T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
110.1 | hmmm | CEODEV::FAULKNER | moderator | Thu Nov 13 1986 13:32 | 4 |
| hey i lift weights
but I don't have a tatoo
do i need to get one?
|
110.2 | Right On! | VAXUUM::DYER | The Shaw Sleeps in Lee Harvey's Grave | Thu Nov 13 1986 14:22 | 2 |
| {RE .0} - I agree, labels are useless.
<_Jym_>
|
110.3 | go for it | WATNEY::SPARROW | Vivian Sparrow | Thu Nov 13 1986 14:51 | 9 |
| re:1
If you feel the need to compete with a perfectly normal
healthy woman, go for it. As for my tattoo's, I got
them cause I chose to, not because I felt the need to
conform! It's sad to see that's all you got from my
comments.
|
110.4 | My 2� | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Thu Nov 13 1986 15:02 | 22 |
|
Minor point: Aliens was one of my favorite movies to date,
and Vasquez was my favorite character. If one is going to find
nobility in soldiering, one is going to find it in people like that.
Major point:
Vivian's concerns are legitimate. I share them to a very great
degree, although as a white Anglo-Saxon male my understanding of
the situation in relationship to hers is probably somewhat limited.
However, I feel the need to point out that labels do not always
spring from the ignorant and insensitive like Athena from the brow
of Zeus (how's that for a mixed metaphor). There are plenty of
cases where people do want to be labeled as one thing or another,
and they promote any behavior that does label them.
It boils down to treating people as they wish to be treated, which
leaves us with the responsibility of finding out just what that
is.
DFW
|
110.5 | insert face here | KLAATU::THIBAULT | Who Dealt This Mess? | Thu Nov 13 1986 15:24 | 5 |
| .1
Kerry, I don't think they're talking about 12 ounce weights.
Bahama Mama
|
110.6 | | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis the Menace | Thu Nov 13 1986 16:21 | 10 |
|
RE: .2 <_Jym_>
I disagree, labels are not useless.
They are very useful for getting your underwear on right. :-)
|
110.7 | why we do it | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Nov 14 1986 12:29 | 21 |
| The thing with labels, like any habit, is that they actually are
useful for something. They relieve the person doing the labelling
of the necessity of treating each person as an individual every
time the labeller has to deal with an example of the "label". Now
that can be good or bad. I can label someone who aggressively cuts
me off in traffic as a "dangerously aggressive driver" and keep
my eyes on that car for further dangerous maneuvers so long as the
car is near mine in traffic. Usually that sort of labelling is
useful, since it allows me to make a quick judgment about which
vehicles need more than the usual amount of attention. On the other
hand, like any label, I could be wrong. Maybe the person was avoiding
an obstacle I didn't see, was about to miss the last exit for twenty
miles, or some other similar thing, and does not normally drive
dangerously. So, I may have misjudged the person. In this example,
that is probably harmless, since I will probably never see the person
again anyways. However, the same thing can happen in person, which
is why we worry about first impressions, right? It's a natural
human tendency to categorize things, while changing our ideas of
a person or thing based on new evidence has to be learned.
/Charlotte
|
110.9 | Sad but true... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Walk in Balance... | Tue Nov 18 1986 01:05 | 6 |
| Sadly but true, labels have there place. We seem to be evolving
very slowly with women and men both expanding into new areas and
arenas. We either cope or suffer shock. Still, making people aware
of our feelings about sterotyping is necessary.
Mikie?
|
110.10 | word games | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Mon Dec 01 1986 11:44 | 21 |
| Set /opinion=personal
Labels only seem to be viewed as bad when they reflect a part of
you that either you don't realize is there or you don't want to
be associated with. For instance, I lift weights (more than 12
ounces) and have tattoos, but being labeled as a dyke doesn't
bother me - I have been called worse things and survived. We seem
to spend the better part of our lives looking for something to identify
with, a label to hang on ourselves. These labels are acceptable
to us, but those that others hang on us may not be.
I guess the point of this rambling is that I see labels as a necessary
evil in any society. I can't think of a culture that has gotten
by without them. The labels themselves are not bad, the predjudice
that goes with them is.
Maureen
|
110.11 | this title is not a label | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Wed Dec 03 1986 07:00 | 32 |
| But labels are a part of prejudice, because they're
abstractions, but people tend to hang personal attributes on the
abstractions. Certainly, there are some labels everyone likes
to have hung on them. But even "good" labels usually have some
negative prejudices associated with them. Personally I rather
like "software engineer"... but I've been told that they walk
into walls a lot and live mostly on twinkies.
"Software engineer" is a nice abstraction. It tells you
what I do. But when I use the label for myself, or when
someone else applies it to me, it's a *useful* label only
if the other person knows what it means. And not if it conveys
personal attributes to that person, because those attributes
probably don't apply to me. When it comes down to it, I'm
*not* "a software engineer"... I'm a unique individual person,
who happens to do software engineering part of the time,
and "software engineer" really tells you very little about
me.
That's fine... but most people insist on imagining that it tells
them something useful about my *personal* nature. That's
prejudice, and it's usually not very helpful.
A label like "software engineer", or "engineering manager"
carries a fair amount of useful data, so perhaps they can
be classified as "necessary evils". Labels like "dyke" contain
large amounts of personal connotations unlikely to apply
to any individual, and virtually no useful data. They're
not by any stretch of my imagination "necessary evils"...
they're merely "evils".
/dave
|
110.12 | dry clean only | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Wed Dec 03 1986 16:19 | 27 |
| re .11
Maybe I'm getting thick skinned as I get older, but labels just
don't bug me the way they used to. I spent a lot of time in my
youth avoiding applying them to anyone else. Somehow I figured
that other people had a right to pick their own labels, and I could
pick mine. The labels others applied to me just went in one ear
and out the other (they still do).
I spent some time today trying to imagine life without labels (and
ans extension of labels, symbols). I was real confusing. With
the number of people and situations I dealt with, the amount of
detailed information soon got to be unwieldy. I think labeling
to some extent serves a societal filing system (quite a bizarre
concept in itself). Or maybe mind has just gotten lazy.
On another vent, I wonder how stereotypes evolve? They're much
more complex than just a label. Who decides what to stereotype,
much less what criteria are used to define the beasts. The other
amazing thing is the geographical area to which a given stereotype
applies. With no formal definition or communication, people on
either side of the continent seem to recognize the same stereotypes.
Enough babbling for now. Got to go find a twinky.
Maureen
|
110.13 | Only part of the picture... | NFL::GIRARD | | Mon Dec 08 1986 06:24 | 9 |
| If Vivian's tatoos and as attractive as her personality, then
they must be an asset to her looks. Femininity is as much how
you present yourself as why. It's nice to know some who cares
enough about herself to be an individual yet sensitive enough to
know she is part of a community.
[why does Colorado have to be so blasted far away?]
GRG
|
110.14 | I know her! | NEBVAX::BELFORTE | Steven's BEST half | Tue Dec 09 1986 13:51 | 6 |
| Vivian is a pretty good person, just a bit nutty at times (most
of the time?)
:^}
M-L
|