but, since the language is already
difficult enough, I have mixed feelings.
Any PHILOSOPHY noters around? How say you?
Steve
|
301.131 | Ok, you all can faint now! | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Fri Nov 04 1988 15:26 | 5 |
| Re: .127
Thanks, Suzanne. Your sentiments on this issue echo mine precisely.
Steve
|
301.132 | - | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Nov 04 1988 15:34 | 15 |
| RE: .127 Many (I don't know what the multiple factor is) more men
have given their lives for the freedom than women have. No, the
lives of men aren't worth more than women, I just wanted to point
this out.
RE: Suzanne. Yes, I believe that if the woman is the sole breadwinner,
and the husband stays home, that family should be eligible for
an additional tax credit. A deduction is not the same as a tax
credit. A deduction is subtracted from your gross income to give
you your net income which is used to figure your tax. A tax credit
is taken off of the tax you have to pay, it is better than a deduction.
I believe if a person is the sole breadwinner in the family, that
family should be eligible.
Mike
|
301.133 | Maybe I'm missing something... | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Fri Nov 04 1988 15:50 | 8 |
| Re: .132
Mike, how is your suggestion of a tax credit substantially different
than the existing tax structure that favors one-income families?
Are you seriously suggesting taxing families different solely due
to the sex of the wage earner?
Steve
|
301.134 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Fri Nov 04 1988 16:01 | 7 |
| RE: .132
Do you mean to include "single parents" (male and female)
as well?
(Just curious.)
|
301.135 | how many men call themselves feminists? | CLT::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Fri Nov 04 1988 16:27 | 15 |
| re: .126
This brought a question to mind - are there any figures on how many
males in the general US population consider themselves feminists?
how many support the basic tenets of feminism?
What I hear in this conference is a small sample of vocal noters who
work for DEC - I don't think that we can extrapolate much from this.
I suspect that there are some wide variations along lines of region,
education, age, and earnings...
Anybody have any figures?
Thanks,
Ron
|
301.136 | 90 | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Nov 04 1988 16:40 | 8 |
| .133 Please see .132
.134 Yes.
.135 I'm sure it depends upon which group or who you talk to.
Mike
|
301.137 | re .135 | MCIS2::POLLITZ | Feminist expert | Fri Nov 04 1988 17:01 | 4 |
| I just called NOW in NYC. They didn't know.
Russ P.
|
301.138 | arrgghh | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Fri Nov 04 1988 17:25 | 9 |
| 1w�� in re .125 (in re .121-.123)
I get very frustrated when I ask questions about what people
have said and consitantly get ignored by the people of whom
I am asking the questions. (see also the questions at
the end of the note on the club admission problem). How about
it .121, .122 and .123, could you answer what I asked?
Bonnie
|
301.139 | Silent - Not me | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Nov 04 1988 19:11 | 40 |
| I am sorry. I didn't realize I was being asked any questions.
I did note that you mentioned the only person who felt that women
make better parents than men was a man. HOWEVER, how many women
fight tooth and nail to not change any of the existing statutes
or court opinions on this matter? You need only read the note about
F.A.I.R. to see this.
Yes, I know that this file is not indicative of the whole world.
We tend to be the more vocal ones. Whether we as a group represent
the mainstream of our respective ideologies I am not sure.
I don't believe that I have been hoodwinked by the media. Yes,
I know they have given some biased coverage. But the media is by
and large very (overly?) liberal in its attitudes. I cannot believe
that the only parts of the women's movement that deserved any press
was the radical fringe. I have to believe that more of the mainstream
women believe in what has been reported. Otherwise, why did they
not move to squash (maybe too hard a word) the radicals and see
that their organizations got a better name.
I hold nothing against women. I do believe that at times they are
not given a fair shake. But I don't believe that I, or anyone else,
should have to go out of my way to be different with women than
with men.
I got a flyer on my truck last evening at the supermarket which
I would like to ask a question about. The flyer was for a health
club in Lowell. It made a special mention of having a separate
area for women-only. I saw no mention of a special area for men-only.
The club is co-ed. Why should this be condoned? I am not trying
to be stupid or anything. I am just curious why women would need
a special area and men not. From what I gathered from the flyer,
the area had a sauna or hot-tub or something like that plus other
things.
I am not afraid of answering responses to my notes. I am sorry
if anyone perceived me of staying silent.
Ed..
|
301.140 | .122 - I'll second that! | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Fri Nov 04 1988 21:19 | 1 |
|
|
301.141 | could you be a little clearer mr comet::berry | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Fri Nov 04 1988 22:50 | 11 |
| in re .140
what are you seconding?
that you will never be a feminist? that you hate the word? that
it is wrong that only feminine attributes are good? that men
can be fair to children or raise them? that you are a Christian?
hmmm
Bonnie
|
301.142 | my lord! | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Sat Nov 05 1988 04:56 | 6 |
|
OKAY! OKAY!
I second .122's entire first paragraph!!!!!!!!!!!!!
mr comet::berry
|
301.143 | be reasonable | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Sat Nov 05 1988 20:08 | 25 |
| RE: .142 (AKA .121)
First off I am a Man, so maybe this note/reply will be more
effective to you. Now I am sure that I don't have to review history
to you is there? If you will, please put yourself in the position
of a Woman. Over the passage of time, I think you will admitt that
"equality" has come much more slowly to Women than any other segment
of the "worlds" people. If you were a Woman, don't you think that
you would be a little angry and yes frustrated at the injustice?
About Women being better mothers....there IS very good
scientific evidence that this is true. There occurs, at birth, a
"bonding" that only mothers have. Now notice that I said mothers
and NOT women. But since only women can give birth, it stands to
reason that they would be more effective (effective is a better
word that better in this case).
Mr. comet::berry (for lack of a first name) the Women I have
talked to do NOT want to "bash men" but only make known that there
are differences in how men and women are treated under the same
situations. That is what I get from the "feminists" as you have
called them. And so I ask you....is there not room in our "world"
for total equality?
Dave
|
301.144 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Sat Nov 05 1988 21:21 | 10 |
|
Dave, please recheck your scientific facts. Bonding also
occurs between new infants and fathers (men). In fact,
adoptive parents also bond with their babies, although
they may not receive the child immediately after birth.
Deborah
|
301.145 | yes......but.....! | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Sun Nov 06 1988 00:36 | 12 |
| RE: .144
Yes, you are right about the bonding between fathers and
infants. But the bonding between mothers is much stronger because
of heart rates, chemical "sharing", and emotional "dual" reactions
during the second and third trimesters of a full term pregnancy.
The bonding you are talking about occurs only at birth
and only if the father is allowed (which occurs more and more now
days) to be part of the bonding process at birth. But that ,or so
doctors say, is not nearly as strong as the mothers bonding.
Dave
|
301.146 | I don't buy it. | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Sun Nov 06 1988 06:49 | 9 |
| Give me a break, Dave...
After reading your replies, I have to admit... they said "nothing"
to me. Sorry. I don't agree.
Dwight (also a minority figure.... a white male)
Acutally, not really white,... I keep a pretty nice tan... :^)
Sorta, a nice golden brown... :^)
|
301.147 | My Wife Didn' Buy It | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Nov 07 1988 09:09 | 10 |
| Well, I told my wife that I'm a feminist. She acted like she was
gut shot. Then she said, "what is it, you want to buy that new truck"?
I said, "no, I'm for equal everything for everybody, and thats what
a feminsit is". She "said, "give it up, I've had a bad day, I don't
need your jokes". I said, "no really, Bonnie explained what a feminist
is in the mens notes and by her definition, I'm a feminist". "Ok"
she said, "your a feminist". I then asked her, "whats for diner" ?
She said "your the feminist you tell me".
Jim (I made tunafish sandwich's)
|
301.148 | just wondering | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Mon Nov 07 1988 09:15 | 5 |
| Jim,
Did you put pickles in the tunafish?
Bonnie
|
301.149 | men's and women's workout space | LEZAH::BOBBITT | lunatic fringe | Mon Nov 07 1988 10:12 | 30 |
| re: separate workout spaces for co-ed and women...
There are times when women don't *like* to be seen by the opposite
sex wearing sweats or spandex or shorts, twisting and bending in
embarassing positions, and lifting less than a fifth of what most
men lift. I know I felt that way when I was really overweight.
Also, there are different machines with lighter weight stacks,
smaller dumbells and barbells on the women's side (generally).
Some women *will not* work out, unless they know men aren't looking.
Heck, there are fitness centers that are just for women, specifically
because they are aware how difficult it is for some women to address
their lack of fitness and their weight, let alone with men looking
on. Typically, when I went to a mostly-male gym, I would feel very
awkward, because I knew I couldn't lift what they could, and I knew
they were all watching me to see how good I was, and I knew I couldn't
possibly surpass their expectations, and I knew they'd write me
off as just another dizzy female who thinks she wants to weightlift
(that was the attitude *there* in *that particular gym* - other
gyms I have been to do not have that problem).
So the women aren't getting special treatment because they're better
or anything, they are being given a separate place so that they
will feel more comfortable if that's the kind of space they need
to shape up in. Often, when they have been lifting a while and
feel comfortable with their own abilities, the women will go train
on the mostly-men's side and a pleasant general comeraderie will arise.
-Jody
|
301.150 | Women in the work force | BETSY::WATSON | No_Mad | Mon Nov 07 1988 10:12 | 49 |
| re: .129 <LIONEL::SAISI>
> .............................. It has been suggested (by no less
> than Ronald Reagan) that women entering the work force have caused
> an economy where only 2 career families can survive. I have not
> seen any proof of this. Just because a and b coexist does not mean
> that a caused b.
I'm not sure if this addresses this issue or not. But I basically agree
with the above-stated premise.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
From the Boston Sunday Globe, 11/6/88, Page 2 (copied without permission)
UPI - Washington
A dramatic increase in the hours worked by wives and mothers kept many
families above water in the past decade but 40 percent of all families
lost income, according to a study released yesterday.
"This study leaves little doubt that ... American families have been
under greater economic pressure in the past decade than in any decade of
the postwar perid," said Jeff Faux, president of the Economic Policy
Institute.
The study found that average American per capita income growth declined
from 2.1 percent in the boom of the 1950s and 1960s, to 1.5 percent in
the 1970s, then down to 1.2 percent in the 1980s.
The study found that husbands' salaries declined in 80 percent of married
couple households, with a steeper drop among lower income families.
The average husband's wage has fallen 4 percent in recent years, the survey
of Census Bureau data found.
Between 1979 and 1986, wives increased their working time in the paid labor
force by 18 percent, the study found. If they had not done so, family
incomes would have grown by one-third less.
"Since 72 percent of the population live in these families, the increased
work effort by wives was the major reason many families have maintained
living standards in a period of declining wages," the study said.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have an opinion on this, but am out of time at the moment.
Kip
|
301.151 | Not A Gormet Tuna Sandwich | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Nov 07 1988 10:15 | 6 |
| RE:148
Nope, no pickles. Just tuna an mayo, on whole wheat "Priory" bread.
Fri. night is bowling night for the bride an myself, so it's always
a fast and easy meal night.
Jim
|
301.152 | What is the definition of a feminist? | DSSDEV::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life. | Mon Nov 07 1988 11:27 | 18 |
|
> Do you accept the stated positions on issues by
> Friedan, Millett, Greer, and Steinem?
>
> Yes or no.
>
> Russ P.
I would have to read them before I would commit to a "yes or no"
answer. Plus, it is not out of the question that I would accept some
stated positions and not others. I have not ready any of the authors
mentioned (with the exception of a few articles by Steinem).
I don't feel that I have to agree 100% with those authors to be a
"feminist."
--Gerry
|
301.153 | In case Russ wants to know, that holds for me, too... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Nov 07 1988 11:49 | 8 |
| RE: .152
> I don't feel that I have to agree 100% with those authors
> to be a "feminist."
Neither do I, Gerry.
Suzanne ...
|
301.154 | ditto | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Mon Nov 07 1988 12:40 | 20 |
| in re .152 and .153
make that three of us...
further, I don't think that negative or antimale articles or
writings by a few well known feminists should be used to discredit
the entire movement.
Bonnie
p.s. to those men who refer to the 'man bashing' writings of leading
feminists, could you supply me with some examples of articles/books
that you have read by them that you consider to be 'man bashing'
I would like to read them to understand what you are referring to.
(and also I do have to admit, because I have some slight suspicion
that there may not be such articles, but only media hype._
Also I am talking about people like Friedan and Steinam, not the
radical fringes like SCUM.
|
301.155 | ???? | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Nov 07 1988 13:09 | 12 |
|
Bonnie,
most of what I have read from these women has been in the
Newspapers, or they have been on talk show such as Phil Donahue.
I have a serious question for you. Why is Philis Schafly (Spelling
Guess) hamered so much by the womens movement ? I seen her on Donahue
and she seemed very intlelligent and made lots of sense. Whats the
gripe ?
Jim
|
301.156 | | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Mon Nov 07 1988 13:10 | 28 |
| Re Dave (Bonding)
I cannot believe that you honestly feel that only a woman can
have a strong bonding with an infant. Just because they share chemical
reactions, etc. does not ensure bonding. There are many mothers
who made terrible mothers. There are also many fathers who made
terrible fathers. I feel that you are doing men a disservice when
you reinforce such unfair beliefs (I wanted to use the word dribble).
Until men and women are treated equally in ALL situations, including
such areas as child custody, alimony, child support, etc. I will
always find it difficult to accept many of the arguments for aiding
women over men. I am sorry, I am not trying to be unfair in this
at all.
Re. Separate workouts
Why would not the feelings that were described to justify separate
women's areas (fear, discomfort, perception of unfairness) also
be a reason to have separate men's areas? I think if someone tried
to set up a health club with just such an area, that many people
would be unhappy with that. Now that is just my perception and
if I am way off base from the mainstream and majority, then I
apologize. But just the fact that I feel this way says something
to me about the women's movement and its impact on our culture.
Ed..
|
301.157 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | lunatic fringe | Mon Nov 07 1988 13:33 | 13 |
| If men feel uncomfortable with women around, there is absolutely
no reason why they should not create/find their own place to work
out. I believe that most women are *much* more self-conscious about
how they look when they're working out than most men are, though,
- and this might explain the fact that there are women-only workout
places and not men-only (although I haven't checked to make sure
there aren't any men-only - but if there are, they're relatively
few). Also, some health clubs only have one locker room, so they
let in one sex on MWF and the other sex on T-Th-Sat.
-Jody
|
301.158 | Hypocrite | DSSDEV::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life. | Mon Nov 07 1988 13:44 | 16 |
|
> I have a serious question for you. Why is Philis Schafly (Spelling
> Guess) hamered so much by the womens movement ? I seen her on Donahue
> and she seemed very intlelligent and made lots of sense. Whats the
> gripe ?
Because she is a very powerful woman who has taken advantage of the
"women deserve a good education and a good job if they desire" ethic
that feminists promote (she is a lawyer and a working woman), and she
uses her power and influence to discourage women from following in her
footsteps. She preaches "motherhood and housekeeping," and, as a
businesswoman, she reaps a healthy profit from this type of
conservative campaigning. She is a hypocrite and an opportunist. She
is a classic "do as I say and not as I do" person.
--Gerry
|
301.159 | my dribble" | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Mon Nov 07 1988 14:05 | 10 |
|
RE .156
Ed,
You may call it anything you want but Doctors call
it FACT. In your reply you refered to mothers and fathers might
be bad. Of course that is correct. I was refering to the "normal"
situation. There are exceptions to every rule but they are just
that...exceptions.
Dave
|
301.160 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Mon Nov 07 1988 14:28 | 9 |
| Re: .159
I seriously doubt "Doctors call it FACT". Maybe one doctor has
expressed an opinion like this, but it hardly seems to be something
universally accepted (and what is, nowadays?) In any event, it sounds
like baloney to me. If what I felt when I held my 1-minute-old
son for the first time wasn't bonding, I don't know what is.
Steve
|
301.161 | Oh ? | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Nov 07 1988 15:01 | 6 |
| re:158
I see. I'm not sure, but I thought she said she stayed home until
her children were grown, before she went out to work, but if
what your saying is true, then I see your point.
Jim
|
301.162 | go....talk! | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Mon Nov 07 1988 15:55 | 12 |
| RE .160
Please go and talk to the physician of your choice...but
look at it - does it not seem reasonable that the bonding between the
child and the mother after 9 months IS stronger that your 1 minute
encounter with your child.
This explaination is from the childs point of view....not
yours.
Dave
|
301.163 | one more time? | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Mon Nov 07 1988 17:11 | 21 |
| RE: ed,steve,comet::(whatever),all
After reading my replys and all of yours I think there is a
missunderstanding. I have never said or ever will say that the ONLY
bonding occurs between mother and child and I support all of the rights
Men are fighting for in the courts. My position is that women(mothers)
have a "kind" of bonding at the birth of the child that fathers
do not. This "bonding" is a natural thing and reinforced at birth
because of the trauma expierenced by the child at birth. That is
the reason why "most" doctors try to give the baby to the mother
as soon after birth as possible....It calms them down. The voice,
smell, and even the heart sounds of the mother reassures the child
that it is in good hands. Try this.....Take a child,a toddler, and
put it between you and the mother,equal distance apart, and if the
child get really scared 99.9% of the time he/she will go to the
mother. Mother is security. The child knows that and responds in
time of crises to the mother. I hope this clears up my position
on this issue. I really did not mean to cause ANY hard feeling in
any of this. :-)
Dave
|
301.164 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Ad Astra | Mon Nov 07 1988 17:19 | 9 |
| Re: .163
I still think this is just conjecture. I've read a lot on this
subject and have never seen any hard data to support your supposition.
It sounds great, but contains "handwaving" about "chemical changes",
"natural thing", etc. If you want to believe it, fine. But please
don't propose biases against fathers due to such folklore.
Steve
|
301.165 | I give up. | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Love is a many splintered thing | Mon Nov 07 1988 18:41 | 11 |
| RE: .164
Steve,
Good lord Steve you can believe anything you
want! Try reading your psych. book from school. That should tell
you a lot. By the way, I am not into "Handwaving" if you want to
live in ignorance then go ahead,it is NOT real, but go ahead. If
you don't want to believe me then GO...talk to your doctor or anybody
you trust to know the right answer. Then you don't have to "think
its conjecture".
Dave
|
301.166 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Mon Nov 07 1988 21:11 | 38 |
| Dave...while there has been research about the affect of
many things on infants in the womb, there no conclusive,
widely-believed evidence that babies are more attached to
the mother at birth. While the heartbeat does give the
child a soothing rhythm, just about any old heartbeat-een
a prerecorded one, will sooth a fretful baby. It works the
same on puppies too. Since the sense of smell is not func-
tioning in the womb, it's a little difficult to believe that
the mother has a familiar odor. Babies are often handed over
to the father. Birth IS a traumatic experience. It certainly
was for my child, who was immediately taken to intensive care
and subjected to any number of medical procedures (this after
24 hours of hard labor culminating in an assisted delivery-I'm
not sure who was more traumatized, him or me).
I didn't even SEE my child until the next day. I can't speak
for my son, but our bonding took place the minute I laid eyes
on him. He was, and is, every bit as 'bonded' with his father
as he is to me. Given the experiment you mentioned earlier, if
he were and equal distance from his father and myself, and was
startled, the chances are 50/50 that he would choose me. The
other 50% of the time he would have gone to his father.
I'm really fed up with this nonsense that women are genetically
better at parenting. Parenting is a learned skill. You're big
on scientic studies. Check the studies of gorillas that have
not been raised amoung their own kind. They have no maternal skills
and literally must be taught to nurture their own infants!
I've known enough men, including my son's father, and his stepfather
who didn't even come into the picture until my son was 6 eyars old,
who are excellent fathers. If I were to be unable to care for my
son, I would have absolutely no qualms to leave the child-rearing
up to them. And I know they would do a job at the least equal to
the one I am currently doing.
Deborah
|
301.167 | thoughts on bonding | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Mon Nov 07 1988 23:09 | 38 |
| hey people,
this is getting a bit silly, dave was basically trying to be
supportive of women ( as I read it ) and stepped into some
other people's hot buttons.
there are many examples of prenatal influence, like babies
responding to music and voices that show that the baby has
formed some kind of link with the prenatal environment..
and that this contributes to the postnatal bonding, and also
that the mother, after the birth, bonds strongly (perhaps
as nature might have intended given how rough the birth
process is). I think what other people are reading into what
he is writing is that he is saying that this is the only
sort of bonding or it is the best sort of bonding. Perhaps
it is fair to say that there is a unique sort of bonding
that develops from the pregnancy and birth experience which
in the absence of any other supportive adult will suffice to
protect the baby. However, bonding is common in many kinds of
relationships. I will agree with Steve that paternal bonding
is rapid and immediate, having seen my husband take his
first born into his arms and burst into a chorus from the
Messia.."I have a son" (I beamed all over my face!) and I today
feel no less a bond or closeness to my 4 adopted kids than I do
to my homegrown son. and I will say that the bonding came the hardest
to the last and oldest at time of adoption...Stevie is mildly retarded
and handicapped and seven when we adopted him. It took much
longer to to bond to him, but it has happened. Perhaps we should
look at a kind of a spectrum of attachment...from the initial
instinctive response of a mother after hard labor to having her
child placed on her breast, to only a short breath behind it,
the father who coached the labor and caught the baby, and placed
it on the breast, to the adoption of an older child, to forming
a close friendship with a person that you then regard as a courtesy
child/parent for the rest of your life.
Bonnie
|
301.168 | Out In Left Field | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Tue Nov 08 1988 07:58 | 4 |
| Well, this note has gone way off the subject. I'll start a new note
so as to keep the subject at hand going.
Jim
|
301.169 | Beware of Psych Text Books | DSSDEV::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life. | Tue Nov 08 1988 11:14 | 27 |
|
> Good lord Steve you can believe anything you
> want! Try reading your psych. book from school.
I was browsing around my roommates books, and I found a copy of an
Abnormal Psychology text book written in the mid-Seventies. I was
curious to find out what pearls of wisdom it contained about
homosexuality. Sure enough, it stated that homosexuality was an
abnormality caused by the overly-nurturing mother and the father who
didn't play enough ball with the boy (notice they never talk about
lesbians!).
That is a theory that has been disproven for the past two decades.
(Though it doesn't surprise me that a Jesuit university would use such
a text book with such outdated information.) Not to mention that, in
the Sixties, before homosexuality was removed from the American
Psychiatric Association's list of "sicknesses" in '73, it used to be
common to place gay people in institutions and to melt their brains
with shock therapy; this is how Alan Turing died. So much for modern
science, huh?
Moral of the story: Don't believe everything you read in your
psychiatry manual. Smart as we are (ha!), we still have a lot to
learn about human behavior and development.
--Ger
|
301.170 | Pen is sneakier than sword... | CLT::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Tue Nov 08 1988 11:32 | 24 |
|
re: .169
Good point! I hate to think about all the little bits of
misinformation I've picked up in schools over the years.
I'm very wary now of pulling out writings as proof (and
I'm less and less sure of the capability or even need to
"prove" anything). Writing is such a powerful tool, and so
pervasive, that we tend to ascribe a high value to anything in
print. One of the most useful classes I ever had was
"Literature and Ideology" - the basis was that all written
material is inherently ideological because it constitutes
a process of selection guided by the beliefs and values of
the writer(s).
I've seen enough contradictory "evidence" on both sides to
feel that there's a lot of gray area here - especially because
what gets written up about human behavior centers on how people
have been observed to behave in the past, not how they're
capable of behaving now and in the future. We're really in trouble
when we start seeing ourselves as static...
Ron
|