T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
86.1 | stop all bashing | TOLKIN::DUMART | | Thu Aug 12 1993 13:52 | 14 |
| I agree with you that an innocent person shouldn't be placed in the
situation that your friend was. How long did it take to find and
verify the witnesses' alibi? Why was bail denied? My guess and it's
a guess only....he may have been denied because there have been too
many women and children killed and perhaps they didn't want to take
that chance until his story could be checked.
As for the woman I have always hated false accusations. They are
especially harmful (not that they weren't before) in today's
atmosphere. Not only do they cause harm to their 'victim' but
they cause harm to all those truly in need of help and protection.
I believe your friend can also bring charges against the woman for
her false accusations. It may be worth the time and money to do so.
|
86.2 | It's the thought that aggrevates | KAOOA::SLADE | | Thu Aug 12 1993 14:24 | 9 |
| This was an article in todays paper and on the radio.
The witnesses testified to the police and the judge.
He was held for two reasons, he was a male who was accused of a crime
against a female and the authorities were afraid of the reaction of
womens protest groups.
|
86.3 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Aug 12 1993 14:30 | 3 |
| Welcome to the 90's...where men are the real enemy.
Marc H.
|
86.4 | | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, BPDAG West, Palo Alto CA | Thu Aug 12 1993 14:55 | 5 |
| welcome to the 90s, where fear of the news media in full blood scent
lets police blame their errors on fear of groups who never said a
word.
DougO
|
86.5 | Get a lawyer time | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Aug 12 1993 15:31 | 8 |
|
Sounds like the guy has a major lawsuit against the woman, the judge,
and the police. This _sounds_ like a willful and intentional
violation of the man's civil rights. Bail should be granted or
denied based on what _he_ may do, not what someone else has done or
might do.
fred();
|
86.6 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Aug 12 1993 16:18 | 8 |
| Crap like this goes on all the time. And there are few of the males who
will counter sue because they dont have enough money to wadge the war.
But, thats life. And if you want justice, you have to fight like hell
for it. Or it will be taken from you as easy as life itself.
If you want to be heard speak up.
You want to be seen, stand up.
You want justice, fight like hell for it.
|
86.7 | | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Thu Aug 12 1993 16:29 | 9 |
| This shows the "respect" that we, human beings, have for our fellow
human beings...
It also shows a total lack of "morals" on the part of the woman, and
indiference from the police and the judge... they must be bored to
death by the "abundance" of so called mis-leads going on... and as a
result, the law punishes those who are supposed to defend and
viceversa... taking a lot of time (and taxpayer's money) to clear the
mess!
|
86.8 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Aug 12 1993 16:35 | 6 |
| Your anger should be directed at the men who have acted violently
towards their wives and girlfriends. It's these men who have given all
men a bad name.
Lorna
|
86.9 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Aug 12 1993 18:36 | 9 |
| re .8
The one does not justify the other. However, there are a lot of
people who think like you do.
As I've said before, if men aren't worried yet, they'd better start
looking at what is going on.
fred();
|
86.10 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | as tenacious as I need to be | Fri Aug 13 1993 08:19 | 4 |
| > Your anger should be directed at the men who have acted violently
> towards their wives and girlfriends.
Don't tell us where our anger should be directed.
|
86.11 | Get Real | OTOOA::COURISH | | Fri Aug 13 1993 08:45 | 6 |
| re: .8
Does that mean that because some men rob banks or indulge in some other
criminal activity that all men have the same reputation. I don't think
so.
|
86.12 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Aug 13 1993 09:16 | 3 |
| .8
Yep.... Just another rasputian type..... yep, thats what we is...
|
86.13 | life in the '90s | OTIGER::R_CURTIS | | Fri Aug 13 1993 09:30 | 26 |
| re .8....
I'm not sure whose reply that was directed at..it seems like a
blanket/catch-all statement. I don't know....it seems like there is
plenty of bizarre, outlandish behavior by both men and women in the
'90s - - how about the woman in the news lately who amputated her
husband's penis ?? I saw an article in the paper of how she has been
getting 'support' and attention from various groups. A 69 year old
woman said something about it being justified..yes, indeed, we need
more women to mutilate their boyfriends so that these rotten men start
getting the message of how they need to be more gentle and civilized.
Believe me, I know there are some male creeps out there, and I hate
hearing about them and wish they would only publish good news, but
a lot of people need to change their attitudes first.
It seems the guy mentioned in the base note was somehow deprived of due
process, though. I only heard about it here.
One more thing....I wish both men and women could stop making blanket
statements how bad/rotten/whatever 'they' are. If we don't uphold a
standard, who will ??
Only my opinion, of course...
|
86.14 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Aug 13 1993 11:56 | 33 |
| Regarding the past few in response to my .8, I just think it would be
nice if more men were as angered and upset by the violence that is
committed by men, against women, in this world, as they seem to be
about the threat of being falsely accused of such.
Re .11, men *do* have a reputation for being more violent, in general,
than women, *because* some men rob banks, and commit other acts of
violence.
Regarding the woman who cut off her husband's penis, obviously this
woman is sick and it was a disgusting and horrible thing for her to do.
I would never try to justify choping up a human body, however, it *is*
true (according to quite a few who knew both), that he had been beating
her for quite sometime. While what she did was definitely wrong, it
can be argued that she probably would never have done it, if he hadn't
acted violently towards her first.
Also, for every one incident that can be dredged up of a woman acting
violently towards a man, there are many more that can be dragged up
of a man acting violenting towards women. It's not teenage girls who
are gunning each other down in the ghettos of America. It's not women
who are overcrowding our prisons. Just the other day I was watching
local TV, getting ready for work, and I saw where a man in the Boston
area just killed his wife, and, also, there is some town (i forget
which) where two teenage girls have been found murdered recently, and
the one common thread is that both girls had dated the same guy. I'm
not saying that women can't be bitchy and mean. They can. But, when
it comes to physical violence, it's usually done by men. Thankfully,
not most men, but a few men. If I were one of the nice men, I would be
angry at the few men who are doing all the damage.
Lorna
|
86.15 | anybody _not_ worried yet? | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Aug 13 1993 12:46 | 42 |
|
re .14
> Regarding the past few in response to my .8, I just think it would be
> nice if more men were as angered and upset by the violence that is
> committed by men, against women, in this world, as they seem to be
> about the threat of being falsely accused of such.
Who says that we're not. Women ARE getting a _LOT_ of attention
for this problem. I have not seen one entry that says that this
is not a problem. However, I have not seen anyone provide
any "solution" to the problem beyond what is being done already
that would not involve suspension of the Bill of Rights, and that
scares me even more. I have seen, however, several entries that
foo-foo the male side of the problem.
> her for quite sometime. While what she did was definitely wrong, it
> can be argued that she probably would never have done it, if he hadn't
> acted violently towards her first.
This is called "blaming the victim". Something that generally
generates howls of outrage if done to women.
> not saying that women can't be bitchy and mean. They can. But, when
> it comes to physical violence, it's usually done by men. Thankfully,
> not most men, but a few men.
I'd disagree with that. I believe that you just hear about the
man->woman violence more. But I still see you trying to justify
violence by women because of violent by men. Neither one justifies
the other.
> If I were one of the nice men, I would be
> angry at the few men who are doing all the damage.
Who says were not, but why does all the anger have to be directed
towards men. When I suggested that some of the anger of rape
victims should be directed towards those who falsely accuse men,
I got thoroughly trashed.
fred()
|
86.16 | Crime | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:15 | 28 |
| Regarding .8 and where our anger should be directed:
The people in the string were replying to the specific issue in the
basenote, not other problems in the World too. Why shouldn't men be
angry at the fighting in Bosnia too ar animal abuse, why wern't they
brought up as a place to direct anger too?
Who says people are not angry at other injustices too Lorna? I am sure
they are.
One gets the impression by reading the papers that men commit most of
the violent crimes. I believe that its true, (that men DO commit most
of the violent crimes) but that doesn't mean that even one innocent man
should be punished because most violent crimes are committed by men.
Crimes against ANYBODY are wrong regardless of the track record of the
general group that victimized person is a member of.
Most men ARE upset by crimes being committed, I know I am. Its gotten
to the point where at times I wonder if being a man is such a great
deal in U.S. Society because all too often men are prejudged to be
potential, or actual criminals, before being considered just plain
men.
Jeff
|
86.17 | | KAOOA::LBEATTIE | | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:26 | 10 |
| Personally, I am angered by the woman who falsely accused the man.
I think it's this kind of abuse by women that really damage the
cause. Women have enough trouble being taken seriously when there
really is a problem (or so it would appear to me).
As for Lorna's comments. Well, I'd better not touch them!
We've communicated in other conference, and seem to agree on
very little!
Laura
|
86.18 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Neck, red as Alabama clay | Fri Aug 13 1993 15:28 | 14 |
|
Lorna,
Where the lady cut off the man's penis, it is known that they have
beaten EACH OTHER on a continuous basis. But the man should sit there
and take it right?
It is as common for a woman to mistreat their children as it is a man.
Don't kid yourself.
Mike
|
86.19 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:03 | 9 |
| I have never said that men should just sit and take violence, and I
certainly have never said that it's right for an innocent person to be
convicted of a crime.
re .17, and, like I said, I'd never try to say that women can't be
bitchy.
Lorna
|
86.20 | I have to wonder | KAOOA::LBEATTIE | | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:30 | 9 |
| ouch!
Lorna, I've said that we have a tendency to disagree, and so
I'd better not respond to your comments.
And now I'm a bitch?
Hmmm...interesting logic!
Laura
|
86.21 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Neck, red as Alabama clay | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:41 | 5 |
|
So a woman gets bitchy and a man gets violent.
|
86.22 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:44 | 14 |
| re .20, I thought your comment about me in .17 was a tad bitchy, yes. I
didn't see any reason for it, other than as an opportunity to make a
negative comment about me, since you never stated your own views.
You say "ouch!" now. Well, it didn't make me feel real happy to read
your comment about me in .17.
Also, I'm at somewhat of a disadvantage since, I'm sorry to say, I
can't seem to recall any of our previous exchanges. I really don't
remember you from before. Sorry.
Lorna
|
86.23 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Neck, red as Alabama clay | Fri Aug 13 1993 16:58 | 6 |
|
If you call that bitchy, I would have to say that it is your
perspective that is out of kilter.
Mike
|
86.24 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Aug 13 1993 17:21 | 43 |
| > Re .11, men *do* have a reputation for being more violent, in general,
> than women, *because* some men rob banks, and commit other acts of
> violence.
Crimes committed by women do not get anywhere NEAR the publicity that those
of men do, in my opinion. And just because someone has a 'reputation' for
something, that does not make it automatically true *no matter how often it
gets repeated*.
> Regarding the woman who cut off her husband's penis, obviously this
> woman is sick and it was a disgusting and horrible thing for her to do.
Is that true for those people who thought it was a 'good thing' for her to
do (to get revenge/even/"justice")?
> Also, for every one incident that can be dredged up of a woman acting
> violently towards a man, there are many more that can be dragged up
> of a man acting violenting towards women.
Where does violence of women against women get chalked up?
>It's not teenage girls who
> are gunning each other down in the ghettos of America.
Actually, there are news of reports of exactly that happening.
>It's not women
> who are overcrowding our prisons.
You make it sound like there are no women in prison.
> area just killed his wife, and, also, there is some town (i forget
> which) where two teenage girls have been found murdered recently, and
> the one common thread is that both girls had dated the same guy.
So, of course the guy MUST be guilty, right????
> not saying that women can't be bitchy and mean. They can. But, when
> it comes to physical violence, it's usually done by men.
Righttttttttttttt.
Z
|
86.25 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Aug 13 1993 17:34 | 5 |
| re .23, and I might have to say that you're not a very sensitive
person.
Lorna
|
86.26 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Aug 13 1993 17:37 | 7 |
| re .24, I certainly can't help it if some people felt the guy deserved
to have his penis cut off. I already said that I didn't think he
deserved it. You'll have to find someone who thinks he deserved it,
and argue with them.
Lorna
|
86.27 | Whats good for the goose as they say | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Aug 13 1993 18:23 | 13 |
|
re .26
> re .24, I certainly can't help it if some people felt the guy deserved
> to have his penis cut off. I already said that I didn't think he
However, you certainly seem willing to blame all men because some
men think women deserve to get raped. You certainly seem willing
to allow an innocent man to pay for the crimes of someone else.
fred();
|
86.28 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Aug 13 1993 18:29 | 16 |
| re .26
in .14 you state:
> I would never try to justify choping up a human body,
then you appear to turn right around and try to justify it with:
>however, it *is*
> true (according to quite a few who knew both), that he had been beating
> her for quite sometime. While what she did was definitely wrong, it
> can be argued that she probably would never have done it, if he hadn't
> acted violently towards her first.
fred();
|
86.29 | Just slightly lost. | STRATA::JOERILEY | Legalize Freedom | Sat Aug 14 1993 05:03 | 11 |
| RE:.22
>re .20, I thought your comment about me in .17 was a tad bitchy, yes. I
>didn't see any reason for it, other than as an opportunity to make a
>negative comment about me, since you never stated your own views.
Lorna I've reread .17 three times and don't see what you're calling a
tad bitchy. Would you mind pointing out the offending part so that I
might understand where your coming from. Thanks
Joe
|
86.30 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Sat Aug 14 1993 22:52 | 7 |
| .8> Your anger should be directed at the men who have acted violently
.8> towards their wives and girlfriends. It's these men who have given all
.8> men a bad name.
Yeah, the problem isn't the woman who lied to the police, the problem
is men. Sometimes, you make about as much sense as a fish on a bi-
cycle, if ya catch my drift.
|
86.31 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Mon Aug 16 1993 10:55 | 28 |
| re .30, Mike, I went on to explain what I meant by that. It just seems
to me that many of the men who write in this file have shown very
little sympathy for all the violence that is directed towards women in
this society. That's all.
I'm sorry if I don't make sense to you, Mike, but I don't have your
high intellectual abilities to work with. My SAT scores we no where
near as high as yours. I wasn't born with an IQ as high as yours,
through no fault of mine own, and was simply expressing my opinion.
I'm sorry it doesn't make sense to you.
re .29, no, I'm afraid I can't point it out. It was pretty much the
fact that she even chose to write what she wrote that hurt my feelings.
It was what I imagined the intent to be. If she had wanted to
seriously address my opinions, she could have stated hers. But,
instead she just made what, to me, seemed like a wisecrack, and that
offended me. YMMV.
re .Fred Haddock, you have completely misconstrued everything I have
tried to say *ever* in the file. I do not blame all men because some
men rape. I do not want to see innocent men convicted of rape, and I
am not trying to justify what that damn fool mental case of a woman did
when she cut off her husbands penis. I think they both sound like a
couple of losers, and probably should both be thrown in a looney bin
for the rest of their lives, IMO.
Lorna
|
86.32 | In other shoes | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 16 1993 13:09 | 10 |
| re lorna
You might want to hold your entries up to a mirror and see how they
look when you reverse men/women and women/men. Just as you accuse us
of being very unsympathetic to women, you (and some other women and men
who note here) seen very unsympathetic to men and their problems. If
you expect to be given the benefit of the doubt for your entries, then I
suggest that you start doing the same for us.
fred();
|
86.33 | and never the twain shall meet | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Mon Aug 16 1993 14:17 | 4 |
| re .32, and, I could say the same to you. So, there we have it.
Lorna
|
86.34 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Aug 16 1993 14:23 | 5 |
| RE: .32
Excellent! Right on the Money.
Marc H.
|
86.35 | still wondering | TOLKIN::DUMART | | Mon Aug 16 1993 15:08 | 16 |
| Is it possible to get an update on the man's situation? I truly hope
he filed charges for false imprisonment. How could the police legally
hold him if his alibi's checked out. I don't think any 'group' would
be able to stop his release just due to perceived pressure. For him
to be held eight days .....did it take that long to check out his
alibis? Would the original noter try and find out more info for a
follow up? I definitely am not an expert on the state legal system.
I am curious as to why he was held so long. I could see 'initially'
the police holding him based on the woman's initial accusation and
the fact that there have been too many women and children killed as
a result of domestic violence. I abhor the fact that the woman lied.
But that still leaves me wondering how they could hold him that long
especially since it was a false accusation.
Paula
|
86.36 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Aug 16 1993 15:47 | 13 |
| I know a man who was accused of horassing his ex wife. And was arrested
three times. Three times he was found inocent. He was not even in the
same county never mind the state when these illedged incidents
happened. Yet, the local Manchester police, knew when he would return
from a business trip, and cuff him. They would be waiting INFROUNT of
his apartment as he stepped out the door of his car!
Yet, todate! His truck has been set a fire, his mail and telephone has
been messed with. And is now in bankruptcy due to his ex wife. And
there is no one standing outside of her door with handcuffs to arrest
her. And! This man has not seen his daughter in 3 years although he has
a court order visitation. His ex still denies this, although he pays
child support.
|
86.37 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Rue 'tine | Tue Aug 17 1993 12:36 | 15 |
| not to be picky, but it seems as this is mennotes, many men here
may be more sensitive to specific men problems, not women problems.
at least when I used to be in wn, the focus was women, not men. I
assume the same applies here...
rape is more specifically a woman problem in terms of vicitimzation.
it is IMO a people problem for 'stopping' it. I don't know how to
stop it, I assume nobody knows how to stop it or it wouldn't be a
problem. But for other men, who rightly or wrongly feel persecuted
for being a male in today's society, I can certainly see how they
(law-abiding, nice guys) may be more focused on how to protect
themselves and their friends from this type of action. I've seen
it mentioned that it is still a small problem compared to rape, but
it seems to me a lot of guys here are personnally acquainted with other
men who have been screwed by this same system....
|
86.38 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Aug 17 1993 13:57 | 14 |
| .37
Seems a simple solution. If you are falsely accused for rape, then you
are legally vindicated for damages done. Thus, keeping false arrest
down to the real stuff. Vs going after some male because he is that
nice guy.
Slander is a good start when it comes to false acusations. Perhaps
allowing the base noter to collect damages.
These ideas are a normal part of our judicial system. But in many cases
are not persued. Or lawyers try to talk to the client to drop the case
because of the cost in lidigations.
|
86.39 | insensitive men ? | COOKIE::PEARRING | | Tue Aug 17 1993 16:59 | 28 |
| Re: 8 (and subsequent notes)
Men aren't less sensitive to anything: Men's pain, Women's pain, any
pain. Men have been socialized to respond differently. Like forming
police forces, governing bodies, laws, policies of behavior. Not
perfect, of course. Not from a woman's perspective, of course. Not from
a rabbits perspective, of course. From the only context they have.
Of course.
But with 99% of the governing bodies and police forces in the world
being made of men, to conclude that men are less sensitive to criminal
activity by anyone, anywhere is a conclusion driven by some other
motivation.
Simple FBI crime statistics (available in my up-coming book): ;-)
men are 76% of the victims of violent crime.
men are 78% of the victims of murder.
men are 4 times as likely to commit suicide.
The question is obviously not: do men have any context with which to
understand the pain of criminal activity. The questions are:
Who is teaching men self-hate?
Who is teaching men that violence against another man is acceptable
within a great deal of parameters?
Who has the motivation and opportunity to teach the children this wide
variety of bigoted attitudes towards and about men?
Men ?
(we can only dream of having such power)
Marc
|
86.40 | oh, I see. a Miracle of Becoming! | WOODRO::JOHNSTON | beannachd | Wed Aug 18 1993 10:26 | 32 |
| re.39
Do you truly believe that fathers, uncles, sport heros, movie heros,
and other male role models have no influence in the socialisation of
boys/young men?
I'm not about to say that they are the _only_ influence. But, from your
comment that "men can only dream of such power" it would seem that you
subscribe to that near-mystical theory that from conception to voting
age, a boy's mother is the sole force that shapes him.
~19 years is a long gestation period to posit, and demonstrably not the
case. Unless of course you choose to limit yourself to the usual 9
months and prefer to believe that character and socialisation are
conferred in the womb.
If the "only context they have" is andro-centric and not ideal from a
woman's perspective [your assertion], from where did this andro-centric
socialisation derive? Odd that you seem to attribute _all_ of the
influence and context building to the very people who find the context
alien and counter-intuitive.
I don't think that women can abdicate all responsibility for what is
wrong with Society, nor do I think that men are to blame for all of the
ills of Society. I do get irritated that my efforts to change the
status quo [a lot of death violence and misunderstanding that no one
seems to find productive, let along joyous] get put down as the ravings
of some glass-chewing harpy who's trying to hang it all on the men.
I'm not.
Annie
|
86.41 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Aug 18 1993 11:09 | 11 |
| RE: .40 I didn't read .39 as suggesting that women were the sole
influence, just the main one. Now perhaps you had mostly men as
teachers growing up and spent as much or more time with your father
as your mother. But that seems to be a rare case.
Most boys spend far more time with women, be it teachers, their mother,
or even their friends mothers, than with men. I was raised by a single
father and I dare say I spent much more time being controlled by women
than by men.
Alfred
|
86.42 | Yea, I know I'm being a smarta$$, but... | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Aug 18 1993 11:32 | 8 |
| re .40
Gee, I thought we live in a time when "nobody has a right to
push their 'morals' on anybody else".
BTW: Where _have_ all the fathers gone?
fred();
|
86.43 | caution: man at work | COOKIE::PEARRING | | Wed Aug 18 1993 13:09 | 34 |
| re:40
Hi annie...
(just have a second) No, I wouldn't say that men play no role in the
misunderstood teachings that little boys get. I hold men totally
responsible for their lack of playing a large role in the developement
of the children. I (for what it's worth) would say this: that men are
devalued as parents. Taught that they have no parental rights. Taught
that they have no parental skills. Taught that their best contribution
would be to provide materially for the family, and that the spiritual,
emotional guidance that they could give should be directed mostly to
society as a whole in the indirect functions of government, church, and
industry.
This triumvirate of typical male power in society; where it is a
great powerful force for society (and andro-centric) of course, has
served to remove the influence of men directly with the children, and
that has been exactly as much of a loss to the children as having
their Mothers play an indirect role in thier lives.
You wouldn't say that I, as a man, can impart to my daughter the
"flower" of her femininity; because I'm not a woman. I would agree.
I'm simply saying that the reverse is true, and that a great deal of
the disturbing behavior of some men is a direct result of:
A. a lack of decent direct/balanced/realistic male "role models" and
B. a confusion with the primary influence in the early years of role
models that are not men, admit to a lack of understanding of men, and
regularly exhibit a passive/aggressive distain for that which they, by
their own admission, do not understand.
Like FBI crime statistics? 81% of the men in prison were raised by
single mothers. I offer this as the simple statistic that it is with
all the implications. NOT as some condemnation of the great love and
sacrifice of those raising their children alone. Why are 91% of them
women? Because the society values the parental role of men? Because men
are taught early the care-giving skills necessary? Nope.
Mark
|
86.44 | | WOODRO::JOHNSTON | beannachd | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:07 | 9 |
| re.42
I don't take your point, so I really can't judge whether you're being
a smartass or not.
Are you saying I'm 'pushing my morals?'
FWIW: I see lots of fathers about. Most of them responsible, caring,
concerned individuals. Where the hell are _you_ looking?
|
86.45 | Stats from hell | COOKIE::PEARRING | | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:47 | 18 |
| re:39 on...
More statistics: (I'm such a pain) 8-)
94% of day workers are women, 84.5% of elementary School teachers are
women (my Mother being one of the best). <-Excuuuse me! ;-)
The point being that the early developemental stages were "assigned"
to women in the post-war era by the last generation; and the combined
effects of the above stats with the male role models propogated by the
men of that generation (overcompensating/unrealistic models like John
Wayne) has lead to the present absurd conflicts in the identity search
for men. No malicious intent, no conspiritorial agenda, just simple
cause and effect.
The influence of men on children has been reduced and subjugated to
the point where it is no longer the positive, effective force it was
(and will be again). Today's fathers are helping heal this wound (for
the most part) and together we shall overcome...
Marc
|
86.46 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the insatiable fire | Wed Aug 18 1993 15:55 | 8 |
| > The point being that the early developemental stages were "assigned"
> to women in the post-war era by the last generation;
No, it's been this way since the dawn of man. Men have been too busy doing
"man's work" which was inevitably dangerous or strenuous or "no place for
children" and hence the women were saddled with much of the responsibility
of bring the children up until they were old enough to work in the fields, etc.
This is NOT a new phenomenon.
|
86.47 | A myth | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Aug 18 1993 16:19 | 8 |
| re .14:
> Also, for every one incident that can be dredged up of a woman acting
> violently towards a man, there are many more that can be dragged up
> of a man acting violenting towards women.
As I said in the previous version of MENNOTES, read note 432.3 in
QUARK::MENNOTES-V1.
|
86.48 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | country state of mind | Wed Aug 18 1993 16:21 | 19 |
|
We have a serial rapist in our area who is still at large. He uses a
crossbow. He seems to get jollies out of killing dogs (killed one and
asked one lady if she had a dog so he could kill it after he raped her).
One husband he tied up and had him (the husband) watch as his wife was
raped. I have already made the decision that, if this guy pays us a
visit, I will fight to death if need be to make sure this doesn't
happen. I have a plan on what I'll do. I think men suffer when a
woman is raped. I know for me, it tears at my heart and gets me quite
angry.
Tine,
Love your reply, if I weren't married (and you too). ;')
Mike
|
86.49 | WHERE'S DADDY | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Aug 18 1993 16:24 | 21 |
|
re .44
> I don't take your point, so I really can't judge whether you're being
> a smartass or not.
Point being, who are we to push our "morals" on other men as to
whether or not they should rape women. Maybe everyone should just
take "sensitivity" classes to "understand their pain" ;^}.
SYS$SET_SARCASM(0);
> FWIW: I see lots of fathers about. Most of them responsible, caring,
> concerned individuals. Where the hell are _you_ looking?
I'm looking at the divorce courts were 50% of the marriages end in
divorce with the father reduced to a walk on wallet and activity
director (if he's lucky). (See previous note where 81% of criminals
in prison come from single parent family).
fred();
|
86.50 | | WOODRO::JOHNSTON | beannachd | Wed Aug 18 1993 17:00 | 42 |
| re.49
I see. I comment that I see a whole lot of fathers behaving as
postive and caring forces in the lives of their children, and now I'm to
blame for the divorce courts.
Yeah, the divorce courts are f*cking idiots. From where I sit, using
darts to decide custody and support would be in the _better_ interest
of the children than what I mostly see around me -- a blind default.
But to paraphrase a gentleman who is frequently vocal on just this
subject in this venue, Life sucks!, stop whining and fight like a
banshee for what you think is right and what's in the best interest of
the children. [do you recognise him yet?] Be a postivle role model.
To paraphrase my own self. I was raped. I was barred from prosecuting
because the violence sustained didn't include broken bones or knife
wounds. Too bad, Life Sucks!, stop whining and fight like a banshee for
what you think is right. Don't get caught up in being a victim.
As for the pain of the rapist, I care. Honestly. From the standpoint
of enlightened self-interest, I feel that right includes looking at the
causes and doing my level best to eliminate them. Rape is not a moral
issue for me; it is a matter of personal freedom, of something that is
counter-survival. [I will confess that after listening to a couple of
convicted rapists, that I barfed my shoes into the trashcan in the
parking lot, but I'm doing my level best]
Blame the courts. Blame the fathers. Blame the mothers. Blame the
victims. Blame the schools. Blame the governments.
It's all one to me. Assigning blame can be a helpful first step; but
when it becomes a vocation it is so much wasted energy that could be
better spent putting things right.
No, not a smart-ass. Just needlessly unpleasant to someone who's not
fighting you, has even found a few things to admire in you.
Chalk it up to experience, Annie, and move on ...
|
86.51 | caution: Homo RejectUs at work | COOKIE::PEARRING | | Wed Aug 18 1993 19:04 | 33 |
| re:50
My condolence on your assault. I congratulate you on your courage in
dealing with it.
I must agree that the divorce courts are, how did you put it? _____
idiots? My suggestion is that custody be shared; by default (unless one
parent PROVES that the other is incompetent) and by shared, I mean
shared: half the time spent in each household. Whether it's by the
week, month or year. That way no one pays the other for child support
because each is contributing to the total support of the child. Not
just the material support, but the emotional/spiritual support. Child
support payments, as expensive as they are, still don't even pay all
the material costs of the child, and certainly don't address the
greater needs. And, the Fathers need the influence of the children just
as much as the children need the influence of the Fathers.
RE: Mark's note...
I don't mean that the division of roles is a new concept, I agree, it
started looooong before. (Homo RejectUs ?) (AustraloPithMeOff ?)
But to me, there was such a formal/artificial division of roles applied in
the post-war era, that it took on a form that was no longer based on
any quasi-intrinsic differences. The differences that men and women had
in their daily lives, world-wide, in that period gave the 2 genders the
most divergent perspectives that they have ever had; seemingly.
The men responded with overcompensating and defense posturing, and
the women responded by raising the little boys to play those roles of
defense and material production. Not that it's that separate, of
course. The men certainly echoed the training of the boys, when the
boys came under the men's influence. My point has been all along that
the men don't get any influence until the ground work (in terms of
identity and role) have already been set by the women. Point: if you
want to change the world, start with the children at the age of ego
developement. (24 months)
Mark 8-)
|
86.52 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Aug 19 1993 11:11 | 52 |
| re .50
> I see. I comment that I see a whole lot of fathers behaving as
> postive and caring forces in the lives of their children, and now I'm to
> blame for the divorce courts.
I didn't say that _you_ were to blame for the divorce courts. I'm
just really tired of those who chant the litany of "men are to blame
men are to blame men are to blame" when, imnsoh, a _big_ part of
the problem is that all to many men and fathers _can't_ have an
affect on the care and instruction of their children.
> Yeah, the divorce courts are f*cking idiots. From where I sit, using
> darts to decide custody and support would be in the _better_ interest
> of the children than what I mostly see around me -- a blind default.
On this we agree totally.
> But to paraphrase a gentleman who is frequently vocal on just this
> subject in this venue, Life sucks!, stop whining and fight like a
> banshee for what you think is right and what's in the best interest of
> the children. [do you recognize him yet?] Be a postive role model.
On this you apparently have not been reading -mn- long or you would
know what I've done.
> To paraphrase my own self. I was raped. I was barred from prosecuting
> because the violence sustained didn't include broken bones or knife
> wounds. Too bad, Life Sucks!, stop whining and fight like a banshee for
> what you think is right. Don't get caught up in being a victim.
On this we also agree totally. There are all too many _victims_
sitting around whining and waiting form someone to do for them.
Not that I mean this about you. In fact, I admire your attitude
to fight back, put it behind you, and get on with your life.
There are some bridges that _should_ be burned.
> As for the pain of the rapist, I care. Honestly. From the standpoint
Quite honestly I don't. I was just taking a backhanded whack at the
politically correct of the world. (Not necessarily meant to include
you).
> It's all one to me. Assigning blame can be a helpful first step; but
> when it becomes a vocation it is so much wasted energy that could be
> better spent putting things right.
On this we also agree totally.
Hope this clears up a few things.
fred();
|
86.53 | | WOODRO::JOHNSTON | beannachd | Thu Aug 19 1993 13:16 | 40 |
|
>> But to paraphrase a gentleman who is frequently vocal on just this
>> subject in this venue, Life sucks!, stop whining and fight like a
>> banshee for what you think is right and what's in the best interest of
>> the children. [do you recognize him yet?] Be a postive role model.
>
> On this you apparently have not been reading -mn- long or you would
> know what I've done.
Apparently my writing skills are not a superb as I've been given to
understand, or you would have seen yourself in that description. 8^).
I am, I confess, an intermittent reader here; but I was under the
impression that you had been handed a grossly unfair custody decision
that placed your children in a hazardous situation. And that rather than
sit back and whine, you moved heaven and earth to get custody. That it
wasn't pretty, it didn't come cheap in monetary or emotional terms, but
you didn't back down. And I have admired you for that. If I've confused
you with some other man, my apologies to you both.
> There are some bridges that _should_ be burned.
Oh, I haven't burned the bridge. That is to say, I haven't severed the
ties and walked away. I can't let it define my life; but it is a piece
of directing my passion and activism.
Just as [if I have you right] you have not forgotten your custody
battles and the unfair system that put you through such hell; neither
have I forgotten the hell that faced me when I bucked the system and
tried to imprison rapist. You won your battle at a high price and are
determined that others shouldn't have to face the same. I lost mine,
also at a high price, and have a similar determination.
I didn't burn the bridge, but I only cross it one MY terms.
> Hope this clears up a few things.
More or less.
Annie
|
86.54 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Aug 19 1993 13:44 | 17 |
|
re .53
>If I've confused
> you with some other man, my apologies to you both.
Naw, you got the right one. I just wasn't sure. Thanks for noticing.
> You won your battle at a high price and are
> determined that others shouldn't have to face the same. I lost mine,
> also at a high price, and have a similar determination.
And in many ways, as far as I am concerned, they are the same fight
when you consider the _real_ problem. Just being fought from a
different angle. Thanks, and good luck.
fred();
|
86.55 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Aug 19 1993 14:39 | 7 |
|
> I didn't burn the bridge, but I only cross it one MY terms.
Yea, I know, but some times the urge to saddle up the burrow and
go tilting at a few windmills just gets irresistible :^).
fred();
|
86.56 | ;') | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Thu Aug 19 1993 23:29 | 7 |
| .37> stop it, I assume nobody knows how to stop it or it wouldn't be a
Now I'm REALly confused ... I thought the way to stop it was to protest
the Super Bowl, like the group "Real Men" did. Now you're telling me
that's not the way to stop it?
Oh, I'm so confused ...
|
86.57 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Rue 'tine | Fri Aug 20 1993 08:45 | 1 |
| Zman, I know you still love me :-)
|
86.58 | Protest, Protest and Protest | KAOOA::SLADE | | Fri Aug 20 1993 12:20 | 34 |
|
The world is full of injustice. We as a collective society bear the
responsibility. We are over run by 'special interest groups'.
If an injustice is against a woman, there are womens activist
organization.
Blacks have civil rights organizations (I hope the term 'black' is
acceptable).
Gays and Lesbians have Gay and Lesbian Rights Groups
Indians (North American) have/are organized.
Pro Life, Pro Choice, pro this, anti that.
The there are the historical injustices that we are recognizing and
trying to rectify (ie: treatment of Japanese during WWII, Japanese use
of women during WWII, relocation of Eskimo bands etc.)
A while ago I was talking to a friend (French). He said that if he
told a joke about a 'stupid Englishman', he was a comedian. If I told
a joke about a 'stupid Frenchman', I was a racist.
I try to think what organizations are proactive for the white North
American Male. (God help me) all I can I can figure out is the KKK and
the Neo-nazis.
Are special interest groups running our courts, law makers, politicians
and media?
Just an old hippy at heart.
|
86.59 | | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, ISVG West, Palo Alto CA | Fri Aug 20 1993 13:44 | 34 |
| > Now I'm REALly confused ... I thought the way to stop it was to protest
> the Super Bowl, like the group "Real Men" did. Now you're telling me
> that's not the way to stop it?
>
> Oh, I'm so confused ...
Well, we knew that. But if you want to understand what 'Real Men' is
after, perhaps you'll have the guts to take on this extract from 78.59,
which both you and Fred were too timid to discuss earlier. I think Real
Men was making an effort to change the cues society offers.
< Beyond that, I want men to acknowledge and work to change those elements of
our society that contribute to our rape culture. Every instance of sexual
harassment, every incidence of lack of respect, every off-color joke which
targets women, every institution that exists to exploit women, every single
cultural practice that demeans women or provides unfair privilege to men
should be challenged; because far too many men see all of their privileges
and all of their advantages as birthrights and unconciously or even overtly
start to think that women are there to be used, theirs for the taking. I
think men need to be taught how to responsibly use their in-most-cases far
greater physical strength. Because in the worst cases, those few men who
rape are taking advantage of all of us who take our privileges as men in less
objectionable ways; they're abusing their privileges! This culture has been
built to exalt men and women who are raped or who fear rape are paying the
price. I expect men to acknowledge all of this and work to change it. Thats
what I expect men to do; even though it means giving up their easier-to-get
lines of credit, their easier-to-prove fitness for promotion, their easier-
to-earn salary increases, and all of the other subtle cultural cues that give
men an advantage over women. Those cues get taken by rotters as justification
for the abuse and rape of countless women. The cues must be changed. >
Dare ya to address the issue on these terms, Michael.
DougO
|
86.60 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Aug 20 1993 14:53 | 11 |
| re .59
There you go again Doug0. Most of the things you mention have
_nothing_ to do with rape. As far as I am concerned your entry
is little more than another chant of the "menaretoblamemenaretoblame"
litany with little substance on _how_ to _fix_ the problem.
So what is there to discuss other than anouther round of why men
are/aren't the scum of all creation?
fred();
|
86.61 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Rue 'tine | Fri Aug 20 1993 15:16 | 9 |
| DougO
without addressing it all point by point, in part I must agree
with Fred. We could do away with all that, but it won't necessarily
get rid of the crime of rape. There are men who IMO are not very
nice and are disrespectful, belittling, etc to women but that doesn't
make them rapists. So, it is a theory and it is good to get rid of
all that, but there is no concrete proof that by doing so, you are
eliminating or stopping the crime of rape.
|
86.62 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Fri Aug 20 1993 15:41 | 1 |
| Yup, he does get carried away with himself sometimes...
|
86.63 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | country state of mind | Fri Aug 20 1993 15:42 | 14 |
|
Doug,
But the inverse (women make off color jokes about men), sexually
harrass men on a regular basis these days as well. One does not
justify the other, but why aren't you crowing about these situations as
well?
Mike
P.S. Harrass me Tine....;')
|
86.64 | | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, BPDA West, Palo Alto CA | Fri Aug 20 1993 17:09 | 45 |
| re .60,
there you go again, Fred; translate everything that might be uncomfortable
to look at into 'menaretoblame' and stick your fingers in your ears.
.61> We could do away with all that, but it won't necessarily
get rid of the crime of rape.
I know it sounds utopian. One never achieves anything useful without
taking on a big goal, even if unrealistic. But you aren't really even
acknowledging what I said. 'do away with all that' you say it so blithely,
like it would be easy. The magnitude of the change implied when I say
'unfair male privileges should be challenged' would utterly transform every
person on the planet and every interaction you'd ever experience. Will we
ever get there? No. Would a substantial and partially successful effort
to get there reduce the incidence of rape? I think it's undeniable.
re .62, notice you didn't dare address it this time either, Michael.
re .63, well, MikeW, seems your P.S. answers your own question. The social
context is far different. Women's harassment of men (which I will adress
only for the sake of argument, not because its a large problem in society
today) is not seen as something that reinforces a system of female privilege
over all men. Nobody responds to it that way, even you; you make a joke
about the possibility of a woman harassing you. A woman inviting harassment
or joking about it is very rare; and for several reasons. One, its seen as
threatening; as sexual assault is so prevalent, women don't like to treat
harassment as anything other than serious; if she disrespects her harasser,
he may up the stakes and assault her; not a situation to joke about. Two,
it is systemic; it can come from any man, known to the woman or unknown to
her, any male in this society may at random single her out for harassment,
and she can do very little about it, unless its in some protected legal space,
like work. If you don't believe this 'any man' scenario, ask around among
your women friends; I bet you'll find more than 75% have been subject to
fearful verbal harssment from unknown men, at some time in their life, that
frightened them. Some men seem to think its their RIGHT to harass women.
I don't know of ANY women who act that way, and I think its because the society
cues so many privileges to men that 1) women instinctively know they don't have
those privileges and 2) some men misinterpret them and take them too far.
So I don't raise the situations you talk about because they aren't systemic
problems; they're isolated abuses that don't reinforce the social norms that
encourage assault.
DougO
|
86.65 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Aug 20 1993 18:39 | 21 |
| re .64
>there you go again, Fred; translate everything that might be uncomfortable
>to look at into 'menaretoblame' and stick your fingers in your ears.
And look who's calling the kettle black. So far all I've seen you
do is try to be divisive without actually offering any
solutions. You also seem to think that every problem in the world
can be solved by bashing men.
>I know it sounds utopian.
I think it's a little more than utopian. It's called, "barkinsg
up the wrong tree". Again you seem to try to blame every problem
on "those bad ol men".
>I think it's undeniable.
I think it's a nonsequitor.
fred();
|
86.66 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, BPDAG West, Palo Alto CA | Fri Aug 20 1993 20:04 | 11 |
|
> Again you seem to try to blame every problem on "those bad ol men"
Fred, I blamed society for providing the cues to men. We inherit the
world, we didn't form it. You haven't yet even understood the basics
of the proposal. I notice that you, and Christine, and Michael, and
MikeW, don't dare address the specifics of what I said, you just avoid
the points and complain about what you think I said. Actually reading
it and understanding it is obviously too much of a challenge.
DougO
|
86.67 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Aug 21 1993 04:47 | 17 |
| re: .64
>A woman inviting harassment
>or joking about it is very rare;
This is an interesting cultural difference. In the Valbonne notes
file a couple of European women *were* joking about sexual harassment,
and got a very upset reply from an American woman on relocation here.
Obviously you cannot invite harassment since an accepted invitation
is not harassment.
This notes file is one opportunity I get to study American culture,
since I rarely visit, and I would be interested in any explanations of
the difference. A suggestion of "American women have no sense of
humour" might be correct, but I would need a little convincing.
Dave.
|
86.68 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Rue 'tine | Sat Aug 21 1993 09:06 | 45 |
| DougO,
I'm not blithely saying anything. Perhaps you could take the
time to understand the meaning of the words written, as you so
often tell others to do with your notes. I have already said
that yes, it would be a good thing to reach for such goals. Yes,
things would be different if even a fraction of all that crap could
be reduced. My point was simply that it doesn't mean that it will
eliminate the incidence of rape. I think the possibility exists for
the incidence to perhaps be reduced, yes, but completely eliminated,
no.
So, if other men go out to convice even more men that it is not ok
to do,say,think X,Y,Z to,about,of women, we will eliminate rape is
much too simplistic. Aside from the fact that many such prejudices
cannot be changed overnight. You can preach (not you specifically,
in a generic sense) till you are blue in the face that men don't
value women, but if a particular man doesn't feel that he fits this
description (tho he may to a T), you aren't getting anywhere. It
just seems to me that you are oversimplifying the process to change.
You seem to recognize this with your comments of it being a utopian
goal. I thought I had asked you for more specific ideas on what men
can do. Yes, you can stand by and not tolerate jokes etc, about women,
and make this known to those making the comments. What have you
actually accomplished, aside from giving the joker the idea that you
are humorless? Not all female/male directed humor IMO is harmful,
sometimes it is very reflective of the point that men and women are
different and parse things in different ways. I agree that there are
many out there, women and men alike who do not value women. Perhaps
this audience isn't the one you need to change and that is why you
seem to get so much resistance to what you say here. It is almost
like preaching to the enlightened. I cannot think of one man in here
who doesn't agree with the basic premise that many men don't value
women. They mainly object to the idea that as an unknown male, they
are automatically assumed to be in the 'bad' group and thusly, resist
such lableling.
Though you many consider the issue of woman to man harrassment a
minor nit or abberation, there are others who are concerned with it.
As far as Mike Wannemacher's PS to me, he and I are very familiar
with each other from another conference and in terms of your using
that to extrapolate some of your reasons for not giving the same level of
attention to the aforementioned problem, it really is irrelevant.
PS-Mike W. any time darlin' :-)
|
86.69 | hahahah ... topic # purely a coincidence | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Sun Aug 22 1993 20:41 | 6 |
| .57> Zman, I know you still love me :-)
Those legs, those short skirts ... wow! And, being 5'9", when you wear
those "I'm the boss" heels, my head comes up to heaven when we grind.
Ahem ... I need a cold shower ...
|
86.70 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Rue 'tine | Mon Aug 23 1993 09:28 | 1 |
| but I am the boss, luv :-) 'member that :-)
|
86.71 | ex | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 23 1993 09:33 | 30 |
| re Doug0
We have a saying here at the Customer Support Center, "The only
thing worse than a good solution to the wrong problem is a bad
solution to the wrong problem". I believe your (as you yourself
put it) utopian ideals are a bad solution to the wrong problem
because they 1)Ignore the real problem 2)take energy away from
solving the real problem and 3)alienate the very people whose
support you need to help solve the real problem.
IMHO, a good sized chunk of the real problem is:
1) the "nobody has a right to tell me what to do" attitude. I see
this more and more in children. Especially teenagers. Even more
now than in years past. If you don't believe me just ask any teacher.
There is not only more disrespect for women, there is more disrespect
for _anybody_.
2) The breakup of the family. I'm seeing more and more recognition
of the lack of a father in the family as a primary cause of
juvenile problems. As was pointed out before over 80% of those
in prison come from single parent families.
3) The "liberalization" of the legal system that puts so many
_real_ criminals back out on the street. I do not view the problems
with the judicial system a "male" problem per se. Although many
"feminist" groups like to use the fact that the Supreme Court and
most judges are male as a club to bash men with, most men have
no real influence of that situation. Changing this will likely
require appointing more "conservative" Supreme Court, and the
building of more prisons.
fred();
|
86.72 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | country state of mind | Mon Aug 23 1993 10:08 | 16 |
|
Doug,
So it is commonplace for women to be harrassed to the extent of felling
threatened, eh?
I know that most people have been in situations where they feel
threatened. I agree that it is definitely different for women than
men. What we have to look at is: 1) What percentage of men are doing the
threatening? and 2) Is it significant enough to assume that all men are
guilty until proven innocent? IMO, the percentage is very small and it
is not enough to assume the men are guilty until proven innocent.
Mike
|
86.73 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Mon Aug 23 1993 11:07 | 4 |
| re .64, thank you, doug. Good reply.
Lorna
|
86.74 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Aug 23 1993 11:11 | 24 |
| re: .71
> 1) the "nobody has a right to tell me what to do" attitude. I see
> this more and more in children. Especially teenagers. Even more
> now than in years past. If you don't believe me just ask any teacher.
> There is not only more disrespect for women, there is more disrespect
> for _anybody_.
Funny you should mention this. I have been reading the
autobiography of a teacher. He got a transfer from Rome to Milan for
this very reason - disrespect of teenagers for their teachers, and he
was male. However, he admits that when he was a kid he cheated in
school, and once went out at night with a street gang to steal pears
from a neighbour. There is an acute analysis of the peer pressure that
led him to do this.
The curious thing is that he was writing this about 1600 years ago.
You might know him by the name of St. Augustine.
I have just got to the point where for political reasons he has
been forced into an engagement with a ten year old girl. He can't
legally marry her until she is twelve, but he has been forced to get
rid of the woman he has had as a concubine for the last fifteen years,
and who has borne his son. He might have something interesting to say
on breakup of the family.
|
86.75 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Mon Aug 23 1993 11:27 | 3 |
| re .74, the concubine might have had something interesting to say about
the break-up of the family, too.
|
86.76 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Aug 23 1993 11:29 | 50 |
| >context is far different. Women's harassment of men (which I will adress
>only for the sake of argument, not because its a large problem in society
>today) is not seen as something that reinforces a system of female privilege
>over all men.
Wrong!!! Aren't there people in this conference saying it IS a large problem
for them??? Women routinely get away with saying/doing things that would have
men up on harassement charges. Look around and listen. When called out on it,
women will most often say "but I was only joking". Of course, men have that
'special privilege' of getting called out for harrassment if men do it.
>about the possibility of a woman harassing you. A woman inviting harassment
>or joking about it is very rare; and for several reasons.
Oh, they will not joke when the harassment is of women. However, I have
heard a number of women joke about harassment when they (women) are not on the
receiving end. You can too, if you were to actually try to listen.
>he may up the stakes and assault her; not a situation to joke about. Two,
>it is systemic; it can come from any man, known to the woman or unknown to
>her, any male in this society may at random single her out for harassment,
>and she can do very little about it, unless its in some protected legal space,
>like work.
It can, and does, also come from women as well... with both men AND women as the
targets. Or had not you noticed? No, I don't you think you have bothered.
It would appear only ONE sex can have the bad traits listed, right?
>I don't know of ANY women who act that way,
What way?
Women commit crimes. Wouldn't you agree?
Women have been convicted of rape. Wouldn't you agree?
Women have committed murder (or both sexes). Wouldn't you agree?
Women have abused both children, women, men. Wouldn't you agree?
Women have harrassed women AND men. Wouldn't you agree?
>cues so many privileges to men that 1) women instinctively know they don't have
>those privileges
Yeh, right..... What tract did you get that gem out of?
>So I don't raise the situations you talk about because they aren't systemic
>problems; they're isolated abuses that don't reinforce the social norms that
>encourage assault.
The problem are not 'systemic' because they get sloughed off everytime they
are mentioned. If you were to actually follow some of the actions of women,
you would find that it is lot more 'systemic' than you (apparently) think.
|
86.77 | Those who do not learn form history.... | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 23 1993 12:47 | 25 |
|
re .71
> The curious thing is that he was writing this about 1600 years ago.
This time period falls in what is commonly known as the Dark Ages.
Curious that you would make the comparison of society of today
and then.
Not to be a "Bible Thumper" but you might find the book of Judges
interesting comparison (about 2000 B.C). The "nobody has a
right to tell me what to do" is not new. It has just had more
power in different times (usually with devastating results to
society).
> You might know him by the name of St. Augustine.
You'll find that many of the "saints" were quite the scoundrel before
their conversion. St. Fransis(sp) for instance was the son of an
aristocrat and not a real nice person before his conversion. St Paul
(aka Saul of Tarsus) was commonly known for persecuting (a general
term for a lot of things not very nice) Christians had a hard time
gaining the acceptance of many of his fellow Christians after his
conversion because of that.
fred();
|
86.78 | | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, BPDA West, Palo Alto CA | Mon Aug 23 1993 21:18 | 51 |
| > I'm not blithely saying anything....
>
> So, if other men go out to convice even more men that it is not ok
> to do,say,think X,Y,Z to,about,of women, we will eliminate rape is
> much too simplistic. Aside from the fact that many such prejudices
> cannot be changed overnight.
That, as a summary of my position, is yes, too blithe. Too easy. That's
exactly the sort of shorthand dismissal for which you are chided. Sorry.
The point is that yes, I'm fully aware that those prejudices will not be
changed easily. I'm fully aware that I'm calling for a revolution from
within, in the attitudes of the entire society, that will make the granting
of civil rights to blacks look like a cakewalk. And for you to toss it off
as if I had said "if other men go out to convice even more men that it is not
ok to do,say,think X,Y,Z to,about,of women, we will eliminate rape" merely
proves that you didn't understand what I said.
>I thought I had asked you for more specific ideas on what men can do.
Well, I'm calling for revolution; there's no other way to characterize the
complete change in order I'm describing. On my own I have done a lot of
reading on what sorts of forces push societies to make drastic changes, in
forms of political life, in forms of enfranchising their citizens, in forms
of property rights or other civil life, free speech, the whole gamut of the
ways and forms whereby the people in a society interact with one another.
These sorts of forces arise by historical circumstance; a famine here, an
unmet set of expectations there, a war here, a sudden awareness of injustice
there. The forces act on a society; and the society either accomodates the
forces peacefully; or unpeacefully; either through a modest or a major
change in the social order, or through a complete cataclysmic revolution
which tears apart the old order and from which the survivirs struggle to
rebuild a new order. It takes a major force; and it requires a major change.
That's the basis for change in a society, any society; it can take decades,
it can happen slowly, but the force is huge and the society changes.
It is my earnest and considered opinion that NOTHING WE CAN DO will reduce
the incidence of rape in this society until we have completely turned over
the relationships/privileges/social order/hierarchy that now exists. You
want more specifics? Try envisioning what I'm asking for, there are literally
hundreds of 'specifics'. Nothing less will accomplish that end. I have
evaluated this society, I have found in it hundreds of ways that the existing
order accomodates rape, permits it to occur, prevents the punishment of
offenders, permits the development of cultural icons of violence and disrespect
towards women, all of which make rape an inevitable end result. I want a major
change here; nothing less will do. You want specifics that men like Fred can
'do' to reduce the incidences? Sorry; that's a bandaid approach, in my honest
opinion, and worse than useless; it distracts people from the magnitude of the
changes that will be required. Bleak, huh? Sorry; that's the way I see it.
DougO
|
86.79 | | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, BPDA West, Palo Alto CA | Mon Aug 23 1993 21:42 | 68 |
| > We have a saying here at the Customer Support Center, "The only
> thing worse than a good solution to the wrong problem is a bad
> solution to the wrong problem". I believe your (as you yourself
> put it) utopian ideals are a bad solution to the wrong problem
> because they 1)Ignore the real problem 2)take energy away from
> solving the real problem and 3)alienate the very people whose
> support you need to help solve the real problem.
Fred, I fully agree; trying to solve the wrong problem is useless. The
trouble you and I seem to be having is a completely different analysis
of the 'real problem'. The endemic rape rate we see in the US is to me
a symptom of the problem that women are simply not sufficiently valued
as human beings by this culture that raises men to glorify violence,
machismo, 'taking it like a man', 'be a man', etc, etc. Too many men hear
that message as an excuse to beat up on women, because they can't get away
with beating up on other men. If trying to solve that problem is utopian
then so be it; if you're willing to accept the status quo what does that
make you? I simply don't believe that small changes will fix the huge
problems; what we have is a significant breakdown in societal relations.
The areas you bring up are symptoms, and I partially agree with you that
they are 'wrong' and need to be 'fixed'; I just see them as symptoms of
the larger problem, is all.
> IMHO, a good sized chunk of the real problem is:
> 1) the "nobody has a right to tell me what to do" attitude.
Another symptom, I agree.
> 2) The breakup of the family.
By itself, this doesn't bother me, as long as kids are raised properly and
conscientiously. If people divorcing can't keep their priorities high enough
for their kids, I doubt they were paying enough attention to the kids in the
first place. So, this is a symptom of the fact that most people don't know how
to raise kids properly, in this extremely complex world we now live in. Hell,
they don't even know how to keep their marriages together, how can they possibly
know how to raise kids properly???
[*disclaimer: I don't pretend I'd know how to keep a marriage together either.
I've seen enough heartache from the situation that I've evaluated my life and
upbringing as ill-suited for marriage; I'm choosing to stay single. My take
on this in the general case is that while our society raises people to *want*
to be married, it doesn't prepare them for the commitments and rigors of that
state, and very few people go into it prepared for it. I know it sounds like
I think anybody who's divorced doesn't have their head on straight; this is an
unfortunate appearance, because I don't really think that. What I really think
is that too many people get married, and have kids, without being ready for it.
Divorce is just another symptom of the mistakes that happen in that situation.
I apologize if my words about raising kids 'properly' are unfair; 'properly'
should be understood to mean "as I would raise them, perfectly of course." *]
Anyway, Fred, what I mean is that as long as kids are being raised right,
the breakup of the family is another argument for my side; the society is
obviously not preparing people for the commitment of marriage. I want all
the taken-for-granted ways that men and women interact to be re-examined
from the light of treating everybody fairly and with respect; and I think
marriage looks a lot different in that light than what it has become in our
society today.
> 3) The "liberalization" of the legal system that puts so many
> _real_ criminals back out on the street.
No disagreement; I'm a believer in the death penalty for the worst crimes,
and harsh sentences for all violent criminals, like Mike Tyson. I feel that
keeping proven violent criminals off the streets would prevent the repeat
crimes that they keep commiting.
DougO
|
86.80 | | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, BPDA West, Palo Alto CA | Mon Aug 23 1993 21:51 | 38 |
| > So it is commonplace for women to be harrassed to the extent of felling
> threatened, eh?
That isn't what I said. I said ask all the women you know if it's
ever happened to them. I predicted at least 75% would say yes.
> I know that most people have been in situations where they feel
> threatened. I agree that it is definitely different for women than
> men.
Thanks- that difference is what I'm talking about.
> What we have to look at is: 1) What percentage of men are doing the
> threatening? and 2) Is it significant enough to assume that all men are
> guilty until proven innocent? IMO, the percentage is very small and it
> is not enough to assume the men are guilty until proven innocent.
I don't get it. If it has happened to 75 of every 100 women you know (and
in my life, the figures are higher than that; approaching 100 of 100) why
do you think its only a very small percentage of men? How small is small?
If its enough men to affect every woman I know then its a systemic problem.
And I have NEVER argued that men are to be presumed guilty until proven
innocent. Shall we go back to what I said on that very point, since you
obviously missed it?
> because far too many men see all of their privileges and all of their
> advantages as birthrights and unconciously or even overtly start to think
> that women are there to be used,...in the worst cases, those few men who
^^^
> rape are taking advantage of all of us who take our privileges as men in less
> objectionable ways;
I'm not saying all men, or even most men. I'm saying the privileges of all
men cue the crumbs into realizing that they can get away with abhorrent acts,
thinking they can get away with it as a male privilege. The only way to change
that is to finally throw down the systems of unfair male prvilege.
DougO
|
86.81 | | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, BPDA West, Palo Alto CA | Mon Aug 23 1993 22:09 | 60 |
| >> context is far different. Women's harassment of men (which I will adress
>> only for the sake of argument, not because its a large problem in society
>> today) is not seen as something that reinforces a system of female privilege
>> over all men.
>
> Wrong!!! Aren't there people in this conference saying it IS a large problem
> for them???
There are? Pointers, please. Even a few would do.
> Women routinely get away with saying/doing things that would have men up on
> harassement charges.
Ah, thank you for proving my point about the context being different, though
I'd quibble with 'routinely'. It is my belief that women are not usually
even seen as capable of sexual harassment, and thus most men are unwilling to
file complaints, or to recognize it as harassment. Most men don't see a
woman as even powerful enough to inflict fear of unwanted acts, or public
humiliation upon them; the inbuilt traditions don't give women that power.
Even note 83 admitted that "it wasn't an altogether unpleasant experience"
of an obscene female caller.
>> I don't know of ANY women who act that way,
>
> What way?
>
Well, it was in context. Here's the whole idea; you seem to have mislaid
the first part:
>> Some men seem to think its their RIGHT to harass women. I don't know of
>> ANY women who act that way,
Clearer now?
>> So I don't raise the situations you talk about because they aren't systemic
>> problems; they're isolated abuses that don't reinforce the social norms that
>> encourage assault.
>
> The problem are not 'systemic' because they get sloughed off everytime they
> are mentioned. If you were to actually follow some of the actions of women,
> you would find that it is lot more 'systemic' than you (apparently) think.
Well you assert "routinely", you assert that the conference is loaded with
examples, you assert the incidents are ignored. I assert that people can
ask women they know and find the truth of their own experiences. I invite
you to post pointers to such problems here; and I further invite you to
consider that if some complaints about female harassers are ignored it merely
goes to prove my point that the social context is completely different. Most
aren't worried about such acts from women because they traditionally don't have
the power to abuse, as do men. If that needs fixing I submit it is in the
social context that fixing must happen; ie, women must be recognized as just
as potentially powerful and deserving of respects and power as are men; then
they'll get the jobs and power; and, they'll inherit the downside, the
perception that they might abuse power, too. Tough trade to make, eh? As
a male you're wary of equality, maybe?
Most women I know would make that trade in a heartbeat.
DougO
|
86.82 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Aug 24 1993 04:26 | 16 |
| re: .77
Augustine was not living in the "Dark Ages". The mortar had hardly
dried from the founding of Constantinople. The Visigoth invasions had
not happened, and as a recognised teacher within the Roman empire he
could freely move from Carthage to Rome to Milan.
I agree that most saints have a rather dubious background. You
might have better quoted Mary Magdelene than Francis. As far in his
book as I have got (teaching in Milan) he was still not a baptised
Christian. It seems his mother was a reformed alcoholic.
re: .75 (Lorna)
Unfortunately we don't have the opinion of his concubine. He was
obviously very upset at the forced break up. He would never have been
allowed to marry her since she was a slave.
|
86.83 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Aug 24 1993 09:09 | 13 |
| RE .79
>Fred, I fully agree; trying to solve the wrong problem is useless. The
>trouble you and I seem to be having is a completely different analysis
>of the 'real problem'. The endemic rape rate we see in the US is to me
>a symptom of the problem that women are simply not sufficiently valued
>as human beings by this culture that raises men to glorify violence,
By your definition, women were "valued" even less in the past. As
the "value" of women increased, so does the incidence of rape and
violence. It is a nonsequitor.
fred();
|
86.84 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Aug 24 1993 09:12 | 10 |
| re .82
> Augustine was not living in the "Dark Ages". The mortar had hardly
> dried from the founding of Constantinople. The Visigoth invasions had
> not happened, and as a recognised teacher within the Roman empire he
> could freely move from Carthage to Rome to Milan.
And where did the Roman Empire go from there?
fred();
|
86.85 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Rue 'tine | Tue Aug 24 1993 10:00 | 8 |
| DougO
You really shouldn't chide those who agree that your premise
is valid. I never disagreed that all you are calling for is
good, nor did I dismiss any of what you said. All I said was
that it is simplistic, that you are oversimplifying the solution
to the problem and ignoring the other side of the coin stuff.
I'll just have to agree to disagree.
|
86.86 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Aug 24 1993 12:47 | 27 |
| re: .84
>> Augustine was not living in the "Dark Ages". The mortar had hardly
>> dried from the founding of Constantinople. The Visigoth invasions had
>> not happened, and as a recognised teacher within the Roman empire he
>> could freely move from Carthage to Rome to Milan.
>
> And where did the Roman Empire go from there?
>
> fred();
The Roman empire was later overwhelmed by a series of invasions
by races with no literature or culture, and again by Muslim invasions a
couple of hundred years after Augustine died. This is what lead to a
fairly general loss of knowlege or even of the pursuit of it in Europe,
that is referred to as the "Dark Ages". In the days of Augustine
learning of all types was cultivated across most of Europe, North
Africa and the Middle East - in fact the Roman Empire. The dark ages
started a couple of hundred years after his death, so I don't think he
can be held responsible. Fortunately the Muslims preserved and
developed most of the knowlege they found during their conquests, so
it was possible to recover it in Europe hundreds of years later.
Was your question serious? I expect the U.S. empire will be gone in
a couple of hundred years, but that doesn't prove that *this* is a
return of the dark ages. If you really want to know what happened to
the Roman empire after about 450 a.d. I can provide good references.
|
86.87 | | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, BPDA West, Palo Alto CA | Tue Aug 24 1993 12:56 | 16 |
| And all I said, Christine, is that calling for a revolution in
attitudes and relations between the sexes can hardly be called
'simplistic' as you insist upon doing. I'll continue to chide
you for misunderstanding what I said as long as you keep calling
it that. We really aren't that far apart in our analysis of the
extent, the hugeness of the problem. I can't seem to get you to
agree that the solution must necessarily be 'huge' too. Why not?
What do *you* think it will take to resolve this huge problem?
Do you really think that little things like keeping violent
criminals in jail and preventing family breakups, as one might
infer from Fred's note, will address the systemic problems? To
me, those things do nothing to really address the causes that
drive rapists, that permit them to so callously disregard the
humanness of the people they injure.
DougO
|
86.88 | Values? | SALEM::GILMAN | | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:12 | 28 |
| I agree with the noter (I think it was DougO) who maintains that
the issues involved in 'stopping' rape are so complex that even a
partial fix will require major social changes. The conditions which
help create rapists are ingrained in American Society, ranging from
disrespect of individuals to violence on TV, to boys being raised without
fathers on the scene. I have observed that since the 1950's respect
for life in the U.S. has declined. A reduction in respect for life
easily extends to disrespect for the rights of individuals.
Many of the 'basics' seem to have been cast aside: What ever happened
to personal accountability, honesty, respect for others, respect for
oneself, the customer comes first, return the lost wallet you found,
etc. etc.?????
Too many today seem to worship: Self, having fun, take what you can
get, profit at the expense of the customer, violence, money, and
ducking responsibility.
And we 'wonder why' rape is so commonplace. It fits right in with the
values in the paragraph above.
Until we see a general social change back to the values in the
paragraph before that I think we can plan on witnessing alot more
lawlessness and violence.
Hold on to your hat.
Jeff
|
86.89 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:51 | 16 |
| From reading this string, it seems that there are rapist on every
street corner, under every bed, and behind the wheel of every car. And
all of these evil folks are male.
The social changes that would help domestic violence against women, if
some one was to carefully observe would be that of divorce. There have
been a recient string of homicides in souther New Hampshire, where an
man walks into the soon_to_be_ex's abode, formally his own. And blows
them to the netherland. Then takes the gun to himself. Funny, that
revolution is even mentioned in this string, for IF you want reform
from these heinous crimes, making our outdated judicial system fair
Just might make reduce many of these types of crimes.
Making false accusations, false arrest punishable would also make
life alittle more fair. And probably reduce crime. Something to
think of.
|
86.90 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:52 | 2 |
| Not one, two. Remember ... every man is a potential rapist.
|
86.91 | Don't miss the point | SALEM::GILMAN | | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:58 | 13 |
| I for one never ment to imply that every (or anything close to every)
man is a rapist or even a potential rapist. Hell, 'everyone is a
potential murderer too' right? We do 'have' to agree though that
violent crime when adjusted for population growth has increased
dramatically, right???? That is, the number of violent crimes per
100,000 is how I believe its measured.
When talking about the RELATIVE increase, then I believe my comments
in my reply a couple of entries back makes sense.
Please, don't twist my comments and miss the point.
Jeff
|
86.92 | Potential Anarchist | KAOOA::SLADE | | Tue Aug 24 1993 15:53 | 23 |
| What is relative in a historical sense?
Everyone and their dog is coming out with accusations regarding crimes
that happened decades ago!
We have also made more 'crimes' to make sure our quota of crimminals
especially in the area of minorities grows.
What is a crime? When one looks at history, commonplace activity does
not fit with the current outspoken moral minority. From a historical
perspective we are rapidly returning to a violent society where human
values and life are irrelevant.
Is it a good war we need to get rid of this aggression and reduce the
male population. This is the longest period in history without a major
conflict.
The increase in violence among our children is mind-boggling. What
lies ahead as adults.
Bill
|
86.93 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Aug 24 1993 16:40 | 59 |
| I think the point is that while not every man is a potential rapist, there's
no way for a woman to know in advance which men are "ok" and which are not.
Given that risk of sexual assault is high enough that it can't be ignored,
many women take the obvious approach of assuming that all men are potential
rapists unless proven otherwise (and even then, they can't be sure.) Can't
say I blame them - just read the newspaper.
I get a taste of the same feel when I walk in what I consider to be a "bad"
part of a large city. I feel I've got a target painted on my back and that
around any corner might be someone who wants to mug me. Intellectually, I
know that most of the people I see are NOT potential muggers, but how do I
convince the emotional side of me about that? I can't pretend that NONE of
the people I see are muggers, as I know that the risk is significant. The
difference is, though, that I don't spend my whole life walking these
streets, so I feel safe from attack most of the time. Women, on the other
hand, don't have any place they can really feel safe. An attack can come
from anyone, from anywhere. The attack need not be physical in nature -
it can be a lewd comment from a co-worker, for instance. Nowhere is safe.
Yesterday on the radio I heard a comment from a black resident of Detroit who
sounded insulted that there had been expectations that blacks there would
riot if the policemen accused of assaulting and killing Malice Green had been
acquitted, even though that's just the sort of thing that happened in
Los Angeles. Why shouldn't people assume (and prepare for) the worst?
My wife told me a story a while back which I think is relevant here. A
lecturer is giving a talk to a mixed-gender audience. She (or he, it doesn't
matter) goes up to the blackboard and draws a vertical line dividing the
board into two sections. Standing in front of one section, she asks the
men in the audience "What have you done recently to protect yourself from
the possibility of sexual assult?" Prepared to write down what the men
offer, the board remains empty as the men in the audience just look puzzled.
She then asks the same question of the women in the audience, and the board
quickly fills up with a long list. The idea is that men just don't understand
what it's like to always be aware that sexual assault could come from
anywhere at any time.
It doesn't matter that I'm not a rapist, nor Fred, nor Doug, nor Jeff, nor
perhaps anyone who is participating in this discussion. The truth is that
there are enough men out there who DO think it's their right to abuse,
intimidate and assault women to make this a serious problem for all of us.
Unfortunately, as Doug admits, it is such a large and pandemic problem that
it defies any sort of easy or even describable solution. We haven't overcome
racism, though we've made some advances there. The oppression of women goes
back many thousands of years - it's something many of us don't even realize
conciously.
What can *WE* do about it? Well, we can first look at our own actions, and
make sure that we don't harrass or assault women, even to the extent of
"protecting" them from full and equal participation in life. We can teach
our children that everyone, male, female, black, white, whatever, deserves
equal respect as a human being. We can speak out when we see sexism in
action, whether it be at home, in the workplace, in advertisements, or anywhere
else. We can object when a victim of sexual assault is accused of "asking
for it". We can stop closing our eyes to the physical and emotional violence
which surrounds us. Maybe, just maybe, if enough of us do this, things will
change for the better.
Steve
|
86.94 | nonsequitor only if you ignore history | FMNIST::dougo | Doug Olson, BPDAG West, Palo Alto CA | Tue Aug 24 1993 17:37 | 39 |
| whoops, missed this.
> By your definition, women were "valued" even less in the past. As
> the "value" of women increased, so does the incidence of rape and
> violence. It is a nonsequitor.
The crime of rape was not originally seen as a crime against the woman.
It was seen as an offense against the property of the man to whose house
that woman belonged. You can see this in the judicial penalties cited
in Jewish law and Roman law, wherein a man who's daughter was raped was
to be compensated for her lost bride price, as the now non-virgin goods
were presumed to be damaged. Rape has existed for centuries, as documented
in nearly all historical records and even in myths and religion. It just
isn't something you're aware of. Yes, women were valued far less in the past
than now; now, they're recognized as human in most circumstances, and the
crime of rape is recognized as an offense against THEM, not their owner.
Yet the criminal justice system still treats rape as a far lesser offense
than robbery, and as I've demonstrated before (78.41, for one recent place)
puts away very few rapists. Furthermore, after centuries of treating women
as property, the social conventions that have evolved do not really grant
women full privileges in most social interactions. In any sphere, from the
simple everyday world of talking (men interrupt more) to civics (women got
the vote in this country only 70-odd years ago) to property rights (most
banks have only begun loaning money to women in the past decade w/o need
of a male co-signer) to corporate governance (how many women CEOs are there?)
and in any other area you can name, men have more privilege. Everywhere.
And some of them use that undeniable fact to justify to themselves the
right to rape. They still see women as chattel. These sickos seem to
be more numerous now, probably in response to the increased strains of
living in this ever-more-violent-and-rapidly-changing society; times of
high social stress always see increases in crime (London in Dicken's time
was hardly the place to wander without a handy walking stick/cudgel.)
So, in short; yes, women are valued more now, as people instead of as
property. And we are more aware now of violent crimes against any people
than we (as a culture) were aware of crimes against property in the past.
DougO
|
86.95 | good note | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Aug 24 1993 17:39 | 4 |
| re .93, excellent note, Steve.
Lorna
|
86.96 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Aug 24 1993 18:10 | 11 |
|
re Steve,
This is not what bothers me. I agree with probably 99% of what you
say. However, what bothers me is the attempted implication that
_all_ men are to blame from rape unless they join the chant "men
are bad, men are bad, men are bad", and the attitude that crimes
against men should be ignored in order to make it easier for rape
victims. Talk about creating second-class citizens.
fred();
|
86.97 | Something got lost along the way | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Aug 24 1993 18:40 | 30 |
| re doug0
Lets examine more recent history. Say in the last century. Until the
last couple decades chivalry was alive and well. Yes women were
at a disadvantage (or as you put it, not valued) in the work force.
However, the attitude towards women by men were much different. I
can remember as far back as the 50's when men _would_ protect women.
I've seen men lay their life on the line to protect a women that
they didn't even know. I've seen men called down for so much as
using "foul language" in the presence of a "lady". You didn't
expect to even so much as kiss on the first date, let alone
"make love".
Now that women are "valued" I do notice a significant change. Not
necesssarily for the better. Brought on as much by the women as by
men. Note discussions in this very file as to whether or not to even
open a door for a woman. Women themselves are brandishing the "f"
word in movies as "art", I know women that could out cuss a sailor.
Walk a woman home or to her car to make sure she is safe? Are you
kidding? You may well be in more danger of her screaming rape on you
than you are of having to protect her, if she don't spit in your face
first for daring to be such a "sexist". Female hitch-hikers? No way!
If she starts ripping at her own clothes and screaming, you are
looking at a vacation in the Greybar Hotel. If you "make a pass" and
she wants you to, that's great, but if you "make a pass" and she
don't want you to, then you're a "rapist" (never mind what you're
intentions are in either case).
Ah, progress, ain't it great!
fred();
|
86.98 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Aug 24 1993 21:37 | 37 |
| Re: .96
Fred, I don't see what you're seeing, especially the part about
"crimes against men should be ignored". I haven't seen this
rationally proposed by anyone. What I do see is an observation that
crimes against women by men are far and away more prevalent than
crimes against men by women. I do see what I consider a somewhat
disturbing "lynch mob" mentality (some of which I see in Doug's
writing, which is what I think sets you (and me) off) that appears
to take a "the ends justify the means" approach to prosecuting
crimes against women. Unfortunately, when your target is
a significant portion of men, not all men but also not identifiable
individuals, it's easy to fall into the trap of shotgun approaches.
It's sort of a "shoot 'em all and let God sort 'em out" attack that
stems from frustration at NOT being able to target those who are
causing the most grief (at least not until AFTER they have raped
or killed.)
I do agree with Doug that all men have benefited from their privileged
position of dominance over women - individually, you can argue with
this, but collectively, I think not. So in that sense, "all men are
to blame", yes, but it's the same sort of collective blame that
whites get stuck with when dealing with racism against blacks.
It's hard to take that BIG step which allows you to understand that
the anger directed "at men" isn't aimed at you in particular but
rather at the (large) subset of men who DO consider women "property",
who DO take out their anger against women. It took me several years
to finally figure that out, and I still have problems with it.
I may not be as flashy a feminist as Doug, but I get there in my own
way. But I consider myself more a "humanist", and do what I can to
promote egalitarianism and mutual respect for all. That in large part
is why I've worked so hard to keep this notesfile going over the
years.
Steve
|
86.99 | | GYMAC::PNEAL | Putting People First...please ! | Wed Aug 25 1993 07:38 | 10 |
| Re.97
It's my opinion that, unfortuneately, feminism for many people
has meant 'to be like men' and that this has produced the kind
of attitudes you're talking about. Men swear, men are agressive,
men pay the check, men don't hold the door for each other and so
on has been the role model for many women. Women (not all but some)
have lost their femininity in the name of feminism.
- Paul.
|
86.100 | Can I butt in here - please ? | GYMAC::PNEAL | Putting People First...please ! | Wed Aug 25 1993 08:04 | 20 |
|
Myriam Miedzian in her book 'Boys will be Boys' is very articulate
about the causes and possible solutions for what she terms the
male mystique. I haven't agreed with all she's written but she
provides arguments supported by facts and examples which are evidence
that she's researched her subject well. It's worth reading.
What I did find interesting, and Bly in Iron John says basically the
same, is that, to quote Miedzian, "nurturant paternal involvement in
child-rearing would play an important role in reducing male violence"
and that "for the sons of nurturant fathers, achieving a masculine
identity is easier, not harder".
I find those comments interesting because in society today (the UK and
the US) we have more single parent families, because of the role that
gangs are said to play in the initiation to manhood and because of the
increase in violent crime.
- Paul.
|
86.101 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Aug 25 1993 09:40 | 14 |
| Steve L., I like what you wrote. But guys and gals, we are drifting
from the main point. The point of the basic .0 is a guy got Falsely
Arrested. And the bottom line is that he will hopefully press charges
against the woman for it. For just as there are muggers, rapist, and
other such rasputians. There are women who use the judicial system to
play out their hand against some guy who did not deserve to be arrested.
Hence... You play with fire, you will get burnt.
Dont believe me? Ask the guy who has not seen his daughter for over
three years now. Pays child support, and has had his truck set on fire,
his mail tampered with, and receives daily, horrassing phone calls from
his ex wife and her tribe of low lifes.
|
86.102 | Back on Track 9 | KAOOA::SLADE | | Wed Aug 25 1993 10:19 | 22 |
| re:101
The guy was not only falsely accused but the very institutions that are
there to uphold the law and protect the innocent while punishing the
guilty were more afraid of upsetting a minority activist group rather
than respecting the rights of an individual and listening to common
sense just because he is a male accused of a crime against a female.
Was not accused of raping her, "strangled" her with a telephone cord,
not that is an acceptable crime.
This note has brought out similiar circumstances that male abuse occurs
but is not as visable as female related crimes.
The police pressed charges against the woman. He is launching a civil
suit.
Think about what a false accusation could do to your life either or a
sexual or a molesting nature.
Bill
|
86.103 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Aug 25 1993 10:32 | 1 |
| He did not rape her. But He did strangle her with a telephone cord?
|
86.104 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Aug 25 1993 10:37 | 8 |
| Re: .99
I agree that the definition of feminism you put forth is held by many who
don't really understand the concept, but I think this is a mistaken notion
based on fear and ignorance. (Indeed, if "feminism" means "be like men",
what does that make a male feminist?)
Steve
|
86.105 | to further rat-hole this discussion | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Aug 25 1993 11:00 | 9 |
|
re .99
To many, the definition of feminism is to 1) take away the advantages
of men, 2) retain the advantages of being a a women, 3) fip-flop back
and forth between the two depending on which is most advantageous
at the time. It's no wonder men are confused.
fred();
|
86.106 | Accused is not auto-gulity | KAOOA::SLADE | | Wed Aug 25 1993 11:01 | 8 |
| re: 103
She accused him of strangling her with a telephone cord. She just
forgot to check where he was at the time.
re:104
"be like woman"?
|
86.107 | Not sure | GYMAC::PNEAL | Putting People First...please ! | Wed Aug 25 1993 11:58 | 5 |
| Re.104
Why the distinction between male or female in using the term
feminist ? Surely you advocate or pursue the rights of woman
or you do not; irrespective of your own gender.
|
86.108 | Crimes | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Aug 25 1993 16:30 | 23 |
| Good entry in .93 Steve, I too agree with about 98 percent of it.
Whether we like it or not guys most violent crimes are committed by
males. Collectively we must take the implied rap for it. If we don't
like it, then, collectively males must change that image by NOT doing
the things that create the image.
Women have gained alot of freedom since the 1950's when I grew up. But
its been at a cost of course. Which system was better (I am asking the
women), one where the guys protected the women more and thus supposedly
reduced the incidence of violent crime against you, or the liberated
conditions whereby you are increasingly on your own?
In the news... Michael Jackson accused of molesting a boy. I hope its
not true. But celebreties are vulnerable to charges like that as men
are giving hitchhikers a ride.
The defenses against being falsly accused (not putting yourself
in a situation where you COULD have committed the crime) and taking a
vigalent stance when walking in mall parking lots create their own host
of problems.
Jeff
|
86.109 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | country state of mind | Wed Aug 25 1993 16:54 | 19 |
|
Steve,
What you write makes sense (.93)
I have been trying to educate my wife on the idea of killing someone
(in self defense). She would rather be raped, abused, etc rather than
kill. This is interesting because I got into the same discussion with
a friend of mine here at work. She said that getting raped was not the
big concern, the safety of her child was. This makes a great deal of
sense until I brought into the picture that after raping you, what if
he wanted to rape your kid. She now knows how to use a gun. You have
to play out the scenario to it's worst conclusion.
Mike
|
86.110 | | WOODRO::JOHNSTON | beannachd | Wed Aug 25 1993 16:56 | 31 |
| re. Jeff
As you said you are asking women here.
Given the number of women of my mother's generation that found
themselves discarded ... this during the time when "men took care of
women more" ... I wouldn't want to go back to those times for
_any_thing. The implicit contract was only as good as those who entered
into it. [such is the case always]
My study of western cultures goes back many centuries and the care that
women could rely upon was only as far as their protectors' _chose_ to
give.
Even if all parties were honourable, even the best care in the world
would not motivate me to choose a relationship where my days and nights
and sustenance were at the whim of any person [male or female].
I did not enjoy childhood and worked my passage _HARD_ so that I would
not be answerable to mother or father at the earliest possible
opportunity. Given my intense aversion for captivity, no matter how
benign or pleasant its form might take, I would not willingly enter
into such a relationship.
I rather die. I'm completely serious.
I am a person, not chattel or an appendage or an accoutrement.
Annie
|
86.111 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | country state of mind | Wed Aug 25 1993 17:01 | 12 |
|
Well like it or not Annie, you were very dependant on mom and dad, as
was I.
I like being dependant upon my family as well as them being dependant
upon me. It makes me/us whole.
Mike
|
86.112 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Aug 25 1993 18:48 | 25 |
| re .108
> In the news... Michael Jackson accused of molesting a boy. I hope its
> not true. But celebrities are vulnerable to charges like that as men
> are giving hitchhikers a ride.
I heard this. Michael is claiming that someone was trying to
blackmail him for $3M. If he didn't pay up, they would turn
in a complaint (I wonder how many celeb's have just paid up
quietly). He didn't pay, and they entered an anonymous call
to some hotline. Sad part is, even if he is innocent, it's
probably going to cost him $1M in legal fees.
Many years back, Errol Flynn gave a woman a lift back from Mexico
on his boat. She turned out to be under age. Rape charges
were filed. He was acquitted after a lengthy and expensive trial.
The publicity basically ruined his career.
Woody Allen has been given only _supervised_ visitation to his
children even though experts testified that there was no evidenced
that he did what he was accused of. The judge said that he, "couldn't
take a chance".
Worried yet?
fred();
|
86.113 | Michael Jackson - it could be you | KAOOA::SLADE | | Thu Aug 26 1993 09:17 | 17 |
| Think about it, if you were a volunteer coach or a leader of a youth
group and a certain disruptive child decided to get revenge on you for
what ever reason, maybe you caught him doing something so he told his
parents you 'touched him'.
Your guilty no matter what. The papers would crucify you, your family
would come under incredible strain, you probably would have to move,
you may loose your job, and financially your shot. When the truth comes
out that your innocent, the newspapers may report it (in the classified
section) but the doubt in everyones minds will always exist.
Justice? It's not just the Michael Jacksons, it's a fact of life for
both sexes.
Justice doesn't sell newspapers, scandal does
Bill.
|
86.114 | I'm sincerely glad that it worked for you | SOLVIT::JOHNSTON | beannachd | Thu Aug 26 1993 09:39 | 21 |
| re.111
Indeed I was dependent upon my parents. Far from making me whole, the
abuse nearly killed me.
It taught me that being dependent upon someone from whom the law and
society _will_ not protect you is life-threatening.
So a context in which women have the means and the protection to
achieve independence to the extent that their male counterpoints are
offered the same is something I value highly.
Not all parents are abusive. Not all fathers, brothers, husbands, and
boyfriends lack the ability or conscience to follow through to follow
through on commitments. In fact, I believe that the proportion is
relatively small.
But the risk is not insignificant; hence it is best to be able and
prepared.
Annie
|
86.115 | Protection | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Aug 26 1993 12:12 | 22 |
| Ok Annie, I hear you... 'give me freedom or give me death' so to speak.
Apparently you did grow up under extreme (abusive) conditions so I am
not suprised that getting away from that is worth virtually anything.
I have been an Assistant Scoutmaster in the Boy Scouts for some 10
years. The risk of having some angry kid accuse you of molesting him
is there all right. But I have never heard of one who actually did that
to get revenge. Good thing! The defense: Don't put yourself in a
position (being alone with a boy) where it COULD have happened with no
witness to vouch for you. That is Scout Policy.... leaders are not
allowed to be alone with individual kids to protect against this.
Actually the Boy Scouts have a number of safe guards built in to protect
leaders and boys from this. Such as what I already stated above, and
no leaders are allowed to sleep in the same tent as the boys. Boys
with boys and leaders with leaders is the policy.
Its too bad we have to live in that atmosphere of mistrust but that is
reality today.
Jeff
|
86.116 | Can't the past rest, concentrate on the future | KAOOA::SLADE | | Thu Aug 26 1993 13:38 | 7 |
| I at times read in the paper adults 20-40 years old that are dragging
their parents (sometimes age 70 +) into court accusing them of abuse,
sexual misconduct, whatever. Why, after all those years? What
satisfaction are they looking for? The feelings of anger, frustration
and guilt must be overwhelming.
|
86.119 | | OKFINE::KENAH | I���-) (���) {��^} {^�^} {���} /��\ | Thu Aug 26 1993 14:50 | 15 |
| >I at times read in the paper adults 20-40 years old that are dragging
>their parents (sometimes age 70 +) into court accusing them of abuse,
>sexual misconduct, whatever. Why, after all those years?
Perhaps because, like me, they didn't remember the abuse until
they were adults.
>What satisfaction are they looking for?
I can't answer this question.
>The feelings of anger, frustration and guilt must be overwhelming.
You have no idea, no idea at all.
|
86.120 | Justice | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Aug 26 1993 16:21 | 25 |
| re: children (now adults) dragging their abusive parents into court.
I think the legal system attempts to serve JUSTICE, and that is an
important word..... justice, not revenge, justice. Many abuse victims
are attempting revenge which, however justified often results in
feelings of emptiness. I think people, (as the prior noter says) think
that revenge via the legal system will 'make it all better'. It
doesn't work that way. One has to work through the feelings in oneself
and resolve them as best one can. If part of that involves bringing
charges against the abuser(s) fine, but don't expect a panacea cure
in yourself.
I don't think people are 'built' to feel good about hurting other
people.... even when its justified, except for those who have a mean
streak in them or who have been so hurt themselves they just want to
lash out.
I was abused as a child (as so many of us seem to have been) but I
don't feel vindictiveness toward my parents, just sadness that they
were too 'sick' to have known any other way. Anger and sadness, yes, but
there is no getting back at them in any satisfying sense. So, what do
you do?! Make sure you don't continue the chain and pass abuse along
to YOUR children!!!
Jeff
|
86.121 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Thu Aug 26 1993 19:51 | 6 |
| .91> violent crime when adjusted for population growth has increased
.91> dramatically, right???? That is, the number of violent crimes per
It's grown in the big cities, just like it did during Prohibition.
In some places, it's fallen.
|
86.122 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Thu Aug 26 1993 19:51 | 3 |
| re:.94, Douglass
And the moon is made of green cheese.
|
86.123 | right on the nose | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Thu Aug 26 1993 20:00 | 5 |
| .105> To many, the definition of feminism is to 1) take away the advantages
.105> of men, 2) retain the advantages of being a a women, 3) fip-flop back
.105> and forth between the two depending on which is most advantageous
Bingoroni, fred().
|
86.124 | Crime | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Aug 27 1993 10:52 | 13 |
| re .121 .... crime just growing in big cities but actually fallen in
many other areas.
Am I missing something here or is my daily observation of the news in
correct? Yes, there has always been crime but to observia media
reports today it seems that one can't walk down the street in safety
anymore.
Come on! Don't tell me that crime isn't more of a problem than it used
to be. Or, are you saying that its simply a more efficient reporting
system?
Jeff
|
86.125 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Aug 27 1993 11:03 | 19 |
| re .124
> Am I missing something here or is my daily observation of the news in
> correct? Yes, there has always been crime but to observia media
> reports today it seems that one can't walk down the street in safety
> anymore.
You're watching too much TV. As someone said before, truth does not
sell. Sensation and scandle does. The news media is no longer
interested in the truth. They are interested in ratings and $$$$.
> Come on! Don't tell me that crime isn't more of a problem than it used
> to be. Or, are you saying that its simply a more efficient reporting
> system?
As compared to when?
fred();
|
86.126 | | SMURF::BINDER | Sapientia Nulla Sine Pecunia | Fri Aug 27 1993 11:25 | 16 |
| Re .124
> Yes, there has always been crime but to observia media
> reports today it seems that one can't walk down the street in safety
> anymore.
Read contemporary letters from the early Roman Empire. If you cared to
walk down the ordure-filled screets, you'd damned well better not do it
after dark. That wasn't taking a chance, it was tempting fate. You
would be about 95 percent likely to get mugged by a sicarius and almost
certainly stabbed dead. Leave no witnesses, ya know... Sensible
Romans did not go out after dark except with at least two bodyguards,
usually ex-gladiators.
dangerous streets ain't nothin' new. We just have easier access to the
news. And, as fred() points out, sensation sells.
|
86.127 | Thats not news - thats reality | KAOOA::SLADE | | Fri Aug 27 1993 12:24 | 25 |
| 'Ignorance is bliss'.
In the global village, we get news on site, as it happens (whether it
happened or not is irrelevant). The more beefed up the better, the
closer to the source (cameras and mikes in front of tragic victims).
A few years ago, this news was only available in the papers or days
old.
What sells, the National Enquirer cause 'inquiring minds want to know'.
or the mindless have nothing else to occupy the space.
Each network is trying to outdo the other until the truth has no
meaning (buy a Chev truck). whats the future, computer generated news,
virtual news reality?
Maybe a new medical syndrome?
Crime hasn't changed, just our knowledge and our perceived need to know
(or so the network tells us).
24 hour news. "Thats not news but thats reality - the way I see it"
Bill
|
86.128 | Crime | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Aug 27 1993 12:30 | 21 |
| I wonder if your samples aren't as biased as you claim the medias' are?
I believe your stories about Rome etc. but it doesn't give the whole
picture. (I know current media news doesn't give the whole picture
either).
A truer picture would be to look at the national crime statisitics. I
don't have access to them though. Then why all the hoot and howl about
increasing crime? Is purely a misconception foisted on the public by
the media?
When I was a boy in the City of South Portland, Maine we didn't even
lock our door when we went out. Nothing got stolen either. THAT isn't
a figment of my imagination. Try that in South Portland now? "But
thats a city, just what we were saying that cities have changed".
Well I hope you guys are right... that increased crime is simply not
true.
I sure am not going to test the theory though.
Jeff
|
86.129 | crime, noise and fear | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri Aug 27 1993 13:03 | 24 |
| .128> A truer picture would be to look at the national crime statisitics. I
> don't have access to them though.
Try any good almanac or _Statistical Abstracts of the United States_ (assuming
you are on this side of the ponds) available in any good library.
I don't have one at hand, and have not checked lately, but the last time I
looked, the data suggested that crime has its ups and downs. Life in the 1980s
was more dangerous than life in the 50s, but about the same as life in the 20s.
Even this statistical data has to be used with caution. Crime reporting has
gotten a lot more effective, especially for crimes like rape, and the handling
of crime statistics has gotten a lot more professional.
> Then why all the hoot and howl about
> increasing crime? Is purely a misconception foisted on the public by
> the media?
Nothing is pure, especially in the media. Life is more dangerous in the 90s,
particularly in the "bad neighborhoods" of big cities. So there is some reality
behind it.
But most of the noise comes from media out to sell fear, politicians looking
for votes and security types trying to sell safety.
|
86.130 | exit | VERGA::BROWN | On time or else... | Fri Aug 27 1993 13:56 | 17 |
|
While sitting in the doctor's office, I picked up an issue of
Time dated 23 August 1993. The cover story was on crime. While
I didn't get to read it, I did see a sidebar story which suggested
a link between baby booms and crime -- the claim was that blips in
birth rates were followed (after enough years to create a blip
in the number of adolescents) by a blip in the crime rate.
I think that most of our efforts at controlling any kind of
behavior have minimal effects and that behavior at a global
level tends to map to long term socio-economic variables --
population, density, distribution of wealth, etc. -- rather
than to short term politics. That's one of the reasons I
don't buy the apocalyptic "unravelling fabric of society"
scenarios.
Ron
|
86.131 | Crime | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Aug 27 1993 15:31 | 12 |
| I think you may have touched on one the explanations. That is that
crime REPORTING has become more effective. Also the sharing of
information. Back in the 50's one would only hear of unusual major
crimes out of ones' local area. Now if someone robs a bank in Calif.
we hear about it on the East Coast. Programs such as Americas' Most
Wanted let the entire Nation know about whats gone on in the last week
as far as major crime is concerned.
So the information explosion includes crime information. Not suprising
it seems more prevalent. Thanks for helping me put it in perspective.
Jeff
|
86.132 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Aug 28 1993 04:12 | 7 |
| You only have to read Homer to know that rape, theft, murder,
abduction happened 2500 years ago, and was more common where there were
more people.
At a guess, Troy is fairly crime-free today, with no more than one
archaeologist stealing anothers pencil. It is quite amazing what a war
of extermination can do to the crime statistics of a city.
|
86.133 | | DOCTP::BINNS | | Mon Aug 30 1993 12:32 | 20 |
| Re: .130
>a link between baby booms and crime -- the claim was that blips in
>birth rates were followed (after enough years to create a blip
>in the number of adolescents) by a blip in the crime rate.
I think this is a pretty well-know phenomenum -- the rise in the crime
rate in the 70s and 80s was greatly influenced by the demographics of
baby-boomers reaching prime-crime age. Similarly, the dip in crime
rates in the last few years has been influenced by a smaller cohort of
young men in their teens and early twenties. But count on a increase,
because a new crop of the children of baby-boomers are reaching the
critical age.
Of course, as others have said, it's also true that a lot of this
crime stuff is a result of victims being more willing to report crime,
and to the deplorable state of what passes for "news" (particularly on
television which is nothing but stitched-together crime incidents).
Kit
|
86.134 | Maybe we create the news for our entertainment | KAOOA::SLADE | | Mon Aug 30 1993 13:39 | 19 |
| TV amazes me. The most popular shows like COPS, America's Most Wanted,
Rescue 911, Unsolved Mysteries and Eye Witness Video have made human
suffering, starvation and war an entertainment. (Let me know if I
missed a few and what time they are on!)
Look at the Gulf War. On the spot news 24 hours a day. Those SCUDS
bombs and missles were falling on people. Highest ratings.
We watch nations starving with impunity and eat supper while watching
reports of genocide.
The news gets caught making news to get more viewers.
Wasn't Fred Astaire, Bing Crosby and Patti Page once entertainment?
What are we teaching our kids? What's next, scary stuff.
Bill (who rarely has time to watch TV - I also find sit-coms intellectually
insulting)
|
86.135 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Mon Aug 30 1993 13:48 | 4 |
| Re .134: Oh, TV's not so bad - it's just trying to fill the gap left by
such popular entertainments as gladiatorial combat and public executions...
-b
|
86.136 | With closeups and on the spot too | KAOOA::SLADE | | Mon Aug 30 1993 14:07 | 1 |
| re: 135. Thought TV had done a good job combining them!
|