T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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571.1 | Jerky comment. | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | days of whisper and pretend | Thu Dec 03 1987 23:05 | 31 |
| I just read a comment in a reply to a note that aggravates me to
know extent.
This is not verbatim...but the comment indicated if a woman made
more money than the ex-husband and had custody of the children she
should pay all the child support. A reference was made to the fact
that she would not allow the father his visitation rights. This
comment was made in response to my comment that I did not like to
talk to fathers who did not pay child support.
Flame on...
This is a typical response of a non-custodial parent that does not
care a hill of beans about their responsibility to their children
and is in fact neglecting that responsibility by accessing and judging
the custodial parents behavior, income and whatever else.
And what does income and visitation rights have to do with the whole
scheme of things. Do all custodial parents with high incomes deny
visitation rights to the non-custodial parent?
This type of logic by both men and women is why the courts are
desperately trying to find ways to settle child support and child
custody cases. We expect the courts to do what we refuse.
I have often said that this conference is not a true representative
of the population. I expect programmers, engineers and professionals
to have better sense and therefore give a more enlightened view
of the world and its problems. Maybe I am wrong. Maybe this is
the real world with real j*erks.
|
571.2 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | I took my hands off the wheel | Fri Dec 04 1987 07:28 | 18 |
| > I have often said that this conference is not a true representative
> of the population. I expect programmers, engineers and professionals
> to have better sense and therefore give a more enlightened view
> of the world and its problems. Maybe I am wrong. Maybe this is
> the real world with real j*erks.
Why do you assume that this conference is not representative of the population?
Or that programmers, engineers and professionals have more sense than the
population at large ? or that jerks don't exist in the cluster cloister ?
Or that the real world doesn't have it's share of enlightened people ?
This IS the real world, with real people. Many of whom don't consider
YOUR viewpoint the enlightened one. Are they all jerks by definition ?
And thank you for introducing a SOAPBOX Note#204 into this conference.
I think I shall vote yes.
dana
|
571.3 | <FLAME ON> | GOSOX::RYAN | Equal Opportunity Noter | Fri Dec 04 1987 12:37 | 31 |
| I'm sick of seeing every topic turned into an excuse for
bickering. I'm sick of people who spend all their time casting
aspersions on each other's motives and beliefs rather than
addressing what they're actually saying. I'm sick of quibbling
over saying "all" instead of "some". I'm sick of individuals
hovering over this file looking for nits to pick, and
individuals who mistake nit-picking for personal attacks. I'm
sick of the self-righteous twits who can't admit that it's
possible for someone to hold an opposing opinion without being
in league with the devil (whatever the hell sex it is).
Before entering a reply, ask youself these questions:
Am I responding emotionally?
Am I intending what I say personally, against the author of a
note, rather than in response to what they said? Am I
addressing what they actually said, or what I think is the
motive behind it?
Am I taking something personally that may not have been
intended that way?
Am I nit-picking?
If the answer to any of these questions is yes, SHUT THE HELL
UP!!!
I do hope someone opens a restricted file. I doubt it will
really work and produce a forum where useful discussion about
the important issues of women and their place in our society
could take place, but it can't hurt to try.
Mike
|
571.4 | Just Picking Nits, Boos | YODA::BARANSKI | Too Many Masters... | Fri Dec 04 1987 13:00 | 19 |
| RE: .3
I'd like to reply to your flame, because I'm sure that what I write can be
inferred as one of the above.
I happen to think that it *is* very important to pick at some nits.
I think it *is* important for people to say *some* instead of *all*; it may be
the only way to get people to treat others as individuals, rather then
sterotyped groups.
I think that it is important to question the logic of a train of thought;
it may be the only way we can seperate the fact from the fiction.
I think it is important to question the assumptions and facts *behind* pet
theories. If I don't know enough of the background, all I can do is dumbly
either nod, or shake my head. I don't think that is a victory for anyone.
Jim.
|
571.5 | Did I miss something? | ASD::LOW | Merge with Authority | Fri Dec 04 1987 13:09 | 17 |
| RE: .1
In my earlier note that offended you, I commented that *both* parents
should be able see the children *equally* (assuming one parent did
not beat the children, etc.), regardless of their sex or income.
I made a sarcastic remark about a father who paid money is alimony
and child support, and yet was not able to see his children. This
is Bull$h!t (with a capital B) and often common. My apologies if
I was not clear in the original note.
As for setting aside a note for flames/abuse, that may be starting
trouble. I have wanted to flame in here at times, but chose not
to dilute the discussion of the topic. Now I have a place to
do so. That may be dangerous. :-)
Dave
|
571.6 | | KLAATU::THIBAULT | Capture the moment, carry the day | Fri Dec 04 1987 13:11 | 8 |
| re:< Note 571.3 by GOSOX::RYAN "Equal Opportunity Noter" >
<----- What he said. Thanx Mike.
I'm also sick of seeing the same people bickering and saying the same things
over and over and over again.
Jenna Poopy
|
571.7 | oh, bother, said Pooh... | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Dec 04 1987 13:13 | 20 |
| There are a lot of really neat people who write in this file.
I have been fortunate enough to meet some of them and I have
found them to be lovely people. Some of those whom I have met
have gone on to become good friends. I am equally sure that those
whom I have not met are just as fine and just as wonderful people.
But sometimes, I feel like I do when my teenagers get going on
something and I am in the middle and all I want to do is holler
"SHUT UP ALREADY!"...now where I can and have done that with
my teenagers (and not always too successfully :-}) I can't really
do that to a group of intelligent articulate passionate etc etc
adults...
but (very small voice here) some times I do wish....
Let us strive for a little spirit of the season here, please
hugs in general :-)
Bonnie
|
571.8 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopless but not serious | Fri Dec 04 1987 13:24 | 17 |
| I pretty much agree with Jim (.4) although I don't think in
terms like "nits". It occurs to me that a common problem around
the NOTES conferences is that we can't enjoy the advantages
of non-verbal queues (hence the proliferation of smiley faces).
This pretty much leaves us with only written words as our means of
communication. At the risk of making a blanket statement, I
feel pretty safe in saying that communication between women
and men is one of the major, recurrent themes of this conference.
So, from my viewpoint, the words we use and the way we put them
together becomes of critical importance in NOTES communication.
And any of you bannana heads who "think" differently can
stuff. . .er, that is, the opinions of others, expressed in
a clear, constructive manner is always welcome.
Steve
|
571.9 | | MOSAIC::MODICA | | Fri Dec 04 1987 13:34 | 13 |
| Nicely said noter Ryan. And ditto to Bonnie.
Personally I dislike getting hate mail, especially when those that
send it will not bother to reply to attempts to "talk about it"
and maybe understand each others views better.
One noter from this conference and I became friends when we did
start corresponding. And it all started out with some heated
exchanges in notes. But as we started writing to each other and
I started listening to that persons point of view, I started to
understand better, and I'm glad we're friends now. So, to those
of you who I offend, let me know. I do have an open mind...
I think........
|
571.10 | Some Might Even Call It Rudeness | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Dec 04 1987 14:04 | 11 |
| Another observation I have around Noting phenomena is that, in
Notes, we too often speak to people, electronically, in ways
that we would never dream of, if we were speaking to them face
to face.
At the Party tonight, even if we get into discussions about topics
that we disagree on, I doubt that we will start off by saying
"Hey pisswit, you're out of your mind". (At least I hope *that*
won't happen. Maybe I better take a full metal jacket along. :-)
Alan
|
571.11 | are you sure you don't think you are in soap?:-) | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Dec 04 1987 14:18 | 3 |
| Now, Alan, when did anyone in this file call someone a 'pisswit'?
:-}
|
571.12 | I Forgot Where I Was | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Dec 04 1987 14:26 | 6 |
| RE: .11
Bonnie, you're right. I meant to say that nobody at the party
would ever think of saying "Hey, p_sswit". :-)
Alan
|
571.13 | o f'r heaven's sake ;-} | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Dec 04 1987 14:58 | 5 |
| giggle....
you should hear me when I lose my temper....fortunately it isn't
very often, I hung out with a bad crowd in grad school and
picked up some bad habits ;-)
|
571.14 | Spell it right, you have only your * | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Fri Dec 04 1987 15:39 | 4 |
| Actually, they'd probably say "Hey p*ssw*t." or something similar. For some
reason, people here are afraid to spell maladictae properly.
Martin.
|
571.15 | should I resent those remarks? :-) | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Dec 04 1987 15:49 | 3 |
| Martin, are you picking on me because I can't spell ;-} ?
it might be okay to spell it if we could define it...
|
571.16 | "maladictae"?? ooOOOOooo! ;^) | VIKING::TARBET | Clorty Auld Besom | Fri Dec 04 1987 16:13 | 1 |
|
|
571.17 | Creative Invective as a lost art | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | The stimulation of eccentricity | Fri Dec 04 1987 16:58 | 13 |
| >< Note 571.14 by MAY20::MINOW "Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho" >
>
>Actually, they'd probably say "Hey p*ssw*t." or something similar. For some
>reason, people here are afraid to spell maladictae properly.
>
There was a wonderful libel (or slander, I forget which) case in
which the defendant described the plaintiff as "A slimey creature
who sleazed up from the bayou" (Or very close to that.) The judge
ruled for the defendant and (in dicta) said that it was a pleasure
to see that creative invective was not a completely lost art.
--David
|
571.20 | It's unusual but I am speechless. | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | days of whisper and pretend | Mon Dec 07 1987 17:29 | 9 |
| It seems like there is a person that contributes to this file that
can straighten us all out. He can tell us why the file was created
and he can fix any misunderstandings about the recent poll.
I can't believe that we as women are still being subjected to this
type of authoritive attitude by even one man.
Iam speechless.
|
571.21 | Two buttons | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | | Mon Dec 07 1987 19:34 | 11 |
| > "Clorty Auld Besom" > ooOOOOooo again!!!
Button 1. Those who reply solely to correct another writer's spelling or
grammar. Take up teaching the dead; they appreciate your effort
more than the rest of us.
Button 2. Those who write one paragraph relating to the string and three
paragraphs about Jesus Christ. Dearly beloved children of God,
have you strayed into the wrong conference?
Meigs (feeling femmo today!)
|
571.22 | Imagine all the people... | KLAATU::THIBAULT | Capture the moment, carry the day | Tue Dec 08 1987 15:27 | 26 |
| I'm sick and tired of seeing endless notes on what and who this file is
for and why it is here. I would think a notesfile entitled "Topics of
Interest to Women" would speak for itself. I wouldn't think a note about
what a hassle it is to find a feminine napkin dispenser that works would
be very interesting to men, but I do believe that there are many notes
that may very well be interesting to men. Same as there are some notes in
Mennotes that are interesting to me and some that are not.
I also think that many people do not feel comfortable bearing their
souls in this or any file regardless of whether it is members only or
not. I happen to be one of those people and for my own reasons I'm not
about to tell my deep dark secrets to the world at large. If I needed
to do so I would do it anonymously, period.
I think that there are men who read this file that hate women. I think that
there are women who read this file that hate men. I think that there are
people in this file that hate everything. I don't think we can ever change
that and all this bickering is getting us nowhere. I think I am having
much more fun and learning lots more by reading BEATLES, 4WD, AUDIO and
countless other interest files.
The world is an imperfect place. We're all in it together and we're all
in it alone. We can lean on each other and make progress or we can push
each other down and go nowhere. I'm know where I'm going...
Jenna
|
571.24 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | Carol Saturnworm | Tue Dec 08 1987 22:49 | 6 |
|
.22 <applause> WELL SAID, Jenna!!!!!!!!
|
571.25 | GRrrrr: don't read this note | 3D::CHABOT | I have heard the VAXes singing, each to each. | Thu Dec 10 1987 20:18 | 11 |
|
I've lost it now.
I'm annoyed at general statements accusing everyone in the notesfile
(except of course the author of the statement) of being vicious
castrating bitches. I'm tired of people celebrating the female
being accused of men-bashing. And oh, no, we never make mistakes,
that's why we are capable of saying these things.
And if anybody *finds* my sense of humor,
please send it back to me.
|
571.26 | From a "vicious bastard" | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Who's on first? | Fri Dec 11 1987 12:45 | 9 |
| < Note 571.25 by 3D::CHABOT "I have heard the VAXes singing, each to each." >
We're not all "vicious bitches", some are "vicious bastards" 8^{).
I would like to see everybody (including me) become less defensive.
The only way any new stuff get in to your head and heart is when
the defenses are down.
Dick
|
571.27 | my .02 worth | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | a collie down isnt a collie beaten | Fri Dec 11 1987 15:23 | 32 |
| I am getting rawther sick of seeing topics become tennis matches
between a few several people, the later responses seeming to consist
only of:
"I feel that you said that what I feel was wrong or denigrating
or offensive"
"I feel that your saying that what I feel was wrong or denigrating
or offensive is wrong or denigrating or offensive and therefore
I must assume that <insert slightly non-sequitorial personal remark
here that seems sort of outside the original topic>"
"Well, since you said "<quote of slightly non-sequitorial personal
remark here>", I can only assume you are not biding by what you
said when you remarked, "<quote from much earlier remark which may
or may not be relative to the discussion at this point in time>"
I think it's the back-and-forthing that gets me out of discussions
more often than not. While this veneration of certain portions
of statements by repeated proof via n-dozen volleys may prove in
the end that someone is "right" and someone is "wrong" - most often
it ends in an awkward silence while the few-several wrangle it out,
and for some time nothing really new or enlightening related to the
topic gets said.
This is just my bug-a-boo, so I figured it belonged here. BTW,
this is nothing personal with anyone in particular or in general,
it's like Suzanne Vega sings: "It's a one-time-thing, it just
happens....a lot...."
-Jody
|
571.28 | 594.0 | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Mon Dec 14 1987 17:53 | 7 |
| for assuming that men don't have nightmares and would not be able
to contribute anything to a discussion of coping with them.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
571.29 | my list, I must be feeling grumpy today | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Mon Dec 14 1987 18:17 | 28 |
| 1. replying to topics with brief messages that don't give a clue as to
the subject except for a RE: note number. I would prefer people
would say RE: #, subject. (I just have a hard time following the
discussion without reminders).
2. People who say that women provide some function for them, such as
nurturing, or giving advice, or are their best friend. Why
women as opposed to men? Why do men have to come into this
file to learn about women as if we were some kind of fish?
I always feel that women are being condescended to even when
the author was really trying to be supportive.
3. People who dump on women who ask for help just from other women. If
women want to know if other women have similar feelings (they
aren't always asking for advice) they should be able to ask
other women without men complaining. Sometimes it's a sort
of sanity check.
4. People who threaten to leave a notes conference because they feel
offended or unwanted or something. Either try to work with
the situation, or leave. Don't tell us you plan to leave so
people can have the opportunity to ask you not to leave.
5. People who analyze too much. Who analyze how the file is doing, how
the analysis of the file is, what people really mean when they
say something.
...Karen
|
571.30 | No problem there... | NEXUS::MORGAN | In your heart you KNOW it's flat. | Mon Dec 14 1987 19:55 | 6 |
| Reply to .28; Marshall,
So what's wrong with starting your own topic concerning men's
nightmares in Mennotes?
I see no problem with what Peggy did.
|
571.31 | Don't you dare smiley-face at me, you dried-up-tulip-bulb! | SHIRE::BIZE | | Tue Dec 15 1987 07:54 | 52 |
| Thanks for creating a note for nagging, whining, complaining, screaming,
shouting, frothing at the mouth, and more...
I hate, hate, hate:
- not being able to be critical about a man's attitude without having
to say that I don't hate men: how can anybody possibly hate 50% of
all human beings. That's simply preposterous.
- not being able to express some thoughts I have because I feel that
some men are going to jump at me, make fun of me, come erudite all
over me, treat me as a defensive idiot child.
I very much dislike:
- people who replace part of the letters in swear words, for example
writing "h*ll" for "Hell". Either you don't object to swear words, in this
case go ahead and use them: you are not sparing anybody's sensibilities
this way. Or you object to swear words, and there are many other ways
to express annoyance or anger. Among other possibilities:
1) Say so: "I am extremely angry"
"I am very upset"
"I cannot accept..."
2) Be sarcastic: "It has probably escaped your attention that ..."
"Though blind people cannot be blamed for not
seeing ...."
3) Take advantage of the richness of the English language to
come up with original or old ways of telling people you
feel they are unbargained-for-remains-of-neo-facistic-memorabilia
or moth-eaten-goat-excrements.
- Smiley faces. To me, they really are a way of saying the most awful things
without taking the blame for it: "your ideas confirm the theory that not all
people descend from apes at the same speed" said she/he, following it by
a smiley face so the person concerned will not take offence and barge into
him/her with a reciprocal insult. Should this happen, it will allow the
smiler to complain about the other person's lack of sense of humour...
Also people will say something they are dead serious about but, as they
are afraid of the reactions of other people hurting them, they will add
smiley faces to their text.
They are also a sign of laziness: if we express ourselves clearly
and accurately, surely we don't need to include drawings in our
writings?
Rantingly and ravingly yours,
Joana
|
571.32 | couple of nits | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Tue Dec 15 1987 09:13 | 12 |
| re .31
The way I understand it the use of * in swear words was due to
a degree of sensitivity around whether we could be running afoul
of FCC laws or for that matter to avoid getting negative reactions
to notes within the company...tho I admit that this impression could
be mistaken.
Also the use of faces in notes was originally suggested as a way
to provide the context of jesture, facial expression etc. that
is present in face to face conversation but absent in notes.
|
571.33 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Dec 15 1987 09:38 | 16 |
| re .30:
You are violating the convbention of this note. I believed that
571 was a place to flame. So I flamed, Peggy's note bugged me, and
you have no right to tell me to go start a note in a conference
I do not read and have no interest in reading.
You may not see a problem with what Peggy did, and I may be totally
unjustified in complaining about it, but that is the purpose of
this note, to vent steam.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
571.34 | The steam slowly escapes... | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Tue Dec 15 1987 10:08 | 12 |
| Re: .33 - The "nightmare" note.
I agree. It is totally absurd to start two notes on a subject.
One for women and one for men. What does that say? It says that
only women can "understand" the authors feelings/fears. Well,
that is a typical attitude, and a bunch of maggot-laden, steaming,
fresh, weasel feces! You want "women only" to reply to a topic
that general? Be serious! I can understand asking women-only to
reply to a "yeast infection" topic (not too many men have 1st hand
experience with that), but this is ludicrous!
Arrrrrrg!!!!!
|
571.35 | Moderator Clarification | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Tue Dec 15 1987 11:12 | 7 |
| Forgive me, Dave et al., but it is (in my opinion) not at all ludicrous
for someone to want to hear only from women, even on general topics,
_in this file_. A desire is a desire, period. It is its own
justification, as is your desire that, e.g., women not have such
wishes.
in Sisterhood,
=maggie
|
571.36 | This not a refreshing topic | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | food, shelter & diamonds | Tue Dec 15 1987 11:14 | 12 |
| I think the single most offensive thing in Womannotes is *this topic*!
I think people are mean, nasty and picky enough to each other in
notesfiles without designating a special topic exclusively for people
to be mean, nasty and picky to and about each other.
It seems to me that we should be directing our efforts towards trying
to understand and be kind to one another, not in thinking up clever,
witty ways to put each other down.
Lorna
|
571.38 | | MANTIS::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Dec 15 1987 13:45 | 8 |
| Alas Eagle ... the most understanding men don't learn about women
through notesfiles. They turn to the lady beside them and talk
to her. I fear that "understanding women" is used by some as an
excuse for their presence. They obviously are not here because
they enjoy our company, or because they appreciate our point of
view, or because they admire our logic and integrity. Some seem
to be here to keep us in our place, to show us the error of our
ways, to straighten us out. Why do they stay?
|
571.39 | A modest proposal. | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Dec 15 1987 14:04 | 51 |
| RE: .28, .30, .33, .34 et al
This isn't really a hot button with me and I'm not flaming, but
I would like to point out to ASD::LOW that even "men" can contribute
to a discussion of yeast infections. I've never had one, that I
know of, but I was sufficiently interested to transcribe some
information from a magazine article which recommended boric acid.
As for BUFFER::LEEDBERG's #594 about dreams, when I read that this
was an example of what she would like to see in a closed, members
only conference, I just NEXT UNSEENed the whole lot. The title
said "for Women Only", which was somewhat ambiguous to me. Did
it mean "no males need reply" or "don't even dare reading further".
I assumed that the author did not want anyone but "females" reading
any further. This disappointed me because I have always looked to
this conference as a place to share information, experiences and
feelings.
I wondered about how to avoid reading future replies to #594. Because
this is one of three conferences that I follow on a regular basis,
it would be difficult to avoid seeing some further discussion of
this "nightmare" topic. What if we had something similar to what
the UCOUNT::MOVIES conference uses to hide plot questions that would
spoil it for someone who hadn't seen the film. By putting in a
FORM FEED, the writer alerts any casual readers to the possibility
that the following information may include "the butler did it",
for example. What if WOMANNOTES adopted a convention of using a
FORM FEED for topics which are considered to be "for women only".
There would not be any way of policing this, but male readers would be
honor bound to skip over that REPLY.
The following has been put beyond a FORM FEED by inserting a
<CTRL> V followed by a <CTRL> L.
Example of information separated from the topic by FORM FEED.
|
571.40 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Dec 15 1987 16:00 | 22 |
| Re: the last several
It seems to me that if a woman enters a note and asks for replies
from women only, it's generally because the note is about a topic
that's very sensitive for her, and she particularly wants to avoid
responses from the male writers in this conference who trample on
people's feelings. (I know there are good guys out there --
unfortunately there is no way to set a "women and good male guys"
filter!). So, I think it's bad form for a man to go off to another
note and complain about this. Among other reasons, it's just a
way to do an end run around the restriction. And I think if they
do this, other members of the conference should just ignore them
instead of feeding the discussion. I'm beginning to understand
the complaints about men in this file, unfortunately.
I don't think anyone objects to men reading "for women only" notes
-- am I mistaken?
If a man has something of deathless interest to contribute on the
topic, yes, do please enter it on men notes if you want. But not
here.
|
571.41 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Dec 15 1987 16:35 | 24 |
| re .40
>...unfortunately there is no way to set a "women and good male guys"
> filter!)
How about simply asking for "courteous responses only"?
> Among other reasons, it's just a way to do an end run around the
> restriction.
Pray, tell me all my reasons for complaining about the restriction.
Exactly how is objecting to such an arbitrary restriction, (in a
note specifically dedicated to complaints)an "end run around the
restriction"? Have I been using _this_ note to discuss my nightmares
and how I deal with them?
> If a man has something of deathless interest to contribute on the
> topic, yes, do please enter it on men notes if you want. But not
> here.
Thanks, that is very kind of you. That is sort of like responding
to a _Boston_Globe_ editorial by writing to the _N.Y._Times_. Or
maybe a better analogy would be a _Ms_ editorial by writing to
_Esquire_.
|
571.42 | All women and some men are OK???? Brainwash! | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Tue Dec 15 1987 16:38 | 37 |
| Re: .40
So only men trample on people's feelings?
It's bad taste to complain in another note?
Well I certainly wouldn't want to complain in that note, would I?
After all it's "No men allowed"!!! The idea of that upsets me greatly,
and I disagree with that concept completely. However, I am respecting
the author's wishes by not replying to that note.
Your beginning to understand the complaints against men in this
file? Congratulations! You are on your way to becoming a true
WOMANNOTER...
What if somebody started a topic here and said "nobody from California
should reply to this note", because they felt that someone in
California wouldn't understand their feelings/emotions on a certain
subject. How would that make you feel? Then, suppose you say "I
have some relevent ideas on that, but you don't want me to respond".
Naturally, you would feel upset that your opinions (unseen and unheard)
were rejected, based on your geographical location. Well, calling
that response "bad form" is another slap in the face.
I simply find it amazing that a conference that seems to be for
an open, sharing community, who would like equality for all,
can be so hypocritical at times by deliberately placing restrictions
on certain members of the conference.
I have never tried to deny anyone's feelings in this conference.
I have never belittled anyone's problems here. I just want all
this women vs. men bullshit to stop. If we can't stop it here,
there's no hope for the "real world".
Dave
|
571.43 | the double bind | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Dec 15 1987 16:41 | 14 |
| doesn't anyone see anything wrong with the statement:
"You, sir, are being a jerk, I wish _men_ would learn to shut up
and just listen."
/
( ___
) ///
/
P.S. And then some poor fool male (like me) will stand up and try
to point out the flaw, and thus automatically become guilty of
not just shutting up and listening.
|
571.44 | please take a quiet moment to think about this. | 38636::AUGUSTINE | What do humanitarians eat? | Tue Dec 15 1987 17:10 | 25 |
|
David,
sometimes it takes so much strength to express thoughts about the
issues that we're struggling with that an insensitive reply can be
devastating. sometimes we need a very specific type of help.
just as a white person can be inadvertently insensitive about hurting
a black person, or a gentile might step on a jew's toes, or a straight
person might accidentally offend a gay person, it sometimes happens
that men say the wrong things to women.
yes, men have nightmares. yes, you might be able to offer your
experience to peggy (and several people have made suggestions about
how you can do that if you feel you have something of value to say).
on the other hand, before you do, please reread peggy's note. try
to understand what kind of experience she's gone through, what she's
been dreaming about, and how that might be related to why she just
wants to hear from women right now. please put yourself in her shoes
for a moment and try very hard to understand what peggy is feeling.
thank you
liz augustine
|
571.46 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Dec 15 1987 17:31 | 13 |
| Re: .41, 42, 43
I think you don't realize how hurtful your replies can be. What
apparently seem to you to be reasoned, quiet replies seem to me
(and apparently to others) to cause pain. No one who enters a note
about something sensitive wants to be shouted at in response. That's
why the mennotes -- so they can completely avoid seeing your response
if they want to; there's no other way to handle that in the current
notes set up as I understand it.
And it does seem to be the same men over and over again in this file
who consistently respond in hurtful ways.
|
571.47 | a question and a comment | 38636::AUGUSTINE | What do humanitarians eat? | Tue Dec 15 1987 17:34 | 21 |
|
Russ,
Some interesting thoughts. But I don't understand who should be the
authors of:
> I suggest that if *that* idea is a *good one*, then the
> moderators collect opinions on "personal women's concern's"
> and present to W/Notes the List.
men? women? everyone? what's wrong with just writing notes about
"personal women's concerns"? or am i just not getting it?
As for women contributing to mennotes more, i dutifully tried reading
it for awhile, but quit when i just couldn't stomach it anymore.
i understand that that notesfile has gone through several changes
since its beginning. on the other hand, i have a few issues i'd
like to work on right now, and "issues of concern to men" just isn't
one of them at the moment. [quickly donning my asbestos suit here...]
thanks much for the invitation, though.
liz
|
571.48 | ??? | DECWET::JWHITE | mr. smarmy | Tue Dec 15 1987 17:37 | 6 |
|
don't any men see the truth of the statement:
"You, sir, are being a jerk, I wish _men_ would learn to shut up
and just listen."
|
571.49 | I must'a not read the directions... | NEXUS::MORGAN | In your heart you KNOW it's flat. | Tue Dec 15 1987 18:08 | 7 |
| Reply to .33, Marshall;
Let me see if I've got this right. You flamed. I replied as to the
base of your flame and you tell me that I'm not following the
convention of this topic. I dont think that questioning the souce
of the flame is out of bounds for this topic. B^) Uh, did I miss
something?
|
571.50 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Dec 15 1987 18:11 | 10 |
| I don't even mind men starting separate basenotes in *this* file
to respond to topics which women have asked only women to respond
to.
Disk space can support it, I believe, and those who wish to write
can write. Those who wish to read can read.
Holly
|
571.51 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Dec 15 1987 18:15 | 7 |
| Re : .0
How does this work with next unseen? Is there some feature of notes
I don't understand? Otherwise, each time someone opens the conference
or does "n u" they're likely to have the new note or a reply to it
staring them in the face, no?
|
571.52 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Dec 15 1987 18:27 | 12 |
| Usually when I have heard people say "Just hit next unseen", they
mean that if a topic you aren't interested in reading appears, you
can quickly jump to the next topic.
For example, there are a couple of long dicussions in this conference
which I'm not following. Often 10 replies to one or the other of
them appear in a day. So if I log in and get .25 and I see that
there are 35 in all, hitting next unseen will get all of the unread
replies flagged as read. Tomorrow I may get .36, and will have
to repeat the process.
|
571.54 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Dec 15 1987 20:01 | 7 |
|
> identifying patterns of answers by the sex of the answerers...
oops, guilty as charged. Russ is right. If I ever enter a note
that I particularly want to restrict answers to, I will say "No
replies from A, B, C, or D, please."
|
571.55 | This has gotten ridiculous | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | food, shelter & diamonds | Wed Dec 16 1987 12:07 | 16 |
| Re the replies from men about Peggy's nightmares, if I were a man
and I read her note and I had something that I sincerely wanted
to discuss with her about her nightmares, or I sincerely wanted
to share with her about my nightmares, I would simply send her mail
and say, "I know you requested women only to reply to this, but
I really wanted to discuss this with you so I hope you won't mind
me writing to you in mail, etc., etc., etc. If I were a man, and
I didn't have anything sincere to add about the topic on
nightmares then I wouldn't give a shit if she wanted men to respond
or not since I had nothing to say anyway. What's the big deal?
The woman didn't want to discuss it with men! So, what???? (I'm
tempted to say, now you know what it's like to be kept out of things
you might want to join! Not much fun, is it?)
Lorna
|
571.56 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Wed Dec 16 1987 12:41 | 10 |
| RE: .55 "...ridiculous"
Lorna, the title of the "nightmare" note says that it's for women
only. It doesn't say "women only need reply". I interpret that
to mean that I have been asked to not even read other people's replies.
Because I have been NEXT/UNSEENing every time I run across that
discussion, I don't know if I have anything worth MAILing Peggy
about or not.
|
571.57 | It just goes to show you... | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Wed Dec 16 1987 12:45 | 16 |
|
Re: last
> The woman didn't want to discuss it with men! So, what???? (I'm
>tempted to say, now you know what it's like to be kept out of things
>you might want to join! Not much fun, is it?)
So in other words, you agree with much of what I have been saying
about the hypocracy and reverse discrimination in this file. It's
OK to do that to men here, because it's WOMANNOTES. Try and look
at this from an abstract viewpoint and you'll see that it is just
as wrong as the discimination you dislike in the "real world"
Thank you for a fine example,
Dave
|
571.58 | Shoe on the other foot | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Wed Dec 16 1987 12:51 | 20 |
| .57 was a reply to .55, not .56...ooops
Re: .55
>If I were a man, and
>I didn't have anything sincere to add about the topic on
>nightmares then I wouldn't give a shit if she wanted men to respond
>or not since I had nothing to say anyway. What's the big deal?
Reverse the example and see how it looks. For example, a local
tennis club has decided to become "male only", after being co-ed.
Several women are upset about it. Since you don't play tennis,
why should you care if women can't belong to this club?
<Insert standard analogy warning...>
Dave
|
571.59 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | aware sentient being | Wed Dec 16 1987 12:58 | 6 |
| Re .56, Dennis, the world doesn't deserve such integrity :-)!
Go ahead and read it...nobody will ever know :)!
Lorna
|
571.60 | apples and oranges | VINO::EVANS | | Wed Dec 16 1987 13:47 | 20 |
| RE: all-male tennis clubs
If I were a tennis player (and I *were*, in my younger days) and
an all-male club prevented me from playing, or having some certain
advantages - I would feel that it was unfair.
If a note were entered which asked me not to participate because
I'm a woman, I couldn't give two hoots less. This is not preventing
me from doing *anything* except giving, perhaps, unwanted advice
or commentary. You don't want my advice or commentary on a personal
subject? Okey-doke.
You create a situation in which I cannot participate in the community
or society? NOT Okey-doke.
[BTW- I feel it would be tacky in the extreme to enter a note in
=W= for men only; but in MENNOTES, it's perfectly appropriate]
--dE
|
571.61 | ?? | HARDY::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Wed Dec 16 1987 16:40 | 19 |
| To borrow Dave's analogy --
Suppose we have two tennis clubs, one for men and one for women?
Men and women are freely allowed to visit the other club as guests.
There are lots of coed matches.
Once in a while though, the women decide to have a women's match
at the women's club. The men are welcome to watch, but not to play
in that match. Some of them say they would really like to participate
in *that* match.
The women think about it, and say "No, we'd rather you didn't. But
you have a couple of options. Start a men's match at the men's
club, or go over to that empty court and start a simultaneous men's
or coed match, it's up to you. We don't want to keep you from playing,
we just want to play with each other by ourselves once in a while".
|
571.62 | Have some interesting news for you, Dave Low... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Dec 17 1987 07:52 | 34 |
| RE: .57
Dave Low, since you have expressed such outrage and utter
contempt for any conference that allows "one sex only" notes,
I have some news for you. (I'm sure that you will want to take
serious action on this one immediately.)
MENNOTES has "men only" notes.
If you are really sincere about your crusade to prevent "one
sex only" notes, then surely you will want to launch a gigantic
protest in MENNOTES about this. Don't forget the part about
how they are discriminating against women (and remember to yell
the way you've yelled in this conference about this issue.)
By the way, I don't believe that any of the women who frequent
the conference have complained about it. I know that I haven't.
As a matter of fact, some weeks ago, I even started a couple
of "men only" notes myself (before the big controversy started
over here.) But it was nothing new.
You can forget the analogy to tennis -- we have a conference
for men that we can look to for comparison. If we don't find
a problem with MENNOTES having "men only" notes, then there
is nothing whatsoever hypocritical about wanting "women only"
notes here.
You, however, will be *very* hypocritical if you persist in
persecuting WOMANNOTES for having "one sex only" notes and
allow MENNOTES to do it without question. (You can't use
"I don't read MENNOTES" as an excuse, either.) :-) I've
told you about it, so you KNOW about it now.
Suzanne...
|
571.63 | References, please. I don't have all day to note | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Thu Dec 17 1987 10:56 | 16 |
| Thank you, Suzanne, for pointing out the parallel between MENNOTES
and WOMANNOTES. Since I do not follow MENNOTES, I was not aware
of the situation you describe. I would also appreciate if you
could provide me with an example of such notes (as I do not have
the time to go through all of them, and you seem to know exactly
where they are..) and MAIL them to me.
Frankly, I'm not surprised that MENNOTES practices descrimintion,
since many men still don't believe in the "equality" idea.
The reason that I am so upset by descrimination in this file, is
that the same people here who complain about descrimination, actively
promote it (against others). I doubt that would be the case in
MENNOTES. But, I guess I'll just have to wait and see, won't I?
Dave
|
571.64 | | MANTIS::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Thu Dec 17 1987 11:04 | 1 |
| I'm curious Dave,... how come you follow WOMANNOTES and not MENNOTES?
|
571.65 | apologia | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Dec 17 1987 11:14 | 15 |
| I would like to withdraw my original complaint. I would like to
thank all those women who have participated in showing me just how
foolish and childish it was. I will try to exercise more restraint
and courtesy in the future. I apologize to all the readers of this
file for causing so much disruption.
I do appreciate this file and the participants here very much, and
would like to remain welcome. I think that I have learned something
this past couple of weeks, and hope that I can act accordingly.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
571.66 | query - | LEZAH::BOBBITT | a collie down isnt a collie beaten | Thu Dec 17 1987 11:52 | 9 |
| since there's been some comparisons between mennotes and womannotes,
and yet some noters here haven't participated in/read mennotes,
I have copied out a recent discussion there (nothing too tawdry)
and boiled it down to a palateable size to exemplify the difference
in climate between the two notesfiles (subtle, but noticeable :-)
are there any objections to my posting it here? (sans names, of course)
-Jody
|
571.67 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Dec 17 1987 12:32 | 26 |
| RE: .63
Oh, I see what you are doing.
*YOU* get to decide what constitutes discrimination. Then,
when you hear that the certain behavior (that *you* have
labeled discrimination) is being practiced by men -- you
say, "Ah well, I am not surprised." (Implied sigh.)
But that same behavior (that *you* have decided is
discrimination) invokes *FURY, SHOCK and DISMAY* when it
is done by women (because, *you* have decided, it goes
against our quest for equality.)
So, therefore, *YOU* are EXCUSING behavior in men that
you *WILDLY PROTEST* when done by women.
Your argument is the worst sort of manipulation. You try
to adjust our behavior by labeling it as discrimination
(and then tell us that it is "understandable" when the men
do it because they are the ones who are *supposed* to be
committing discrimination.)
Meanwhile, you are still harrassing us.
Suzanne...
|
571.68 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Dec 17 1987 13:03 | 12 |
| RE: .63
By the way, since you have admitted that you *only* object
to "only one sex" notes when they occur for women in this
file, then you do qualify as a hypocrite.
You are also trying to restrict women from having an
activity that is enjoyed by men.
*You* are the one who is promoting discrimination here.
Suzanne...
|
571.69 | Excuse me? | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Thu Dec 17 1987 13:43 | 27 |
| Suzanne,
I did not say it was OK for MENNOTES to have one-sex notes. I said
that it does not surprise me. It is still wrong, and I did ask
for some examples so that I could read them in MENNOTES and reply
to them, pointing out the offense. I do not see this as being
hypocritical. Did I mis-read my own reply? Just because a behavior
is expected does not make it right. I expect police cruisers to
speed on the highway, even though it is not right. (And yes,
I have called the SP to complain about them)
I have never asked for or promoted any restrictions on women in
this file, or any other. Please tell me where you got the idea
that I had.
Re: Why here?
I read this file, rather than MENNOTES, because I generally find
women to more expressive and open about their feelings, and generally
more sensitive than men. Those men that note here also seem to
exhibit the same traits. Since most of my friends are women,
I find this desirable and find it easier to communicate in such
an atmosphere. Once we get past all this bickering I hope that
can be more clearly demonstrated - on both sides.
Dave
|
571.70 | starting to simmer... | 38636::AUGUSTINE | What do humanitarians eat? | Thu Dec 17 1987 13:58 | 19 |
| Dave,
I'm quickly losing my patience on this subject. You are apparently
objecting to the fact that some noters have requested that only
women respond to their notes. We've patiently answered questions,
explained, drawn analogies for you. A moderator has said that this
is acceptable behavior. We've offered you alternative suggestions
so that you can make yourself heard on the topic. We've given you
things to think about. And you're *still* complaining. Are you just
trying to make a point? Consider it made. Are you trying to change
everyone else's behavior and expectations to match yours? Come on.
A notesfile is full of compromises. The icing on your cake is the
comment:
> Once we get past all this bickering I hope that
> can be more clearly demonstrated - on both sides.
Who's been doing all the bickering in the last few days?
What will it take for you to drop this issue?
liz
|
571.71 | <EOF> | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Thu Dec 17 1987 14:30 | 30 |
| Liz,
All I want is for people in this file to feel welcome and contribute
to any discussion that they feel they can add to. I really don't
think that's too much...
About the "woman-only" note:
I have responded by mail to the author, and I have stated that
although I do not like the practice of Women-only notes, I will
respect the wishes of the author. I really didn't intend to start
such a heated argument over it, I just wanted to show that it was
sort of against the proclaimed nature of many of the members in
this community. However, it seems that others here did not see
it as such. In my desire to explain my postition more clearly,
I continued to point out the hypocracy of such an action.
Apparently, you see the point I am trying to make, and still
feel that it is OK. Well, if that's that's the case, then I
have no reason to continue talking about this, since you
seem to think that hypocracy is OK.
My comment about the bickering was meant to indicate that
I would like to drop the issue. And it takes two to fight.
As far as I'm concerned, the issue is dead. I've expained
myself, others have expressed their views, and it appears that
there is no middle ground.
Dave
|
571.72 | Peace reigns once again... <crowd roars> | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Dec 17 1987 14:39 | 18 |
| RE: .71
Thank you, Dave, for killing the issue.
Since it is definitely dead and all, I'm sure you won't
mind me pointing out that you made a typo in your note.
(Well, no one is perfect.) :-)
Those who argue against you do *not* agree that there is
hypocracy in wanting a topic once in awhile that is only
for women. Therefore, it is not a matter of anyone here
thinking "hypocracy is OK."
Some of us merely *totally disagree* with your personal
definition of it in this situation. Our opinions on this
are different than yours, but valid nonetheless.
Glad we got this cleared up. Thanks again.
|
571.73 | We're DECCIES, We Catch On Pretty Quickly | FDCV03::ROSS | | Thu Dec 17 1987 15:53 | 21 |
| RE: .71
> My comment about the bickering was meant to indicate that
> I would like to drop the issue. And it takes two to fight.
So drop it already. You don't have to announce your intentions
to stop. If you do stop, I'm sure people will notice.
Your remark reminds me of the person who calls somebody on the
phone to announce: "I'm calling to let you know I'm not going
to talk to you again".
Is your pronouncement on dropping the issue your last one, or are
we all to be treated with additional "Now I'm *really* dropping
the issue", 1-n times?
We're most of us pretty astute here. If you really decide to drop
the isssue, I'm sure we'll catch on.
Alan
|
571.74 | Apologize? for What? | XCUSME::DIONNE | Life is a game of Trivial Pursuit? | Thu Dec 17 1987 16:16 | 50 |
| re: < NOTE 571.65 by TFH::MARSHALL >
< apologia >
> I would like to withdraw my original complaint.......
Sir,
I looked, and looked to see little smiley faces, or maybe some
indication of sarcasm, please tell me it's there but I just missed
it. After all, just because you responded to the basenote:
> The purpose of this note is to flame. Gently and without naming
> names or insulting.
> I often find comments in other notes that annoy the h*ll out of
> me and I don't want to divert the note by saying anything so I
> started this note.
So you had the unmitigated gall to express yourself about something
in the honorable womannotes file!!!!!!! Something that bothered
you? Oh for shame, Sir. Are you sure your feelings are valid?
Are you sure you have any reason to be insulted? Why should you
be upset about being asked to keep your opinions to yourself?
NO BIG DEAL, other people have to put up with this type of insult,
so why can't you? Why should you complain? Even if you were given
the forum for complaining. Things should stay the same, people
should not complain just because they are discriminated against
because they are not in the majority/prevailing gender! After all,
discrimination only exists against women, in the womannotes, men
are never insulted, there is never any INSINUATION that "you shouldn't
feel that way" there is NEVER any INSINUATION that YOUR feelings
are of no importance, and most importantly the womannotes file is
always a place where MEN and women actively pursue the exchange
of thoughts, feelings, and life experiences.
and by the way, YES Sir, I DO see alot wrong with the statement:
"You, sir, are being a jerk, I wish _men_ would learn to shut up
and just listen.
I wish more men and more women (at times, myself included) would
work harder at listening, because there are a lot of people with
a lot of valuable things to say, both positive and negative, that
might just give us all something to THINK about.
Sandie
|
571.75 | | BEING::MCANULTY | Neither here nor there | Thu Dec 17 1987 16:38 | 20 |
|
Gee...NO GE...(just had to say it....;-) )
Can I offer $.01 of my words of wisdom....
Why can't we just accept the wishes of others. Is it really
that hard. If a particular noter beit, male or female
doesn't want that other sex to reply, then OK. No matter
if you want to or not....They have asked a simple request.
Fine. AND MOST OF ALL, I REPSECT the wishes of people in these
notes files.
Everyone please cool down. Go home, take a hot bath, have
a nice dinner, have a nice sleep, and lets all be friends
again in the AM....
A simple request from a WOMANNOTER....
Michael
|
571.76 | gasp from an old dragon fighter | 3D::CHABOT | Yes, Victor, there are the SGRs! | Thu Dec 17 1987 18:54 | 11 |
| Sigh. I'm really tired of men saying what _women_ are or aren't.
I neither want to be flattened nor flattered here. "What's the
agenda," I wonder, and "so what's the point?"
New years resolution: I vow to stop paying attention to these kind
of notes.
This isn't directed at any one in particular, and it's more an
expression of weariness than a real flame. If it causes you any
particular problem, please read .-1 for your own health's sake.
That's what I'm going to do.
|
571.78 | Blithely ignoring all the previous... | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Dec 18 1987 09:41 | 33 |
| People who say "...people that...", generally in the form of
~I am a person that <verb>...~. This is wrong! You are a person
*who* verbs. "That" and "which" are for things; you are not a
thing. Got that?
Now. The reason people do that is probably because they don't
know whether to use "who" or "whom", and the reason people do that
is probably because they were never taught well enough. Try chopping
off the first part of the sentence, and seeing if "I" or "me" would
make a better substitute for the who-word. If the former, use
"who", if the latter, use "whom".
P.S. Customers deserve the word "who" also, but companies are
"that"'s.
Now about I.T.S.: The word "it's" is a contraction for "it is";
it is not a possessive. "Its" is a possessive, *exactly* like "hers"
and "his", and you don't put apostrophes in those, do you? Right.
There is no word "its'".
The contraction for "et cetera", which means ~and so on and so forth~
is "etc.", not "ect.", and is pronounced "ET set-ter-ah", not
"ECK set-ter-ah".
Prepositions, which are words like "between", "with", and "by",
take the objective case, which is to say, pronouns like "me", "her",
"us", "him", and "them".
Ann B.
P.S. Yes, I know that all the punctuation is supposed to go inside
the quotation marks, but I have *always* thought that that was
dumb, and I won't do it unless I absolutely, positively have to.
|
571.79 | Consistency | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Who's on first? | Fri Dec 18 1987 10:04 | 24 |
| > Now. The reason people do that is probably because they don't
> know whether to use "who" or "whom", and the reason people do that
> is probably because they were never taught well enough. Try chopping
> off the first part of the sentence, and seeing if "I" or "me" would
> make a better substitute for the who-word. If the former, use
> "who", if the latter, use "whom".
Hi Ann,
Seeing whether "he" or "him" fits is better than "I" or "me". The
"m" ending tells which to use. I'd recommend using "she" or "her"
but the "r" doesn't map 8^{).
> P.S. Yes, I know that all the punctuation is supposed to go inside
> the quotation marks, but I have *always* thought that that was
> dumb, and I won't do it unless I absolutely, positively have to.
Has it occured to you that other people don't pay attention to any
grammar rules because they think that they are all dumb 8^{).
If we are going to flame grammar, which I think is a good idea, then
let's be consistent.
Dick
|
571.80 | recklessly following along... | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Christine | Fri Dec 18 1987 10:11 | 11 |
|
Re: .78 I've always thought that punctuation inside quotation
marks, when the quotation marks surround a word-as-a-word, was
ugly, too. I think the English have a more sensible approach,
i.e., they agree with us!
Thank you, Ann.
Excuse me, moderators.
CQ
|
571.81 | apostrophes, commas, and double-quotes, oh my! | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Dec 18 1987 10:46 | 13 |
| Thank you, Ann!
I cannot express my irritation at the current fad of throwing
apostrophes at any final "s" like <ahem> rice at a wedding.
(or is that "apostrophe's") <snicker>
Well, its/it's/i'ts/i't's/ been good to be able to site/cite
this instence/instance. ;-}
--DE
|
571.82 | hello...earth to noters... | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | easy as nailing jello to a tree... | Fri Dec 18 1987 13:14 | 7 |
| did anyone read my response (.66)? I got no response, and either
no one wants to see it, or it got lost in the fray....
or is it all academic by now...
-Jody
|
571.83 | | RAINBO::MODICA | | Fri Dec 18 1987 13:33 | 3 |
| You're right Jody. I'll respond. If it was something I wrote I'd
rather know first, in case it is something I regret having written.
But thanks for asking first.
|
571.85 | here goes... | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | easy as nailing jello to a tree... | Fri Dec 18 1987 15:05 | 93 |
| I think the atmosphere in mennotes is different, the tone is different.
Comparing mennotes to womannotes is almost fair, but since the attitude,
and even the purpose there, is subtly different, you're comparing oranges
to tangerines.
an example: some nameless excerpts from a recent discussion in mennotes
about football. I am not ragging on these people, I am not disturbed by
the remarks (except for one), but I just want to emphasize how differently
they sometimes treat discussions. They seem to take things more in
stride, and don't analyze most things to the extent we do here in
womannotes. Well...here goes.
(from the basenote)
Football. Of all the sports one can play or watch, surely football is the
dumbest. The game involves 2 opposing teams that put 11 players each on the
field. The players wear helmets and pads. They're usually strong and large.
The goal is to move a football into the opponents end zone ( much to their
embarrassment ). Or to boot it thru some posts. In the end, one team
'wins'. The sport involves fierce collisions on every play. Often a 250 lb
defender will run full steam at a ball carrier with the intent of
'tackling' that carrier. That stoppage prevents (usually) the ball from
moving toward the defenders goal-line. I ask, what sane 'person' would
want any part of such a sad sorry spectacle? Why would anyone want to play
such a game, much less watch it? They used to have a Coloseum in Rome for
such glorious gladiators.
(one response)Didn't make the team huh?
(another)For the kind of money Vinny Testaverde will make in five years,
you betcha bottom dollar I'd take the chance! The controlled violence in
the game is probably its greatest appeal. Besides, its the big bucks that
make football so popular.
(another)Aw leave Football alone! I would think your hostilities would be
directed first at Hockey. I mean, when football players get in fights (and
seriously, with all that padding and protection, what can they do to each
other?) they are broken up immediately. Watch a fight in hockey. The
referees actually *hold back* fellow teammates from breaking up the fight!
And these guys have unprotected faces and heads....Perhaps you don't enjoy
it, or some other sports, but calling it's viewers "moronic" is hitting a
little below the belt. Perhaps you should be penalized! Why not just go
out and rake your yard and forget it's even on.
(another)As an aside to football; ever watch it and see those commercials
for the National Football League Charities? For a sport that is 'moronic',
its participants sure do devote alot of time and MONEY to worthwile
charities like the United Way, MS, American Cancer Society, Juvenile
programs, Drug Abuse programs. Wonder what would happen if that money
generated by the NFL for these charities dried up?
(another).4 sez it all. if you don't like something ignore it. or
platitudinously. Be a Man about it.
(another)I feel very sorry for you.Open your mind to all the good that
football has done.Such things as charities,benifits,education,yes
education!!Football has given out many oppurtunities to our young people
for it was not for this grand game they would not be able to afford an
education.Football aslo instills into our young the meaning of such things
as sportsmanship,competion,etc. You have a right to voice your opinion and
express it the way you wish.But,please do all of us a favor and sit back
and get all the facts about the game. These people you call moronic play
this game for a living.This is there livelyhood.Just the same way you earn
your living.Has anyone called you a moron for what you do.
('nother)I don't watch because those big strong guys patting each others'
behind looks queer!
(another)Actually the game probably does give fans something; an indirect
outlet for pent up anxieties and a psuedo-release for violence. Hmmmm,
almost sounds like noting doesn't it?
(oh boy...)Sounds like someone might wanna lend .0 a dime for the tampoon
machine. |^)
(another)Football's not the only 'thing' that is 'Dumb'. Open wide so I can
shove a bunch of u... ones in.
The rest of the responses turn into a discussion similar to what one would
see in womannotes. But sometimes, topics that I'd like to see treated
seriously are bantered around with rude remarks and jokes. This is how
mennotes is. I don't complain, because it's not "my" notesfile. I enjoy
reading it, but seldom respond, particularly when I know what others'
response to my entry may be. If I have something to say, I don't do it
with a chip in my shoulder. The folks there have little tolerance for
chips. I take most of the crass responses as joking (I assume they ARE
joking...right?).
-Jody
|
571.86 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Fri Dec 18 1987 15:20 | 24 |
| RE: .85
Too bad you didn't quote the one where a man asked why women
don't ask men out.
The basenote stated that it was because women have inherent
character flaws. [Note: He did not say "some" women.]
Another one said that it is because women are sexists.
[He did not say "some" women, either.]
Another one said that it is because women are cowards.
[Still no "some" disclaimer.]
Yeah, mennotes is really different. They are not worried
about insulting women because they know they will rarely be
challenged by anyone (except the mods who occasionally
delete notes, like the topic about women titled "Stupid Parasites.")
That basenote was written by someone who says similar things over
here (and is currently saying similar things in a discussion
over there as we speak.)
Suzanne...
|
571.87 | | RAINBO::MODICA | | Fri Dec 18 1987 15:22 | 3 |
| Jody, I see your point. As for whether they're joking, beats me.
I'll have to go back in there to see how a serious topic
is addressed by them.
|
571.89 | Irregardless | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Dec 18 1987 17:47 | 7 |
| There is no such word "irregardless"! Use "Regardless". PLEASE!
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
571.90 | Used to often also... | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Toto and moi are On the Road again. | Fri Dec 18 1987 18:56 | 12 |
|
re:.89
I know something about that note REALLY bothered me.
Thanks.
_peggy
(-)
| We should try to use English not
abuse it.
|
571.91 | By The Book | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Fri Dec 18 1987 19:16 | 12 |
| According to my LRD (DEC-supplied Little Red Dictionary, American
Heritage variety):
irregardless: adv. Nonstandard. Regardless.
Usage: Irregardless, a double negative, is only acceptable
when the intent is clearly humorous.
So this means we can only use 'irregardless' when it is
'irregardless :-)', right?
Rita
|
571.94 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | The Dread Pirate Roberts | Sat Dec 19 1987 02:19 | 6 |
| re:.85
What surprises me, Jody, is that you only found one response
disturbing. I found four of them rather offensive.
--- jerry_who_also_can't_stand_football
|
571.95 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | easy as nailing jello to a tree... | Sun Dec 20 1987 00:27 | 9 |
| I tried to take most of 'em in a "joking spirit", which I assume
they were trying to attain. The one that got to me was the quip
about the tampon machine.
p.s. anyone know what Jym is up to these days? I ain't seen him
and neither have many of his old cronies from WPI.
-Jody
|
571.97 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Sun Dec 20 1987 11:24 | 14 |
| re .95 (J Dyer whereabouts):
My Dyer was spotted recently on a Green Line train by this
correspondent. I knew it was Dyer because he was reminding a
fellow traveler (who was about to board the car with a lit
cigarette) that smoking was not allowed.
He's doing some s/w work for a company in Boston (forget which
one), thinking about going back to school (U Lowell), and trying
to remember that it's the 10-centime piece that works in MBTA
token machines (now that he's managed to lose his pass).
--Mr Topaz
|
571.98 | | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Thu Dec 24 1987 16:44 | 15 |
| I can't stand *long* notes. If the author has that much to say
maybe it could be broken up into several smaller notes. Or
condensed.
I can't stand people who reply to practically every reply in a note
with lot's of RE: #'s and one line messages. Who can keep
track of what each # was talking about? These replies are very
hard to follow, so I don't. This means if they ever refer to one
of my replies, I won't respond.
...Karen
What a bummer to be bummed during the holidays when everyone
gets upset with you because you're not happy all the time.
Let's give people the right to be a scrooge any time of year.
|
571.99 | misc bastardings | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Thu Dec 24 1987 17:45 | 48 |
| RE: .55 Peggy's Nightmare note
If I really wanted to say something in the note, I think I'd be inclined
to just reply, and to Hell with the rules and regulations...
But, I haven't read it yet, as you can see, I'm quite behind...
RE: .60
I don't see the difference...
RE: .61
I think that this a a better analogy, but...
The reason that the tennis match sounds ok, is because it is competition.
Notes is not (or should not) be competition. I think that the duplication
of conversation is a wholely stupid waste.
RE: .62
I wouldn't like men only notes in MENNOTES any better, but I don't read
MENNOTES. And I have no obligation to carry out *your* crusades, at least
the ones you could really care less about...
RE: .67
"*YOU* get to decide what constitutes discrimination."
Everyone decides for themselves what is discrimination; what's new about
that?
Why be more upset about discrimination in WOMANNOTES and not in MENNOTES?
Perhaps I thought hoped for better in WOMANNOTES then than. One of the reasons
I don't read MENNOTES is because I don't have the same expectations of MENNOTES.
No insult of MENNOTES intended.
RE: .76
"Sigh. I'm really tired of men saying what _women_ are or aren't."
'Sigh. I'm really tired of women saying what _men_ are or aren't.'
RE: .78
Thanks for the English lesson :-|
Jim.
|
571.101 | Was I smart when they were little? | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | days of whisper and pretend | Tue Dec 29 1987 11:04 | 11 |
| Although I thoroughly enjoyed my role as a mother, I find the role
I play now as matriarch of an extended family better. The role
of mother is very much a service, nurturing type of activity. The
role of father has been historically one of the maker of decisions
of authority. Children have looked up to the father. Children
have obeyed their mother in order to continue to receive the
service she provides. They have emulated their fathers because
of the power and control they possess.
It is only after my children left home that they realized how wise
and smart I was!
|
571.103 | It is all equal | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Tue Dec 29 1987 13:52 | 6 |
| re .102 I believe your premise is that women have the greater
influence over our young. I suggest that is not true. I tend
to agree more with your last statement adding a few words.
Equal Praise, equal blame and equal responsibility in
children's behavior and attitudes.
|
571.104 | Times are changing, says I... | SHIRE::BIZE | | Wed Dec 30 1987 05:35 | 16 |
| I have been overwhelmingly influenced by my mother, and so has my
brother. Our Dad was an absentee landlord. However, when we were
small, we looked up to him as if he was God. My mother was "just
around" and I now understand that she must have suffered very much
from our attitude. She developed our interest in so many things,
she opened our minds to the world around us, however when dad was
around we'd just defer to him for all decisions and treat my mother
as a domestic help.
That changed with adolescence, and she is now getting the recognition
we didn't give her when we were small.
This was still a pretty general attitude when mom stayed at home
and daddy worked. Now, nobody stays at home, and I think recognition
goes where it should (at least I hope so!)
|
571.105 | Dragons breathe flames through their nostrils, I think | SHIRE::BIZE | | Wed Dec 30 1987 08:56 | 24 |
|
I got completely confused by note 626.* (Women Only Conference
Announcement).
Is it a joke or is it for real? If it's a joke it's really in very
poor taste. My sense of humour has gone on hols, and I'll be joining
him there.
If it's real it should be introduced and announced by the Moderators
of this conference, or at least by a Moderator of the new conference,
or at the minimum by someone with a name (I also have privileges
to use the SYSTEM or OPR accounts, but I wouldn't dream of using
them for posting anonymous notes).
I'll take this opportunity for stating something so damn obvious
I thought it went without saying: I wouldn't accept a man as a
moderator of a members-only conference circling around topics of
interest to women.
As topic 626 has been set no-write, I guess it's a joke. If I am
right please consider me as flaming mad. If I am wrong, please accept
my anticipated apologies.
Joana
|
571.106 | The joke may be on everyone | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Who's on first? | Wed Dec 30 1987 09:14 | 9 |
| > Is it a joke or is it for real? If it's a joke it's really in very
> poor taste. My sense of humour has gone on hols, and I'll be joining
> him there.
If it is a joke, it is an extensive one. Members only conferences
MEN and WOMEN and an open conference THE_SEXES have been announced in
EASYNET_CONFERENCES on VADER by VADER::SYSTEM.
Dick
|
571.107 | Quite serious | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Dec 30 1987 10:06 | 17 |
| It is not a joke. As one of the =wm= moderators I contacted
the individual starting up the file(s) and found out who he is.
As he said in a different note he is providing the disk space
and expects moderators to arise out of the membership of the
conference.
There is no need for the moderators of one conference be involved
with the announcement of another related conference in the original
file.
My suggestion is that people who want a memebers only conference
go ahead and join and see how things work out.
Bonnie J
moderator
|
571.110 | The most qualified | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Wed Dec 30 1987 16:15 | 1 |
| I don't think the distinction is sex I think it is experience.
|
571.111 | Not women only if moderator is a man | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Wed Dec 30 1987 19:03 | 10 |
| Obviously, if the women's only conference is moderated by a man,
it is not women's only.
However, if his intention was just to get it started, get a woman
member of that conference to become moderator, then step out of
the conference and simply provide the disk space, I think it's great.
If the women only conference is needed, *someone* needed to start
it and quit discussing it.
Elizabeth
|
571.113 | Were you talking to me? | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Wed Dec 30 1987 20:50 | 39 |
| It is my observation that young children in single parent homes
seek out relationships with people of the same sex as the missing
parent. I have seen this happen in both directions.
How might we better structure our families...there are many good
families around which came about not out of a socioligical model
but out love, committment and common goals.
I think children respond well to anything that works well. So my
theory suggests that if it works well for you and your spouse it
will be good family.
Having children for their sake is a new concept and I doubt if that
was incentive enough so that engineer that figured out the whole
biological process gave us a little instinct...and we took it from
there...children have been an asset to a family business or operation,
they have been a source of pride for the parents...and in some
societies they have born out of a sense of responsibility to continue
to populate the earth. I think children have gained a lot of respect
over the years and we find more parents encouraging behavior that
will make the child happy or will benefit the child.
Last but not least I don't expect answers on the screen or in that
space on the disc that is assigned to Womannotes. I formulate my
answers from what I read, interpret and accept. Even the nonsense
that goes on in this file has value to me...for it keeps me realistic.
Sometimes I try to imagine face-to-face interraction like we have
here. It doesn't happen to often. What we see here is what is
going on behind the smiles and the forced agreement that occurs
in face-to-face confrontations. This is the real world...most of
the other is just an impression that is created for the benefit
of someone else...
|
571.115 | For Jane's sake | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Thu Dec 31 1987 05:04 | 27 |
| re .114 When I hear having children for their sake I imagine
people feeling a responsibility to have as many children
as they feel they can produce and raise to productive
human beings.
If your concept is that after the decision to have the
child you decide you will raise it for their sake...I
think we are getting there and it is about time.
A long time ago I was working in a hospital close to home
and my ten year old son would come to pick me up. He made
friends with a janitor and one day said in front of me
and a coworker..."When I grow up I want to be just like
Joe". My coworker immediately said "Nick, wouldn't you
rather be a doctor". I in turn began a discussion about
Joe's happiness with life and how much joy he brought to
a sometimes tense and depressing atmosphere. To me raising
children for their sake means giving up what you want for
the child and having your major goal their happiness.
In speaking about nonsense I was referring to the male/female
tension that predominates this conference so often.
Will your first son be named Pete or were you frustrated
with my responses.
|
571.116 | No Flame Policy: NOW | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Thu Dec 31 1987 10:27 | 58 |
| RE .115 My major Goal would be for the Child's Development to
clearly be for Their sake. Education, Happiness, freedom
to explore (incl var risk-taking).
There is nothing wrong with a couple wanting to have
a child "because I want one," etc.
Problems can occur when Children are raised to be
Parental clones (so to speak).
" If you don't go to college, you'll never amount to
anything." "Son, I really want you to work in the Man-
ufacturing Plant, like the Family always has." "Simone,
STOP wasting your time walking around all over the place-
hikes in the Woods, you could fall & get hurt! ( didn't
stop De Beauvior ). " Sandra, You've got to Get a Rich
fellow like I did, everything will just *fall into place*."
"Allen, the study of any Religion other than Christianity,
is a downright sin. Take that sinful book back to Library
Now before I throw it into the fireplace." "Beth, you
want to drive a truck - you must be out of your MIND or
something! That's something Men do! I've enrolled you
into the Nursing Program that your sister Jean completed
last summer. Look how happy SHE is. I know you're feeling
angry about it, but you're sure to like it. You'll see."
"Son, I know we're of a different Generation, but if you
don't take that earing out of your ear, I'll have to ...."
"Mike, take it from me. Marriage is the pits. Relationships
are the Greatest things. Who needs the Committment. If
you get into trouble & can't work it out, ya just break
up - What could be easier!? All we do is fight, fight,
fight. What a bitch. And if you do get Married, get a
Contract, otherwise she'll take ya to the cleaners. Never
told ya this, but I have this Woman friend see........."
"Diane, Men are only trouble. Dad and I want you to
to wait until your Senior year before you start Dating.
Boys are fresh and will want to take advantage of a pretty
girl like you. You could get pregnant or horror - get
VD or Aids. No, and he mustn't come from a Bluecollar
Family. Professional Gentlemen are the only good ones."
"Ted, what's the line on the Rams game against Denver
today? Denver by 4? You've got to be kidding! Call Jim
now and put $200 on L.A. Kid, this is the easiest money
WE'VE EVER MADE."
Regarding the oft-time F/M tensions, it is disgraceful
& a NO FLAME/BLAME type POLICY Ought to be closely looked
at. IE Flame the noter's idea(s), and NEVER the Noter.
Irregardless. 3 strikes and yer OUT. At worse, a 'flame'
at a noter in a humorous fashion would require something
like a (FLM, :-) ) type symbol attached to the TITLE.
This way, everyone would know up front, at least, what
part/most of the note was about. I suspect the above idea
could get the usual howls - from the Guilty Parties in
Question. More embarrassing, perhaps, could be the listing
of the most frequent flamers, like a wall chart 'Progress
Report. I think such a list would make all but the most
Venal noters (and clowns) shape up - & QUICKLY at that.
Not frustrated w/your answers and such, just kindof
goin with the flow.
Russ
|
571.117 | Is this discrimination or what? | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Mon Jan 04 1988 13:46 | 10 |
| RE: 626.3 "Moderator Response" to "Closed Membership WOMEN Conference"
"I have set this string writable again."
Why is it that Women authors of Topics may select who they wish to hear from,
But Men authors may not?
Is this discrimination or what is it?
Jim.
|
571.118 | it's or what | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Jan 04 1988 14:39 | 6 |
| Jim, You didn't pay attention to the context. Maggie set it
no write because she didn't know who had entered the note, not
because of the sex of the annonymous person who entered the note.
If anything the error in this is mine since I didn't communicate
to Maggie who the author was when I found out.
Bonnie
|
571.119 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Tue Jan 05 1988 11:01 | 17 |
| Using different technical terms to refer to the same thing.
Specifically, in Notes; more specifically, in this conference.
A while ago, one of the moderators began to use the expression
"string" to refer to the thing that the documentation and most
experienced notes users call a "topic". Now, maybe the concept of
a topic in a notes conference is similar to the concept of a
string in some other context that the moderator is familiar with,
I dunno.
Now yet another of the moderators has picked up on this misnomer.
There are enough different technical concepts to learn without
having to also deal with multiple names for the same concept.
--Mr Topaz
|
571.120 | well since you asked.. | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Tue Jan 05 1988 11:06 | 2 |
| People who use greater familiarity with a subject to pick nits
about correct usage.
|
571.123 | sorry, you're not allowed in here, you'll have to leave... | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Tue Jan 05 1988 15:00 | 8 |
| RE: 637.0 and 637.2
It really pisses me off to see a *man* start a *women* only topic in a *women's*
conference, and then reply to it. Come on now, don't you know that's not
allowed?! The moderators should move that note!
Jim :-)
|
571.124 | Guilty As Charged | FDCV03::ROSS | | Tue Jan 05 1988 16:04 | 8 |
| RE: .123
Jim, mea culpa.
I already have acknowledged my transgression in 639.1 (or was that
639.2).
Alan
|
571.125 | | CEODEV::FAULKNER | GOD, drives a camaro. | Tue Jan 05 1988 18:03 | 2 |
| re.121
no eagle it was alfred e neuman
|
571.127 | Probably a repeat of an earlier "hot button" | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Thu Jan 21 1988 21:54 | 6 |
| Today's hot button seems to be private conversations being carried
out in the middle of a public notesfile.
That, and long disserations.
Martin.
|
571.128 | womannotes:==baranskinotes? | ULTRA::LARU | Let's get metaphysical | Mon Jan 25 1988 11:53 | 1 |
| loudmouthed yahoos who don't know when to quit
|
571.129 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Mon Jan 25 1988 17:27 | 2 |
| Name-calling.
|
571.131 | Administering immunizations, anyone? | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Mon Jan 25 1988 20:08 | 8 |
| re: .128 (Bruce)
>> womannotes:==baranskinotes
Hahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!! Good one, Bruce!!!!
Carla
|
571.132 | | PARITY::SMITH | Penny Smith, TWO/B5, 247-2203 | Mon Jan 25 1988 21:30 | 6 |
| re .128 and .131
rudeness to other noters... and jumping on the bandwagon to 'put down'
another
Penny
|
571.133 | I'm getting dizzy. . . | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Mon Jan 25 1988 22:29 | 12 |
| re: .132
Rudeness to other noters rudeness to. . .no, wait a minute. . .uh,
rudeness to noters who are rude to the rudeness. . .no, I'm *sure*
that's not it. . .
Oh never mind.
This isn't like me at all, is it Penny? :-D
Steve
|
571.134 | Cop Out | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Tue Jan 26 1988 21:40 | 23 |
| In note 189.178, I note that I won't enter a summary of an article in
New England Monthly on a date-rape incident at the University of New
Hampshire because, at 10,000 words, it is too long to type in.
that is a cop-out -- the real reason is more complex:
-- any summary of the article would collapse the discussion, making it
impossible for the notes reader to reach a conclusion as to whether
the woman consented to sex without trusting *my* editorial judgement.
-- a good article: the lessons are, in my judgement, ambiguous. I do
not feel competent to preserve that ambiguity in a summary.
-- the current climate in womannotes leads me to feel that there is a
strong possibility that some reader would feel I was imposing my own
judgement on the incident, and discussion of the article (and of
date rape) would be sidetracked back to the current battle between
the sexes.
I would welcome someone else summarizing the article. At this time,
I'm afraid it would have to be a woman.
Martin.
|
571.135 | WOMANnotes, dammit! | DECWET::JWHITE | mr. smarmy | Wed Jan 27 1988 01:44 | 5 |
|
re: .128
i second that notion
|
571.136 | what an excuse for a conference | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Just for the feel of it! | Wed Jan 27 1988 16:11 | 3 |
| SOAPBOX
|
571.137 | Finally -- my turn | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Thu Feb 11 1988 17:04 | 3 |
| I wish the word *obese* could be banned from the English language.
BZZZZZZZ <-- sound of my hot button being activated.
|
571.138 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Feb 11 1988 17:25 | 5 |
| Would you be willing to say why, Liz, and which word/s you would
prefer?
(Any place if this isn't the right one...)
|
571.139 | a reason and some alternatives | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Thu Feb 11 1988 17:42 | 9 |
| sure... because when i hear the *o* word, i also hear some amount of
accompanying judgment. to me, it always seems loaded with baggage such
as "ugly", "unhealthy", "undesireable", and so on. in my book, there
are plenty of alternatives that sound better -- bonnie randall recently
used "robust". i occasionally use "plump", or "pleasingly plump". even
"round" is nice. but i think i like "huggable" the best.
e
|
571.140 | The Word Is Not THE Problem, The Condition Is. | FDCV03::ROSS | | Thu Feb 11 1988 17:54 | 14 |
| RE: .139
Liz, some of the accompanying baggage that is attached to the "o"
word, e.g, unhealthy ------> undesirable is deserved, if one is
talking about "clinical" obesity.
Perhaps, the "o" word is too frequently used to describe people who
do not deserve that term in the strict sense of the word.
However a 400 pound person (male or female) who is 5'5", and who
chooses to think of him/herself as merely "chubby" or "robust" is not
effectively addressing a life-threatening condition.
Alan
|
571.141 | hot buttons being set off left and right | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Thu Feb 11 1988 18:04 | 12 |
| alan,
this is my hot button note. i really don't want a lecture here about my
response to this word. and it's really not up to us to judge who is or
is not "addressing a life-threatening condition". (whoops. i feel
another hot button being set off.) please feel free to start another
note if you'd like to continue this conversation. (but if you do, i
request that you read the material about body size in "the new our
bodies ourselves" first.)
liz
|
571.142 | chain reaction hot buttons | YODA::BARANSKI | The Mouse Police never sleeps! | Fri Feb 12 1988 13:35 | 8 |
| RE: .141
"it's really not up to us to judge who is or is not "addressing a
life-threatening condition"."
Isn't that what you are doing? :-)
Jim.
|
571.143 | re .-1 | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Mon Feb 15 1988 13:25 | 1 |
| No.
|
571.144 | more on "the O word"-a hot button indeed | LEZAH::BOBBITT | I call all times soon, said Aslan | Mon Feb 15 1988 14:06 | 20 |
| I hate the "o" word, too. I hate it even more because it does not
apply to me (anymore)...in the clinical definition. I was reading
a book on "obesity" and it said that people who are more than 10%
over their ideal weight are "overweight", whereas people who are
more than 40% over their ideal weight are "obese". People who are
more than 100% over their ideal weight are "grossly obese".
YES I am overweight
NO I am not obese
and YES a person's weight is THEIR OWN business, whatever that weight
is and however the person looks and acts in regard to it is THEIR
OWN business. Close friends and family may reserve the right to
discuss their feelings about it with the overweight/whatever person,
but Jo Q. Off-The-Street has no right to make judgement calls or
otherwise put more pressure on that person than they are often putting
on themselves.
-Jody
|
571.145 | What is traditional? | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Thu Feb 18 1988 16:46 | 16 |
| A recent reply to a note on ERA stated something similar to the
following statement.
Men have 'traditionally' been 'screwed' by the court system
on cases of child support and child custody.
Traditionally means to me for a long period of time. Statistics
prove that the woman's financial status 'traditionally' decreases
after divorce and a man's financial status 'traditionally' increases.
These statement is true even today as non-custodial parents are
being forced through the courts to pay.
Until the courts decide to assess a non-custodial parent 1/2 of
the cost of providing for that child the system will never be fair.
If a parent cannot pay they then owe to whomever does pay the
difference between what they can afford and what it actually costs.
|
571.146 | grr, grr, grr | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Feb 23 1988 13:31 | 24 |
| Hot button -- references to women as "frigidaires" (ie frigid).
FLAME/ON
simply because a large number of women respond differently with
different people and MAY not enjoy sex with one or another person
does NOT, NOT, NOT mean they are frigid.
the word has implications which cannot be ignored, and jokes about
how a woman (or "most" women) are unresponsive or frigid (also implying
not complete, somehow sick, lacking) are entirely inappropriate
here.
FLAME/OFF
MEANNESS/ON
seems to me a person whose experience leads them to believe "most
women" are frigid ought to be asking some questions about their
OWN prowess, love-ability.
MEANNESS/OFF
GRUMPINESS/SIMMERING
lt
|
571.148 | yes, Lee | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Tue Feb 23 1988 22:35 | 16 |
| in re .146
As an observer of the human race for a good while now, I think
that there is a lot of truth in what Lee said.
Any man who finds his partner less responsive than he would care
for should attempt to communicate with her as to what she finds
pleasurable. Having now been married for over twenty years to
a gentle creative man I am very much aware of how important the
willingness to learn together and the desire to find out what pleases
another is.
There is a fair degree of truth in the old saw "There are no
frigid women, only clumsey lovers."
Bonnie
|
571.149 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Wed Feb 24 1988 06:43 | 24 |
| There are also women who have been told "This kind of sexuality
is good" (missionary position; vaginal orgasm) and "That kind of
sexuality is bad/immature" (anything else; any other kind of orgasm).
Each woman has individual tastes in food, clothing, home style,
and leisure activities. Why in the world wouldn't each woman have
an individualized preference in the area of sexuality?
Young women are not often encouraged to explore their sexual feelings
to find out what they enjoy. Much of the popular literature is still
directed at women and oriented towards pleasing one's partner.
One of the best things I learned from the women's movement is that
each woman is responsible for creating her own sexual satisfaction
whether it be alone or with a partner. She can explore the
possibilities, 'practice' on her own and also with a partner and
learn enough about herself and her responses to create what she
likes. (And why is this considered a *radical* idea...<sigh>.)
Lonnie Barbach's book, For Yourself, is a good resource for both
men and women, and addresses the issues non-orgasmic/pre-orgasmic
women encounter. It's pretty widely available.
Holly
|
571.150 | terminology check | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Feb 24 1988 09:04 | 8 |
|
Frigid woman: One whose sex drive is (even slightly) lower than that of
her male partner.
Nymphomaniac: A woman whose sex drive is (even slightly) higher than that
of her male partner.
JP
|
571.151 | Set Unwritten | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Wed Feb 24 1988 13:32 | 19 |
|
One of My Hot Buttons...
A man makes a smart-a**ed, misogynous remark that is devoid
of any creativity and meant only as "bait," and scores of
women rush in to help and "educate" him. A woman creates
a work of art that happens to include some anger at her
sense of this male-dominated world we live in, and her
comments are removed from view.
Feeling invisible,
Justine
ps After writing this, I learned that there might be some
confusion about which misogynous remarks I was referring
to. I was thinking specifically of the frigidaire "jokes."
|
571.152 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 15:20 | 7 |
| Yes, our moderators are great, but I think deleting Sandy's poem
was a mistake. It is a work of art, and it accurately describes
the minds of some men. When all sorts of deliberately offensive
notes are posted here and remain, I don't understand why Sandy's
poem was deleted. Perhaps a moderator could explain why Sandy's
reply was, but Russ' frigidaire replies weren't?
|
571.153 | moderator response | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Feb 24 1988 15:40 | 19 |
| Sandy's reply was set hidden because we received a complaint about
it. If we receive a complaint about *any* note we set it hidden
until we can work out the problem with the author and the person
who entered the complaint. Russ's note was not felt to fall into
the trash note category (although I admit that is a judgement call)
and we received no complaints about it. When the complaint about
Sandy's poem was forwarded to her she responded that the note
could be deleted. If any reader has a problem with any individual
note we encourage you to first contact the author and if that does
not prove satisfactory, to contact the moderators. Please reread
note 1.n especially the part that Liz wrote about the sanity check
first. In general we prefer not to play 'notes police' but we
will respond to direct complaints.
Thankyou
Bonnie Jeanne
Bonnie
|
571.154 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 15:54 | 7 |
| In general, I don't think that notes should be deleted. It seems
strange to me that anyone, including even someone of very questionable
motives, can suppress a note for an indefinite period of time while
they slug it out with the author. Mumbling about free speech and so
forth, and the rights of others in the file to read the author's
views. What we have to learn to do, I think, is just next unseen.
|
571.155 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 15:59 | 3 |
| I also wonder: if a note is removed from the file, should the
names of the people who asked that it be removed be listed?
|
571.156 | from the complainer | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Feb 24 1988 16:25 | 9 |
| annonymous reply
As the person who complained to the moderators that Sandy's poem
was, in my opinion, sexual harrassment; I would be happy to abide
by a formal decision by Digital's EEO/Corporate Personnel as to
whether this posting violates section 6.03 (Harrassment) of the
Personnel Policy and Procedures Handbook.
A friend.
|
571.157 | further clarificaton | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Feb 24 1988 16:33 | 14 |
| Karen,
First please refer to Maggie's note 1.7 about why we have the
policy of setting notes hidden. Although you have objections
about what happened in this particular case, the policy is one
that is beneficial to the file and the members in the long run.
However, I would not publish the name of a complainer. That would
be a violation of an individual's privacy. We have upon occasion
in the past ignored complaints that were obviously meant only
for harassing purposes.
Bonnie Jeanne
moderator
|
571.158 | Different ways of dealing with "offense" | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Wed Feb 24 1988 16:39 | 29 |
|
About Bonnie's earlier point that one note received complaints
while the other didn't... that was my point, really. Women are
often accused of advocating "censorship" when they raise objections
to material posted here.
But in this case, women actually reached out to try and "help" the
offender. But when a woman wrote a poem which described some cutural
trends as *she* saw them, the note was deemed offensive and deleted.
It was not my intent to take action around this issue. (Geez, I thought
the Hot Buttons note was a place to let off steam!) I merely wanted
to point out something that I saw. I, too, believe that "offense"
is in the eye of the reader, and anyone has the right to say that he
or she finds material offensive. I just thought it was interesting
that when notes here are found to be offensive to women, we talk
about them and try to explain why we're offended. When a note is
posted that has anything to do with anger toward the behavior of
men, the note often disappears.
Justine
Disclaimer: I am not complaining about the actions of the moderators.
I think the policy of setting a note hidden upon request of a noter
who's offended is fair. I hope I've made it clear (after a very long
day) that my issue is not with the moderators but with the different
ways that controversial material gets dealt with... depending on
which group is offended.
|
571.159 | depends on the individual reaction | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Feb 24 1988 16:43 | 8 |
| Justine,
Thanks for your reply. We have set notes hidden upon the request
of members of both sexes, however, and the notes in question have
been not necessarily by a person of the opposite sex of the
complainer.
Bonnie Jeanne
|
571.160 | enough nurturing bozos! | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Wed Feb 24 1988 16:55 | 6 |
| The reason the refrigerator comment wasn't complained about is that
we're all too BLANK much "good girls" and aren't acting enough like
real people.
Consider this a public complaint. It was a rude, offensive comment;
I want it deleted, not merely just set hidden.
|
571.161 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 18:45 | 5 |
| Re: .156
I consider .156 an attempt at harrassment and intimidation, and
I would like it set hidden.
|
571.162 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 18:58 | 3 |
| About the individual's privacy: there is the concept of the right
to face one's accuser, which it seems to me takes precedence over this.
|
571.163 | | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Feb 24 1988 20:16 | 4 |
| Karen, if someone was challengeing one of your notes I would put
you in contact with them. It was not your note that was challenged,
you were not being accused.
Bonnie
|
571.164 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 20:33 | 10 |
| I know it wasn't my note. I thought you said that someone could
ask to have a note suppressed and could also request that his or
her identity be kept hidden. You seem to be saying that I
misunderstood? If the supressee knows, that's almost as good as
it's being universally known. (Not quite, actually, since it would
still be interesting for the file at large to know if certain
individuals are consistently suppressing others.) I am assuming
that anyone who has a note suppressed can publish the name of the
person who caused it.
|
571.165 | issues should be private first | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Feb 24 1988 21:49 | 17 |
| Karen, in general I think that allowing people to be able to
complain about notes annonymously is to the benefit of the file.
There are still many women who are more private about speaking
out about things that bother them than you or I are. If we allowed
anyone to request the identity of a person who objected to a note
then that would be to the disadvantage of the more private person
who hesitates to speak out on important issues. and Karen, no
indivduals are consistantly supressing others. If any such trend
started you can definitely rest assured that we moderators would
not tolerate it. What I meant is that if a person complains, then
the problem should be first adressed by the complainee and the
complaintiff so to speak with the moderators mediating...I see no
need to publically broadcast problems which can be worked out
between individuals.
Bonnie Jeanne
|
571.166 | How we 'frame' our comments makes a big difference | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Feb 25 1988 08:59 | 12 |
| We've talked about not generalizing before.
I think that if someone like Sandy enters a clever and creative
poem (my opinion) and introduces it by saying it represents experiences
she has had with SOME men, that puts it in the realm of her description
of her experience. No one need be offended...but if the shoe fits...
In the same way, if Russ had said "some women I've known felt like
frigidaires" he is speaking about his experience. No one need be
offended.
Holly
|
571.167 | not Frigid just unexplored! | FSTVAX::ROYER | FIDUS AMICUS.. | Thu Feb 25 1988 09:04 | 23 |
| I am several days late, and probably many $ as well..
regarding Fridigity...
I am not an expert, so I can only speak from my own limited experience
1. In England I met a woman who said she was frigid. I asked how
she knew that, She said that her Husband told her so!
Not true, just a different placement of an important part of
her body.
2. My present wife told me she was frigid, She had two previous
husbands. She had never felt anything during intercourse.
With care and understanding I was able to help both, and my wife
is the "best sexual partner" I have ever had. We have explored
new territories each encounter.
I think that if 1000 women were considered frigid, that in actual
fact fewer than 50 actually may have some problem and that is usually
physical in nature.
Dave
|
571.168 | A win/win, I collect them! | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Feb 25 1988 09:16 | 21 |
| > 2. My present wife told me she was frigid, She had two previous
> husbands. She had never felt anything during intercourse.
>
> With care and understanding I was able to help both, and my wife
> is the "best sexual partner" I have ever had.
It's scary that some women buy into definitions that are handed
to them by others. So often those definitions are just a reflection
of some other limitation of the situation.
Dave, your note is encouraging. Sometimes women have to fight for
wholeness and the right to be a free person. It's nice to be reminded
of other occasions where men are actively supporting women in their
desire to grow and have fuller, richer lives.
Holly
|
571.169 | ex | RANCHO::HOLT | Mystical golden foo | Thu Feb 25 1988 20:41 | 13 |
|
It's possible that "fridigity" could also refer to
having a cold, aloof, semi-rude attitude toward those
fellow humans who happen to be male, in normal daily
situations.
It's also a method of communicating that men's presence
in general may be dispensed with.
(If men *were* to be dispensed with would someone tell us
or would we read it in the papers first?)
Feel free to copy BOLT::DECUSC$LIBRARY:[TOOLS]CPP*.*
|
571.170 | have you considered moving? | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Feb 26 1988 06:23 | 2 |
| My goodness Bob, where do you find so many women like that?
:-)
|
571.171 | Ah, Minnesota 8-) | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Fri Feb 26 1988 09:27 | 1 |
| Yeah - takes the fun out of 'California Dreamin'' fer shure.
|
571.172 | Tactical Discreditation | AQUA::WALKER | | Fri Feb 26 1988 09:30 | 10 |
| Hot Button:
The fact that the ongoing accomplishments/achievements of women
are discredited. Books written by women, especially if they come
to close to writing about reality, are lost - disappear from the
libraries. A good book disclosing this is "Feminist Theorists".
Even though a woman can, through greater effort, accomplish a
salary equal to that of a man it is seen as a gift (another means
of discrediting what she actually accomplished).
|
571.173 | Too busy to check in daily - missed the original | ASD::LOW | Nuke the Swiss and Steal Their Gold | Fri Feb 26 1988 12:37 | 8 |
| If anyone has a copy of the poem that was deleted, I would appreciate
it very much if they could MAIL it to me.
Thanks,
Dave
|
571.175 | | AQUA::WALKER | | Fri Feb 26 1988 13:41 | 4 |
| Has the eagle made an assumption? If yes, perhaps the eagle should
also read the material being referred to as bad.
People who are offended have taken that on themselves.
|
571.177 | OH for heavens sake!!!! | DANUBE::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Feb 26 1988 15:20 | 7 |
| THE MODERATORS DID NOT DELETE SANDY'S POEM!!!!!!!!!
There now that I have that off my chest! Sandy chose to delete
the poem herself when it became controversial.
Bonnie J
moderator
|
571.178 | | ASD::LOW | Nuke the Swiss and Steal Their Gold | Fri Feb 26 1988 16:00 | 6 |
| I have received a copy of the peom, thanks!
Dave
I thought it was great!
|
571.179 | NIT | VIKING::TARBET | Clorty Auld Besom | Fri Feb 26 1988 17:08 | 8 |
| <--(.177)
um, actually it's still there in a hidden state, and I hope that
Sandy doesn't delete it because [I think] it has artistic merit
and it may be that we'll be able to unhide it again one of these
days.
=maggie
|
571.181 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | $50 never killed anybody | Wed Mar 02 1988 03:51 | 5 |
| Having read the poem (send mail to the author asking for a copy
if you want to read it), I really don't see what the fuss is all
about. Speaking as a male, I didn't find it offensive in the least.
--- jerry
|
571.182 | | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Thu Mar 03 1988 19:54 | 7 |
| Yet another request for a copy of the hiden note(s)...
Oh and please give me a pointer to the context...I'm over 800 notes
behind...again.
Thanks,
MJC O->
|
571.183 | after reading the 4th or 5th request... | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:57 | 6 |
| Today's hot button: People who ask for copies of something
in the note conference, where it would be more direct for them
to ask the person who has it via mail, and the rest of us
won't have to read about their requests.
...Karen
|
571.184 | Just Playing By The Rules | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Mar 04 1988 13:35 | 6 |
| RE: .183
Karen, maybe they're just afraid of violating "Corporate Policy"
(see Note 738.97). :-)
Alan
|
571.185 | re .184 | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Fri Mar 04 1988 14:11 | 1 |
| By asking someone else to "violate" it?
|
571.186 | "Hello, FEDERAL???" | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Mar 04 1988 14:28 | 11 |
| RE: .185
Lisa, you're right.
I guess Sandy'll have to send it via U.S. mail (from an outside
mailbox, of course) directly to the home address of the person
making the request.
In a plain brown wrapper, naturally. :-)
Alan
|
571.188 | If There's Connectivity, I'm Missing It! | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Mar 04 1988 16:10 | 14 |
| RE: .187
Say, Eagles, what are you talking about? Other than using my
name in your title (albeit, spelled incorrectly) and referencing
my reply, I don't understand your point.
I suggested (not seriously) that Sandy, in order to follow policy,
would have to send her poem via U.S. mail, from an "outside"
mail box, so as neither to clutter our interoffice mail system,
nor to violate official policy for mis-use of the Net.
Is there a correlation between your reply and mine?
Alan
|
571.189 | please stop it! | DECWET::JWHITE | mr. smarmy | Thu Mar 31 1988 04:16 | 21 |
|
I'm getting sick and tired of replies of the form "well, it's not
so easy for men either". First of all, the folk who say this seem
to be laboring under the misconception that the topic of discussion
is 'discrimination' or 'oppression' and therefore 'to keep things in
perspective' we need to hear the plight of men also. Wrong. The
topic is women and women's perspective (so it already *is* 'in
perspective') and in that context the plightof men is usually
irrelevent and rarely adds to the discussion.
Second, and perhaps more importantly, when one says, "it's not easy
for men either" it has the effect of stopping the discussion in
place and forcing it elsewhere. A trivial analogy: if I'm talking
about how great the NY Mets are and you say, "well what about the
Red Sox, they're pretty good too", it is no longer a discussion
about the Mets. At best it is a discussion of comparisons between
the two teams. At worst it becomes a discussion of the Red Sox.
In neither case has the original thrust been maintained and, in
fact the topic 'the NY Mets' has been trivialized. In discussions
of women's rights or sexism (especially) time and again the original
thrust is diverted and trivialized in this simple, yet extremely
coercive and manipulative way.
|
571.190 | right on brother! | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Mar 31 1988 23:30 | 7 |
| Re: .189
YEAH! What he said!
Now, would you change your personal name? :-)
-- Charles
|
571.191 | re.190 | SA1794::CHARBONND | to save all Your clowns | Fri Apr 01 1988 08:32 | 1 |
| I dunno, maybe you should change *yours* :-)
|
571.192 | "For God's sake don't say yes until I've finished talking." | OPHION::HAYNES | Life is too short | Fri Apr 01 1988 23:37 | 15 |
| -- Darryl Zanuck --
Re: .191
"... maybe you should change *yours*"
Hey! Good idea. Thanks.
It is clearly absurd that it should be possible for a woman to
qualify as a saint with direct access to the Almighty while she may
not qualify as a curate.
-- Mary Stocks, "Still More Commonplace"
-- Charles "OPHION::" Haynes
|
571.193 | speaking of personal names... | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Wed Apr 06 1988 19:03 | 11 |
| from a note header:
| Note 478.268 Dehumanization of Women
| SALEM::AMARTIN "nemoW SDEEN sraM"
fwiw, i found the juxtaposition of the base note title and mr.
amartin's personal name rather intriguing. is this a deliberate
insult? a "joke"? is it meant to antagonize the readership?
liz "curious" augustine
|
571.194 | I don't think it applies | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Apr 06 1988 22:48 | 6 |
| Liz
I asked Al Martin about his personal name and if I recall his
answer correctly it refers to a rock group that he likes.
Bonnie
|
571.195 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Spring forward, fall over | Thu Apr 07 1988 03:54 | 4 |
| It's also the title of a *very* silly science fiction movie
from the 60's, a classic "Golden Turkey".
--- jerry
|
571.196 | huh? | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Thu Apr 07 1988 10:35 | 5 |
| so if i can find a rock group or a *very* silly science fiction
movie called "All men are stupid", then it's ok to use that as my
personal name?
liz
|
571.197 | Official Male Response | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Thu Apr 07 1988 11:01 | 8 |
| re: .196
so if i can find a rock group or a *very* silly science fiction
movie called "All men are stupid", then it's ok to use that as my
personal name?
You have my permission.
Martin.
|
571.198 | Opportunity For ALL | FDCV01::ROSS | | Thu Apr 07 1988 11:56 | 7 |
| RE:. 196
Liz, not to worry:
ooT, neM SDEEN sraM
Alan
|
571.199 | Mars needs women -- the inside story | SCRUFF::CONLIFFE | Better living through software | Thu Apr 07 1988 13:04 | 13 |
| Ahh, but it's OK Liz.
The Martians have been reading Playboy, Penthouse, Hustler and Cavalier! They
are actively seeking and removing the smooth-skinned, firm breasted young women
whose pictures grace those pages.
That's why we've noticed an upsurge of "real women" in various advertizements,
TV shows, and magazines. It is not because the social concience of society is
being raised -- NO, it is because all the "fantasy" women who might appear in
such places have been carted off to Mars.
Pretty soon, there will be no more "fantasy women" available; they will ALL
be on Mars. Then the martians will be happy and Al will have to change his
personal name.
|
571.201 | It's not easy being green! | 3D::CHABOT | That fish, that is not catched thereby, | Fri Apr 08 1988 19:51 | 1 |
| Mars needs people who can type!
|
571.202 | Pump up the Volume by Marrs.(listen to it) | SALEM::AMARTIN | niagA sngieR pihsrosneC | Sat Apr 09 1988 00:35 | 3 |
| Sorry if it offended anyone. I shall no longer use it in this conf.
in case you are wondering about .200. It was mine and again it
was not liked. It is gone.
|
571.203 | aaaarrrrrrrgggggghhhhhhhhh!!!!!!! | ULTRA::LARU | transitive nightfall of diamonds | Thu May 19 1988 18:03 | 2 |
|
the chronic emergence of new bozos who stir up the same old crap
|
571.204 | | VIKING::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Thu May 19 1988 23:32 | 1 |
| the names have been changed, but the arguments remain the same...
|
571.205 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Robert A. Holt | Fri May 20 1988 12:54 | 4 |
|
The evil, remain evil....
The wicked, remain wicked....
|
571.206 | Die Verwandlung | 3D::CHABOT | California born | Fri May 20 1988 14:07 | 4 |
| Hmmm, I was thinking it was more like a communicable disease
or an alien parasite that takes over a person's mind...You know,
you wake up one morning and discover you have a Mission in life
now, and it's to enlighten womannotes. :-) :-) :-) :-)
|
571.207 | Do "warm buttons" count??? | SCRUFF::CONLIFFE | Better living through software | Fri May 20 1988 15:45 | 12 |
| I get irritated by the people who have a knee-jerk reaction to the letters 'man'
or 'his' or 'him' when these are merely syllables in a larger word. The latest
(and the one which provoked my ire!) is Peggy's use of the word "Herstory". I've
never seen this bastardization before, and am assuming that it is an attempt to
produce a feminine form of "History".
I understand the debate over "chair-xxxx" (chairman, chairwoman, chairthing,
chair-tron) but feel that this is going too far! Where will we draw the line?
Might one have to refer to "HISesy" (instead of heresy) in MENNOTES???
Nigel
ps:now to get into my asbestos suit! (-:
|
571.208 | A tongue-in-cheek reminder | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri May 20 1988 16:07 | 9 |
| Well, Nigel, look at it this way: It's honest.
"Herstory" means a discussion based on *her* story -- "what happened"
from the viewpoint of a woman or women. It is also a gentle, chiding
reminder that, in many ways, history is *his* story -- "what happened"
from the viewpoint of a man or men. You know, as in the caveat,
"History books are written by the victors."?
Ann B.
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571.209 | _that's_ little boyish... | ULTRA::LARU | transitive nightfall of diamonds | Mon May 23 1988 10:11 | 1 |
| calling people names 'cause they don't vote the way you like
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571.210 | | SCOTCH::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon May 23 1988 17:48 | 5 |
| Re: .208
>It is also a gentle, chiding reminder
There's many a slip 'twixt intentions and perceptions.
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571.211 | don't get me started | DECWET::JWHITE | rule #1 | Wed May 25 1988 17:32 | 5 |
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People who threaten womennotes with various 'actions'. Some of us
dearly love this notesfiles; more than we like some people. I have
no sympathy for these attacks.
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571.212 | | 3D::CHABOT | Uppity Woman | Wed May 25 1988 18:52 | 1 |
| I'm worse than that (re .211), I think such attacks constitute harassment.
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571.213 | Idle threats, pateweee | SALEM::AMARTIN | DIG IT AL | Thu May 26 1988 05:05 | 1 |
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571.214 | Where do these people come from...? | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu May 26 1988 05:22 | 8 |
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Along the same vein...
What really bugs me more than anything is when someone comes
into this conference as a stranger and uses his professed
affection for the file as an *excuse* to threaten that if the
file does not bend to his will, he intends to destroy it.
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571.215 | not in the same vein | CIVIC::JOHNSTON | I _earned_ that touch of grey! | Thu May 26 1988 10:05 | 3 |
| my mother [and the 48-hour barrier]
Ann
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571.216 | | 38082::CHABOT | Uppity Woman | Thu May 26 1988 11:21 | 10 |
| re .214
What really bugs me more than anything is when someone comes
into this conference as a stranger and uses his professed
affection for the file as an *excuse* to threaten that if
the file does not bend to his will, he intends to destroy it.
Except for the "stranger" part,
sounds a lot like abuse, (e.g., wife-beating) doesn't it.
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571.217 | It's probably just my ex using a pseudonym... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu May 26 1988 11:31 | 8 |
| RE: .216
> sounds a lot like abuse, (e.g., wife-beating) doesn't it.
Good grief, I knew there was something familiar about all this.
(But don't worry, Lisa, he's just doing this for our own good.)
<shudder>
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571.218 | Overtly it is all the same. | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | An Ancient Multi-hued Dragon | Thu May 26 1988 17:15 | 11 |
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And of course we would never, ever fight back, would we....
_peggy
(-)
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Now how do I get this thing to swing????
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