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Conference turris::womannotes-v1

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 1 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V1 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:873
Total number of notes:22329

479.0. "Responses to 446" by STUBBI::B_REINKE (where the sidewalk ends) Mon Sep 14 1987 15:17

Since there appears to be a continuing need to discuss this
    issue, I am moving Mr. Marshall's note to start a new topic.
    
    Bonnie J
    moderator
    
    
    
    
                <<< COLORS::$2$DUA11:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES.NOTE;1 >>>
                        -< Topics of Interest to Women >-
================================================================================
Note 446.64               Commercial Ads - Good and Bad                 64 of 64
TFH::MARSHALL "hunting the snark"                    37 lines  14-SEP-1987 14:09
                             -< incest and Freud >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    When I first saw the "offending comment" I didn't even notice it.
    But as the argument has carried on, and I think about the statement,
    I AM becoming more offended every day.
    
    > ...it played on the incest fantasies of men...
    > ...I merely said that this particular ad played on male incest 
    > fantasies...
    
    What is offensive is the assumption that males just naturally have
    incest fantasies. That these fantasies can be exploited to get men
    to buy a particular product. Suppose I had said something like
    "...it plays on the maternal instincts of women..." or "...it plays
    on the subjugation fantasies of women..."?
    
    As for Freudian analysis, there is some very good evidence that
    Freud constructed the incest fantasy theory to duck out of the
    seduction theory. The story of this is that early in Freud's career,
    he realized that most of his women patients related stories of
    childhood sexual abuse by their fathers. Suppression of these memories
    resulted in the hysteria that he was trying to treat. At first he
    took these stories as truth and ascribed their hysteria to their
    seduction by their fathers. This theory was not well received by
    his peers. In later years, he backed away from the seduction theory
    and developed the fantasy theory, that all children have incest
    fantasies. It was this theory that was much more palatable and thus
    accepted by the male dominated medical profession. This theory has
    come to dominate the thinking about children, resulting in the
    immediate disbelief of a child who complains of abuse, when in fact
    there is plenty of evidence that children do NOT fabricate such
    stories.
                                              
                                                   
                  /
                 (  ___
                  ) ///
                 /
    
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479.1NEXUS::CONLONMon Sep 14 1987 15:2730
    	RE:  .0
    
    	Try to remember that the ad in question is evidence that the
    	advertiser felt that the image of a little girl coming out of
    	Daddy's room wearing his shirt (just like the woman did, I
    	presume -- I haven't seen the actual ad) would conjure up some
    	sort of reaction that would make one want to buy their product.
    
    	It is the AD AGENCY that is presuming men (or little girls)
    	have those fantasies (and some people are just recognizing the
    	fact that the ad agency is playing to what they THINK will sell
    	to their intended audience.)
    
    	The fact that we recognize who they are playing to (and what
    	they presume men's fantasies are) is not to say that any of
    	us HERE believes that all men have incest fantasies.
    
    	Personally, I don't believe that one can make that sort of
    	generalization about either sex (and yes, I'd be disturbed if
    	someone hinted or stated to me that I had fantasies about incest
    	with my son.)
    
    	I just don't agree that anyone has been insulted here by the
    	fact that we think that the ad agency for the shirt commercial
    	DOES obviously think that people (men or little girls) have
    	incest fantasies and that they can make a buck out of them.
    
    	Let's not get mad at the wrong people here.
    
    							    Suzanne...
479.2Directed at Men?MAY20::MINOWJe suis Marxist, tendance GrouchoMon Sep 14 1987 15:5414
When I saw the ad, I thought it was directed *specifically* at women:
it ran during the Christmas buying season, which is a time when women
buy *a lot* of clothing for their male relations.

In addition to the incest fantasy, I can also think of fantasies involving
half-dressed adult women and their guy's shirts, as well as rather
innocent child dress-up-like-daddy fantasies.

At the tender age of seven years, little did I realize I was nudging
transvestitism when I clumped around in my mom's high heels and wore
lipstick.  (Once only:  lipstick felt icky, my toes hurt, and my parents
convinced me I'd rather eat dessert tomorrow.)

Martin.
479.3YODA::COOKDon&#039;t drop it! It&#039;s a Zidjian!Mon Sep 14 1987 15:562
    
    This is ridiculous.
479.4Some Balance Here, PleaseFDCV03::ROSSMon Sep 14 1987 16:4738
    RE: .59 (and others, related to this particular ad)
    
    Dawn, the ad in question, touts Van-Heusen shirts.
    
    I have to disagree that the commercial, albeit for a man's shirt,
    is aimed at men (and therefore, *their* sexual fantasies).
    
    This particular ad is trotted out at TWO particular time during
    the year - just around Christmas time and just before Father's Day.
    Because of the timing, I think the presumption can be made that 
    the commercial is meant for "those people" who are wondering what 
    to get for that "special man in their life" - in this case "those 
    people" being female, since the ad shows the females after they
    have appropriated the shirt in question.
    
    So if anything, if one wants to read all sorts of hidden sexual
    messages into this commercial, perhaps the message is geared 
    toward the female's fantasy of seducing *her* man, whether it be
    her lover, husband --- OR father. (Remember "Lolita"?)
    
    And to those who feel that, since the name of this Conference is
    WOMANOTES, it's acceptable, encouraged even, to make all sorts of
    blanket statements dealing with the purported sexual fantasies of men 
    in general, and then say that men should keep from commenting because 
    this is a "woman's" file, picture this scenario:
    
         You're a woman and have "insidiously" crept into the 
         MENNOTES files. Some male in that file says, "Hey guys,
         did you see that ad on TV last night, the one where the
         stud rips off the woman's dress while they're parked, and
         she's PRETENDING she really doesn't want IT? What crap,
         THEY ALWAYS WANT IT; they just like to play hard to get!!"
    
    Would you keep quiet, and just carefully tip-toe away? Come on,
    now, we know what would happen.
    
       Alan                  
                            
479.5One more timeVINO::EVANSMon Sep 14 1987 17:1139
    OK.
    
    How's this?
    
    I think it is inappropriate to infer in *ANY* advertising, *ANY*
    intimate, sexual connection between a child and an adult.
    
    I believe that ad did, simply because the first scene inferred intimacy
    between the adult female and the adult male. I also believe that
    this was done purposely, since if the ad were not trying to make
    a sale using sex, it could have shown scene 1: Little Tommy dressed
    in dad's shirt and tie, a too-big hat resting on his ears, then
    scene 2: Little Mary in dad's shirt also. Announcer makes appropriate
    cutesy comments.
    
    Totally different ad with girl-friend in Harry's shirt. Innuendoes
    OK, here.
    
    
    As I said in my reply to the dust-up in the other note, I would
    object equally, if an ad played on female incest fantasies. I
    *strongly* object, in general, to the use of sex in selling many
    products. This one, if done as I outlined above, is OK because men
    want to be attractive to women, and this shirt will help, etc. -
    goes the ad-agency thinking.
    
    I simply didn't like the inference of sex from one scene to the
    other, and believe it was purposeful, on the part of the ad agency,
    for the reasons I stated above.
    
    BTW - don't a lot of guys buy their own shirts? Especially young
    singles? I think the first scene intimates a "girl-friend" rather
    than a "wife", so maybe the ad was aimed at "young singles"...?
    
    SO: In summation, whomever the ad was aimed at, I object to the
    inference of sex/seduction in such close proximity to a child.
    
    Dawn
    
479.6What did you say?PSYCHE::SULLIVANMon Sep 14 1987 17:1533
    FWIW
    
    First of all, I don't think your comparison a very good one, but
    even if we disagree on that point, I think you're mistaken about
    what the response of women would be.  I understand that there is
    a fair amount of arguing between in men and women in Mennotes, but
    I also understand that no men have complained about women's presence
    in the file or suggested that men's experience would be enhanced
    if women would be more sensitive to their (men's) need to talk to 
    each other.  Secondly, I don't think women (in Mennotes) would go
    around demanding an apology.  They might say, "When you said this,
    this is how it made me feel."  In response to that kind of
    non-accusatory response, the author of the basenote *might* apologize,
    and the women would probably say, "Thanks, but my real hope was
    to make you understand how your words might be understood."  I hardly
    ever see that kind of exchange between men and women in this file.
    What I see is men pouncing.  Sometimes women retreat and smooth
    things over, and sometimes they stand their ground.  At which point
    they usually get called whicked names or get accused of taking things
    too personally, having a grudge against all men, etc.
    
                                                         
    With regard to your analysis of the ad... I think the fact that
    you mentioned women's seduction of men, be they husbands, lovers,
    or *fathers* as if it were a common, well-known thing.. suggests
    that ads like that one are doing a very effective job of perpetuating
    damaging myths about women.  I do not ask for an apology on behalf
    of women everywhere who are probably wounded at least indirectly
    by words like those.  I only ask that you reread your note and think
    about what it means to suggest that little girls often or even
    sometimes seduce their fathers.
                                                              
    Justine
479.7Didn't type fast enoughPSYCHE::SULLIVANMon Sep 14 1987 17:214
    
    My 479.6 is meant as a response to 479.4 (Not 479.5)
    
    Justine
479.8Dang, I agree with DEVIKING::MODICAMon Sep 14 1987 17:296
    
    RE: .5 by Dawn, Your last sentence I agree with completely.
    	I wish the morons on Madison ave. would use different means
    	to sell their wares.
    
    
479.9... which I didn't infer when I saw it ...STAR::BECKPaul BeckMon Sep 14 1987 17:435
    Nit alert re .5 -
    
    The ad didn't infer anything; the viewer did.
    
    The ad might have IMPLIED something...
479.10Back To The Original PremiseFDCV03::ROSSMon Sep 14 1987 17:5818
    RE: .6
    
    We seem to have shifted the original point in note 446.* away from
    the assertion that this ad played into the MALE fantasy of incest.
    
    I do not disagree that this ad is pitching sex; many ads do - to
    both sexes.
    
    However, my point was that I believed it should not have been 
    construed as it initially was (having male incest overtones).
    
    Should ads use sex to sell their products? We can debate that
    aspect if you wish. But I'd like some acknowledgement that, perhaps,
    the initial interpretation of the perceived male's incestuous fantasies
    could have been jumping to some wrong conclusions.
    
       Alan
    
479.11VINO::EVANSMon Sep 14 1987 18:4514
    The ad was using sex to sell its product to men. There was a child
    in the ad. Inferences could easily be made by the viewer. The child
    was female. The ad was aimed at males. I presume most incest fantasy
    of males is heterosexual (this must be the flaw in my logic).
    
    I am not now, nor have I ever said, that EVERY male viewer of this
    ad has/had such fantasies. I am saying that, for those who have
    such fantasies, the ad played into them.
    
    PErhaps I am being obtuse, but I do not see how that particular
    ad could've evoked FEMALE incest fantasies.
    
    Dawn
    
479.12some thoughts on .4 and .10WHICH::AUGUSTINEMon Sep 14 1987 19:0643
    [nb: Dawn entered reply .11 while i was writing this.]

    re .10
    come on! the author has already a) apologized, b) said that HER
    interpretation was that the ad designers were playing on male incest
    fantasies (others have offered their interpretations) and c) said
    that all ads implying sexual attraction between children and adults
    are offensive to her. what else do you want?
    
    could you possibly agree to disagree?
    

    re .4
    actually, i have snuck quietly away from two conferences, but i
    didn't leave until i'd been offended a number of times. mennotes
    was one of them. i just didn't like the attitude toward women that
    was in the air at the time. i didn't object, because it wasn't "my"
    file. i didn't demand an apology, nor did i yell about harrassment.
    i merely deleted the conference from my notebook. 
    
    the other conference that i left quietly was blacknotes. for a while,
    it was one of my favorite conferences. but then the participants
    started discussing why anti-semitism was ok. that was not ok with
    me -- i felt very uncomfortable -- but again, i was the guest in
    that conference and did not feel right intruding into that space.
    (fwiw, i'm equally uncomfortable hearing about why it's ok for jews
    to hate blacks, and i usually speak up in those cases, too). 
    
    in both cases, i feel wounded. i'm sorry there's so much
    misunderstanding between the different groups of people. it shows
    how much further we have to go. but clearly, the men and blacks
    at DEC have carved out a space for themselves that's meant to be
    somewhat seperate from other types of people (otherwise, they'd
    participate in human relations or something). and i'm unwilling
    to intrude on that space.
    
    [disclaimer/further explanation: i'm not suggesting or requesting
    that others follow my example, but i did want to describe my behavior,
    especially in light of the comments in .4.]
    
    quietly,
    liz
479.13Watch out, I'm getting long-winded again...GCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TTue Sep 15 1987 00:16100
    re .4
    
>    And to those who feel that, since the name of this Conference is
>    WOMANOTES, it's acceptable, encouraged even, to make all sorts of
>    blanket statements dealing with the purported sexual fantasies of men 
>    in general, and then say that men should keep from commenting because 
>    this is a "woman's" file, picture this scenario:
    
>         You're a woman and have "insidiously" crept into the 
>         MENNOTES files. Some male in that file says, "Hey guys,
>         did you see that ad on TV last night, the one where the
>         stud rips off the woman's dress while they're parked, and
>         she's PRETENDING she really doesn't want IT? What crap,
>         THEY ALWAYS WANT IT; they just like to play hard to get!!"

    The difference is that there is no difference in victimizers' gender,
    whereas there is a difference in the gender running the files (tho some
    would argue this last part).  In both cases, the same gender is
    victimizing the other.  Statistics show that the people who victimize
    others with their incest fantasies are overwhelmingly men.  They (no,
    not _you_, they - be ye male or female, I doubt strongly that you are
    (or want to be) raping your children) are the bad guys. 
    
    Statistics also show that the people who go out and gang rape another
    human being are overwhelmingly men.  They are the bad guys.

    I think the point many of us make without stating it openly in this
    conference is that we (women) are sick and tired of being victims.
     We are sick of watching our daughters, our sisters, our friends,
    (for some of us our lovers) be victims.
    
    Those who victimize us and our loved sisters/daughters/friends/lovers
    are, for the most part, male.  For now, for many of us, the "enemy",
    who is actively causing us pain, is men.  Note that I said "men"
    and not "a man".  There is not one man in this conference who has
    actively hurt me or one of my loved sisters (tho there are one or
    two who have scared me silly upon meeting them face to face -- but
    those few are anomalous).
    
    We are at war with men.  We will no longer be victims.  We will
    no longer allow that amorphous group called "men" to victimize our
    sisters and children.
    
    But we love some individuals who are men.  We respect and admire
    some individuals who are men.  We are indebted to many individuals
    who are men.  We certainly can't blanket them all as our enemies;
    we love many of them!  So what do we do?
    
    We first try to understand the behaviors of that nasty group.  What
    do "they" do that hurts us?  Why do they do it?  Do they know they
    are hurting us?  Do the individual men we know.. are they aware
    of the behavior patterns that hurt and frighten us?  Would they
    do it if they _knew_ it hurts and scares us?
    
    Then we look at the behaviors of the _women_ who have helped "men"
    to oppress us.  We wonder, do they know that they could be hurting
    themselves, their daughters, their loved ones?  Would they still
    do it if they knew?

    Most of us (unless the scars of our victimization are terribly deep)
    think that "the bad guys" will stop it if they know the harm they
    cause.  If you do something nasty to me or my loved ones, I will
    inflict pain on you: I will show you how much you have hurt another
    human being. This is a harsh punishment, and usually a very effective
    one. 

    So we talk about it a lot.
    
    This causes big problems when we talk about our victimization and
    our anger at our oppressors with people who identify so strongly
    with their gender (male) that they ignore the fact that they have
    never done most of these nasty things (*certainly* not done them
    knowing how awful it has made them feel) and they think our attacks
    on the bad guys are attacks on themselves.
    
    We do not want to attack _people_; we want to attack behaviors.  If
    _you_ are not nasty to me or my loved ones, _you_ are not a "bad guy."
    I  call you an "honorary woman."  You may or not think of this as a
    compliment, so I usually hesitate to tell you.  Many (if not most) of
    the males who contribute to this file are "honorary women" in my eyes.
    I am fairly generous with this title.  I am certain there are other
    women in this file who would be much more sparing.  Their list of
    grievances is much longer than mine, and they are understandably more
    cautious. 
    
    Being an "honorary woman" in my eyes does nothing to diminish your
    masculinity.  Rather, you become more of what is delicious (see
    lecherous leer) and wonderful about men.  You also share some of
    the traits that I love and admire in women.
    
    So the point of this whole treatise, is to remind you that _you_
    are _not_ the enemy.  I think you are on our side in this war --
    you do not want to hurt other people just because you are male.
    You want your daughters, sisters, lovers, and mothers, to be safe
    from the nasty fellows who hurt us.  _You_ can see how much they
    hurt us, and I think you hate what they have done as much as we
    do.  _They_ are the bad guys, not you.  Just because you both have
    that funny Y chromosome does _not_ mean you are both the enemy.
    
    Lee
479.14Still really don't see itHUMAN::BURROWSJim BurrowsTue Sep 15 1987 00:2641
        I should like to respectfully disagree with Dawn Evans'
        appraisal of the add, if for no other reason than for novelty of
        combining respect and disagreement.
        
        As I said in my first reply over in the original topic, it never
        occurred to me that one could draw the inference of incest from
        the ad. That is still my view, and in fact, I suspect it would
        also surprise the originator of the ad. 
        
        What I see in the ad, is a mixture of a couple of messages.
        First of all, as the ad in question is specifically run at
        gift-giving time (which is my own observation as well as that of
        others), I take it that it is at least as much pitched at women
        as at men. From that perspective, I infer that the message is
        that buying such a shirt will help a woman or girl to win the
        love of her man, be he father, lover or husband, or at the very
        least that it is a good way to express their love. 
        
        Secondly, as the ad is ambiguous as to the relationship between
        Harry and his lady-friend, and it also uses a father/daughter
        relationship, I take it that the add is pitched at those who buy
        shirts for (or the love) of both single and married men. 
        
        Thirdly, the add makes winking reference to the male notion that
        our women folk only love us for our shirts (or what they can get
        out of us), and their deplorable tendency to appropriate our
        things, especially our well-beloved things. From this I would
        infer that the add is target at men as well as the women who buy
        them shirts for romantic or sentimental reasons. 
        
        Now, there are a number of stereotypes contained in this ad, and
        I'm not really wild about all of them. I don't, however, feel
        that the fantasy of incest is intentionally implied in it. I can
        see where it can be inferred, however, especially by those (most
        probably women) who are especially sensitized to the issue, and
        because such an inference can be inferred, we need to be careful
        in what we write, be it notes or ads.
        
        That's just my perspective. No claim of infallibility.
        
        JimB.
479.15PASTIS::MONAHANI am not a free number, I am a telephone boxTue Sep 15 1987 06:105
    	I am not sure I see what the fuss is about. Fantasies never
    hurt anyone. Anyone is welcome to accuse me of having any fantasies
    whatever. A few of them I might even admit to :-)
    
    		Dave
479.16EUCLID::FRASERAndy Fraser, PAGan.Tue Sep 15 1987 09:195
        Re: .13 Lee,
        
        That was very well expressed and should be required reading.
        
        Andy.
479.17Fantasies are OKVINO::EVANSTue Sep 15 1987 10:4511
    Yes, Lee. Excellent.
    
    Dave - Thanks! My commentary was not directed at anyone's fantasies.
    It was directed at the *ad*. Jim has disagreed with my interperetation.
    Fine with me. I was simply giving my opinion of *the ad*.
    
    Thanks again for making the point about fantasies so succinctly.
    (sp?)
    
    Dawn
    
479.18Response From An Honorary WomanFDCV03::ROSSTue Sep 15 1987 11:4038
    RE: .13
    
    Lee, thank you for not lumping me, Alan as an individual, into
    that amorphous group of victimizers of women known as men.
    
    You are able to identify me as a person and count me as an "honorary
    woman" (I do take that as a compliment). However, I'm not sure that
    a lot of other female contributors to this Conference are able to
    make that distinction -  that not ALL men are the enemy, the victimizers,
    the oppressors, the rapists, the abusers.
    
    All too often here, men are told not to respond to a topic, not
    to voice an opinion, accused of being incapable of understanding
    women's perspectives-- just because they are of that class called
    men. 
    
    I am an individual. I can't, and won't, be held responsible for
    all the hurts my gender has inflicted upon women. I WILL take
    responsibility for my own actions. If *I* fall short in some areas
    of my life, if *I* inflict pain on another, if *I* am insensitive
    to someone's needs and feelings, then *I* deserve that criticism
    and will accept it.
    
    Recently, I responded to an entry in BAGELS, the Jewish-oriented
    Conference, that was posted by a person who is active in the CHRISTIAN
    Conference. In my reply, I gave my reasons for feeling that Jews
    historically have had to be wary of Christians, based upon the
    past persecution of Jews by Christians.
    
    She replied that *she* wasn't responsible for past hurts, that *she* 
    wasn't anti-Semitic, and that *she* did not want to be "tarred by 
    the same broad brush" just because she was Christian.
    
    As an individual male, with my own identity, I ask for the same
    consideration.
    
       Alan
                            
479.19GCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TTue Sep 15 1987 12:2370
    re .18
    
  �                                    However, I'm not sure that
  � a lot of other female contributors to this Conference are able to
  � make that distinction -  that not ALL men are the enemy, the victimizers,
  � the oppressors, the rapists, the abusers.
   
    Many of these women have a very long list of very serious grievances
    against the bad guys.  _I_ think their anger is too widespread, like
    Jews who lived through Nazi Germany and now hate every single person
    who speaks German -- there is hatred and it is unreasoning, but
    understandable because of the suffering they have witnessed and
    endured.  We treat both groups of angry people with kid gloves, gently
    reminding them that you and I did nothing to hurt them or support the
    evil-doers.  We are uncomfortable with their anger when it is wrongly
    aimed at us but we cannot know that in their places we would act any
    differently. 
    
  � All too often here, men are told not to respond to a
  � topic, not to voice an opinion, accused of being incapable of
  � understanding women's perspectives-- just because they are of that
  � class called men. 
    
    The topics in question are usually ones where we tell of our own
    victimization, the feelings associated with it, and where we attempt
    to figure the why's and what's of our suffering.  We are inordinately
    sensitive about aspects of each issue.  I remember flaming some poor
    guy who suggested that women wouldn't get raped if they were more
    careful.  Outside the conference, I flamed a woman for the same
    thing.  Where we have been hurt, we are especially protective of
    our wounds.  When those wounds have been inflicted by men, we are
    very suspicious of any man discussing the issue -- he _might_ be
    one of the bad guys, and he _might_ add to our hurt.  Once that
    person demonstrates that he won't hurt us, then we are much less
    suspicious.
    
    In those topics it is unlikely that a woman (who has almost certainly
    experienced or witnessed closely the same suffering) will hit a
    bruise (tho it happens).  But how could any man know where the bruises
    _are_?  This one fellow hit a very sore spot of mine without even
    knowing it.  It added hurt to an already painful area.  He couldn't
    know without having it happen once.
    
    Part of our asking that men not reply to a topic is self protection --
    we don't want more hurt, and any man could easily add to the hurt in a
    vulnerable area.  Part of it is trying to protect him, to keep him from
    hurting others (which he would certainly not want to do).
    
    It is wrong of us to _assume_ you will hurt us.  But in areas where
    our vulnerability is high, we can be fairly confident that you will
    have to be very, very careful to _avoid_ hurting us.
    
    When a man who is angry about the terms of his divorce and the
    childcare "solution" discusses the issue, women discussing the issue
    cannot avoid hitting some very sore spots.  When we do so, the flames
    run very high because he is very angry.  When he tells us this is
    hurtful, we try to be more careful in what we say, EVEN THOUGH WE
    THINK HE IS WRONG AND CARRYING HIS ANGER TOO FAR.
    
    But when all we hear from him is anger, and we do not know that
    anger stems from horrible awful pain, we do not know enough to be
    careful of his feelings.  It would be very wise of him to ONLY discuss
    the issue with other victims until his anger is under enough control
    for him to be able to bear the inevitable pain of trying to enlighten
    those unfamiliar with his suffering.
    
    Same issue, same problem, same result -- flame, anger, pain.
    
    Lee
    
479.20NEXUS::CONLONTue Sep 15 1987 14:3747
    	RE:  .18
    
    	There is less widespread blaming than you might think.  Most
    	of the women here *DO NOT* blame the men here for the things
    	that the "bad guys" have done.  My sincere belief is that it
    	is a problem in communication.
    
    	Recently, I got into a very heated discussion in the Battered
    	Women note.  I'm a former victim and I rarely talk about it
    	publicly (especially in notes.)  Most of the time, I make very
    	vague references to it as if it happened to someone else that
    	I knew.  I do that because I don't feel like going into the
    	details of my situation in a notesfile.
    
    	One of the men who wrote in started saying some of the things
    	that my Mother-in-Law used to say to me (TO EXCUSE THE BEHAVIOR
    	OF HER VIOLENT SON) and it sent me right up the wall.
    
    	I wrote replies to the man, then deleted them and tried again.
    	I must have written 3 or 4 replies to each of his notes before
    	I found one that I felt I could leave in the file (and STILL
    	came out sounding really unreasonable.)  When I decided that
    	there was just no way I could continue the conversation and
    	stated that feeling, some OTHER guy came in and really flamed
    	me (saying that my note was offensive, etc.)
    
    	Now, I certainly don't consider any of these men as "the enemy"
    	in any possible way.  But I think that there were some difficulties
    	in communication, and I don't know they can be solved unless
    	we ALL are willing to give the benefit of the doubt to the other.
    
    	When women ask men not to respond, give us the benefit of the
    	doubt that some of us have been THROUGH these experiences and
    	find it difficult to see men (or anyone) "speculate" on what
    	it MIGHT be like or why victims MIGHT have stayed after the
    	problem started.  Some speculation is VERY upsetting to see
    	when you've been through it yourself.
    
    	Maybe we (women) need to remind men more often that we KNOW
    	the difference between the good guys and the bad guys (and
    	are not accusing anyone here of causing the problems we are
    	trying to deal with.)
    
    	It will take a lot of effort on both sides to make these
    	communications more effective, and I think it can be done.
    
    							Suzanne...
479.21Trying to Open a WindowPSYCHE::SULLIVANTue Sep 15 1987 15:0781

    I agree that it feels lousy to be considered an enemy just 
    because you're a man, or just because you're white, rich, whatever.  
    And it's true that there are some women who have so much anger at 
    men that they cannot see individuals, many of whom are caring, 
    sensitive people.  But I really don't think there are any such 
    women here in this file, or working at DEC for that matter.  
    How could they?  Certainly, there are different levels of
    anger among the women in this file, just as there are different 
    levels of sensitivity among the men in this file.  

    I don't think that the exchanges of anger that have occurred between 
    men and women in this file are really about one person's anger at 
    every member of the opposite sex being misdirected at one of the 
    "good guys".  I think the anger expressed here has been about
    something said or done, something implied *or inferred*.  I think it's
    a bit of a cop out to say, "You're just saying that because I'm a man, 
    and you don't like men."   It is an understandable response to a
    situation in which you feel criticized, but is it the most productive 
    response?  
    
    Here's one example that might better explain what I'm trying to
    describe.  I'm a former battered woman.  Ever since I began reading
    this file, (almost a year) I have wanted to bring up the topic, share 
    some things, but I was afraid.  When I first saw the battered women 
    note, I was delighted and looked forward to gathering up the courage 
    to tell some of my story.  And then someone (a man) started putting 
    stuff in like: if we change the laws, then any woman can have her 
    husband thrown in jail.  When I read that, sitting here in my cube, 
    I started to cry; it just hurt so much.  I felt like my experience 
    was being dismissed, and it felt like that note was not going to
    be a very supportive space in which to share some of the most difficult
    things I've *ever* encountered,  and then I got angry and expressed
    that anger (along with others).  Now I happen to think that: 1) I was 
    entitled to feel angry and to express that anger. 2) the fact that the 
    author of the reply-that-made-me-angry was a man *may* have been 
    responsible for his views on the topic; he's never been a battered 
    woman, BUT 3) I was angry *about what he said* not *because he was a man*.
    
    I once received personal (electronic) mail from a man who asked 
    me what I (in my personal opinion) thought men in this file could 
    do to be considered more sensitive to women's issues. (here again, 
    it was only my opinion that was being solicited.)  I'm not sure I 
    had a very good answer for him at the time, but his willingness to 
    ask the question really impressed me because it seemed to me that 
    he was open and secure enough in himself to risk hearing something
    that might be difficult, someting that might actually disrupt his 
    sense of how others, (in this case one woman) saw him.       

    In thinking about that exchange, I have since realized that therein 
    lies the answer that I would now give to the question raised in
    that mail message.  Try to be open.  Many women in this file have 
    said "When you hear something that expresses anger at men, don't 
    *assume* it means you."  I agree with that sentiment, and, Lee,
    I think you expressed all of that really well.  I think letting
    go of the feeling that you are personally under attack is a very 
    important *first* step at reducing the level of anger and 
    defensiveness so that communication can happen.  (Hoping that in light 
    of all that I've explained above this next part will be understood), 
    I think the second step in improving communication (once the 
    defensiveness is gone.  Sequence is especially important here!) 
    is don't assume it doesn't mean you.  

    I am convinced that we can all be less racist, less sexist, less 
    classist, etc.  We can all understand each other better and listen 
    better.  It seems to me that when we reach the point where we
    basically feel good about ourselves, and we know that we are not 
    perfect but that our intentions are good, *and* our desire is to 
    grow...  once that happens, then we can read something that describes
    how one person feels about experiences with members of a group to 
    which we belong, and we can look at it openly, think about our own 
    experiences, evaluate them, and keep that which is valid (for us) 
    and discard that which isn't.  It's my opinion that all feedback 
    has value; either it provides information that we can use, or it 
    helps us continue to improve our ability to decide what is right 
    for us.  I think that saying, "You're just saying that because I'm
    a woman/man...." closes doors; a real shame since so many doors 
    get closed *for* us.
    
    Justine  
479.22WAGON::RITTNERTue Sep 15 1987 15:595
    I just wanted to express my admiration for notes like .13 and .21
    that help to balance the fire with earth and water when it feels
    like issues are moving away from being resolved rather than closer...
    
    Elisabeth
479.23More kudosBUBBLY::LEIGHBoxes, boxes everywhere!Wed Sep 16 1987 19:378
    And I want to express *my* admiration for .20.  Suzanne, thank you
    for being willing to explain all that in this conference.
    
    We *all* have particular hot buttons.  I think we all have to feel
    indebted to the people who are willing to discuss theirs openly
    in this forum.  But we have to recognize that they *are* hot buttons;
    push them clumsily at your own risk!
    
479.24Yes, here I go again..STING::BARBERSkyking Tactical ServicesFri Sep 18 1987 14:3085
 There are some of you ladies out there that know or have met me.
 Many already know that they have my respect although we may dissagree.
 Others know that I can get a bit long winded with my philosophy.
 Yet there from time to time come a point where I can no longer 
 remain just a reader of this file and some of what Iam feeling 
 and thinking needs to be put into written words. 

 Just some thoughts on all this. I follow this file on a somewhat 
 regular basis. One of the most consistent emotions in here is
 anger. Now this is both good and bad. Its good from the standpoint
 of it allows one to vent and express this anger and fustration to
 and with their fellow human beings. There is solace and a degree of 
 comfort when they find that others have had similar experiences to 
 their own. This gives them a common ground to talk from and sometime
 helps releave the anger.

 The bad side of this anger is that every time I see it, it is solely
 directed to men. Not the individual that was responsible for the problem,
 But in each and every instance it has spilled over to include all men.
 This has increased the anger level not only to those that have had 
 similar experiences, but to those outraged by the acts. This now
 widens the amount of women with mistrust and ill feelings to all
 men in general.

 It docent seem to make any difference what the problem is, be it
 on a personal level such as rape to a professional level such as
 job discrimination. The consensus is that all men rather than some
 are responsible for all the evil and wrong doing that all women suffer.
 This has set a mind set in so many of you and from my side of perspective
 it goes overboard in instances. An example is the comments over the
 shirt ad.

 This is not a shot at any one but the interpatation of the shirt ad 
 as being condoning incest and the like is reading a hell of a lot 
 more into something than is there. yet there are those of you that 
 actual seek out hidden meanings in anything in the world around us.
 WHY ???? are you really convinced that all men are out to get you ??

 For the record there are many of you out there that have a 1000 %
 right to bitch, be angry, hurt and upset. I dont wish to demean
 nor belittle anything that you have had to suffer or go through.
 BUT direct that anger to the person that caused the problem,
 not all of us lumped into a single "despicable" category.

 Suzzan, Lee and others have written "disclaimers" about they are 
 not lumping men into that "all bad" bucket. But then they go 
 on with the BUT follower that throughs us back in there again.
 What Ive found to be really disturbing is that so many women have 
 gotten to a point that they no longer know how to believe in or trust
 a man. That each and every one of us has a hidden agenda, something 
 that were not telling them, is only pretending to be nice, is actually
 an evil person in discuise. And so rather than excepting that we are 
 what we are, we get measured against this perfect person thats in her mind.
 And when we dont measure up or cant change to fit that image, then were 
 one of those no good men. 

 The other thing that is getting a bit old is that we cant understand.
 that we cant feel those feelings, that we haven't experienced these things.
 To this I say women are not the only people that have been victimized.
 Men have been robbed, beaten, molested as a child, discriminated 
 against, and some even raped. No one sex has an exclusive to the wrongs
 that people do to one another. The difference here is that men dont go 
 blaming all the other men in the world as being just as guilty or 
 responsible for these things.

 The bottom line to all of this is that not all men are your enemy.
 We may disagree on many and varied things and subjects BUT it 
 does not mean that all of us are out to get you. Lets face it, there
 are unthinking callous jerks on both sides, nature put them there to 
 test our strength of goodness as human beings. If you wish to sink to
 their level there is little I can do to stop you.

 But if you are willing to take those two steeps back to review whats 
 going on, you may be surprised to find that both the good men and women 
 are fighting the same bad men and women. Its about time that the good 
 people became friends and allies against the bad, rather than the war
 between the sexes and good and evil, that goes on today. A major peice
 of this would be a more open understanding of communication. If you
 think someone has said something wrong get a clarification BEFORE you
 flame that person as a man jerk. One we all learn to work together
 well all acheve our goals sonner.

                                      Bob B 
 
    
479.25A broad brush paints no portraits.REGENT::BROOMHEADDon&#039;t panic -- yet.Fri Sep 18 1987 14:418
    Bob, in your note, you wrote, "But in each and every instance
    it has spilled over to include all men."
    
    "Each", "every", and "all" are words that take this statement,
    and everything that derives from it, out of the realm of even
    possibly true, leaving it as a wildly inaccurate generalization.
 
							Ann B.    
479.26Please read Maggie's latest addition to note 1.* ...NEXUS::CONLONFri Sep 18 1987 14:5533
    	RE:  .24
    
    	Bob, speaking of communication -- I think that you personally
    	need to come a long way before you can claim to know what we
    	are feeling in our hearts when we write notes.
    
    	You say you notice my (and others') disclaimers about NOT
    	BLAMING ALL MEN but then you refuse to believe that we are
    	telling the truth.
    
    	Why would we lie about such a thing?  If I say that I don't
    	blame all men, who the heck do you think YOU are to tell me
    	that I'm not telling the truth?  You don't even know me and
    	yet you feel you can read my heart better than I can???????

    	We have said AD NAUSEUM that we don't blame all men.  Either
    	you aren't paying attention or else you are calling us all
    	liars.
    
    	Maggie even posted a note about this very subject in the
    	Introduction note (1.*) of this conference.
    
    	I'd like to request that you PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE try to
    	keep up with what is really going on here and not try to read
    	things that we AREN'T SAYING and DON'T MEAN TO SAY.
    
    	Communication starts with yourself.  Try to read a reply
    	without deciding ahead of time that we are all mad at all
    	men.  You might be surprised at what you see once you take
    	that mental barrier down.
    
    						In friendship,
    						  Suzanne...
479.27Lee speaks for me, too, in 1.28 ....NEXUS::CONLONFri Sep 18 1987 15:0112
    
    	P.S.  The note in question is 1.28 -- Bob, please go read
    	it.  It is a copy of a note that Lee wrote (and she expressed
    	her thoughts on this issue quite beautifully and eloquently.)
    
    	Someone mentioned that it should be "required reading" for
    	this conference (and Maggie agreed and reposted it in 1.*)
    
    	This may give you a better idea of how many of us feel on
    	this issue.
    
    						     Suzanne...
479.28The other side of the coin.EUCLID::FRASERCrocodile sandwich &amp; make it snappy!Fri Sep 18 1987 15:1414
        I'd agree  with  Bob  to  some extent concerning the feeling of
        anger in this  conference,  and for a time it was difficult not
        to feel as if  it was directed at men in a generic sense.  Now,
        thanks to some very well written notes I for one no longer feel
        personally 'threatened' by the anger expressed.
        
        I  (barely)  survived  a  marraige to an  abusive  and  violent
        alcoholic and it took a lot of time,  love  and  reassurance to
        give me back my faith and trust in 'women' - I didn't like them
        much;  imbued  them  all  with  the  same characteristics as my
        ex-wife - I know better now, but for a time........
        
        Andy.
        
479.29NEXUS::CONLONFri Sep 18 1987 15:2410
    	Maybe Maggie should replace the notice of the Bork hearings
    	with the message "Old and new noters -- please read 1.28 if
    	you haven't already."
    
    	If anyone has a difficult time BELIEVING us when we say we
    	aren't mad at all men, then that is a whole different issue
    	and probably needs to be addressed outside the realm of this
    	conference.
    
    						     Suzanne...
479.30This is not an encapsulationHPSCAD::WALLI see the middle kingdom...Fri Sep 18 1987 15:424
    Rare indeed is the issue raised here that doesn't need to be addressed
    outside this conference.
    
    DFW
479.31STING::BARBERSkyking Tactical ServicesFri Sep 18 1987 18:14237
 RE. 26  


    Suzanne
             Your doing exactly what I asked you not to do.  You evidently
             missed a few lines in the text when you read it. It strikes 
             me as a bit strange that Ive lost my ability to communicate
             properly from just a few months ago. 
             
            > I think that you personally need to come a long way before
            > you can clam to know what we are feeling in our hearts when 
            > we write notes.

             Go back and reread the 8th paragraph in .24 in it you will find
             "To this I say that women are NOT the only people that have
              been victimized. Men have been robbed , beaten, molested ECT"

             Are you trying to tell me that I (or we [men] as the case may be)
             are incapable of feeling hurt, pain anger and fustrartion ??
             Are you inferring that men and women cant share the same feelings
             in their heart ???? Please enlighten me for I cant understand 
             that statement.

        
    >	You say you notice my (and others') disclaimers about NOT
    >	BLAMING ALL MEN but then you refuse to believe that we are
    >	telling the truth.
    
    >	Why would we lie about such a thing?  If I say that I don't
    >	blame all men, who the heck do you think YOU are to tell me
    >	that I'm not telling the truth?  You don't even know me and
    >	yet you feel you can read my heart better than I can???????

       
    >	We have said AD NAUSEAM that we don't blame all men.  Either
    >	you aren't paying attention or else you are calling us all
    >	liars.
       
        I may have been mistaken to have include you specifically in 
        what I was referring to. If I was wrong on that count I apologize.
        I am neither attempting to read your heart nor calling you a 
        liar. Again if you go back to paragraph 7 of .24 you'll find
        " But they go on with the BUT follower that throughs us all
          back in there again. Its like a qualifier, "Gee your not that
          bad, except , but, ...if you change this about you, you'd be
          alright and acceptable. " How ?? why ??? Because each one of
          us winds up having to explain himself to you. Needs to 
          prove that we arnt the bad guy. In essence we are all 
          guilty until proven innocent. The way that you have come 
          back at me questioning my ability to understand, to be 
          able to feel only goes to prove the point.
        
    >	Maggie even posted a note about this very subject in the
    >	Introduction note (1.*) of this conference.
    
    >	I'd like to request that you PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE try to
    >	keep up with what is really going on here and not try to read
    >	things that we AREN'T SAYING and DON'T MEAN TO SAY.
         
        For point of reference I read Lees statement before I wrote mine.
        If you and you fellow women view Lees words to be truly representive
        of how you think and feel let me point out a few things in
        reference to what Ive been talking about. Let me say that I 
        believe I understand Lees intent, but take another look at
        how it reads.


>    The difference is that there is no difference in victimizers' gender,
>    whereas there is a difference in the gender running the files (tho some
>    would argue this last part).  In both cases, the same gender is
>    victimizing the other.

     Point 1  Only men can victimize....Women never do it

>                           Statistics show that the people who victimize
>    others with their incest fantasies are overwhelmingly men.  They (no,
>    not _you_, they - be ye male or female, I doubt strongly that you are
>    (or want to be) raping your children) are the bad guys. 
    
     Point 2  Since "they" are overwhemingly men "they" IE men are the bad guys.

>    Statistics also show that the people who go out and gang rape another
>    human being are overwhelmingly men.  They are the bad guys.

     Point 3  Again "they" IE men are the bad guys

>    I think the point many of us make without stating it openly in this
>    conference is that we (women) are sick and tired of being victims.
>     We are sick of watching our daughters, our sisters, our friends,
>    (for some of us our lovers) be victims.

     Point 4  Only women are victims, never men, and therefore men are the
              only ones who victimize and are there for bad. (see above)
    
>    Those who victimize us and our loved sisters/daughters/friends/lovers
>    are, for the most part, male.  For now, for many of us, the "enemy",
>    who is actively causing us pain, is men.  Note that I said "men"
>    and not "a man".
      
     Point 5   The above statement stand by itself "men" no a "man"
               is the enemy.

>                      There is not one man in this conference who has
>    actively hurt me or one of my loved sisters (tho there are one or
>    two who have scared me silly upon meeting them face to face -- but
>    those few are anomalous).
 
     Point 6  No one "man" is to blame only "men"
   
>    We are at war with men.  We will no longer be victims.  We will
>    no longer allow that amorphous group called "men" to victimize our
>    sisters and children.
 
     Point 7  Here we are again , only "men" as a class of persons
              NOT a MAN who is representative to himself is to blame.
   
>    But we love some individuals who are men.  We respect and admire
>    some individuals who are men.  We are indebted to many individuals
>    who are men.  We certainly can't blanket them all as our enemies;
>    we love many of them!  So what do we do?
    
>    We first try to understand the behaviors of that nasty group.  What
>    do "they" do that hurts us?  Why do they do it?  Do they know they
>    are hurting us?  Do the individual men we know.. are they aware
>    of the behavior patterns that hurt and frighten us?  Would they
>    do it if they _knew_ it hurts and scares us?
 
    Point 8  Again its "they" enmass, not the individuals that cause the 
             problems but "they" et all of men.
   
>    Then we look at the behaviors of the _women_ who have helped "men"
>    to oppress us.  We wonder, do they know that they could be hurting
>    themselves, their daughters, their loved ones?  Would they still
>    do it if they knew?

   Point 9  Women that have helped men have been coerced or tricked 
            into doing so. Again another case of the bad "men" victimizing
            women.

>    Most of us (unless the scars of our victimization are terribly deep)
>    think that "the bad guys" will stop it if they know the harm they
>    cause.  If you do something nasty to me or my loved ones, I will
>    inflict pain on you: I will show you how much you have hurt another
>    human being. This is a harsh punishment, and usually a very effective
>    one.

   Point 10  "The bad guys"..Plural..IE  they again equating to men,
              not the small percentage that do these things but,
              "The bad guys" 

>    So we talk about it a lot.
    
>    This causes big problems when we talk about our victimization and
>    our anger at our oppressors with people who identify so strongly
>    with their gender (male) that they ignore the fact that they have
>    never done most of these nasty things (*certainly* not done them
>    knowing how awful it has made them feel) and they think our attacks
>    on the bad guys are attacks on themselves.
 
   Point 11  When the terms (words) that are meant (see above) and 
             describe men used as a encompassing plural (confirmed 
             via the above statements) It VERY difficult NOT to 
             feel that one is NOT included in that statement.
   
>    We do not want to attack _people_; we want to attack behaviors.  If
>    _you_ are not nasty to me or my loved ones, _you_ are not a "bad guy."
>    I  call you an "honorary woman."  You may or not think of this as a
>    compliment, so I usually hesitate to tell you.  Many (if not most) of
>    the males who contribute to this file are "honorary women" in my eyes.
>    I am fairly generous with this title.  I am certain there are other
>    women in this file who would be much more sparing.  Their list of
>    grievances is much longer than mine, and they are understandably more
>    cautious.

    Point 12  Ah here we have it the "chance" to "prove" that any one
              of us is NOT a "bad guy". and just how do we do that ???
              Are only the "accepted contributors" to this file 
              acceptable?? What about all the rest of us out there ???
              In Essence a man must prove himself worthy by your standards
              in order to remove himself from the" bag guys", "them" "men",
              category to the man, honorary woman status.   
    
 >   Being an "honorary woman" in my eyes does nothing to diminish your
 >   masculinity.  Rather, you become more of what is delicious (see
 >   lecherous leer) and wonderful about men.  You also share some of
 >   the traits that I love and admire in women.
  
   Point 13   It is not good enough to be just a man, to be a good 
              and honest person, to be your self. NO !!  now you 
              must take on the attributes and traits of a woman
              to be acceptable.
  
>    So the point of this whole treatise, is to remind you that _you_
>    are _not_ the enemy.  I think you are on our side in this war --
>    you do not want to hurt other people just because you are male.
>    You want your daughters, sisters, lovers, and mothers, to be safe
>    from the nasty fellows who hurt us.  _You_ can see how much they
>    hurt us, and I think you hate what they have done as much as we
>    do.  _They_ are the bad guys, not you.  Just because you both have
>    that funny Y chromosome does _not_ mean you are both the enemy.
    
>    Lee
 
     Point 14   This is the first time I have seen or been told in 
                this entire text that I, as a man and part of men
                am not the enemy. Yet in order not to be the enemy 
                I must prove and qualify to you that I deserve to
                have the "they" stigmatism removed. One can read 
                the first 90 % of the text and get a VERY POSITIVE
                message that the author considers all men the enemy.
                Even at the end one comes to the conclusion that they 
                must qualify to have that bad person label removed.
                this falls in line with what I said before that there
                is too much of "Gee you would be OK if you changed 
                this about yourself."


      
>    	Communication starts with yourself.  Try to read a reply
>    	without deciding ahead of time that we are all mad at all
>    	men.  You might be surprised at what you see once you take
>    	that mental barrier down.
    
    						In friendship,
    						  Suzanne...
 
  Suzanne, believe it or not THATS exactly WHAT Ive been trying to do.
  I would ask you and your fellow women to take those two steps back
  and look at what is being written. Iam afraid it may not be what
  you wish to express.

                                   In return of friendship

                                        Bob B
          
    
479.32Take this in friendship, too....NEXUS::CONLONSat Sep 19 1987 14:4061
    	RE:  .31
    
    	Bob, 
    
    	In your remarks, you stated "I think I understood what Lee's
    	intent was" [when she wrote 1.28] but went on to deliberately
    	twist all of her words into something hateful (and into some-
    	thing that YOU KNOW was not her intention when she wrote it.)
    
    	You came in here *pontificating* to us about how we should
    	feel, then you admit to us that you *KNOW* that our words are
    	not meant to be hateful towards men.
    
    	Your opening line to me (in .31) was "Your [sic] doing exactly
    	what I asked you not to do."  I wasn't aware at all that you
    	had given me orders on how to behave in this conference (or
    	that you felt you had a right to do that.)  What gives here?
    
    	Your intent in this note is somewhat suspect because you
    	started out accusing us of hating men (and feigned friendship
    	with us in order to convince us not to condemn all men for the
    	actions of criminals.)  Then you went on to indicate that you
    	*KNOW* that we don't blame all men, but that our words are
    	capable of being twisted into something hateful (and you want
    	us to know what sorts of things malicious people could do with
    	our words.)  Yes, I think the hatchet job you did on Lee's
    	note was malicious and deliberate.
    
    	What is your intent in this note?  Are you not trying to use
    	insulting arguments to get *US* to change the way we write
    	in this file??  Isn't it true that you have done this before
    	(entered a note out of the blue that damns the whole conference
    	and everyone in it after having NOT contributed to the file
    	in quite some time?)  I can cite the note if I need to.
    
    	My message to you (earlier) was that you did not understand
    	what was in our hearts when we wrote notes.  By that, I meant
    	that you CANNOT READ MY MIND WHEN I SIT AT MY TERMINAL AND
    	CREATE ASCII CHARACTERS THAT GET WRITTEN ONTO A DISK ON RAINBO.
    	I hardly ever write notes when I'm in the midst of a violent
    	attack.  [sarcasm here]  
    
    	You may or may not know what it is like to be a victim of a
    	violent crime.  Whether you do or not, you *STILL* cannot read
    	my mind when I sit at my terminal and write notes.  If you choose
    	to READ INTO MY NOTES hatred towards all men, you are ADDING
    	THINGS THAT AREN'T THERE!!  Nowhere have I EVER STATED (nor
    	MEANT TO STATE) that I either BLAME ALL MEN for the actions
    	of the criminal that assaulted me or DISLIKE MEN IN GENERAL
    	merely because of the PROVABLE FACT that men commit more violent
    	crimes against men & women than women do.

    	Now, I'd like to ask YOU to do something.  I'd like to ask you
    	to stop coming in here to condemn the whole file for things
    	that YOU KNOW we are not feeling/thinking.  I'd like to ask
    	you to try to see our notes for the things that we say (and
    	the obvious intent behind our words.)  And when we tell you
    	A MILLION TIMES that we don't hate men, try to be a GENUINE
    	FRIEND and do us the courtesy of taking us at our word.
    
    						    Suzanne....
479.33NEXUS::CONLONSat Sep 19 1987 15:0416
    
    	P.S.  By the way, I'd like you to know that I consider the
    	whole "man-hating" argument to be part of a disturbing
    	and quite OFFENSIVE stereotype about women.
    
    	We seem to hear it every time we raise our voices on any sort
    	of topic.  The fallacy seems to be that any woman who would
    	publicly confront a man (and disagree with him) must do so
    	because she hates all men.

    	It doesn't surprise me much at all to find that we have to
    	fight off offensive stereotypes within our own file.  Our
    	society is still riddled with them (and many regard them as
    	the so-called "TRUTH" about us.)
    
    						     Suzanne...
479.34SighGCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TSat Sep 19 1987 17:12109
    Oh golly, I had a feeling that would erupt sooner or later.  Calmness,
    Suzanne: I appreciate the support, but please don't fry him _too_
    crispy.  I'd like to try to deal with this, without totally alienating
    Bob.
    
    Now Bob, and any others out there who may not feel very comfortable
    with the original note, I'd like to clarify on a few points.  

    First a little graph.  The dashed box stands for all men in
    America.  The "R" box stands for all rapists in America.
    
    
        
    _____________________________________________________________
    |                                                           |
    |                                                           |
    |                                                           |
    |                                         RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
    |                                         R                 |R
    |                                         R                 |R
    |                                         R                 |R
    |                                         R                 |R
    |                                         R                 |R
    |                                         R                 |R
    |                                         R                 |R
    __________________________________________R__________________R
                                              R                  R
                                              RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
    
    Not all men rape, but very nearly all rapists are men.
    
    The relative sizes of the boxes is open to discussion/debate.
    
    Next, I must point out one sad fact: any anger I feel towards
    men-in-general is empirically based.  The people who have beat me up
    are not female.  The grandparent who violated my mother and her sisters
    was not female.  The persons who have beat up my female friends
    were not female.  The people who raped me were not female.  The
    people who have tried to rape me were not female.  Now once upon
    a naive time, I approached everyone as good and trustworthy unless
    they proved themselves otherwise.  My experience has shown me that
    this is very dangerous with men.  So I am extremely cautious and
    suspicious when first getting to know _any_individual_ man.  In
    essence, I keep myself well-protected until that individual indicates
    that I need fear nothing from him.
    
    To demonstrate that I need fear no harm from you, you need to do
    very little.  I am relatively quick to assign a man the value of
    ... "harmlessness" for wont of a better word.  It is very easy for
    you to show me that I do not need to protect myself from you a whole
    lot.  Some women have incurred much, much more pain at the hands
    of the men in their lives, and they stay suspicious a bit longer.
    
    There is no need for me to suspect any individual woman is going
    to hurt me, because not one ever has.  I have suffered emotionally
    at the hands of women, but not one has assaulted my body under any
    pretext.  I abhor violence, particularly when it directly involves
    me, and no woman has ever used violence with me.  For that reason,
    I remain unsuspicious of any woman until she demonstrates that I
    have nothing to fear from her.
    
    Fair?  Not at all.  Equal?  Not at all.  Morally right?  Not at
    all.  Reasonable?  Entirely.  I started giving _everybody_ the benefit
    of the doubt, and then retracted that benefit from a group that
    hurt me.  When faced with any individual from that group, I will
    give back that benefit once I am assured that he will not hurt me,
    and that does not take much time to establish.
    
    Every day you pay for the "sins of others" in that you will see
    me or one of my sisters withdraw from you if we are alone on a street.
    We will _not_ allow you to "come up for a drink" until we are very
    certain that the episode will not hurt or scare us.  This is what
    I mean when I say that all good men have a vested interest in
    eradicating sexism; we will no longer assume you are hostile until
    shown otherwise.
    
    The parallel case is true.  If, for a wild example, you, Bob, had
    been hurt terribly by the women in your life, I would expect you
    to think that I was out to destroy your self-esteem (or whatever)
    until I demonstrated otherwise.  I would assume your hostility towards
    me was aimed at some other woman (or women).  If the hostility were
    particularly fervent, I would assume you had been the victim of
    many, many emotional hurts at the hands of the women you cared for.
    Or I would assume you had one injury, but it was a very bad one.
    Or I would assume the injury was particularly fresh and sore.
    
    For that reason, I do not attempt to bludgeon a man who has been
    shafted into a rotton child-support situation into recognizing that
    no, _all_ men are _not_ wrongfully deprived of their children by
    evil ex's and their lawyers, etc.  I mention it quietly, once, with
    a personal story.  If he is unwilling or unable to put aside his
    anger, I will not assault his integrity and insult him so I can
    make my point.  I have no scars such as his, and have no reason
    to refresh his pain for my intellectual satisfaction.
    
    If I had such scars, I would feel forced to continue the conversation
    (which would probably be a heated one); I would be hurting him no
    more than he would be hurting me.  
    
    I feel this is why some of the divorce notes have been so hot --
    both sides are angry because they have suffered.  Neither can bear
    to simply afford the other the benefit of the doubt on the grounds
    of not having suffered as much as the other.
    
    [BTW, thanks Bob, for not quoting me out of context.  Many of the
    statements I made in that note cannot stand alone, and I appreciate the
    effort you made to maintain context in the quotations.] 
    
    Lee
479.35I love the graphic image...LeeBUFFER::LEEDBERGTruth is Beauty, Beauty is TruthSat Sep 19 1987 21:4419
    
    
    Lee,
    
    You do such a good job at saying what needs to be said - I just
    wish that it didn't need to be said so often - especially here.
    
    _peggy
    
    BTW - When I am accused of be a "man-hater" I now take it as
    a signal that I am up on points and the accuser has to grab for
    a low blow.  Since I have a son whom I love dearly - I can't be
    a generic "man-hater" in my eyes.
    
    	(-)
    	 |	Sometimes I get tired of walking your shoes
    		and want my own back even if they are full
    		of sand.
    
479.36This is NOT an invitation to invent new stereotypes, but...NEXUS::CONLONSun Sep 20 1987 02:3812
    	RE:  .35
    
    	Agree heartily with both your statements (that Lee once again
    	did a good job of explaining things and that it's a shame we
    	have to keep answering accusations about the same unfair
    	stereotype over and over and over.)
    
    	Next time, I hope someone thinks up a new stereotype to hit
    	us with (cuz I think we've explained the "man-hater" one to
    	death at least a dozen times over, don't you?)  Sheesh!!!
    
    							Suzanne...
479.38STUBBI::B_REINKEwhere the sidewalk endsSun Sep 20 1987 21:271
    kathie, beautifully spoken 
479.39GCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TMon Sep 21 1987 01:1912
    Oh kathie, my eyes are misting over again.
    
    I too was touched and encouraged by Andy's note.
    
    By the way Bob, I am wondering: is the dissection of my note actually
    the way you read it?  If so, I'd like to address some of your points
    more specifically.  It contained many dangerous statements,
    particularly if they are taken out of context.  So many, that I
    was on the way to delete the whole thing when, er, people seemed
    to take it the way I meant it.
    
    Lee
479.40EUCLID::FRASERCrocodile sandwich &amp; make it snappy!Mon Sep 21 1987 10:5323
        Re .37, Kathie - 
        
> From Andys words, he was able to finally put the past to rest and 
> believe and trust in women again. But I wonder Andy,did you once consider
> all women "Man-Haters" and condemn them for what someone else had put 
> you put you through in your past?         
        
        Not at  any  time!    The  problem  _I_ had was of being unable
        (unwilling maybe) to open  up  and  let myself trust again, for
        fear of being hurt in the  same way.  It had nothing to do with
        seeing  women  as  'man-haters';    more,  it  was  in  my  own
        perception  of women who had the potential to  cause  the  same
        hurt I had lived with - it takes time to allay those fears.

        The past is gone, the memories fade, and with Sandy the present
        and the future  are bright and happy.  It feels good to be able
        to love and trust  again  when  at  one  time  that  seemed  an
        impossible dream.
                
        In friendship,
        
        Andy.
        
479.41This has gotten out of handSTING::BARBERSkyking Tactical ServicesMon Sep 21 1987 14:3442
 
 Well I must admit that I was under the opinion that I was a reasonably
 good communicator. from the replys here I guess not. The whole point
 behind what I have written was not to attack anyone. My original words
 and intent were to bring out the following points.

 The original note written by Lee CAN and WOULD be interpreted by many men
 as an anti men statement. I explained that I believed I understood her 
 original intent, BUT the whole exercise of taking it apart was to SHOW HOW IT 
 COULD AND WOULD BE INTERPRETED AS A NEGATIVE . I did this not as Bob B the 
 person attacking Lee the author as I have been accused, but a man as part
 of men that has been lumped into a bad connotation about men.

 The original note was written as a man that was not trying to attack any
 one but was disturbed to see a note written that reads that all men are bad.
 I am not a bad person, and the whole point was that only a small percentage
 of either men or women are the ones responsible for the evil and bad 
 things done to their fellow human being. I get disturbed, since I am
 not one of those people and wind up getting lumped into them because I
 am a men. Why is it OK for you to disagree with a man who writes a
 generalisation that all women in this file are men haters. But then
 one of us objects to a text that can be interpatated as anti man and
 he gets leaped all over ????

 Even after the first note I can back and apologized if the intent
 was taken out of context, yet the flames just went higher. I am not 
 attempting to tell nor order anyone on how they should think, do or 
 feel. These notes and others that Ive written on the same lines 
 are statements that I, for one object to automatically labeled as a
 bad person because Iam a man. You go right ahead and think and feel
 as you please. 

If anyone of you out there, truly believe that I am an evil person,
then that is your purgative. It would appear that I can do little
to change that, since Ive have been judged. BUT for the record, it only 
shows that you DONT KNOW who and what I am. 
    
 RE .39   Lee , Ide be more than happy to talk about your entry and
          its possable perceived interpations.
    
                                      Bob B
479.42What *do* you want?PNEUMA::SULLIVANMon Sep 21 1987 14:5217
    
    Many women in this file wish to discuss things that are important
    to them.  This includes discussions of pain, some of which includes
    pain that has been inflicted by some men.  It seems to me that
    the women here go to great lengths to insert the word "some" before
    the word "men" in order to avoid offending anyone.  When that word
    is left out, it is usually by oversight.  What would it take for
    women to be able to talk about the things important to them without
    offending men?  I for one, am tired of this fighting back and forth
    about women hurting men's feelings.  So.. can we draw up some
    ground rules?  Can we say:  When we say "Some men...." we don't
    mean you unless we say, "You men..."  I would be willing to modify
    my language so as to avoid hurting feelings as long as I can
    be allowed to talk about my experience in a way that is true for
    me.  
    
    Justine
479.43Taking the part for the wholeREGENT::BROOMHEADDon&#039;t panic -- yet.Mon Sep 21 1987 14:5812
    Bob,
    
    It is not yor writing ability which anyone takes exception to,
    it is the level of reading comprehension you show.  It is
    especially the [incredibly low] level of reading comprehension
    which *you claim* other men will/may have in reading what women
    have written here.
    
    And which you *seem* to think is our problem, or is at least
    for us to solve.
    
    						Ann B.
479.44*Unbelievably* low reading comprehension level, evidently...NEXUS::CONLONMon Sep 21 1987 15:1116
    	Bob, I agree with Ann.  How many millions more times do we
    	have to SHOUT FROM THE ROOFTOPS that we don't hate men until
    	you are willing to believe us (take us at our word)?
    
    	I'm deathly tired of seeing the same old argument (over and
    	over and over).
    
    	I've noticed a DRASTIC REDUCTION in the number of other men
    	in this conference who think we hate men.  It appears that
    	MOST of the men here have gotten the message.
    
    	Yet, you (even today) are STILL asking us not to hate men.
    
    	You just aren't listening to a word we say, are you?

    							Suzanne...
479.45Thoughts from the "enemy"CYBORG::MALLETTMon Sep 21 1987 15:2050
    It seems to me that the assertion by "women" that there exists a
    kind of state of war with "men" is valid from what I'd call
    the editorial standpoint for lack of a better phrase.  As that
    beautiful diagram several notes back indicates, there is a large
    group of people who, *in general* are/have oppressed women.  This
    group can be generally classified as "men".  It doesn't mean all
    men literally, but it does mean that the one most common character-
    istic of that group is that they are male.  Just as the assertions
    "Whites are oppressing Blacks in South Africa" or "Americans are
    at war with the Vietnamese" don't mean all whites on the planet
    nor all Americans, "Men have oppressed women" doesn't *necessarily*
    mean all men.
    
    It also occurs to me that there is at least one way to preface
    the assertion that "Men oppress women" such that it is literally
    true.  No matter what our personal politics, it appears that 
    everyone agrees that socialization begins at a very early age
    (like soon after birth if not, in fact, before).  Having been 
    raised in a male-dominant world, we are all fed an incredible,
    often subtle array of information during our formative years.
    I suggest then, that the basis for sexism begins so early and
    is so profoundly thorough, that we may not be *able* to be
    "truly" egalitarian.
    
    My point is not whether any individual is or isn't utterly
    equal-minded, it is simply that, given the time and space
    coordinates of our birth, it may be impossible to purge out
    every last vestige of sexism (or racism, or. . .).  It may
    thus help us to keep in mind that we're not 100% pure (yet :-D ).
    Given an assertion of "Men oppress women", I ask myself "Do I/have
    I never exhibited any oppressive behaviors?  C'mon Steve, any?
    never?. . ."  In truth, I find I have been "part of the problem"
    sometimes and, even today, though I want to be "part of the 
    solution", I realize that my upbringing has biased me, created
    blind spots, if you will, that make it virtually impossible to
    be absolutely even-handed all the time to all people.  It seems
    to me that in order to help change things, I must admit to myself
    that I belong to that general class of women-oppressors called
    "men" and that if I look hard within myself, it won't be that
    hard to find the weeds of bias growing side-by-side with the
    flowers of equality.
    
    Mind you, I *am* getting very close to perfection.  The schedule
    now calls for my perfection to be on-line in Q4 '88, though I'm
    just a tad concerned that the date seems to keep slipping, and
    slipping, and. . .
    
    Steve (who reminds you that everything you read here could be wrong).
    
    
479.46MOSAIC::TARBETMargaret MairhiMon Sep 21 1987 15:3010
    (I hope the following is water on the flames, not oil...)
    
    I think Ann has pinpointed the problem exactly:  Bob *is* saying that
    (1) men will mis-read what (e.g.) Lee wrote, and (2) it is the
    responsibility of the writers to make sure that that doesn't happen.
    
    I haven't seen Bob make any overgeneralised charges in this discussion,
    either overtly or by implication. 
    
    						=maggie
479.47Not an enemy at allPNEUMA::SULLIVANMon Sep 21 1987 16:078
    
    re 479.45
    
    Steve,
    
    Thank you!  I really liked what you said in your note.
    
    Justine
479.48STING::BARBERSkyking Tactical ServicesMon Sep 21 1987 17:1949
    
     Re .43  Ann
    
          Excuse me but I do happen to have a QUITE HIGH level of
          comprehension.  But for the matter at hand lets look at
          some of the text as an example.
    
          " For now , for many of us the "enemy" who is actively causing
           us pain , is men . Note that I said "men" and not a man."
    
           "We are at war with men".
    
            Now Iam sorry but in my book these (and other statements)
            made in the text are straight forward anti men statements.
            THIS is what I object to, that I have been wrongly labeled
            as bad because Iam a man. You keep telling me that you arnt
            anti man, well go back into the text, replace men with women
            and see if it sings the happy tune you claim it does.
          
            For once Ignore the last paragraph and concentrate on the
            first 90 % of the text. The statements are very direct,
            and leave little if no room for interpatation.
    
     RE .44   Suzanne
    
           How many millions of times before I believe ????
    
           When I stop seeing statements such as were in the first 
           90 % of Lees text. When I stop getting flamed when I object
           to what I believe to be gerneric anti men statements. When
           I see the person(s) responsible for the problem, rather
           then all men get the blame. Am I getting nit picky ...yes probably
           but if one of us men wrote something similar, Iam quite
           sure one of you would have come back at us with an objection.
           In my original text I asked for both men and women to work
           together to help each other against the bad. But it seams
           that you only wish to read what you wish to see. It would
           appear that you are the one who hasent listened to a word
           said.
    
      RE . 46   Maggie
    
          Thank you, at least one person has read all of what Ive 
          written. I was beginning to wonder if the real meaning and
          message was getting across at all.  
    
            
    
          
479.49MOSAIC::TARBETMargaret MairhiMon Sep 21 1987 18:2229
    um, Bob, you have now misread something that was, I think, *very*
    clearly stated.  The sentence immediately following those you quoted
    is "There is not one man in this conference who has actively hurt
    [any of us]".  You are almost by name excluded from any imputation
    of guilt, Bob.  What more could you ask?
    
    What I almost think I hear you arguing is that we should never make any
    general statement; that if we cannot name individuals then we shouldn't
    talk about the problems.  You seem to be saying that any general
    statement, no matter how thoroughly qualified to exclude you as an
    individual, nonetheless maligns you because it speaks of men and
    you are a man.  
    
    I guess it's maybe something like being german and hearing people say
    "Germans are responsible for having killed 6M jews".  It makes no claim
    that ALL germans were  killers, or that the germans were the ONLY
    killers, or that jews were the only people killed.  So it's a true
    statement, and probably all the harder to hear because of that very
    fact.  
    
    Similarly, being a man and hearing "Men are our enemy because they are
    actively causing us pain" must be very hard to hear, even when in the
    same breath your personal innocence is clearly acknowledged. 
    
    It's too hard to expect people to either name names or say nothing,
    Bob.  The best anyone can do is try not to burn the innocent, and Lee
    did that over and over again in the note you cite. 
                                                                 
    						=maggie
479.50CYBORG::MALLETTMon Sep 21 1987 18:4717
    re: .48  Bob
    
    "Now Iam (sic) sorry but in my book these...are straight 
    forward (sic) anti men (sic) statements."
    
    I believe what many of the women are saying is that in many
    mens' books, these are not straightforward anti-men statements.
    They and you are both right; I'm sure many men feel as you do,
    but I'm equally sure some (many) don't.  Me f'rinstance.  While
    I acknowledge I'm a part of the oppressor class (not just to
    women, BTW; after all, I'm white, too), I understand from many
    of the women in this conference that I may not be the object of
    any *particular* note or offense.  And, though I may be weird,
    I'm not entirely alone, right guys?  Uh, *right* guys?  Um, guys. . .?
    
    Steve (who tries to wear those shoes that fit)
    
479.51I'll admit to being NesfanREGENT::BROOMHEADDon&#039;t panic -- yet.Mon Sep 21 1987 19:1156
    Bob B,

    You claim, in reply .48, "to have a QUITE HIGH level of comprehension."

    Very well, let's look at some of it:

    A few lines after you wrote that you wrote, "You keep telling me
    that you arnt [sic] anti man [sic]..."

    Since I, personally, have NEVER written or said any such thing in
    any forum, public or otherwise, your statement is false, and to
    have produced such a statement implies a reading comprehension
    level of approximately zero.

    Alternatively, thou art using the word "you" to be plural.  Still,
    this includes me as part of a group which has repeated stated to
    thee that they are not "anti man", and I am in no way part of such
    a group, and my conclusion of the previous paragraph stands:  Thy
    understanding is zip.

    A further alternative is that you do not distinguish between the terms
    "you" and "they".  Here are more promising grounds.  In your comments
    on Lee's essay, you repeatedly demonstrate this failing.  Let me see
    if I can explain the difference between the two pronouns to you:

    	Imagine Lee is seated at a terminal on a vast flat plain.  All
    	the people who read this file are standing behind her, and
    	reading over her shoulder.  All the rest of the people in the
    	world are out on the plain in front of her.  When she types
    	"I", she means the person seated at the terminal.  When she types
    	"you", she means one or more of the persons standing behind the
    	terminal.  When she types "they", she means two or more of the people
    	out on the plain.

    	Let me paraphrase.  When she types "they", she is never
    	referring to anyone reading over her shoulder.  When she types
    	"you", she is never referring to anyone out on the plain.

    Notice that I did not use the term "all" except when I meant to
    use the term "all".  Please extend the courtesy of believing that a
    writer refrains from using "all" as a deliberate act of English
    composition to all the people you read, and especially to all the
    people to whom you reply.

    Perhaps you do not think you do this, yet how else could one
    explain that you quote Lee as she speaks of two individual and
    hypothetical cases ("In both cases, the same gender is victimizing
    the other."), and then claim that it is making the point, "Only
    men can victimize....Women never do it"?

    From TWO situations, carefully crafted to be similar, you derive
    concepts like "only" and "never".  This is not responsible reading
    and writing, and this is only one, quick example out of many I
    could write.

    							Ann B.
479.52restimulationVINO::MCARLETONReality; what a concept!Mon Sep 21 1987 23:1450
    Re: .19
    
    > Part of our asking that men not reply to a topic is self protection --
    > we don't want more hurt, and any man could easily add to the hurt in a
    > vulnerable area.
    
    I have read a huge number of notes in this file.  I mostly read
    here to try to get a better understanding of women and their issues.
    Most of the notes pass by me and add little to my understanding.
    A few just make me want to flame.  Once in a great while a note
    expresses and idea so well that I have a leap of understanding.
    The "ah-ha" effect.  These notes also add to my ability to feel
    empathy and make me glad that I took the time to read though all
    the rest. 
    
    479.19 is one such note.  Thanks Lee.
    
    Re: .20
    
    	> One of the men who wrote in started saying some of the things
    	> that my Mother-in-Law used to say to me (TO EXCUSE THE BEHAVIOR
    	> OF HER VIOLENT SON) and it sent me right up the wall.
    
    Being the man that the above fragment refers too I can see now that
    I fell into the trap that Lee talks about in .19.  I was pouring
    salt in Suzanne's wounds and I did not even know it.  I was expecting
    that Suzanne was speaking from a cool rational base and that all
    her flames were based on only what I had said.
    
    I can see now that, at times, demanding a rational discussion may
    be asking too much.  I don't think that I could stay rational under
    similar but reversed circumstances.
    
    One discipline of healing that was practiced by my parents and family
    friends was called reevaluation counseling.  In the lingo of that
    school of thought my input in the battered women note would be
    called the "restimulation" of Suzanne's memories of her mother-in-law.
    The resulting output from her would be called "discharge" and is
    recognized as being healthy to the person "discharging".  Discharge
    is not supposed to be questioned.  If we had been face to face I
    might have recognized that Suzanne was restimulated and I might,
    therefor, have reacted differently.  At the time I had no idea that
    my arguments could have touched a nerve.
    
    Keep in mind that the men in this file may also be reacting to
    painful events from the past.  I'm sure the biggest flames come
    when both sides are poking at each other's wounds.
    
    					MJC O->
    
479.53Saved (For A Short Time At Least)FDCV03::ROSSTue Sep 22 1987 11:319
    RE: Last 25, or so, replies
    
    Phewwww... Oh Boy/Girl! I'm glad I'm off the hook for a while.
    
    And to think this particular round all started over a Van Heusen
    shirt ad.
    
       Alan
     
479.54But What The Hell - Life's ShortFDCV03::ROSSTue Sep 22 1987 11:4713
    RE: .51
    
    Have *you* confirmed with Lee that what you interpreted as *her*
    meaning for "you" and "they" is really what *she* meant?
    
    I'm not saying that she didn't necessarily mean them the way you posit.
    
    It's just that you may be doing something that you're inferring
    Bob should not do.
    
      Alan
     
    
479.56Keep trying...STUBBI::B_REINKEwhere the sidewalk endsTue Sep 22 1987 13:4814
    Bob, not being Lee, I wouldn't say I am at war with men, but
    I would say that I don't *trust* a man I don't know. I tend to
    be much more wary around male strangers than I am around female.
    (Unless the female looks like a biker then I would be wary around
    her also :-) ). I have never been hurt like many of the women in
    this file have been by men, which accounts for the difference in
    how we express this sort of feeling. In general tho, if I have gotten
    to know someone, even by notes or mail, I am much more apt to trust
    them (no matter how they look ;-) ). So just keep on communicating,
    keep on writing notes, keep on listening, keep on talking, and
    encourage others to do likewise. As long as we are trying to
    communicate and understand each other there isn't any war.
    
    Bonnie
479.57STING::BARBERSkyking Tactical ServicesTue Sep 22 1987 14:23113
          RE .49
          Ahhh Maggie , no I didn't miss the "one man in the conference " 
          statement. The problem is in the beginning of the next paragraph
          it starts off with "We are at war with ALL MEN". (my emphasis)
          Now where does one draw the line ??? The problem is that we read 
          one statement saying were all bad and then one saying this group
          is OK, and then back to we're all bad again. Am I safe and a good guy 
          because I follow this conference ?? ( one would not get that idea 
          considering the current dialog going on in this note.) Would I be
          any different if I had never either read or wrote in this conference
          ??  I don't think so, I am the same person I was before I add this 
          conference to my file.
          
          The "not one man in this conference has hurt us" statement is
          an example of what Iam talking about when I talk about qualifier
          statement. It equates with "gee you would really be OK if you 
          would be like I think you should be". In this case the statement 
          is exonerating any and all men who follow or write in this 
          conference.  

          I really kind of have to go "HUH ???? " at that one.
          I can recall some real knock down, drag out written fights 
          between some of the participants of this file. Some went as 
          far as to be personal attacks against the other, that Ill be
          willing to guarantee caused anger, hurt and pain to the persons
          involved. 

          I can remember certain men that do nothing else, but come 
          in this file to argue and cause problems. There are others 
          that are here and agree with every thing any of the women 
          write. And still there are the others such as myself that 
          agree with some things, disagree with some of the others.
          Am I only welcome here if I only agree ???? If I disagree 
          with some things, do I still come ( by Lees statement)
          under the heading of a good guy ???

          The point here is that there is a very large number of men
          in this company that don't follow this file. There is a even
          greater amount that don't even work for DEC. Now does that
          put them outside of the realm of being classified as good
          men ????  
          
          I don't expect anyone to remain silent on the things that bother
          them. I mean look at this as an example. Am I going a bit
          overboard on the terms thing ? , maybe, but in your cited example
          if I were a German I would be upset to be hated by those who
          lived through WW II. The Nazis were the people that brought
          so much suffering to others, not the current generation born 
          during and after those times. 

          Is it right that they bear the brunt of the sins of their 
          forefathers ?? Is it right under the same pretense that I suffer
          the stigmatism brought about by a small percentage of other men ?? 
          That only when I think, do and say what you consider to be 
          accecptable (varies with source) that then Iam OK ????
          I am getting the feeling that its not allowable to be a good
          guy and an independent thinker.

          No, I don't expect you to name names, but on the other side I 
          don't think its unfair of me to request that you stop writing
          statements that infer that all of us are to blame. If it was 
          your ex boyfriend, husband, friend, whatever say it was THAT MAN
          that did you wrong.

          I really must apologize to Lee since this entire discussion is 
          centered around her text. I have read other things written by
          Lee, (such as .19) that I would agree with .52, is a super
          example of an "Ah huh" step in understanding.

    RE.50
         Steve, I hear you and respect that, that is your opinion,
         Yet I would need to hear it from a number of more men 
         before I retire from my stand on the subject.  
           
   RE. 51
         Ow, ouuuu Yup you got me on that one. Your absolutely right
         in stating that you haven't made any stand or written on whether 
         your pro or anti man.  Sorry about that, I was getting a little 
         too wrapped up in the subject at hand. Now that you mention it I 
         didn't realize that this was my English Comp exam instead of a 
         discussion of differences. All you have done up to and including 
         your last reply is nit pick my style of writing. But I contend
         that my ability to comprehend should not be compaired to my
         mistake on who replyed what.
         
         On the subject of my writting ability, well I did suffer my
         way thrugh English comp in school, but suprise, I got a A in
         understanding English lit. So, sorry bout that, I studied 
         Engineering and not English as my major, so I suppose that 
         if you wish to follow along with this , you'll just have to 
         suffer through it.

         On the other side I was unaware that you and Lee were one in
         the same person. Who are you to know exactly what Lee's 
         thoughts were at the time she wrote her note ?? Iam quite sure
         that Lee has the ability to explain her own mind set ( which she
         has done [.19] and it was nothing like you describe) much better
         than you.

         In the case of the point of my statement " only men can victimize
         ...women never do it ? was meant to be a question ( read question 
         mark at end of sentence ) It was made in reference to the statements
         " Statistics show that the people who victimize others with their 
           incest fantasies are overwhelmingly men. "  followed by....
         " They (..........) are the bad guys." The rational was that I was 
         questioning the statements that lay the total blame for problem
         on men.  
       
         I'de love to continue this, but Iam going to be gone for the
         rest of the week. Ill catch up when I get back.
    
                                        Bob B
479.59GCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TTue Sep 22 1987 14:4725
    re .57
    
    >>  We are at war with ALL MEN.
    
    The emphasis may be yours, but you certainly aren't quoting my .13
    (which was copied as 1.28).  It reads:
    
    >    We are at war with men.  
    
    and then goes on to say (again) that we are not at war with YOU.
    (For you, read you, Bob Barber, you, Bob Holt, you, ANY MAN WHO
    IS NOT HURTING US).
    
    You are reading into my statements much more hatred and rancor than
    is there.  I said what I _meant_, darnit!
    
    Do I _have_ to remind you that men are among the people I fall in
    love with?!?  Would I fall in love with someone I hated, even
    subconsciously?  And if I were a lesbian, would you assume that
    meant man-hater instead of woman-lover?  Would you then think you
    _knew_ what I meant even if I said the opposite??
    
    Sorry.  Flame off.
    
    Lee
479.60Quit while you're ahead?PSYCHE::SULLIVANTue Sep 22 1987 15:0918
    
    
    Lee.
    
    I think maybe you ought to quit while you're ahead.  I thought
    your first note was beautifully written, and it *was* understood
    by most of us.  I worry that your attempts to explain your words
    to a few are confusing some of the rest of us.  (I, for one had
    some trouble with the Viet Cong-leads-to-bashing-of-all-Vietnamese
    analogy, for example.)  I think your words stand pretty well for
    themselves.  I think the explanation of MEN (as a class, as a social
    and political entity) as different from individuals who are male but 
    not oppressive has been made countless ways.  
    
    Maybe it's like Algebra... not everybody gets it right away.
    
    Justine who barely passed Algebra
                                             
479.61RAINBO::TARBETMargaret MairhiTue Sep 22 1987 15:2056
    <--(.57)
    
�         Ahhh Maggie , no I didn't miss the "one man in the conference " 
�         statement. The problem is in the beginning of the next paragraph
�         it starts off with "We are at war with ALL MEN". (my emphasis)

    um, Bob, it _doesn't_ say "all"...you're not only adding emphasis,
    you're adding the whole word!!
    
    I don't want to put words in Lee's mouth, but my interpretation of her
    "not one man in this conference" statement was as a "don't anyone here
    take the anger you'll find here personally because as far as I know not
    one man in this conference" etc.  Benefit of the doubt, in some cases,
    fairly certain knowledge in others.  Any injury caused in here is,
    on both sides I think, pretty transient.  (Not less painful in the
    moment, sometimes, but still of fairly short duration)  I really
    can't think of any genuine creeps in here.  Curmudgeons yes, creeps
    no.
    
�         ... but in your cited example
�         if I were a German I would be upset to be hated by those who
�         lived through WW II. 
        
    That's where you keep going wrong, Bob.  My example is of someone (a
    german, call him Hans) who considers it unfair of someone else (call
    her Anna) to SAY "germans killed jews" because after all *he*, Hans,
    has never killed anybody.  Somehow Hans keeps hearing Anna say "all"
    even though she isn't, and somehow he then makes the leap to her
    hating *him* because of it even though she has never said anything
    about him either personally or inclusively.
    
�         The Nazis were the people that brought
�         so much suffering to others, not the current generation born 
�         during and after those times.                
    
    That has nothing to do with the truth of the statement!

�         Is it right that they bear the brunt of the sins of their 
�         forefathers ?? Is it right under the same pretense that I suffer
�         the stigmatism brought about by a small percentage of other men??
    
    But you *don't* suffer it, Bob.  I can almost guarantee that were you
    perceived as "one of Them" few in here would be even civil toward you.
    The only flak you're getting is what you're bringing down on your own
    head...and that's a trivial amount :') 
    
�         That only when I think, do and say what you consider to be 
�         accecptable (varies with source) that then Iam OK ????
�         I am getting the feeling that its not allowable to be a good
�         guy and an independent thinker. 
    The only people worth having are those who are "good guy[s] and
    ... independent thinker[s]".

    Have a nice holiday!
    						=maggie
    
479.62ANGORA::BUSHEEGeorge BusheeWed Sep 23 1987 12:4824
    
    	RE: .58
    
    	 Lee, the Vietnam example was a bad one..  Just as the one
    	I kept hearing the whole time I was there;
    
    	  "We are NOT at war with North Vietnam.. We are here as
    	    advisors..."
    
    	Sure they kept telling us that, all the while I kept watching
    	my buddies getting blown apart by the non-war!!
    
    	So bottom line.  Did I really think we weren't at war?
    
    		NO WAY, there was shooting and people getting
    		killed.. Funny it sure looks like war.
    
    	Some men may react the same, they hear you say you don't
    	blame all men, then make statements that read by themself
    	seem to imply it.
    
    	So what can we do, how can we work past this?
    
    	George
479.63GCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TWed Sep 23 1987 18:093
    well, I'll just delete that one if it didn't work.
    
    Oh well.                                  Lee
479.64Sad, not angry, not offendedHUMAN::BURROWSJim BurrowsWed Sep 23 1987 23:08103
        Well, since I seem to be in the habit of disagreeing with
        everyone, may I give this rather dead looking horse a few kicks
        of my own? (I'd never beat a dead horse, but I might kick him.)
        
        When I read Lee's note I will admit that I was a little hurt, a
        bit saddened, but it wasn't in the way that you might have
        thought. It didn't hurt my feelings. It didn't make me angry. It
        didn't feel like bigotry or sexism. It didn't make me feel badly
        about Lee, nor did it make me feel that she disliked or was
        attacking me. No, I was hurt or saddened because I care very
        much for Lee, and she ssemed to be letting the bad guys win. 
        
        Lee did a marvelous job, I though, of explaining who the bad
        guys are, and giving an idea of what made them bad. But, in my
        eye, when she said "we are at war with men", and when she
        implied that in order to be good guys men had to be "honorary
        women", she was giving in to the bad guys--letting them win.
        
        She let them win by letting them poison her view of men. The bad
        guys of the world win each time we fear, each time they make us
        angry, each time they steal our ability to trust. They win when
        they impose world view on us, when they bring out the dark side
        of us, when they remake us in their image or in their image of
        us.
        
        By declaring not that "we are at war with the bad guys of the
        world", by implying that men are only good when they are
        womanly, Lee confuses, on the verbal level at the very least,
        men as a class with bad guys as a class. She may have done it
        only on the verbal/rhetorical level, but our thoughts are often
        conditioned by or reflected in our language.
        
        Even if she isn't actually confusing the two groups, the other
        things that she says indicates that she fears, doubts and
        suspects men more than women. One way or another, the bad guys
        have conditioned her view of men in general, and the way she
        deals with them and speaks of them. 
        
        You have to understand, if you're going to understand what I'm
        saying, where I'm coming from on this. For years as a youngster
        I was a victim. The bad guys beat me regularly. Worse than that,
        they managed to engage virtually all of the other boys in our
        class to join them in this sport of beating me. They didn't just
        beat me. They made me into a victim--with my acquiescence. I
        felt like a victim. I looked like a victim. I was victimized
        even by people who weren't victimizers. I boiled with impotent
        anger. I feared and distrusted everyone.
        
        One day I put and end to it. I stopped being a victim. I began
        to believe in myself. I fought back. But more, I began to trust
        again. I swore off not only fear, but hate, uncontrolable anger
        and distrust. I stopped centering my life around those people
        who only made it miserable. 
        
        My experience colors my view ofthe world. It made me hate to see
        good people manipulated by bad, be it through fear, hate, guilt,
        or distrust. I deeply resent any concession made to the bad
        guys. And when I see people I care for, people I admire
        surrender control to the other side it hurts.
        
        I think a lot of Lee. I admire the strength and consistancy of
        her principles. I respect her technical competance. I aplaud and
        am attracted to her strength of character. I feel great sympathy
        for her difficulties of times past. When I see signs that she
        has come to distrust men, to classify them with the bad guy it
        hurts. It doesn't hurt me personally. If I thought she disliked
        me that would hurt personally. No, this hurts because one of the
        best has made a concession to the bad guys. It hurts because
        *we* (the good guys--Lee, me and the rest of us) are losing.
        
        When I read Lee's note I was affected quite a lot by it. The
        things she said were just a small defeat, perhaps just a slip of
        the tongue, but because they came from Lee and not someone who
        normally rants or condemns men, from someone of strong priniples
        and intelligence, they felt like a very real defeat.  It hurt
        because I knew that it would have taken a lot of pain for the
        bad guys to win that concession from her, and I didn't want
        to think of some I cared for being hurt that bad.
        
        It's taken me a long time to write this. I have no idea if I
        have conveyed the reality of my raction to this note. I really
        don't want to support the "man-hating" image, or the "be careful
        of what you say or you'll hurt the feelings of men" view. I
        don't think that many, if any, of the women here are bigotted
        against men. I feel that even for men this is one of the most
        supportive conferences on the net. But I was bothered by that
        note and I think that the reason is important. 
        
        By the way, to see the note taken by Maggie, whom I respect
        deeply and posted in 1.28 in the name of the conference hurt
        just as much. Another one of the best of the good guys concedes.
        Another victory for the bad guys. The phrases are a small thing,
        but the implication of them is extremely daunting.
        
        To have several people embrace and commend them and praise them
        without seeing the lost of trust, the acceptance of fear, the
        prejudice of "war with men" and goodliness being equated with
        womanhood and presumption of badness with manhood, adds up to a
        big loss, and it makes me sad. I hate to lose. It hurts whether
        the loss is big and dramatic or slow, small and gradual. And to
        me, this feels like a defeat for the side of right.
        
        JimB. 
479.65Thanks, JimQUARK::LIONELWe all live in a yellow subroutineThu Sep 24 1987 00:1716
    Thanks, Jim.  You've put into words what's been bothering me for
    a long time.  I felt a sour taste in my mouth whenever I thought
    that I had to be an "honorary woman" to be accepted as a "good guy".
    But I couldn't find the right words to say it.
    
    I too was a victim all throughout my school years.  But I never
    lost my willingness to trust, to assume that someone was a friend
    until they proved otherwise.  And it has hurt when I have come
    to realize that I have to prove to others that I am "harmless".
    
    I've felt enough of the not-so-subtle pressure here that I've
    basically stopped participating in this conference, though I
    continue to read it.  I'm weary of having to prove myself each
    time just to get listened to.  I'm weary of being told that I'm
    unworthy because I'm a man.
    				Steve
479.66good friendsSTUBBI::B_REINKEwhere the sidewalk endsThu Sep 24 1987 00:317
    Jim and Steve....
    
    both of  you are valuable contributors to this file. Please
    continue to add your thoughts and insights... the file would
    be poorer without either of you
    
    Bonnie
479.67too much static!!!DECWET::JWHITEweird wizard whiteThu Sep 24 1987 00:4325
    
    I'm getting a little tired of this. The only thing I can think of
    is that many of the men arguing this issue must have been fortunate
    enough to have avoided much oppression. Is it not clear that many
    people in our society suffer oppression? Is it not clear that a
    disproportionate number of those suffering are women (and blacks
    and children and...)? Is it not also clear that a disproportionate
    number of those *not* being oppressed are adult white males? That
    alone might be enough to at least suggest that white males are the
    oppressors. However, it also seems clear that many white men do
    not actually have the requisite power to oppress. So we must temper
    our ideas at least enough to say, maybe, some people oppress others
    and a significant (and highly visible) proportion of those oppressors
    are white males. But...
    
    I believe it is far more important, rather than argue about how many
    oppressors there are, rather than quibble about whether we should
    say 'some' or 'most' or 'many', is to realise and admit that, as
    white males, *even if we are not active oppressors*, we tend to
    benefit from the system as it is. We need to say the system is *wrong*.
    It *must* be changed. We must *help* make it change. Doing *anything
    else* simply delays change and I for one am not willing to take
    the awesome responsibility that somewhere, someone is being oppressed
    one day longer because I quibbled.
    
479.68GCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TThu Sep 24 1987 10:4622
    But Jim, the bad guys have won a temporary victory only.  Do you
    think I could go on if I thought they had really won??  They are
    fighting a losing battle and will soon (less than 1 generation,
    in my opinion) be entirely outdated, a thing of the dark ages. 
    To do this, ALL of us need to keep fighting as hard as we can, which
    is one of the reasons I care so much about including men in this
    file and in our lives -- you MUST see the problems, understand that
    the problems effect you too, and help fix them.
    
    Steve and Jim, I say and think "honorary woman" for many reasons,
    one of which is that it makes it much easier for me to understand
    you: I understand myself pretty well, and using that phrase makes it
    easier for me to understand you as if you were a human being (as
    _I_ am) rather than some "other".  It may may seem otherwise, but
    for some of the men in my life to understand me as a person, they
    have had to look at me as though I were an "honorary man".
    
    My mind is a bit fuddled today, so I'll stop while I'm behind :)
    and try again later.  Your notes touched me (see Lee trying not
    to cry in her office).
    
    Lee
479.69Give Peace a ChancePSYCHE::SULLIVANThu Sep 24 1987 10:55108
                     
    
    Jim B.,
    
    I just read your considered response, and I for one really appreciate
    that this issue of how women feel about men is so important to you.
    It seems to me that we (meaning women) cannot ask you (meaning men)
    to agree with our views, but we can ask you to consider them seriously,
    and it's obvious that you have done that.
    
    In reading your message, however, I felt that you had at once both
    understood and then dismissed the importance of one of Lee's key
    points.  Because many men have and continue to oppress and
    victimize many women a number of things happen:
    
    	o The women who have experienced this victimization directly
    	  may experience fear of men and perhaps some bitterness (the
    	  amount of bitterness and fear is probably proportionate to
    	  the amount of victimization experienced.)
    
    	o Other women who may not have been directly victimized in (for
    	  example) a violent way may live in fear that it could happen.
    	  (I, for example, have never been raped, but I've been chased
    	  by a carload full of drunk teenage boys and as a result have
    	  some fear.)

   What this means is that a lot of women are afraid of being hurt by
   the "bad guys."  The problem here is that how do you tell the bad
   guys from the good guys.  Rapists and wife beaters can be found in
   every social strata; they have no distinguishing marks or features.
   Women have to try to figure out who the bad guys are.  I suspect 
   that women fall somewhere on a spectrum of trust in this regard.
   On one end you have women who trust everyone, and then luck determines
   whether or not they will be victimized.  On the other end of the
   spectrum you have women who trust no men; I think they all live
   in an organic farm collective in Belchertown, MA :-).  Most of
   us, however, fall somewhere in the middle.  We take some risks
   and constantly reevaluate what seems safe to us.

   What does this fear that women have mean to men, especially to men
   who are not oppressive?  Well, as has been mentioned before, on
   some level men benefit from women's fear, from women's second
   class status.  I think the losses good men suffer, however, far
   outweigh the gains.  As you have mentioned, Jim, good men suffer
   when women mistrust men because of their experience with the bad guys.
   Good men suffer when they feel they are being lumped together with
   the bad guys.

   So what should good guys do in response to what seems to misplaced
   anger?  Well, only you can decide what you *should* do, but I'll
   offer an opinion.  When our words hurt you, do speak up, and tell
   us why it hurts.  But when you do that, I think you should remember
   a few things.  

   First of all, as I mentioned before, the only recognizable characteristic 
   that (most of) our oppressors share is that they are men.  (Perhaps this 
   discussion would not go on if Lee's message had said, "We are at war with 
   the men who oppress us.")  Secondly, as women fighting oppression, we are 
   not just fighting for better jobs and equal pay (although those things are 
   important to us); we are fighting for our SURVIVAL.  I think that changes
   the rules a little.  Do I care about your feelings?  Yes.  Will I risk 
   hurting your feelings if I feel my life (or the life of one of my sisters) 
   is in danger?  Yes, I will.  So, please remember that for some of us the 
   stakes are higher than those of mere intellectual debate.
   
   The last thing I'd like you to keep in mind when our words hurt you
   is that our words and our ability (and freedom) to express our anger
   are very important to us.  In fact, in this battle that we're fighting,
   words are sometimes our only tools.  We could fight back with violence,
   but men (and here I mean good guys AND bad guys) have the weapons.
   They make the laws.  They run the courts and the police stations and 
   the jails.  And not being able to distinguish (at a glance) the good 
   guys from the bad, some of us mistrust all the symbols of the 
   (white male) establishment.  So the only way that we can hope to win 
   this battle is to inspire each other first, and for some of us that 
   means getting angry, spelling out the fact that we are "at war" for 
   our survival.  

   The good guys can benefit from joining in our battle because they are 
   hurt by the bad guys, too.  But you must remember that it is our 
   battle, and that if you attack our words and our feelings (as the bad 
   guys do), then we may have a conflict with you.  You may start to look 
   like one of them.  It's *not* fair.  But as I mentioned, the stakes 
   are very high for some of us.  So if you wish to join our team, you as 
   a member, have every right to question and criticize the process.  But 
   for the reasons that I hope I have explained clearly above, you will have 
   to be very careful when you do it.  That's just the way it is.  We all 
   suffer from the bad guys: women suffer the oppression, and good men 
   suffer the potential for mistrust.  

   The question that remains is:  Can we resolve our differences and fight 
   for change together?  I suspect the answer to that question is sometimes
   yes and sometimes no.  But it's an important goal.  And as much as it 
   feels sometimes like we're going around in circles on this issue.  I
   think it's important for us to discuss it when it comes up.  I, for one,
   have come to see some of the men here as potential allies.. something
   that wasn't true just a short time ago.  I was angry and resented not
   having a space in which I could safely express that anger.  But I
   I think we're working it out.  In fact, for some of us, learning to
   *make* this notesfile safe and valuable for us has been an important
   growth experience.  And if we sometimes step on each other's toes, 
   I suspect that's just a part of recognizing difference and trying
   to learn to value and benefit from it.

   I hope you'll give some of these ideas a second look,

   Justine
                    
479.70Men as oppressorsCANDY::PITERAKThu Sep 24 1987 11:2237
This discussion is soooo strange.  Men - as a class - have oppressed women.
Some women - as individuals - oppress women.  Even the "good guys" will
unwittingly oppress women.  Every time a "good guy" takes advantage of male 
privilege he oppresses women.  Society has a bias toward "favoring" men.  
Even if you do not knowingly oppress us - you are in the "cat bird" seat.  
Society oppresses women with the use of laws, class privilege, *moral* 
standards, violence, the media etc.,etc.

The much used "You are part of the problem, if you are not part of the
solution" is very apropos here.  The first step to the solution is 
internal change and the ability to view the overall oppression of women
by society.  The next step is to not take part in the privilege of being
male.  I don't believe that very many men can accomplish that one.  It's
very tough to turn down being part of the "old boy network" of the
locker room, the board room, the golf course.  It's tough to vocalize
that you find other men's treatment or attitudes toward women as demeaning
to women or offensive to you.  Just because you as an individual have changed
does not solve the problem.  Are you an activist for women?  Do you complain
about the sexist language in books that you read, or training material you
receive?  Do you even notice it? Do you call sexist remarks that men around 
you make?  Do you take a "chance" about being the proverbial pain in the ass,
or is it just a lot more comfortable to feel that - alas, as long as you have 
changed it's enough?

Some men understand and work with women to change what is wrong with
societies treatment of women.  Most men I have worked with politically
have understood my statements around men -as a class- being oppressive.
Most straight people I have worked with politically have understood my
statements around heterosexuals -as a class- being oppressive of lesbians
and gay men.

I believe part of the support men can show women is the understanding that
men -as a class- oppress women, and they as individuals can work toward
changing other men and society.

Flora
479.71COLORS::IANNUZZOCatherine T.Thu Sep 24 1987 11:4255
[While I was writing this, several other notes have been entered that 
say pretty much the same thing.]

I feel that a lot of the commentary in this note is missing the point
about the nature of sexism. We live in a patriarchy: rule of society by
and for "the fathers" -- men.  This means that by virtue of their
gender, every male is born into a position of privilege relative to
every female.  Individual men may not be personally responsible for
putting themselves in this position, but they benefit from a society
that provides them these privileges at the expense of a large underclass
of economically, socially, sexually, and emotionally exploited women. 

Societies function like complex organisms, with the same blind will to
survive and propagate.  Although comprised of individuals, a social
system shapes its members to serve its purposes of survival. Any social
group represents a force that is more than just the collective will of
the individuals in it.  

For men to interrupt every argument by protesting that they are not
personally exploiters is to nullify any attempt at analysing the larger
social picture.  This is a kind of libertarianism that imagines all
individuals to be unique instances of autonomous and arbitrary behavior,
from which no conclusions about the workings of power in our society can
be drawn.  For you engineering types, the situation is a lot like trying
to understand the high level design of a system while someone is
constantly insists on explaining the contents of the low byte in
Register 4. 

The purpose of feminist social criticism is to understand the social
entities that are "men" and "women" and to expose the dynamics of
exploitation, so that women can throw off the internalized misogyny that
serves to keep them from claiming their own power and men of conscience
can use their positions of privilege in the cause of furthering justice.

Being the out-of-power group, it is much easier for women to engage in 
critical analysis of the system.  As beneficiaries of the system, it is 
much harder for men to question the nature and source of their power.  
It's a hard thing the women of this conference are asking of the men who 
choose to participate, but a necessary one if we are going to change the 
world.

[p.s. 

 re: .65:

    >> I'm weary of having to prove myself each
    >> time just to get listened to.  I'm weary of being told that I'm
    >> unworthy because I'm a man.


	This is the typical woman's experience ALL HER LIFE.
	Just experiencing it in this little corner of your life makes 
	you angry and frustated.  And you wonder why the women 
	feel the way they do??
]
479.72Articulate, intelligent, buncha folks hereVINO::EVANSThu Sep 24 1987 13:288
    RE: last few
    
    Boy,I wish *I'd* said that. And that. And *that*.
    
    Thanks, y'all
    
    Dawn
    
479.73That was great.....BUFFER::LEEDBERGTruth is Beauty, Beauty is TruthThu Sep 24 1987 18:329
    
    
    I think that we have some of the most articulate, intelligent
    writers in the conference.
    
    _peggy
    		(-)
    		 |	Truly in the arms of the Goddess
    
479.74I just don't know how to say it...HUMAN::BURROWSJim BurrowsThu Sep 24 1987 22:3866
        Sometimes I feel so inarticulate I just want to cry...
        
        Justine, (I hope I may call you Justine)
        
        It would seem I did a poor job of conveying what I intended in
        my 479.64 reply. Several times in 479.69 you speak about hurting
        my feelings or about the good guys being hurt by being mistaken
        for the bad guys. But the whole point I was trying to convey was
        that Lee when she wrote the note and Maggie when she reposted it
        and the others when they praised it DID NOT hurt my feelings. 
        
        I tried to say that my feelings weren't hurt, I wasn't offended,
        I was just deeply saddened, saddened FOR Lee, for Maggie, for
        all the women who, if even only on a verbal level, embraced the
        image of men as a class being the bad guys. Because of how much
        they mean to me, I hate to see them accept and embrace the bad
        guys claim that they (the bad guys) are no different from other
        men. Every time I see bright articulate thoughtful women lump
        bad guy men and good guy men together it feels like a defeat for
        goodness, not for me, but for the cause of goodness.
        
        The bad guys want you to believe that they are no different from
        the average man. They're just normal healthy red-blooded young
        men who know where a woman's place is and how she really wants
        to be treated. They want you to think that all men are just like
        them. They aren't bad, they're just men. And when you buy that,
        or when you repeat it even if you don't believe it completely
        they win just a little bit more.
        
        If we allow them to define abusiveness, sadism, hate, and mean
        spiritedness as normal or as normal for men, we give them
        something to hide behind--an excuse for being whatthey are. We
        can't let them do that to us, to any of us. We have to say "NO!
        if you do that you are not normal, you are not just being a man.
        You are doing wrong and you must stop!" 
        
        There ARE times when I read the words of especially bitter women
        who speak quite vehemently against men as a class or men in
        general, who do not say some men, but all men or any man or any
        male, or any white man, and I get angry. There are times when
        having every class I belong to: white, male, middle class,
        heterosexual, Protestant, WC4, etc. called the oppressors just
        gets to be too much. And when it does I say so. It happens very
        seldom. And it is in NO WAY what I was trying to talk about in
        my note. 
        
        What I saw in Lee's note was not reverse bigotry, it was an
        acceptance of the bad guys' definition of male behavior. I saw
        her let them have a victory they don't deserve. I saw womanhood
        and manhood diminished because a few more of the good guys let
        the bad guys write the agenda.
        
        To Hell with whether you hurt my feelings. Don't let them lie to
        you about what it means to be a man or what it means to be a
        woman, or who the enemy really is. It isn't men as class. It
        isn't white men. It is anyone who takes advantage of another. It
        is every hateful, abusive, violent, antisocial, manipulative,
        arrogant bastard whether he be a he or a she or a little green
        bug-eyed critter from Deneb.
        
        It seems almost impossible to convey this, because everyone
        knows that the problem is that the good men are offended when
        they're lumped in with the bad, but honest I'm trying to say
        something different. 
        
        JimB.
479.75VIKING::TARBETMargaret MairhiFri Sep 25 1987 11:0137
    <--(.74)
    
    Jim, we know you're trying to say something different.  So are we.
    That's where Lee's analogy to the Viet Nam war (that everyone disliked
    so much) came from.   
    
    Let me have a go at explaining.  The VWVs will relate to this.
    
    You're a grunt in 'Nam, out in the countryside.  Most of the people you
    meet are local folks, farmers, very in favor of live-and-let-live, not
    too interested in politics, willing to be friendly, share their food
    with you, good people.  They're small, brownskinned, and wear black
    pajamas.  Some of the folks you meet are also local folks, but besides
    being farmers they're also Charlie, the Viet Cong, a lot more
    interested in killing you than sharing food with you.  They're small,
    brownskinned, and wear black pajamas. 
    
    Quick, now, your life depends on it!: how do you tell them apart?
    Charlie doesn't wear a big red star on his chest, and his smile may be
    even bigger and more sincere-looking to lull your suspicions. Quick! Is
    it the old man with the bag slung over his shoulder and coming toward
    you with alms bowl clutched in palsied fingers?  The young woman
    passerby carrying a sling that looks too big for the baby riding in it?
    Is it the little kid with the big smile who's offering you the melon?
    Guess wrong and either you're dead or some innocent villager is!  You
    haven't figured it out yet?  Too bad!  Time's up, you're dead: it was
    the young woman with a "borrowed" baby, she had a machine pistol under
    her blouse.  You and your two buddies are KIAs.  Will all the good
    people in the village rise up in horrified anger to avenge your death?
    Not bloody likely! 
    
    We do try to distinguish the good guys from the bad guys, and we do
    recognise that there are fundamental differences between individuals
    --that was a major burden of Lee's message that I reposted-- but it's
    an existential issue, Jim: you all wear black pajamas. 
    
    						=maggie
479.76GCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TFri Sep 25 1987 12:0822
    <-------- (.75)
    
    Ah maggie, you hit the nail on the head!
    
    JimB, if I believed that to be male one has to do what the bad guys
    do, I'd move out to that separatist farm collective in Belchertown.
    
    Like you, I feel that *those* activities take away a person's humanity,
    the very essence of what makes them human.  As far as I am concerned,
    they are from Mars.  The men _I_ like are different from women,
    yes, but they are HUMAN.
    
    I think I understand where you're coming from, and I appreciate
    your concern and care (as you well know).  I also think you understand
    the gist of our (my) messages.  It is hard for me to explain why
    I think you're feeling more concern than is needed.  That may be
    because I am very used to what has happened to me and my sisters
    and have been desensitized to it (the horror) a bit. 
    
    Dunno.
    
    Lee
479.77SPIDER::PAREWhat a long, strange trip its beenFri Sep 25 1987 13:378
    It occurs to me that we (woman as a class of people in society)
    strive to win battles (as in this note) while ending up losing the
    war (as is evidenced by womans continuing place in society).  We
    don't accomplish anything nor do we help ourselves or our position
    in society by alienating the very people who are in a position to
    help us.... the (perhaps) few people who are inclined to help us.
    Just an observation of course.
    Mary
479.78"Madder'n hell, and..."REGENT::BROOMHEADDon&#039;t panic -- yet.Fri Sep 25 1987 13:569
    JimB,
    
    Don't worry too much.  The ~at war with men~ statement tells me
    that she/we/they has/have reached the point that you finally
    reached:  You weren't going to be the victim any more.  This is
    the attitude behind the "Take Back the Night" Army, and I like
    it very much.
    
    							Ann B.
479.79It takes a long time to change society.BUFFER::LEEDBERGTruth is Beauty, Beauty is TruthFri Sep 25 1987 13:5715
    
    
    I think that Maggie explained the situation quite well - but most
    of all the war is far from over and woman's place in society is
    changing.  It is a very long war and it is moving very slowly.
    
    (I do not like using the term war - though it does describe the
    situation.)
    
    _peggy
    		(-)
    		 |	By the Goddess I remember when a woman
    			could not buy a house on her own.
    
    
479.80My view of our male friends is much more optomistic...NEXUS::CONLONFri Sep 25 1987 14:3866
    	RE:  .77
    
    	We *are* making progress with our position in society!  It
    	may not be as much as we might have hoped for at this point,
    	but it *IS* happening for us.
    
    	Think for a minute about what you're saying about the men
    	who could possibly help us in our cause.  What you're implying
    	(or what I'm inferring from your comments) is that the NICE
    	men will only be willing to help us if we are careful to treat
    	them with the proper respect (the respect that they deserve
    	for being above us in society and being in the position to help
    	us *OR* hurt us by withholding that help if we *DON'T* pay
    	homage to them.)
    
    	Myself, I take a MUCH MORE OPTOMISTIC view of our male friends
    	(the ones who truly want to see us receive equitable treatment
    	in our society.)  I don't think for a minute that our TRUE
    	FRIENDS are going to hold it against us that we have strong
    	feelings about the oppression we have experienced in our culture
    	(and will sooner or later KNOW, if they don't already, that
    	our fight is against a BELIEF SYSTEM that values us less than
    	men and is not a fight, in any way, against all men.)
    
    	We would be defeating ourselves, I think, if we decide that
    	the best alternative is to pay homage to males who can help us
    	(as if we lack faith in our own power to effect changes in
    	our culture.)
    
    	It is unfortunate that some of our male friends are being
    	offended along the way, but my strong feeling is that many of
    	them COULD understand our position if they CHOSE to, and I
    	do not subscribe to the idea that we can't "win the war"
    	unless we are careful to keep from ever offending any man
    	who might be on our side.
    
    	If we spend all our time and energy trying to be "nice" and
    	never offend anyone at any time (which is an impossible task
    	to begin with), then we will lose much of our potential
    	effectiveness in the overall struggle.
    
    	If a man is truly our friend (and believes in what we are
    	working for) then it will be unconditional.  The man believes
    	in equality because it is RIGHT AND JUST (and **NOT** because
    	we paid him the price that he demanded of us:  that we say what
    	HE demands that we say to make him feel good about helping us.)
    
    	Think of it this way:  How much of a friend would you consider
    	a white person who worked for civil rights if he or she joined
    	the movement saying, "Well, I could help you but I'll only do
    	it if you treat me REALLY NICELY, because remember that you'll
    	never make it without my help as a white person.  If you make
    	me mad, I'll withdraw my help immediately."
    
    	I don't believe for a minute that our true male friends have
    	this attitude toward us.  Like I said, it's incredibly
    	unfortunate when we inadvertently offend our supporters, but
    	we can't spend 100% of our energy trying to avoid that if it
    	means that we diffuse our own power to effect the changes we
    	want.  We need to be able to expect that our male friends will
    	understand that we are trying to sort things out and do not
    	mean nor intend any insult to them.  If that's not good enough,
    	then maybe we haven't lost much of a friend in that sort of
    	individual.
    
    							Suzanne...
479.81We really do have many TRUE FRIENDS that are men...NEXUS::CONLONFri Sep 25 1987 14:439
    	By the way, I do think that **MANY** of the men in this
    	conference and in DEC **ARE** our true friends!!
    
    	Sometimes I think that not all of them completely understand
    	our position, but I feel certain that they believe in our
    	struggle for the right reasons and are our FRIENDS in the
    	true spirit of the word!
    
    						      Suzanne...
479.83Huh?PSYCHE::SULLIVANRun, Pat, Run!Fri Sep 25 1987 17:245
    >    The purpose of this entire conference ought to be to help men
    >    to achieve a better understanding of the position of women.
    
    Do you mean that this ought to be our sole purpose?  
479.86NEXUS::CONLONMon Sep 28 1987 11:3833
    	RE:  .85
    
    	> It just makes it easier to agree when one is agreeable.
    
    	Bob, the vast majority of women that I've met in the world
    	(and in DEC) do not openly discuss concerns about women's
    	rights in mixed company.  We are agreeable, calm and smile
    	(even when we think that we may have run up against some 
    	sort of oppression or discrimination.)
    
    	Rarely have I seen any woman turn to a man in a business
    	situation (in an environment other than notes) and openly
    	state what it's like to be a member of an oppressed group
    	in this culture.
    
    	One must come to a forum such as this one to see such things
    	on an everyday basis.  As rare as it is (and as enlightening
    	as it can be), why would you want to prevent us from saying
    	what is on our minds here?
    
    	If you want to hear only that which makes you comfortable,
    	try almost any other forum (other than this one) and most
    	likely you will find that women will not choose to discuss
    	the sort of delicate/disturbing matters that you seem to
    	find so unsettling.
    
    	The choice is up to you -- if you'd rather not know what
    	we think when we discuss women's issues, there is an alter-
    	native for you.
    
    							Suzanne...
    
    				                 
479.87Bette Davis had a great line for situations like these... :-) NEXUS::CONLONMon Sep 28 1987 12:217
    	P.S.  Personally, I'd much rather that you stick around and
    	share this with us (I'm not suggesting that you go away.)
    
    	Just keep your seatbelt fastened around here, cuz it can be
    	a bumpy ride at times.
    
    						     Suzanne... @^@
479.88That reminds me..PNEUMA::SULLIVANRun, Pat, Run!Mon Sep 28 1987 12:2411
    
    Suzanne, your mentioning that women don't like to discuss their
    concerns in "mixed company" reminded me of something that I noticed
    at the last get together at Leslie's house.  As I walked around
    and mingled with different groups of women, I noticed that sometimes
    the conversation would get kind of loud and heated, even angry,
    but when a man entered the area, we lowered our voices. 
    
    Did anyone else notice that?  Other examples?
    
    Justine
479.89It's Called Human RelationsFDCV03::ROSSMon Sep 28 1987 13:0718
    RE: .80
    
    Suzanne, I don't think the writer of .77 was suggesting that
    homage be paid to people (men) who were in a position to help
    effect changes that women are fighting for.
    
    MY interpretation of what she wrote is that, simply, people (male
    female, white, black, yellow, young,old, managers...) have more of a
    tendency to listen positively to someone else who is, at least,
    temperate in his/her approach.
    
    Personally, I close my ears to someone who starts off by saying,
    "HEY ASSHOLE". 
    
    I suspect many others do the same.
    
      Alan
    
479.90Flaming/discussing is in the eye of the beholder...NEXUS::CONLONMon Sep 28 1987 13:5028
    	RE:  .89
    
    	Alan, while I do agree that it makes it tough to have a
    	conversation when people are screaming, let it suffice to
    	say that one person's "Oh, gee, excuse me" is another
    	person's "HEY *SSH*LE!" and that each of us probably has
    	his/her own opinion about what is and is not a reasonable way
    	to approach an "intense" discussion.
    
    	For every instance you can name where you think one side or
    	the other was a tad too vehement in asserting a position, I
    	can show you where the other side had moments that were
    	equally as assertive.
    
    	Would it surprise you to hear that I had no idea exactly
    	how oppressed women ARE in this culture until I saw how difficult
    	it IS for women to express almost any idea in our own file
    	without being endlessly challenged as to our right to HAVE
    	and to EXPRESS such ideas?  [Now I'm going to be challenged
    	for saying that, I bet.  :-)]

    	Like most other things in life, it is a two-way street.
	I would suspect that when women can peacefully talk about
    	women's issues, we will be less apt to get a tad upset when
    	we have to spend so much time defending our right to discuss
    	such issues in the first place.
    
    						      Suzanne...
479.91What we really need here are SUBTITLES...NEXUS::CONLONMon Sep 28 1987 13:577
    	P.S.  In case it wasn't obvious, that last message was
    	meant as an "Oh, gee, excuse me..."
    
    	I know it's hard to tell these things when we all read
    	this stuff on impersonal terminals.  :-)
    
    						Suzanne... @^@
479.94Sorry, Oh, yes, don't let the door hit your back.BUFFER::LEEDBERGTruth is Beauty, Beauty is TruthMon Sep 28 1987 15:3915
    
    
    I really love it when someone has to explain why they are leaving
    WOMANNOTES in great detail.  I would just say "I am not comfortable
    here or I no longer find the discussion of interest but will check
    in from time to time to see if topics change."
    
    The "I am leaving and here is what I think of you" parting short
    is really rather childish and the longer it is the more evident
    it is that that is what is being done.
    
    _peggy
    
    		"Cakes" is coming to Westford MA
    
479.95STING::BARBERSkyking Tactical ServicesMon Sep 28 1987 16:1262
          It is interesting to see what has transpired since I was away. I
          sense the fact that I'am am not a regular contributor to this file
          has a touch of bearing to it, or is it just my style of verbalization.
          I don't know. 

          In .69 the words come across as they have in other places and by 
          multiple authors.

        > So what should good guys do in response to what seems to misplaced
        > anger ? Well, only you can decide what you *should* do, but I'll
        > offer an opinion. When our words hurt you, do speak up, and tell
        > us why it hurts. But when you do that, I think you should remember
        > a few things.

         She then continues to explain why. I would totally agree with her 
         on the basis of this whole thing would have not gone on if the 
         text had read "We are at war with the men who oppress us". That 
         was the entire point of my original note. Why is it OK for you to
         say it and not me ????

        I'am sorry, I guess I must have not used the right words. I went off
        and attempted to explain why Lee's note not "hurt", but disturbed me.
        Further in my my original note I stated that I honestly believed that
        many of you ladies had very good reasons to be mad, angry and hurt.
        In the following notes , I went on to explain why and show HOW the 
        text COULD BE interrupted as negative. Does this count towards getting
        an understanding , No way.

        Did anyone read everything that I had to say rather than seeing 
        something that set them off, I have a tendency to doubt it. Why ??
        Because of the responses. In them I get blasted for not saying the 
        things that were either explained or stated in the original text.
        
        This wasn't done to be vicious or malicious, yet thats how it was 
        taken. I went on to explain that I DIDN'T have anything against LEE,
        others that responded, this file, only that that note bothered me.
        Yet I continued to get blasted. Now low and behold, two regular 
        men contributors come in and say that the text *hurt* them and 
        the whole tone changes to a civil discussion. People do a 180,
        and begin to see that it can be take as a negative man statement.

        I guess that in order not to upset the apple cart and get everyone
        defensive, I guess that only Jim B., Steve L. or Charles has got 
        to be the one to say something about it. Sorry if I have something
        to say I prefer not to do it through someone else. It somehow looses 
        something in the translation.
        
        There is a number of topics in here which should serve as a good
        common ground for communications and better understanding.
        There has been a number of times that you folk's say you want 
        feedback and comments about what hurts or disturbs us, yet get 
        defensive when we enter it. Some of you have gotten so defensive 
        that you no longer can tell the difference, for you HEY NO VC NO VC
        Then you wonder why most men wont put word one in here. It makes me
        wonder , why I bothered at all.  Have no fear I will go back to being
        a read only person, since I'am tired of being called a vicious bad 
        person. I'am tired of ducking the pot shots, its gotten too dinky dou.
          
                                   Bob B
         
    
479.96FRSBEE::MALLETTMon Sep 28 1987 17:1125
    re:  .93  ". . .being discouraged because I'm male. . ."
    
    That's odd.  I'm hanging around because I get the distinct
    impression that thoughtful, considerate discussions from
    men were welcome.  It seems to me that, if anything, things
    are getting generally more reasonable of late.
    
    I keep thinking I hear several women clearly expressing the
    idea that "men" is a classification of a group of people who
    are oppresive (BTW, seems to me that an "oppressor" rarely
    labels him/herself that; it's usually up to the oppressed to
    bring this notion to the other; and it's usually denied. . .).
    
    And this seems to be followed by vehement denials by some men
    that they, as individuals, are not "bad", "evil", etc.   I have
    that feeling that some folks aren't listening to some others.
    
    But then, what would I know anyway?  I turned *that* age this
    year and have played rock music for some 23 years; we all know
    what that sort of stuff can do to one's brain.
    
    Steve (who recalls lots of (white) people running around during the
    racial upheavals of the '60s saying stuff like "I don't understand
    what these Black people want; *I'm* not an oppressor. . ."
    
479.97FAUXPA::ENOHomesteaderMon Sep 28 1987 17:226
    I've stayed out of this so far, but Steve (re .96), that's a great
    point at the end of your note, about whites saying "I never oppressed
    blacks ...".  That says very succintly what so many of the woman
    in this note have been trying to express.
    
    G
479.98VIKING::TARBETMargaret MairhiMon Sep 28 1987 18:2011
    <--(.97 about .96)
    
    I second that.  Nice point, Steve!
    
    <--(.95)
    
    Bob, nobody's climbing all over your case, honest.  If you took
    a poll of the women members, $20 says you'd be seen as one of the
    Good Guys (the ARVNs? ;').  Wanna bet?
    
    						=maggie
479.99Sure hope that most of us can see past the heat....NEXUS::CONLONTue Sep 29 1987 01:5818
    	Although it does bother me to see some people totally misunder-
    	stand what we say (and see hate where no hate exists) -- I just
    	have to say something here.
    
    	During the Womannotes party this past summer, I had the opportunity
    	to talk (by voice phone) to members of this community (and have had
    	the pleasure of mail exchanges with quite a few folks in this
    	conference as well.)
    
    	I just want to say that the people in this community are some
    	of the warmest, most intelligent and articulate people I've
    	ever known.

    	When the discussions become intense, I hope that most of us
    	can keep some level of perspective here and value the caliber
    	of the contributions that are typical of this conference.
    
    							Suzanne...
479.100Back to one of the issues at hand...NEXUS::CONLONTue Sep 29 1987 08:0940
    	RE:  .95
    
    	Bob, your original note mentioned NOTHING about Lee's note
    	about being at war.  You came in with your usual attack on
    	the entire file (including a patronizing lecture to us about
    	why we shouldn't hate men) and said nothing about what set
    	you off. 
    
    	If you recall, my next two notes POINTED to Lee's note as a
    	way to answer your concerns (and you then admitted that you
    	came in BECAUSE of her note.)
    
    	If you had started out saying what was REALLY on your mind
    	(in a reasonable fashion) instead of just blasting the whole
    	file and all of us in it (including mentioning MY name in
    	particular) then you might have received a more civil response
    	to your concerns.
    
    	This sort of thing often happens in this conference -- people
    	come in blasting the WHOLE FILE instead of addressing the immediate
    	area of their concern.  It's quite difficult to conduct meaningful
    	dialogue with someone who just drops by to say "You're all screwed"
    	instead of merely addressing a reply or a statement within a
    	reply.
    
    	We know from experience that a person who drops by to say that
    	the file is screwed is not going to be happy whether we say,
    	"Oh, gee, I'm soooo sorry you feel that way" or "Go jump."
    	So there is very little incentive for us to sit here and accept
    	attacks that consist of "wildly inaccurate generalizations."
    	It just becomes another part of the vast amount of bullsh*t
    	that we are asked to swallow in our culture (and some of us
    	are less enthusiastic about swallowing that stuff in our
    	OWN file.)
    
    	It is easier to have a dialogue with women in this conference
    	when one approaches the file with a degree of sensitivity and
    	common respect.
    
    							Suzanne...
479.101Still feel the same way about Lee's original note...NEXUS::CONLONTue Sep 29 1987 08:267
    
    	P.S.  BTW, I *still* fail to find anything wrong with Lee's
    	original note.  I think she explained things quite well and
    	one would have to go some distance to misinterpret her
    	intentions.
    
    
479.104and its not a full moon....BUFFER::LEEDBERGTruth is Beauty, Beauty is TruthTue Sep 29 1987 18:5527
    
    
    Lorna,
    
    I perfer to change the males position whenever possible. : ^))
    
    Seriously,
    
    	One of the most important things that males in this
    conference can do for themselves and for us  is to 
    
    		LEARN TO LISTEN  (read)
    
    to what is being said (typed).  This is what has caused more
    misunderstandings.
    
    Oh, yes - There are males in this conference who do listen
    and they do it very well.
    
    _peggy
    		(-)
    		 |	Talking, talking, talking
    			listen to the words
    			and you will begin to understand
    			what it is that we are saying.
    
    
479.105VIKING::TARBETMargaret MairhiWed Sep 30 1987 09:3410
    Indeed, as several women have remarked, there are many men in our
    community who *do* listen and *are* *listened* *to* in return because
    of that fact.  
    
    (And at least a couple of them are living proof that men don't need
    to sign up for "the feminist agenda" to be welcomed and heard here.)  
    
    (Oy vey are they living proof!! ;') 
    
    						=maggie
479.106OK! I'll shutup.MSDOA2::CUNNINGHAMWed Sep 30 1987 14:4830
    re: -.104
    
    	Believe it or not, there are a lot of male readers out here
    who do try to do just that, shut up and listen.  We try to keep
    this a space for predominately female voices and opinions.  I may
    not agree with everything I read, but so what?  I rarely do anywhere.
    If I have an overpowering need to express myself, I try to keep
    that to mennotes.
    	I would ask the contributors of this file to remember that when
    men such as Jim B. comment on something that upset them in this
    file, they are the vocal ones, not the only ones who are upset,
    and for their opinions to be seen as somewhat representative of
    many of us.  I found Lee's note to be upsetting as well, (especially
    when it was moved to 1.28 as representative of the conference.)
    My reasons are many of the ones that have already been pointed out,
    is it necessary for every reader that is upset to chime in with
    "me too" for it to become obvious that her note upset many of us?
    Is your response to this that we are all just crazy and unable to
    read, and therefore who care?  OK.  I understand.  I know now what
    our opinion is worth.  We should keep it to ourselves.
    	Maggie, your comments have often chimed in and given me heart.
    I appreciate them, and I mean that sincerely.  I don't agree though
    that it is not necessary to sign up for the feminist agenda in order
    to be "welcomed" and "heard".  After all the highest complement
    I can hope to achieve in this file is to be considered an "honorary
    woman".
    
    David
    (DRC)
    
479.107VIKING::TARBETMargaret MairhiWed Sep 30 1987 15:5427
    <--(.106)
    
    David, I (we) do indeed know that the vast majority of men members
    ("male members" would be more grammatical, but it sounds too much like
    a risqu� pun ;') "try to keep this a space for predominately female
    voices and opinions".  And we appreciate it, too (though my personal
    opinion is that our file would be a poorer place if none of our
    Brothers spoke).  No, it isn't necessary for anyone to regularly me-too
    this or that position; we do understand that the men who speak up are
    speaking for many other men, just as the women are speaking for many
    other women. One voice almost always speaks for many hearts, no matter
    what is being said. 
    
    But if you feel you need to speak out personally, *please* do so.  And
    understand that even if we then roast you to a crisp, we'd still hug
    you in person because you are our Brother; you are Family. 
    
    No, people really don't have to sign up for the "feminist agenda",
    David.  Honest.  One needn't even be willing to take the verbal heat...
    though we all lose whenever someone walks out instead. 
    
    And I would urge all the men who, like David, feel devalued by Lee's
    "honorary woman" phrase to reflect for awhile on how devalued women
    have felt to have the supreme accolade for women in business be "You
    think just like a man"!
    
    						=maggie
479.108(Note hidden by author)HUMAN::BURROWSJim BurrowsThu Oct 01 1987 01:4563
        I get terribly confused every time I read this topic.
        
        I keep finding myself held up as one of the men who are welcomed
        and then someone, often the same person, says that you have to
        buy the feminist agenda to be welcomed here. It makes me wonder
        if anyone was listening to what I had to say when I defended
        calling the dear things girls, or to not buying the argument
        that there is no moral isssue involved in homosexuality or
        argued that saying "no male legislator would voluntarily reduce
        male control of women" is bigotry, or any of a number of the
        areas where I question the feminist party line. 
        
        It seems to me that I regularly take stands in this file which
        open me to a fair amount of heat from the women. I know that I
        at times agonize whether something is too inflamatory to say
        here, and find myself saying "Damn the torpedoes! Someone has to
        say it." I try to say it with respect and gently, without
        casting blame (except for what I see as blatant feminist
        bigotry). At times it is accepted and at times I get opposed
        quite vigorously.
        
        I find this file to be one of the most supportive on the net,
        even for men, and even for men who don't buy the party line. I
        feel great affection for a large number of people I know only as
        nodename/username pairs in this file. I feel as safe as I
        possibly can when talking about painful things here--things like
        being beaten up or sexually assaulted--things like the ways that
        I have been perceived as a sexist or as harrassing when that
        wasn't my intent. I really feel I could turn to most ofthe
        members of this file for help if I needed it. 
        
        I'm also confused when people whom I admire and respect say that
        it's OK for women to say things that are hurtful to men because
        men have "traditionally" said things that were hurtful to women.
        These same people seem to claim at other times that what we need
        to do is become more considerate of each other and view each
        other first as people and then as members of a sex.
        
        I really expect that rather than say "Well if that made you feel
        bad just think how bad women have felt in the past", and "I see
        nothing wrong with that note" they would say "Gee, now that you
        point that out, I can see how that's like the things that we
        find hurts so much--terribly sorry. Hope we can both learn from
        this." 
        
        I read notes by women that look conciliatory to me and men bow
        out because they can't stand the fighting. I see men trying to
        explain that they didn't mean it the way it was taken and women
        pouncing to prove that what the men said was offensive. I see
        men arguing that even though they know what a women was trying
        to say the way she said it could be missinterpretted, and then
        find that the way they said *that* could be misinterpretted as
        an attack. Ms. X doesn't like the way Mr. Y conveyed the way
        he didn't like the way Ms. Z conveyed what he knew she meant.
        Huh?
        
        People complement me on how articulately I said something and
        then make it quite clear that they think I said something I was
        trying very hard not to. Something there doesn't figure.
        
        I get terribly confused every time I read this topic.
        
        JimB.
479.109Come meet us!ULTRA::GUGELDon&#039;t read this.Fri Oct 02 1987 18:4316
    To all of the men who feel criticized or hurt or harassed in
    this conference - I think you would find something very different
    if you would come to a party and meet us.
    
    I see the names of the men here who have been held up as "examples"
    in what caring, considerate men can have to say to us.  Almost without
    exception, those are the same men that come to meet us at the parties
    and gatherings we've had.
    
    Are we more tolerant of them because we know them personally?  Are
    they more considerate and less quick to jump on us because they
    know us personally?  I tend to think it's a little bit of both.
    
    Is it time for another party yet?  We could sure use one.
    
    	-Ellen
479.111party? need a placeSTUBBI::B_REINKEwhere the sidewalk endsFri Oct 02 1987 20:063
    Ellen I tried to get another party going but noone was willing
    to offer a place to hold it.....I astill willing to do the
    organizing if someone offers a house.  :-)
479.112Nomex ??? Puh !~!!STING::BARBERSkyking Tactical ServicesMon Oct 05 1987 16:295
    
      I beleave a three layer Kevlar suit would be more in order 
      for some of us.
    
                                  B
479.113Kevlar won't helpVIKING::TARBETMargaret MairhiMon Oct 05 1987 16:503
    We use full Teflon jackets, Bob.   ;')
    
    						=maggie
479.114But, if you're careful...MAY20::MINOWJe suis Marxiste, tendence GrouchoMon Oct 05 1987 17:014
I've never seen the need for anything more than latex.  Lubricated,
of course.

Martin.
479.115TFH::MARSHALLhunting the snarkTue Oct 06 1987 11:349
    re .114:
    
    I don't like the implication.
                                                   
                  /
                 (  ___
                  ) ///
                 /
    
479.117Incominnnnng!VIKING::TARBETMargaret MairhiTue Oct 06 1987 13:132
    Rathole Alert!  Rathole Alert!
    						=maggie
479.118A later response.AKOV04::WILLIAMSTue Oct 06 1987 14:2128
    	I revisited 479 today as a reaction to another note and was
    confused as to why I had not reseponded since the first about 100
    responses caused my blood pressure to rise.  The last few notes
    reminded me why I chose not to respond - an interesting discussion
    (some of the note responses were interesting to me - *some*)
    degenerated to a level of silliness which I find boring.
    
    	But, the rereading has resulted in my responding.  479.* is
    an excellent example of what can be wrong and *bad* about notes.
    So many responses were little more than attacks on specific words
    and sentences rather than responses to what various authors wrote.
    
    Choosing a word or sentance or paragraph out of a note to disect
    in an effort to "prove" some implied intent on the part of the author
    is ignorant and self serving.  I might suggest, however, offering
    note responses which are too long invite misunderstanding.  After
    all, most of us must reread detailed, complex arguements in order
    to understand them.  A quick read through often results in
    misconception.
    
    Joseph Pulitzer wrote:
    
    	Put it before them briefly so they will read it, clearly so
    	they will appreciate it, picturesquely so they will remember
    	it and, above all, accurately so they will be guided by its
    	light.
           
    Douglas
479.119VINO::EVANSWed Oct 07 1987 12:4912
RE: 118
    
    Well said, Douglas - I really liked the Pulitzer quote.
    
    Maybe *that* oughta be put in the into note to this conference!
    :-)
    
    (And some others I know of....( (yes, it's a preposition. But then,
    the sentence hasn't officially ended, yet.) :-)
    
    Dawn
    
479.120I See!GUCCI::MHILLAge of Miracle and WonderWed Oct 07 1987 13:5716
    RE: .13 and .118
    
    Another vote for well said, Douglas - I'll use the Pulitzer quote
    to set the stage for future presentations.
    
    I also had to reread a large portion of this note to discover what
    all the fuss is over.  If it is what was said in .13, then those of
    us (men) that Flammed did not really read this note.  I, as a       
    represenative of the male gender appreciate being an honorary woman.
    The title was ment in the most complementary way. I understand the
    difference between "they" and me as an individual member of the male
    population.  Men "they" and me as an individual have victimized
    women.  I hope to learn from our my and our past mistakes.
    
    Cheers,
    Marty          
479.121RE .108HUMAN::BURROWSJim BurrowsWed Oct 07 1987 23:5330
        Well, I've been thinking about it for nearly a week and I've
        decided what to do about 479.108. I'm sorry it took me so long
        but I was getting a lot conflicting input from folk I value and
        there's no way I can make everybody happy on this one. I really
        want to but it isn't possible. 
        
        One very dear friend whose opinions and feelings I value deeply
        is quite offended by two or three things I've said there and
        insists that I should delete it or admit that all the values
        that I've advocated in regard to Notes are false. At the same
        time a small handful of folk who read the note and then saw that
        I had hidden it have implored me to unhide it so that it and the
        issues it raises can be discussed. 
        
        I can't do both.
        
        I've decided to unhide it and to promise in advance not to take
        offense at any of the harsh words that it may provoke. I know
        that by leaving it in the file I am discomfrting people who are
        extremely important to me. I am deeply sorry. I know I am likely
        to anger some of the members of the file. I accept and forgive
        in advance anything they may say that expresses that anger.
        
        I don't feel I can unhide it without explanation. I will post
        that explanation in my next reply. In this one I merely want to
        say what my decision was, apologize without making excuses, and
        assure anyone who responds harshly that I understand and do not
        hold it against them.
        
        JimB. 
479.122In explanationHUMAN::BURROWSJim BurrowsThu Oct 08 1987 01:03124
        There are, as I understand it, three things in .108 that people
        find objectionable. One is relatively minor (I suspect) and I,
        too, feel that it was wrong and I would not do it again if I
        were starting from scratch. The other two are more serious, but
        I meant them; I can't see a more acceptable way of presenting
        them without detracting from what I was saying; and I have come
        to believe that it is better for me to say them and take the
        heat for doing so, than not to. 
        
        The clear mistake was comining a flip remark that on its own
        would probably not have been misinterpretted with much more
        serious statements. The flip remark thus appears serious and
        therefore mean spirited. It was bad judgement. I'm sorry.
        Specifically, when referencing my defence of more traditional
        language I shouldn't have said spoken of the "daer things". Had
        the whole note remained light, I could have gotten away with
        that kind of tongue in cheek style for emphasis, but combined
        with the talk of bigotry it was flat out of place. Sorry.
        
        Now on to the more serious statements. Both regard the use of
        the term "bigotry". If you will remember (or may have just gone
        and seen) the whole theme of my note is that people have a
        tendancy to be sufficiently understanding of me to forget that I
        have said, and continue to say things that are very clearly not
        your typical feminist stand point. In the two statements in
        question I spoke of the times when I have opposed what I felt
        were bigotted statements made in the conference.
        
        This is, as I understand it, objectionable to some members of
        this conference on two grounds. First it alleges that there is
        bigotry in this file, and thus demeans the file and its members.
        Second, by giving an example of the kind of statement that I
        felt was bigotted, Iit was felt I was singling out one person as
        bigotted and thus "speaking badly of someone in a notes file",
        which I have often spoken out against.
        
        Let me see if I can clarify my view on the occurance of
        statements that I feel reflect bigotry in this file. First of
        all, I make no bones about it. I do believe I have seen bigotted
        statements by both men and women about both men and women (and
        not solely of the opposite sex) and about others on non-sexual
        grounds in this file. Let me, if you will, add immediately that
        I do not hold the people who have made these satements to be
        therefore bigots.
        
        Each of us in this society has experienced bigotry, and each of
        us is its victim. We are the victims when it is directed at us,
        and when we either unthinkingly or even intentionally propagate
        it. I have a hard time beliving that there is any member of this
        conference who hasn't at one time or another experienced the
        "click" of realizing that some view we held was rooted not in
        fact but in prejudice. If there is such a person hear, it is far
        more likely that they have never realized it, rather than that
        they have never been prejudiced.
        
        This is not a very prejudiced file, far the opposite. In this
        file we have repeatedly dragged prejudice, sexism and bigotry
        out into the open, decried it and with luck foresworn it. 
        
        While I was trying to figure out if my allegation that I had
        seen bigotry in the file unfairly defamed the file, I extracted
        every note containing the string "bigot". I found quite a
        surprising number of them. Some, including my own, specificly
        pointed at a note and took serious issue with it. Others decried
        it in general or ascribed it to our society as a whole. Perhaps
        not too surprisingly, the two folk who used the term most often
        were Lee and myself. We neither of us believe in pulling our
        punches and both very fervently want to see bigotry driven out
        of our society.
        
        That we can talk about bigotry is a real strength of this
        conference. It's a hard thing to live with and a hard thing to
        get rid of. It won't go away by wishing or hoping. It won't go
        away because we ignore it. It certaily won't go away if we just
        turn it around and use it in reverse. Bigotry exists less in
        this conference than in the vast majority, and yet it is talked
        about more. I believe that there is a reason for this.
        
        As to the objection that I cited a specific sort of statement as
        bogotted and that a fairly similar statement was made by a
        memeber of this file, I have this to say. I did, in fact, have a
        specific discussion in mind, and a specific set of statements
        made by a specific person. I was not, however, singling out that
        person as a bigot. 
        
        In fact, I don't believe that the person *is* a bigot. Some of
        their statements do, I feel, reflect a more blatant bigotry, an
        a greater excess of zealous rhetoric than most of the members of
        this file, but I believe that the problem is that they have been
        sold a bill of goods, that they have been taken in by
        stereotypes of our society. This person isn't a source of
        bigotry. They are merely someone who has been its victim, a very
        eloquent and angry or cynical person who more clearly exposes
        the undercurrent of bigotry in our culture than many others. 
        
        I decided to acceed to the requests to unhide my note rather
        than to the request to delete it because I feel that is
        important to assert that this is a file in which hard issues are
        faced, in which people of extremely good character take chances
        and speak honestly and take the responsibility for what they
        think, feel and believe. 
        
        I may be wrong in my views. What I feel is an example of bigotry
        may not be. The strength of this file is that it allows me to
        say my piece and then has the honesty and courage to tell me I'm
        wrong. In this file I can talk about being a victim of sexual or
        racial assault, and how that feels. In this file I can say that
        I have reservations about homosexual behavior. I can ask
        questions and air opinions. And if I do so with some amount of
        respect and open-mindedness, I am told that I am wrong with
        respect and honesty (and considerable firmness). 
        
        If the discussions become heated, affection and respect and
        trust and a willingness for both sides to work it out often win
        out. This file reflects many of the virtues of a good marriage.
        The vast majority of the members bring love, trust and
        commitment to the file. It is hard work, but it is worth it.
        
        I am terribly sorry that what I said or how I said it hurt
        anyone. Having done that, I'd rather examine the hurt and the
        cause, and take the criticism for having done it than try to
        pretend it didn't happen, or hide it. 
        
        JimB.
479.123Moderator ResponseCOLORS::TARBETMargaret MairhiThu Oct 08 1987 07:103
    Thank you, Jim.  And welcome back.
    
    						=maggie
479.124COLORS::TARBETMargaret MairhiThu Oct 08 1987 07:267
    ...and while I'm here, let me be the first to get in the boot ;')
    
    I would argue that the case you cited as bigotry would be more
    charitably ...and accurately... characterised as hyperbole or
    rhetorical excess.  And I'm surprised that you didn't do so.
    
    						=maggie
479.126We are a model...MARCIE::JLAMOTTEAAY-UHThu Oct 08 1987 08:0329
    I hope I can express what I say here well...for what I am going
    to say reflects just that the ability to say things well.  JimB
    has the ability to say things well....and if I were to summarize
    .108 it is my perception that he said....
    
        I say things well so therefore I am a welcome member of 
        the community.
    
    There are three men who respond to this conference that do not say
    things well...but I know these men personally.  They are good men
    who have ideas that I am not always in agreement with.  All of them
    seem to be reflecting thoughts based on their perceptions and their
    experience which make those thoughts as valid as ours.  Sometimes
    I think they should take the thoughts to Mennotes, sometimes I wish
    they wouldn't appear so vulnerable on the screen (because I like
    them and I want you to like them).  
    
    But I cringe inside when we as a community attack anyone as a person
    (and my male friends that I have mentioned have done that also).
    
    If we as a community could address issues instead of attacking
    individuals we could prove that the larger community could have
    peace.  Peace has always seemed so simple...but as I read this
    conference I wonder how simple it is.
    
    Thanks JimB for your thoughts...I don't always agree with your ideas
    but I like the way you say it.  
    
    Joyce    
479.127I'm sitting here in shock and disbelief...NEXUS::CONLONThu Oct 08 1987 08:5817
    	RE:  .122
    
    	JimB.,
    
    	Interesting.  You have insulted an identifiable member of this
    	community and everyone is thanking you.  How nice.
    
    	You say that she got her views by being FOOLED ("sold a bill
    	of goods") and TAKEN IN (by what, I don't know.)  And, of
    	course, she is a victim.  Well, hell, that would screw up
    	ANYONE's head!  No *wonder* her words include such blatant
    	bigotry, according to you.
    
    	Do you think that all feminists got their politics by being
    	fooled (or all women in general)?

    							Suzanne...
479.128Anger <> Bigotry PSYCHE::SULLIVANOctober 11, 1987..Thu Oct 08 1987 09:5932
    
    I don't think that an expression of anger or even an exaggerated
    statement of anger is the same thing as bigotry.  It's a very effective
    tactic to turn around and accuse your opponents of that which you
    have been accused.  But I don't think it's very fair.
    
    	Bigotry is judging a person or persons harshly simply
        because of their membership in a group of which you don't
        approve.
    
    	Anger is an emotional response to an actual (or perceived)
        wrong.
    
    	An exaggerated statement of anger is an emotional response to
        an actual (or perceived wrong) and includes a statement which
        may stretch the truth.  Like saying, for example:  All men beat
        their wives.
    
    So is there really a difference between these three things?  I think
    so.  If someone is angry, you *can* deal with it.  For example, you can
    try to find out why the person's angry, and you can either take steps 
    to correct what is wrong OR you can explain why you disagree with
    the angry person's assessment.  If someone is a bigot, there's not
    a whole lot you can do except expose their bigotry.  If someone
    can look you in the eye and say, "I believe in my heart that xyz
    group is intellectually or morally inferior to *my* group," what can
    you say in response to that?  How can you argue?  I think we should
    be a little more careful how we throw terms like bigot around. 
    If the anger is legitimate, you may be able to argue about the extent
    to which it gets expressed, but you cannot call it bigotry.
                                                       
    Justine
479.129NEXUS::CONLONThu Oct 08 1987 10:4421
    	RE:  .128
    
    	Thanks, Justine -- I agree completely.  Calling "the person's"
    	words bigotry (PLUS saying that she only says them because she
    	was DUPED) is a *very* effective tactic to use against one's
    	opponent.  It has the benefit of condemning the opponent's
    	argument as both morally wrong and foolish.
    
    	Combine that with some very condescending statements about how
    	one pities the person for her status as victim (and do not wish
    	to hurt her feelings) and you have, in effect, an argument that 
    	says the opponent is morally wrong, foolish and defenseless.
    
    	That is one of the ways that minorities are kept "in their
    	place" (if one is willing to fall for such a tactic.)
    
    	It is *EXACTLY* this sort of condescending, judgmental attitude
    	toward women that is STILL a problem for us in the real world
    	(and is one of the things that makes some women so angry.)
    
    							Suzanne...
479.130Response from the "bigot" in questionCSSE::CICCOLINIThu Oct 08 1987 11:20131
        >I have this to say. I did, in fact, have a specific discussion 
        >in mind, and a specific set of statements made by a specific 
        >person. I was not, however, singling out that person as a bigot. 
        
        This sounds like "I'm going to insult you now but I don't want you
        to think of this as an insult".  C'mon, Jim, take some responsi-
        bility for your words.  If you have a "specific discussion", a
        "specific set of statements" and a "specific person" in mind when
        you use the term bigot, you have singled out someone whether you
        want us to realize it or not.

        >...excess of zealous rhetoric 

        That could describe a lot of YOUR notes.

        >but I believe that the problem is that they have been sold a bill 
        >of goods, that they have been taken in by stereotypes of our society. 

        That's sure no reason to call someone a bigot.  Don't you feel sorry
        for me then in your oh-so-generous way if you really think I'm a duped 
        victim?  I thought you were so open-minded - so fair - so egalitarian.

        >I may be wrong in my views. What I feel is an example of bigotry
        >may not be. 

        Perhaps you'd better give this line a little more thought then
        before you begin name calling EVEN if you insist your name calling
        really isn't name calling.

        >and then has the honesty and courage to tell me I'm wrong. 

        It takes neither honesty nor courage to tell you or anyone else
        you're wrong.  Do you think we're all listening wide-eyed and
        only the most "courageous" among us has the nerve to disagree
        with you?  Get real.

        >And if I do so with some amount of respect and open-mindedness, 
        
        You do so with a good smokescreen of respect and open-mindedness.  
        You pad your insults with sugar,  "I'm not angry but I just feel pain
        for you..."  is how you defended yourself against one woman you
        angered.  This is pure condescention and it's a further insult
        that you actually believe that you can just TELL us you're not
        really being insulting or condescending and then have your merry
        way with your own eloquence.  I've hesitated addressing you direct-
        ly in the past, (because we are worlds apart), but since you singled
        me out for insults, (like it or not Jim, you did), I guess I have
        a little room here to single you out too.

        >If the discussions become heated, affection and respect and
        >trust and a willingness for both sides to work it out often win
        >out. 

        Again this is more claptrap designed to make us all think your in-
        tentions in this file are only the best.  Your notes suggest other-
        wise therefore the words above are empty.

        But the good new is, Jim, that I don't take you seriously anyway.
        I got a phone call telling me about this note and I really just
        had to laugh.

        >It seems to me that I regularly take stands in this file which
        >open me to a fair amount of heat from the women. 

        What you want us to read here is that you get flamed simply for
        taking stands.  The truth is that some of the stands you take are 
        inflammatory even though you pepper them with disclaimers.

        >I know that I at times agonize whether something is too inflamatory 
        >to say here, and find myself saying "Damn the torpedoes! Someone has 
        >to say it." 

        And Jim saw that it was good.  Let some woman, (me for instance), 
        have such a "Damn the torpedoes" attitude and she will be called
        bigoted, duped, a victim.  Good for you, Jim.  You just say what
        needs to be said and we'll listen and only engage in lighter
        chatter.  We'll leave the heavy stuff to you.

        >I try to say it with respect and gently, without casting blame 
        >(except for what I see as blatant feminist bigotry). 

        Then you can't say "without casting blame".  You can say, "I monitor
        these women's words and when I deem them blatant feminist bigotry
        I have a right, nay a DUTY to expose them".

        >I feel as safe as I possibly can when talking about ... things like 
        >the ways that I have been perceived as a sexist or as harrassing 
        >when that wasn't my intent. 

        You poor, persecuted thing and all you want to do is learn!  How
        can women be so callous as to ignore your INTENT and respond only
        to the sound of your words?  If you are perceived as sexist then
        you may as well be, regardless of your intent.  The road to hell
        is paved with good intentions.

        >I really expect that rather than say "Well if that made you feel
        >bad just think how bad women have felt in the past", and "I see
        >nothing wrong with that note" they would say "Gee, now that you
        >point that out, I can see how that's like the things that we
        >find hurts so much--terribly sorry. Hope we can both learn from
        >this." 
        
        Yes, Jim, we'd all like to throw out our pearls of wisdom and
        have everyone looking wide-eyed at us as if we've found the answer
        to world hunger.  If people are taking exception to your words why
        do you just assume there's something wrong with them and/or the file 
        environment?  Why not address the issues?  You really sound like 
        you're sulking that here you are trying to do your best and re-
        spectfully point out bigotry, closed-mindedness and cynicism, (which
        you identify by the acceptance or rejection of your notes), and
        women actually have the GAUL to not just say, "Gee, now that you
        point that out..."  That's what sexist men like to hear from women
        and you're not that way, are you?  It doesn't matter that that's
        what you want to hear too, does it?  Because you're only sexist if
        YOU say you're sexist.

        Let's just kill this debate from here.  I'm not insulted by your
        names, I'm not hurt nor do I think you've done me any irreparable
        social or career damage.  You've pissed off some other women in
        this file but I just don't take it all that seriously.  

        There really is no WAY to screen out every single "nasty" word in a 
        forum that is accessed and addressed by people the world over.  Just
        saying, "AHA! - I FOUND one!" doesn't prove anything but that
        there are all kinds of people in the world with all kinds of ideas.
        The law of averages says there's going to be some "bad" words used
        here sooner or later.  People who just police the file looking to
        catch people are playing in the minor leagues and probably don't
        really understand the weightier issues anyway.

        And in closing may I quote the great Ashley Roachclip...
479.131I've been here before...VCQUAL::THOMPSONNoter at largeThu Oct 08 1987 12:438
    Wow, Deja Vu! I've seen this whole argument before. Wow,
    only the sides have changed. Before it was men defending
    how they interpreted women's *words* to be attacks against
    men. Now we've got women defending how they interpreted a
    man's *words* to be attacks against women. Is this progress
    or what?
    
    			Alfred
479.132P A R T Y ! ! ! ! !NEXUS::CONLONThu Oct 08 1987 12:4911
    	RE:  .131
    
    	You betcha!!  :)
    
    	Life in notes is like watching time-lapsed photography.
    	
    	God, I love it here!!  WHEN IS THIS PARTY??  Now I *gotta*
    	go (even if I have to parachute out over Liz' house.)
    
    							Suzanne...
    
479.133This generosity I don't needSHIRE::BIZEThu Oct 08 1987 12:548
    I'd like to mention that I agree with the last three notes and say
    that I was flabbergasted by the incredible condescension shown by
    Jim in his latest note.
    
    It sounds like an excess of zealous rhetoric in a Sunday morning
    sermon. The display of generosity is a bit hard to swallow.
    
    Joana
479.134I could say more but for what purpose?MARCIE::JLAMOTTEAAY-UHThu Oct 08 1987 13:3934
    .108
    
    *    I get terrible confused every time I read this topic.
    
    *    I keep finding myself held up as one of the men who are welcomed
    *    and then someone, often the same person, says that you have
    *    to buy the feminist agenda to be welcomed here.  It makes me
    *    wonder if anyone was listening to what I had to say when I.......
    
    Is this the first time we have listened to the author's ideas,
    philosophies and thoughts?  If it is then there has been an important
    point made in reply .108.
    
    Ideas, thoughts and philosophies belong to people.  I can like the
    people but not the expression.  If Notes were set up to show the
    text first and the header last I expect that something good might happen.
    
           We would read with less prejudice.  Not knowing the author
           would allow us to focus on the words not the personality.
    
    I have made a personal decision that I intend to follow in noting.
    I will *never* again refer to an individual by name in a conference
    and I would appreciate it if my name is never mentioned.  This 
    philosophy if adopted by a substantial number of people would improve
    communication and the substance of the conference a great deal.
                                                                   
    In my humble opinion we have proven the thought in .108 that up
    to the point of this note this author was respected for his prose,
    stature in the community and noting style.  We were not paying any
    attention to his ideas, philosophies or thoughts, because the author
    has made similiar remarks throughout the conference and never been
    subject to the name-calling that has occurred this morning.
    
    
479.136GCANYN::TATISTCHEFFLee TThu Oct 08 1987 13:5957
    Well, a light bulb of possible understanding of Sandy went off in
    my mind at a h_r note.
    
    Jim, I don't think Sandy's more, hmm, heated statements are bigotted.
    Correct me if I'm wrong Sandy, but I think her statements reflect
    a balanced viewpoint and brutal honesty.  For ex the comment about
    males not willing to legislate away their power.  Seems to me that
    if I were in a position of power, _I_ would not willing give that
    away unless I saw some way I could gain by it.  Seems to me that
    Sandy made a similar comparison of what _she_ would do in that
    position.  
    
    It may have _seemed_ like bigotry (to a certain extent, it did to
    me), but right now I don't see it.
    
    I also don't see it much coming from _any_ of the members of this
    file.  What I see sometimes is a belief that "people" will act only
    in their own self-interest, damn the consequences to others.  This
    is a belief with which I do not agree, that's all.
    
    On another issue:
    
    I think if you knew Jim a bit better, you might be a bit less ready
    to scream at him for a condescending attitude.
    
    For example, I think his opinions of homosexuality are dead wrong. I
    disagree with him vehemently.  I see that as an example of prejudice,
    judgementalism, plain stupidity, etc, in him.  I am more than a little
    firm in my disagreement with him.  He is aware of this, my conviction
    that there is a part of him which is fundamentally and morally wrong.
    
    I do _not_ think he is a rotton person for feeling this way, just,
    er, stupid in one spot.  He does not resent my "condescending
    attitude" towards him.  We are separate people, with separate opinions
    and outlooks on life.  We differ on many issues.  With many of those
    differing attitudes, we are each willing to hear the other's point
    of view and examine ourselves to see whether that changes our opinions.
    Sometimes we convince each other, and sometimes we do not.  When
    we do not convince each other, we simply say what we believe and
    why, then agree to disagree.  That does not mean that I may not
    be furious still at the stupid blindness of the view he holds; I
    simply know that we have reached an impasse.  If we reach too many
    impasses, then we cannot be friends because we are just too different.
    
    The point of this is that while it FEELS like condescention coming
    from his mouth (fingers?) sometimes, I think he is simply trying
    to say what he feels (even when he disagrees) without making it
    impossible for us to be civilized.  You don't HAVE to like him or
    his words; I don't think he is looking to be adored or worshipped.
    Friendship, however distant, is *nice* when it results from such
    a correspondence, but it by no means necessary.  Nor is enmity,
    and I think he simply wants to say his piece, maybe discuss it,
    maybe heatedly, in a civilized fashion which will provoke thought
    or distaste rather than anger.
    
    
    Lee    
479.137Like I said, P A R T Y ! ! !NEXUS::CONLONThu Oct 08 1987 14:0011
    	RE:  .135
    
    	Oh, be honest Iggles!!  *YOU* will be there with bells on
    	(whether you are willing to admit it NOW or not!)

    	Anyway, who is talking about a phone call.
    
      
    
    ~~S~~  Where_do_Eagles_attach_bells_when_they_wear_their_party_
    	   _feathers_?__Egads_never_mind_I_don't_want_to_know_! :)
479.138A pervasive problem that even I suffer ofHUMAN::BURROWSJim BurrowsFri Oct 09 1987 00:25123
        Bless you, Lee, (and may I be forgiven by other noters for
        speaking of an individual in the conference) you have not only
        seen my point regarding how we express ourselves, but you have
        also helped me to clarify some thoughts I've had in the last few
        days regarding what I have perceieved as bigotry in this
        conference and others. 
        
        On the point of bigotry, I am coming to feel that I was quite
        likely wrong in my interpretation of some of the statements made
        here. I still think that there is an element of prejudice in the
        statements themselves, but what I was hearing as bitterness or
        anger or even hatred seems to me now something more benign and
        common. There is a strong assumption that all men are the same
        or all legislators or all whites or all people in power or
        whatever, but I think that the vehemence is as you suggest more
        motivated by brutal honesty than the bitterness I thought I
        heard. This interpretation has been coming to me for a while
        now, but you have helped to jell it. 
        
        Sandy, again let me apologize for any offense I have given you.
        Just as Lee strongly disagrees with me on some subjects and will
        tell me so quite clearly without meaning any offense to me, so
        do I disagree very strongly with you without thinking badly of
        you as a person. I find some of the things I hear you say (which
        I am willing to admit may not be what you intended to say) to be
        absolutely dreadful. None-the-less, I feel no animosity towards
        you nor wish you any offense. To me, at least, there is a
        difference between a person and their notions or statements. 
        
        The major bone I have to pick wth you is that you often claim to
        know how men think, what motivates them, and what they are
        after. Assuming that men as men think, feel or are motivated in
        one way, or that women, blacks, WC4s, homosexuals or anyone as a
        class does is, I am convinced, just plain wrong--both in the
        sense that it is incorrect and in the sense that it a bad thing
        to do. When we think of people as a class, when we decide that
        because we understand some members of a class we understand them
        all, we are misled and we do them a great disservice.
        
        Your views on men are both on the one hand unflattering and on
        the other hand so unlike the way I view myself and many men that
        it seems that such a view could be based only on anger or
        bitterness. But as I tried to write about my earlier note in
        which I spoke out against the prejudice and stereotyping that I
        saw in your notes, and then as I read your note in H-R, and as I
        read what Lee said, I have begun to think that I misread your
        notes. I still think you are wrong and I disagree with you
        heartily, but I view it somewhat differently.
        
        It seems to me that both you and the men you associated with and
        identified with (as you mentioned in your H-R note) are
        extremely different from me and from what I see as the norm (of
        course I don't view myself as "abnormal", right). What I wish I
        could convey to you is that the converse is true, that many men
        are very different from what you have adopted as your image of
        men. Your projections of your own point of view is extremely
        alien to many of us who are men.
        
        A point that I've had an extremely hard time making in H-R,
        Philosophy and other conferences is that some people are not
        motivated primarily by self-interest or gain. Several people
        with whom I've debated have insisted that they new better--
        everyone is motivated by self-interest at the heart. While that
        may be true of many, I maintain that there is much more
        diversity amongs human beings.
        
        Lee has said that if she were in a position of power she would
        not willingly give it away without being able to see some way to
        gain from it. She suggests that you are similar to her and have
        projected your own view on men as a class. Myself, I don't find
        power or wealth, which is quite a related vlaue, very attractive.
        I don't like being powerless, controlled by others, but beyond
        wishing not to be controlled, I have no strong desire to
        control. When in a position of power, I often delegate that
        power to others. Power, once you have a modicum of it over your
        own life, can be quite a nuisance. 
        
        The point of talking about my view on power is not to toot my
        own horn or to disparage those who value power. I merely wish to
        say that Lee as she describes herself, and I are extremely
        different. That in turn is intended only to illustrate my point
        that we all are different. It is to illustrate that knowing that
        I am human or male or white or whatever is not to know much of
        anything about what I feel, what motivates me or what I would
        do. 
        
        This gets around eventually to the point that someone made in
        paraphrase of my .108 to the effect that I am well received
        because I express myself well. Because we often assume that
        everyone is like us, when we see someone who is articulate or
        intelligent or of good character or logical or "reasonable" in
        some manner we assume that they must agree with us. It is hard
        for us to believe that well-meaning intelligent people who are
        aware of the facts could possibly disagree with us. Only someone
        stupid or bad could fail to see the point. 
        
        But in reality people ARE very different and just because they
        are pleasant or inteligent or well spoken doesn't mean that they
        will feel like us or agree with our views. 
        
        This problem is I feel at the root of a lot of what goes on in
        this topic. People often assume that all of the women here have
        the same beliefs or that those who are welcomed here all agree,
        when they don't and we don't. I feel that many of the
        categorizations of men or of women here are bigotted or at least
        prejudiced because they assume that all men or all women are the
        same. At the same time, *I* tend to hear anger or bigotry in
        views that I have a hard time understanding because the folk
        putting them forth are so very different from me that I have a
        hard time seeing from their point of view. 
        
        This assumption that all people are alike or all men are alike
        or all WomanNoters are alike, and the corelate that anyone good
        and clever must agree with us when presented with the same facts
        is the main problem I have been trying to address in the various
        notes I have posted here. Related to that is my assertion that
        to be critical of the view or statement is not necessarily to be
        critical of the person who holds or makes it. 
        
        I'm sorry if I have presented it badly or in an offensive
        manner. That is most assuredly not my intention. 
        
        JimB. 
479.139a fine kettle of misunderstanding!YODA::BARANSKILaw?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*!Wed Oct 14 1987 16:5523
Well, I've read it all, a fine kettle of misunderstanding...

I have to say that I support the point which Bob Barber was trying to make; that
the words used objectively can be read as 'condemning' men as a group. I don't
feel that he twisted either the words, *or* the meaning;  He understaood the
meaning.  It is not just *one* example of a complete sentence which can be read
as condemning men, it is at least a dozen.  I think that there is something
wrong about a writing style where a dozen sentences can be taken '''out of
context''' to mean the opposite of what the note is supposed to be saying. 

I also support JimB (not me :-)), that it is a bad thing that this is not
realized.  I also have to say that I respect Lee, and her writing quite a bit. 

In case anybody is curious, I am looking at every occurance of "all men", "all
women", "no men", and "on women", and other absolutes in this file. (I wish I
didn't *have* to use notes!)  So far, I have found very few dammnable uses of
the phrases.  There are a ***lot*** of instances of these phrases in arguments,
saying such and such is an insult, but the phrases are never used as insults. 

*I* would encourage *every*one to *all* ways use 'some' qualifiers in *all*
their notes. :-} 

Jim.