T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
841.1 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Nov 23 1992 15:58 | 12 |
|
Mr Kupton,
I inderstand what you have stated, but I can hear the other sides
response before it is even written. It would go something like this"
We do not mind the mutual respect(ladies and gentelman) but what we
want is equality, we want to be able to share in the power and not have
your superior physical ability as a road block." How do you respond to
this arguement?
David
|
841.2 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 23 1992 17:03 | 4 |
| David, what 'other side' are you talking about?
(What you said wouldn't be my argument at all, just to let you know.)
|
841.3 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Nov 23 1992 17:12 | 6 |
|
Well then why don't you take the bait ant represent the other side??
David
|
841.4 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 23 1992 19:38 | 16 |
| David, I don't see that the whole question of how our species deals
with gender issues can be boiled down to two sides.
Please don't put words in the mouths of people you see as being on
the 'other side,' ok?
My first impulse here was to respond to your characterization rather
than K. Upton's words such as pointing out to you that so-called
'superior physical ability' is relative. Gorillas (male and female)
have the kind of superior strength and dexterity (not to mention having
4 thumbs!) that make the strongest humans look weak, yet I don't see us
all rushing to give world power to gorillas for these gifts. On the
other hand, women live substantially longer than men, so in one sense,
women have superior physical ability. (See what I mean?) :>
Never mind.
|
841.5 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Nov 23 1992 21:53 | 7 |
|
ok.. I will not put words into your mouth. My apologies. No I do not
see your point. Please explain it again..
thanks,
David
|
841.6 | | STAR::ABBASI | Nobel Price winner, expected 2040 | Tue Nov 24 1992 03:15 | 7 |
| i think the last week or so noting here made more clear that men and women
are drifting more apart, and that they dont understand where the other is
coming from, i think we need a very big computer to find out why and how
to fix this. iam not smart enough to even give a clue on this!
/nasser
|
841.7 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Animal Magnetism | Tue Nov 24 1992 07:52 | 6 |
| > i think the last week or so noting here made more clear that men and women
> are drifting more apart, and that they dont understand where the other is
> coming from, i think we need a very big computer to find out why and how
> to fix this.
I think you have a very naive way of looking at things.
|
841.8 | | NITTY::DIERCKS | We will have Peace! We must!!!! | Tue Nov 24 1992 08:43 | 9 |
|
Personally, I think the last couple of weeks worth of entries in this
notes conference have made it abundantly clear that there are certain
men who are determined to widen the gap between men and women and that
certain women are determined continue down that same path. Lord,
folks, don't you have any work to do? (kind of 8-))
GJD
|
841.9 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | up on the watershed... | Tue Nov 24 1992 08:59 | 10 |
|
I think it's obvious that there is a gap between what one or more women
and one or more men think, and how they feel about their values,
differences, and expressions in this notesfile and in the world.
However, I think it's important to get value from the discussion, and
still see that not every woman, and not every man, feels *that* way.
-Jody
|
841.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Nov 24 1992 09:28 | 6 |
| Re: .9
Exactly, Jody, which is why I don't want to exclude any one group from
participating in the discussion.
Steve
|
841.11 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:08 | 7 |
|
-1
And were not you asking you to Steven. Were asking that(hence forth)
you enforce the " Notes must be in response basenote topic."
David
|
841.12 | Oh well... | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:14 | 18 |
| RE: .9 Jody
> However, I think it's important to get value from the discussion, and
> still see that not every woman, and not every man, feels *that* way.
In the recent discussion about child support (topic 837.*), I disagreed
with a lot of what was written - but I didn't voice any objections
because I know it's a touchy subject for some men (and I could see that
some men were letting off steam about their strong beliefs that they
are treated unfairly.) Of course, thanks to Mennotes, I agree that
men are treated unfairly in family court (although I still disagree
with a lot of individual discussion points in 837.*).
In the same way, workplace prejudice is a touchy subject for some
women and minorities, so someone is bound to *voice* an objection
to seeing them in a workplace notesfile. It shouldn't be such a
big deal to have these objections, but it is (and probably always
will be.) It seems inevitable.
|
841.13 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:18 | 9 |
| RE: .11 David
> And were not you asking you to Steven. Were asking that(hence forth)
> you enforce the " Notes must be in response basenote topic."
Keep in mind that notes that say, "Hey, you're not talking about
the basenote!!!" are not talking about the basenote, either, and
would have to be deleted if such a policy were enforced.
|
841.14 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Fantasies are free | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:23 | 24 |
| Suzanne,
Perhaps it's not so much prejudice and hatred you see, but anger
and frustration that men are feeling.
Many men don't feel they belong to the group who actively works
to suppress minorities. Although many would argue that the patriarchy
is responsible for all said suppression, I personally know many
men who are as much a victim of oppression as any minority group
member. I have seen attitudes which express to men who point this
out that it doesn't matter (their anger and frustration), that by
virtue of being born male, they belong by default to said catagory
and that despite their own life experiences, these men have been
told that by being male, they inherently have received or benefitted
from the misery of others. If I were a man, I too would feel angry
and frustrated when confronted with such attitudes.
In the -wn- file, it's ok for women to express their anger and fear
and frustration with men. There seems to be a feeling that it is not
ok for men to express their anger, fear and frustrations they have/are
experiencing with women. Why in one case is it 'ok' but in the other
termed to be hatred?
Christine
|
841.15 | | BUSY::TBUTLER | Carpenter Diem - 'Sieze The Tools' | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:33 | 24 |
| re: .14
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU
Reason does prevail!
But the sad thing is that it takes a woman to say this. If it were a
man that wrote this, it would immediately be torn apart, but because it
was written by a woman it will be perceived differently. WHY???
Because men are afraid to say what they feel for fear of retribution.
I still think that most of the problems in society today are of the
rights over responsibilities attitude in society. Let's take
responsibility for our own circumstances for a change and not try to
find someone to blame. If there is a problem with me, it's my problem
and I can fix it. If it means that I have to work harder than person
X, or Y or Z than so be it because in other areas I have the advantage.
That is how life works folks. You don't always win, you don't always
have things as you would like them, you do the best you can with what
you have and hope to the good Lord that he helps you to make the right
decisions.
Tom
|
841.16 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | Enough! | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:37 | 1 |
| We need a Hall Of Fame. .14 can be first in.
|
841.17 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:50 | 56 |
| RE: .14 Christine
> Perhaps it's not so much prejudice and hatred you see, but anger
> and frustration that men are feeling.
Why didn't you direct this to the people (not me) who first started
accusing others of showing "hatred" in the topic? Why is it 'ok'
for some men to accuse a woman in a discussion of showing 'hatred,'
but it's not 'ok' if she responds by pointing out the 'hatred' she
sees? Why didn't you tell them, "Perhaps it's not hatred you see,
but anger and frustration at seeing the same old workplace prejudices
yet again"?
> Many men don't feel they belong to the group who actively works
> to suppress minorities.
If a particular man is making statements implying that minorities
are inferior in the workplace, then he's actively working to suppress
minorities, in my opinion (even if doesn't run out and try to get
every one of us fired.)
> Although many would argue that the patriarchy
> is responsible for all said suppression, I personally know many
> men who are as much a victim of oppression as any minority group
> member.
I agree men are sometimes or often "victims," although it's become
another nasty word used to describe minorities.
> ...these men have been
> told that by being male, they inherently have received or benefitted
> from the misery of others. If I were a man, I too would feel angry
> and frustrated when confronted with such attitudes.
Is it necessary to express this anger by promoting workplace prejudices
in a notesfile where we all work, though??? Not all women and minorities
have contributed to the pain of white males, so why should they be the
targets for white male anger and frustration?
> In the -wn- file, it's ok for women to express their anger and fear
> and frustration with men.
Like hell it is!!! Women take an incredible amount of heat for almost
any expression of anger (even when it's about CRIME, which is a societal
problem for everyone.)
> There seems to be a feeling that it is not
> ok for men to express their anger, fear and frustrations they have/are
> experiencing with women. Why in one case is it 'ok' but in the other
> termed to be hatred?
Where have you been??? The practice of describing someone's discussion
as "hatred" is almost exclusively directed at WOMEN. When it was
started yet again, I tossed it back. As I expected, people objected
right away (I mean, how dare a woman describe a male as acting in
hatred when it's surely just something women do.) Yeah, right.
|
841.18 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:53 | 8 |
|
Suzanne,
Read the title of this topic lately??
David
|
841.19 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | Enough! | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:54 | 5 |
| re .17
> Is it necessary to express this anger by promoting workplace prejudices
You've got it wrong again. Nobody was promoting anything of the sort.
|
841.20 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Nov 24 1992 10:55 | 8 |
|
841.14(Christine)
Yes!!! Excellent note..
David
|
841.22 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:02 | 8 |
| RE: .18 David
> Read the title of this topic lately??
I responded point by point to Christine's note. If I'm off the
topic, then she must have been off the topic, too.
Make up your mind.
|
841.23 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:04 | 8 |
| RE: .21 Mike Smith
> You just don't get it. I have recently reached the conclusion that you
> never will.
I suppose it would be impossible to simply say, "We disagree. I have
recently reached the conclusion that we never will agree."
|
841.25 | Is this an 'agreement that we can't disagree'...? | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:09 | 13 |
| RE: .24 Mike Smith
> No, Suzanne. We cannot disagree, as that implies that you understand
> the issues about which I have been trying to discuss and that we merely
> disagree on their import.
Obviously, you do not understand what I've been saying.
> So far, I have seen no evidence that you do,
> indeed, understand. Hence my recent comment.
I see no evidence that you understand. So what?
|
841.26 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | up on the watershed... | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:10 | 38 |
|
re: .12 (oh well...)
RE: .9 Jody
> > However, I think it's important to get value from the discussion, and
> > still see that not every woman, and not every man, feels *that* way.
>
>
.
.
.
> In the same way, workplace prejudice is a touchy subject for some
> women and minorities, so someone is bound to *voice* an objection
> to seeing them in a workplace notesfile. It shouldn't be such a
> big deal to have these objections, but it is (and probably always
> will be.) It seems inevitable.
I'm not sure you understood what I meant above.
I *really* meant that it was important for people to get value from the
discussion....
*AND*
see that not every woman and not every man feels that way.
There is value in both sides of the discussion, and there is even more
value as people grow to listen more, express their insights in
different ways according to where the conversation is leading, etc....
AND it's important to see that not all men or women feel the same way
as the people posting at that particular time.
I'm sorry if what I said felt invalidating (as I felt it might when
your title read "oh well....")
-Jody
|
841.27 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:11 | 8 |
|
Dearest Suzanne,
I don't ofter recommend this to people, but here goes, start using
drugs soon, lots of them :-)
David
|
841.28 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:13 | 4 |
| RE: .27 David
You didn't make up your mind, I see (but that's ok, too.) :>
|
841.29 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:15 | 7 |
|
Suzanne,
About what???????
David
|
841.30 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:17 | 2 |
| David - see reply .22 - ok?
|
841.31 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:24 | 13 |
|
Suzanne,
and you be sure and read 841.13 again please?? I think you may have
misunderstood me.. I was pointed out the title of this topic to you
in order to show you that this was the correct topic to discuss tangent
from the other one..errr, I think something like that, its all such
a blur now...
who am I, why am i in this conference
David :-)
|
841.32 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Fantasies are free | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:54 | 14 |
| Suzanne-
Perhaps I am wrong, but I did think that you were the first to bring
up what hatred you had seen in the other note in response to Fred
Haddock. I thought the ensuing tangent in the string dealt with
objections to your use of the word hatred in objection to why Fred is
glad to be a man. That is why I directed that part of my note to you.
As to all the rest, I just disagree. I don't have time to go point
by point to show you that I'm right and you are wrong or vice-versa.
Take note .14 to be my opinion on the subject and that by not responding
to your point by point dissection of my note in no way implies agreement
with your points.
|
841.33 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 12:22 | 23 |
| RE: .32 Christine
> Perhaps I am wrong, but I did think that you were the first to bring
> up what hatred you had seen in the other note in response to Fred
> Haddock.
You're wrong. Fred was the first to use the term (in 840.67):
"Is there any difference? Do you dare say anything good about being
a man without getting thoroughly trashed by the envy/hate groups?"
My first use of the term was in direct response to this note.
> I thought the ensuing tangent in the string dealt with
> objections to your use of the word hatred in objection to why Fred is
> glad to be a man. That is why I directed that part of my note to you.
Now you can fix it (and direct future such notes to others,) ok?
> As to all the rest, I just disagree.
Well, it's ok for us to disagree (without fighting to the death over
it.) But then, we're women. :> :>
|
841.34 | Cudos | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Nov 25 1992 10:09 | 19 |
| re .33
> <<< Note 841.33 by CSC32::WSC641::CONLON >>>
>
> RE: .32 Christine
>
> > Perhaps I am wrong, but I did think that you were the first to bring
> > up what hatred you had seen in the other note in response to Fred
> > Haddock.
>
> You're wrong. Fred was the first to use the term (in 840.67):
>
> "Is there any difference? Do you dare say anything good about being
> a man without getting thoroughly trashed by the envy/hate groups?"
>
And so far Suzanne, you've done a magnificent job of proving my point.
fred();
|
841.35 | Your point was thoroughly disproven, actually. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Nov 25 1992 10:46 | 12 |
| RE: .34 Fred
> And so far Suzanne, you've done a magnificent job of proving my point.
On the contrary - other men have listed good things about being a man
without getting any negative comments from me (or anyone else) at all.
Even YOU listed something good about being a man (after your initial
entry) that I didn't regard as a problem.
As mentioned before, I only objected when you (and one other person)
described the 'good things' about being a man in terms of negative
characterizations about another group.
|
841.36 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Nov 25 1992 10:52 | 5 |
| re .35
Sure could'a fooled me.
fred();
|
841.37 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Nov 25 1992 10:54 | 6 |
| RE: .36 Fred
> Sure could'a fooled me.
You fooled yourself, Fred.
|
841.38 | | MILKWY::TATISTCHEFF | well, lah-di-dah | Wed Nov 25 1992 22:52 | 12 |
| on a mostly unrelated note:
if i think about what i like about being female, much (maybe even most)
of it is the result of direct comparison to what i think it would be
like to be male. ex: i am very glad that i will never have to wonder
who my children are (or if i have any children).
yes some parts of what we like about our gender exists without
comparison to the other, but much of what we like is *not* being that
other gender...
lt
|