T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
621.1 | one moderator's response | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Dec 28 1987 14:43 | 14 |
| Actually what I think is that I wish that I hadn't had to make a
decision on this one :-}!
Jim's note has been moved to start a new note...those who wish to
respond to the content of the note please do so in note 620 and
those who wish to further react to the fact that the note was entered
at all may do so here...or continue in the Hot Buttons note...
my personal best choice would be that the subject be closed and
not used to start another round of negative exchanges.
Bonnie J
moderator
|
621.2 | answer | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Dec 28 1987 14:47 | 25 |
| Tanya slipped this response in while I was moving things around :-)
<<< VIKING::$2$DJA6:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Topics of Interest to Women >-
================================================================================
Note 594.30 The Following is for Women Only - thank you. 30 of 30
CASV02::AUSTIN 15 lines 28-DEC-1987 14:33
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>I think that when a man replies to a "for women only" note, the
>moderators should delete his reply. What do you think, moderators?
I am not a moderator but I would like to give my opinion on your
question. I don't think .29 said anything that would hurt this
topic, I think it may have been helpful to some people. His reasons
for entering it in a topic that had been requested to be answered by
women only, I don't know. I would think that since the author did
ask for women only to reply, he should have respected her wishes by
not entering it. But since this is an equal access file I think it
could cause problems if it were to be deleted.
T
|
621.3 | ????????????? | MTBLUE::DUCHARME_GEO | | Mon Dec 28 1987 15:52 | 13 |
| I am new to this file,and very confused by the moderator(S)actions.
Please explain.
I was offended by notes labeled for ****** only,but had over
looked the prejudice.I was half expecting the moderator(S) to send
a quiet mail message to the people who had posted such notes to change
the heading.Did you the moderator(S) just move a reply because the
responder was male?? If so,what are your reasons for creating a
potential problem?
Please tell me, I am miss understanding this.
With hope George D.
|
621.4 | not again | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Mon Dec 28 1987 15:59 | 8 |
| Re: .3
This has already been discussed _a_lot_, so you might want to search
back thru previous notes. My own conclusion from the discussion
was that if I ever wanted to post a note on a topic that I wanted
only sensitive replies to, I'd say: "No replies, please, from the
following: A, B, C, or D." It happens to be that A-D are males.
|
621.6 | a moderator responds | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Dec 28 1987 16:07 | 10 |
| re .3
George,
Try reading the notes titled on psuedo-separtism and hot buttons
- I think most of the discussion is there. If you have any further
questions I will be glad to discuss this by mail...and believe me
there has been mail sent on all these issues...
Bonnie J
moderator
|
621.7 | such a short calm between storms? | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | U.S. out of North America | Mon Dec 28 1987 16:53 | 18 |
|
I was hoping to find some way to help prevent a storm over this
issue, but we all have to draw the line some place. I see absolutely
no reason why one member of this file can not request input from
any other members of this file. Of course, anyone in this file
has the "right" to reply to any note here, but the moderators
are supposed to see to it that replies appear under the appropriate
note. I suspect we could all make their job easier if we didn't
put our replies in the wrong place.
While this issue is pending, I would like to ask the women in this
file to simply ignore inappropriately positioned replies. I've
been feeling really good about the way a couple of notes are going
in this file (anyone else feeling good about that, too?), and I think
we *can* transform this file into the space that *we* want if we only stand
our ground.
Justine
|
621.8 | | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Tue Dec 29 1987 08:37 | 6 |
| I support the acceptance of having notes which request responses
be limited to women or men. I also respect the reason why the response
in question was moved and feel it was unfortunate the note was entered
- beginning yet another round of 'them' and 'us' definitions.
Douglas
|
621.9 | | CADSE::HARDING | | Tue Dec 29 1987 10:52 | 6 |
| I also support the right of requesting that responses be limited
to woman or men. I do however, hope that this will not be abused
as a way of totally shutting out one gender or the other. There
is a problem that may rear itself. What happens if a man places
a base note with the request saying "Only Men responed" in this
conference ?
|
621.10 | A conference of ostriches? | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Tue Dec 29 1987 11:32 | 17 |
| I do not support slamming the door in the faces of a class of noters
who may have very serious and personal views on a topic, but are
arbitrarily prohibited from expressing these views in the conference.
I firmly believe that such actions only serve to drive a wedge between
women and men, or whatever groups you are trying to segregate.
I am currently discussing with my co-moderators of MENNOTES a
new policy to prohibit such notes in MENNOTES. I feel that
the conference should be a place for ALL noters to express their
views, no matter what those views may be or what class (sex, color,
blood type, shoe size, etc.) the noter may belong to.
I am very sad to see such discriminatory notes proliferate in
WOMANNOTES, which I once felt to be one of the most accepting
conferences on the network.
Steve
|
621.11 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Dec 29 1987 11:57 | 11 |
| Would people be more comfortable if the basenote writer started
a note for responses using the next note?
For example, if I start a note in #700 and ask for women only to
respond, I would also start a note in #701 for anyone to respond who
chose to. Women could respond in #700; women and men could respond
in #701.
That's the model I would prefer.
Holly
|
621.13 | A "hot button" reply, I guess | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Tue Dec 29 1987 14:49 | 16 |
| re: .12
Re: .11 A good suggestion but I do have to wonder out loud;
When will we ever learn to work/discuss/etc together?????
When we realize that we have to work/discuss/etc together, whether
it's fun or not.
Along with the "you're not welcome here" notes, I also resent the
passive-agressive "have a nice day, asshole" notes that have been
cropping up for the past few weeks -- the ones that say "I read
your note; I don't like it; I won't tell you why (again); and
I want everyone to know that I don't think they should reply either."
On the other hand, I guess the happy holidays notes are an improvement
over the 200 line monologues.
Martin.
|
621.14 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Dec 29 1987 14:51 | 6 |
| When I see a note marked "women only", I breathe an involuntary
sigh of relief and say "Thank goodness, there won't be any fighting
in this note." I'd like to ask the appropriate subset of men in
this conference to consider that it's their behaviour here that's
brought this type of note about.
|
621.17 | Right! Now if we could just... | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Dec 29 1987 15:30 | 24 |
| You got it! The exchange of information is precisely what a
non-conflict note is about. <thoughtful pause> In fact, what
good is *any*thing without a transfer of information? <aside>
Information is not just "just the facts", it is also the emotional
import of a situation, or of someone else's emotion, or ...
Therefore, it should be possible for "even :-)" a male human to
obtain understanding by reading without writing -- just like watching
the news on the jujubox. What I [we?] would really like to see
is a man experiencing an "ah-ha", of the sort called a Click! in
"Ms." magazine and other feminist circles.
Here's an example: At a university cocktail party, a professor of
psychology was explaining to her college dean about a particular
phenomenon. This was, that when Person A, who was not a "buddy"
of Person B, placed a hand on Person B, it was an expression of
Person A's belief that A was dominant over Person B. The dean was
not buying this scenario, until the university president came up
to him, placed his hand on the dean's shoulder, and told him that
it was time for the two of them to leave. The dean turned dead
white with realization. *That* is an "ah-ha" -- and a nasty one
too.
Ann B.
|
621.18 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Dec 29 1987 16:26 | 15 |
| Re: . - I forgot the number
Martin, the "have a nice day" notes came about as follows: Person
A posts a "you *&^^%%$%$^&&" reply to person B. Person B flames
back to A. A flames at B. Everyone wearies of wading thru this
junk. So, someone suggests that "you &*&&^&^^^" notes ought to
be ignored. The "have a nice day" notes seem to be a transient
stage the noble B people went thru just to say "I know you called
me a %^^*&^&**&*(, but I'm not going to inflict the scenario on
everyone else again." Good for the B people for exercising
self-restraint.
signed,
learning to next right past the A notes.
|
621.19 | Help! Help! I'm being Oppressed! :-{ | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Tue Dec 29 1987 16:26 | 44 |
| RE: ~594.30
For your information, I had asked a moderator if it would get deleted...
RE: 594.30
I entered a reply to 594 because I felt I had something to add to the
discussion, I chose to ignore the artificial prejudice of 594.0
RE: .7
"I think we *can* transform this file into the space that *we* want if we only
stand our ground."
What do you mean "we"?
Ah, well, I guess that us men will have to go back out into the dark, and
wondering 'what the hell *do* these crazy women want of us?', while the women
remake the world without men having a say in matters, and have men telling each
other that women don't understand, and have women telling each other men don't
understand.
RE: .8
"feel it was unfortunate the note was entered - beginning yet another round of
'them' and 'us' definitions."
What I was doing was ignoring the "us" vs. "them" definition. It is 594.0 which
creates the categories of "us" and "them".
RE: .11 Holly
Could you explain what you feel are the differences between your suggestion,
and allowing prejudiced topics and not allowing prejudiced topics?
RE: .17
"The exchange of information is precisely what a non-conflict note is about."
Funny, I could have sworn I was trying to exchange information...
Jim.
Jim.
|
621.20 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Dec 29 1987 17:12 | 35 |
|
Jim, I'm not sure I understand your question. I'll try to answer, even
though I don't agree with your basic premise that women-only notes are
prejudiced.
Here's what I entered:
!For example, if I start a note in #700 and ask for women only to
!respond, I would also start a note in #701 for anyone to respond who
!chose to. Women could respond in #700; women and men could respond
!in #701.
!
!That's the model I would prefer.
My suggestion was directed to the end that everyone gets to speak
and to be officially recorded in an easily found place (next basenote)
within the conference. Readers coming along in a year can easily
read both sets of responses in a coherent way, for example.
I don't consider notes which ask for women-only responses to be
prejudiced. I am very interested in what women think about
certain subjects. I also enjoy reading women's responses to one
another.
Anyone who wants to know what everyone thinks would also have an easy
system for finding all the responses.
In many cases I would read both sets of responses to see what everyone
thought, but it would be very nice to be able to have the views
of the women easily available. That's one of the reasons I read
this file regularly and don't make reading "human relations" a priority!
|
621.22 | I like that suggestion | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Dec 29 1987 18:47 | 16 |
| I must say I like the suggestion a lot (two basenotes when replies
from women are of special interest).
FWIW, I've seen some fighting among the women (when men are ignoring
that note for whatever reason) and while I'd agree that the noise
level is several orders of magnitude lower, we do occasionally get
into pissing matches like those rampant in the other notes.
Somehow, I find that "our" pissing matches are much more interesting
and satisfying -- we say we're really pissed off by a note/attitude
and this is why, and I feel like there's some _content_ to the fight
-- not just a battle of personalities/wills.
re .21 eagle -- agreed.
Lee
|
621.23 | | COMET::BRUNO | Beware the Night Writer! | Tue Dec 29 1987 20:47 | 6 |
|
Hmmm... the old 'separate but equal', huh? An unsuccessful
and painful memory in America's past. May it remain in the past.
Greg
|
621.24 | | SHIRE::BIZE | | Wed Dec 30 1987 04:04 | 23 |
| The suggestion of consecutive notes answering the same base note
seems to be a reasonable one, though I fear it will complicate matters
somewhat. We already have responses adressing multiple answers to
the same base note, now we will have the same phenomenon but with
two base notes; example:
re 700.32 ....
re 701.18 ....
re 700.41 ....
re 701.55 ....
When I try to understand what it's all about, it means I am just
going back and forth between the responses to understand why 700.51
is saying "You twerp!" to 700.7 (12 days later, for Heavens'sake!)
If we can avoid this snag, maybe we could try this alternative,
though I'd find it very sad if a majority of the notes were designed
that way.
Joana
|
621.25 | I AM A PERSON TOO. | BAXTA::DUCHARME_GEO | | Wed Dec 30 1987 08:10 | 16 |
| To request **** only,implies that there is something unwanted
or undesirable about replies from that particular group.Separating
the notes implies pretty much the same thing.The prejudice here
is so obvious that I find it hard to believe, that I have to argue
the point.
Now that there is a woman's only note file.
Will the for **** only notes in this file be stopped?
I feel angry. What the appropriate response to the anger I feel
is, I have not decided.The first thing I felt I should do is
what I have just done.Say I am angry and why.
Loosing hope George D.
|
621.26 | | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Wed Dec 30 1987 09:18 | 11 |
| Jim B.
I recognize you responded to a 'women only' note because you
believed you could add something to the discussion but a belief
in your ablility to add to a conversation is not an invitation to
join said conversation. Your actions, in my opinion, were rude,
at best and remind me of the children in my neighborhood who show
no respect for personal property, trespassing where and when they
choose.
Douglas
|
621.27 | | MANANA::RAVAN | I got my facts blurrin' | Wed Dec 30 1987 09:39 | 31 |
| Sigh.
a. I believe that "xxx Only" notes are indeed prejudiced, and I
find them silly at best and offensive at worst. (This applies only
where "xxx" is a characteristic that cannot be changed by the owner;
requests for responses only by those with applicable experience,
for example, make much more sense. "Only those who've been
mountain-climbing," rather than "only those who are over 5'3" tall"...)
b. Despite (a), I would not delete or otherwise deny noters the
right to enter "xxx Only" notes if they want to; they are saying
something about their perceptions of the world, and that in itself
may be of interest. Besides, whatever it means to me to see such
notes, I can't assume that it means the same to the person who posted
the note.
c. I would consider it rude for a non-xxx to reply to an "xxx Only"
note. Rude, not illegal. I've never understood why people get so
upset at finding unwelcome notes in a conference; I don't always
like 'em either, but I just hit the "next" key and ignore them.
If I wanted to comment on an "xxx Only" note for which I was not
an xxx, I'd start a new note.
Conclusion: No, I don't believe that non-xxx replies to an "xxx Only"
note should be deleted, set hidden, or otherwise molested. Those who
respect the intention of the person who posted the note will either not
reply at all, or will reply in a separate note (to facilitate "Next
unseen" by someone who doesn't believe that non-xxx's have anything to
contribute).
-b (female, if anyone's counting)
|
621.28 | WOMANNOTES not private property | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Wed Dec 30 1987 09:48 | 8 |
| RE: .26
The difference is that WOMANNOTES is not private property.
I am sure that if a bunch of protesters showed up on your doorstep with signs,
that you would find that rude as well.
Jim.
|
621.29 | For the record | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Wed Dec 30 1987 10:01 | 8 |
| re: .13
In a personal message to me, Suzanne Conlon has pointed out that
"the vast majority of [her notes] are under 50 lines."
I apologize for the misunderstanding.
Martin.
|
621.30 | > 620 notes and +/- 3 for women only? | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | U.S. out of North America | Wed Dec 30 1987 10:11 | 79 |
|
When I was in college, there was an all-black gospel singing
group. It was student organized and conducted, and the group rehearsed
in the living rooms of various dormitories (the ones with pianos in
them). One night the group was rehearsing in my dorm, and I stayed
and listened for a while; I really enjoyed the music. I had sung in a
group like that in high school, and during the break, I went up to the
conductor and asked if I could join. She said, "No." (I imagine that
she would have elaborated on her answer if I had asked her to.)
At first I was embarrassed and a little bit hurt by the rejection. I was
a pretty good singer, and she didn't even *hear* me! I suppose I could
have gone to the Dean and cried, "Foul!" And I might have won. The group
was rehearsing on school property, after all, and I had a right to be
anywhere I wanted.
But I thought about it and realized that even though I was a pretty good
singer, I couldn't add any value to the sound *they* wished to create.
But I went to lots of their rehearsals and performances and listened.
And if any of the members of the group had noticed me quietly humming
and singing along once and a while (as I no doubt did without even thinking
about it; I really liked the music) they probably wouldn't have minded
because my enjoyment didn't infringe upon their enjoyment. And as I
listened, my appreciation for the music grew.
Now I had a legal right to join that group, but I didn't think it was the
right thing to do.
I find it sadly ironic that the more vehemently the men in this file
cry that
there are no real socio-political differences between men and women,
that there are just people on this planet... some men are sexist,
some women are sexist, but you can't talk about general differences
between the groups... ad infinitum,
the more strongly I believe in those differences. And perhaps it is those
very differences that keep one group (mostly men) from understanding an
idea that seems to be quite clear to another group (mostly women) in this
file. That idea is this. While we (women) do appreciate the contributions
that men have made and continue to make to society and to our personal and
professional lives, in order for us (women) to begin to understand and
appreciate our unique and valuable contributions, we *Sometimes* need to
talk to each other.. not exclusively, but sometimes.
I think that one of the goals of this conference is (or ought to be) to
provide some (*SMALL*) opportunity for women to discover and discuss
issues that are important to them so that women can value themselves
more. (You know that saying, "You have to love yourself before anyone
else can really love you.") I think that if every one in this conference
supported that as one (not the only) of the primary goals, there would
be less conflict, and we would all value each other more.
An aside: A number of people have made reference to GDE and Blacknotes
as places where all are welcome and all opinions aired. I find it
pretty curious that GDE (where I am a member) and Blacknotes (Which I
do not read, but the discussions about it here have led me to believe
this to be true) have not experienced the same level of unrest as
Womannotes. I know that (in GDE anyway) on occasion un-supportive
outsiders have intruded, but none of those episodes has lasted very
long. Could it be that because GDE and Blacknotes are moderated by
(and were founded by) men, other men respect those areas as legitimate
turf? Or could it be that non-gay, white men are less likely to be
concerned about the empowerment of Gays and people of color than they
are about the empowerment of women? I don't think we have the tools
here to examine this idea, but the coincidence certainly seems to
warrant some consideration.
This is what I intend to do to make this space useful for me. I
intend to enter notes and ask for input from women only, if that
seems appropriate to me, and I will ignore (what I feel are)
inappropriately positioned responses from men. I will trust the
moderators to implement DEC policy correctly and move the notes
from men if that's right thing to do or leave them where they are.
My hope is that men will respect a request for responses from women
only and not intrude with replies that interrupt the flow of the
note and cause the moderators more work and heartache. Out more
than 620 notes, how many of them have been for women only?
Justine
|
621.31 | Oh-so-much work to be done... | SALEM::LUPACCHINO | From All Walks of Life 6-5-88 | Wed Dec 30 1987 10:58 | 13 |
| Justine, I've wondered about GDE and BLACKNOTES in a similar way.
Hmm...if there were a Lesbian conference I wonder how much "unrest"
there would be?? Just a musing...npi.
I've been communicating with a few female =WN=er's over the tube
lately saying how I think we're all brainwashed to "make nice" for
everyone even when it is NOT in our best interest. I think you
call it internalized misogyny.
And the beat goes on....have a fine New Year!
Ann Marie
|
621.32 | | STAR::HUBER | Marvin's Magical Mysery Tour | Wed Dec 30 1987 10:59 | 85 |
| First, a little background:
I've been reading this conference on and off for about 2 months,
and have found many of the discussions enlightening and quite
interesting. HOWEVER, the bickering and arguing that has proliferated
so in the last month has severly detracted from this conferences
value to me, in a large part because so much has to be weeded through
to find the worthwhile bits. If all the energy that has gone into
the bickering had instead gone into developing and exploring issues,
this file would be one of my high priorities for lunchtime reading,
instead of one I've often considered deleting. Just the opinion
of one non-contributer.
Re .27
I have been thinking for some time about what would be a happy medium
between what I will call, for lack of a better name, the "womens"
view and the "mens" view on "xxx Only" notes. What I will call
the "womens" view is that 1) they should be allowed, 2) responses
by a non-xxx should be either moved, set hidden, or deleted. What
I will call the "mens" view is that 1) they should not be allowed,
or 2) if they are allowed, non-xxx replies should still be allowed.
I am not meaning to imply in any way that all women agree with what
I will call the "womens" view, or that all men agree with what I
call the "mens" view.
The thoughts I came up with are very similar to those you presented,
with a few differences as follows:
a) I too feel that the "xxx Only" notes are often, but not necessarily,
prejudiced. For this reason, I feel that if any person wants to
enter a note excluding any group of persons from replying, they
should state their reason in the the basenote. For example:
Note title: For Avocados Only: Do You Prefer The Midwest?
In the basenote, the reason: I only want the personal experiences
of avocados.
Note title: For Plums Only: Pain in the Pits
The reason: I want to avoid the controversy likely by allowing bananas
to reply.
In this way, the reasoning for the "xxx-Only" is better understood.
b) I too agree that "xxx-Only" notes should be allowed, with the
reasoning preferably given as above. Anyone entering a "xxx-Only"
note should realize, though, that they do not and should not expect
non-xxx persons to read the note and its replies.
c) Here is the advantage of putting the reasoning in the note: if
a non-xxx replies without violating the reasoning for having a
"xxx-Only" note, the reply should not be considered rude. However,
if, using the previous example, a banana puts in what it considers
to be a non-controversial reply, but which the author of the basenote
considers to be controversial, the author could ask the moderaters
to move the note to a serepate topic. Additionally, if a "xxx"
puts in a reply that violates the reasoning, the author could also
ask that that note be moved.
I realize that this is not a perfect solution, but I figure it can't
hurt to try.
Advantages | Disadvantages
-----------------------------------------------------------------
1) "xxx-Only" notes would | 1) Entering of "xxx-Only" notes
be allowed, as the | could be abused, lowering the
"womens" view desires, | value of this file to some.
but replies by a non-xxx | 2) The moderators would still be
would be allowed, as | asked to make decisions about
desired by the "mens" | how notes fit the stated
view. | reasoning.
2) The moderators would not | 3) Convincing the "community" to
have to move notes | agree to any standard will
unless the author | probably bring on bickering of
requests it. | its own.
----------------------------------------------------------------
There are, of course, more points on both sides, but this is already
far too long.
I am sorry that to add this to the pool of thoughts requires both
1) adding to the bickering, and 2) a long note, but I thought the
opinions of someone who isn't involved in the bickering and does
not plan on getting involved in the bickering might be of some use.
|
621.33 | A difference in point of view... | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Dec 30 1987 11:10 | 10 |
| Anne Marie
There is a diference between 'makeing things nice for everyone'
and trying to mediate between different people each of whom brings
their own different point of view to a situation.
Attempts at diplomacy shouldn't be regarded as 'internalized
misogyny'.
|
621.34 | a good thing in the wrong place | BAXTA::DUCHARME_GEO | | Wed Dec 30 1987 11:14 | 18 |
| I feel badly for those who feel they have been on the receiving
end of miss placed anger or harassment.I really hope that you
can discuss things close to your heart with other women and other
women only if that is your desire.It is the choice of trying to
do so here, in an open notes file.
I want to support the idea of a private notes file for women for
those who wish to have women only discussions.
I feel that the forced bussing of responses to segregated areas
is demeaning.
Lets deal with individuals not groups.I have not purposely harassed
anyone in this file.You are shutting me out because of certain individuals
actions.All that I know I have in common with these individuals is
that I am of the same sex.
George D.
|
621.35 | | VIKING::MODICA | | Wed Dec 30 1987 11:34 | 1 |
| re: .34 Well put!
|
621.36 | Candy from strangers? | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | U.S. out of North America | Wed Dec 30 1987 11:34 | 18 |
|
When the issue of a Notesfile FOR women came up in this file, the
men (and some of the women) said that would violate corporate
policy.. so the men said yeah, we can be here, but if you
have an issue that you think is woman-only, label the note
"for women only" ... and then the men cried foul and said that
would violate corporate.... and round and round it goes.
In GDE no one has to say for "Gays only please." because
the non-gay members only speak to their own experience and
treat the file with respect.
About the current offer of space for a members-only file, I
think that's swell, but I've always tried to avoid accepting
rides or gifts, etc. from strangers. If I had access to the
disk space, I would gladly co-moderate a members-only file, but
I'd want to know all the players first.
Justine
|
621.37 | One more time, with feeling | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:03 | 36 |
| George, we're not shutting *anybody* out, you least of all!
One more time. Let's see whether I can make it clear (though if it
isn't already after eloquent people such as Justine, Suzanne, Karen K.,
Ann, Lee,...I could go on for awhile naming people... if it isn't
already very very clear then I confess little hope of being able to
make it any plainer).
There are a few times when women just want to hear other women on some
subject. Women's voices are regularly masked out in the larger world;
most of what we hear on *any* subject out there reflects primarily
men's views, from the right way to run the world down to the nature of
female sexuality. So, in here, sometimes, occasionally, some of us
just want to hear what our sisters have to say. Why? Sanity checks,
for one--and probably the most important--thing. Seeing if there's a
split in opinion along gender lines, for another. Not being *told*
what or how one "should" feel about something, for a third.
Men aren't being excluded from _reading_, certainly. And there are a
number of easy mechanisms for getting one's views "into print", the
most straightforward of which is starting up a parallel string. That
has been done successfully for any number of reasons in the history of
this file. Another way is to apply to the basenote author for an
exemption...though by the time someone is so in need of women's
voices as to request women-only responses, they're unlikely to grant
any such request (Camel's Nose principle).
Consider: if you were carrying on a conversation with friends in the
street, would you want other people coming into the conversation, even
if they were immensely reputable people? I think not. When we're
carrying on certain conversations, we don't even welcome other
_friends_ into the flow; it's just naturally disruptive. Same
principle here: the worth or lack of worth of male contributions is
just not the issue.
=maggie
|
621.38 | "Where's the Beef?!" | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:26 | 10 |
| RE: .36
" I would gladly co-moderate a members-only file, but I'd want to know all the
players first."
Apparently volunteer moderators are being welcomed.
Do a SHOW MEMBER and find out who is who...
Jim.
|
621.39 | get this camel outta here! | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:36 | 22 |
| RE: .37
"There are a few times when women just want to hear other women on some
subject."
"Seeing if there's a split in opinion along gender lines, for another."
Huh? how can you have the latter if you have the former?
"That has been done successfully for any number of reasons in the history of
this file."
I could be wrong, but it seems that most of the past 'only' notes were for
statistical information... quite different from what we are discussing.
"Consider: if you were carrying on a conversation with friends in the street,
would you want other people coming into the conversation, even if they were
immensely reputable people?"
I disagree, I would!
Jim.
|
621.40 | | STAR::HUBER | Marvin's Magical Mysery Tour | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:39 | 22 |
| Re .37
This made me think again about what I said in .32, and I would like
to clarify a couple of points in my suggestion:
First, I don't think that the reasoning of only wanting to hear
replies from "xxx" is unreasonable, again provided it isn't abused.
The idea of including the reasoning for an "xxx-Only" note is that
the reason for entering it in such a fashion can vary: it can be
that one just wants to hear from "xxx"'s, it can be to avoid
controversy, it can be other things.
Second, on the flip side, it would not be unreasonable for a man
to enter a topic for "xxx-Only", provided the topic fits in with
women's issues. For example, if a man was having marriage troubles
and wanted to hear from other women ONLY about ideas, suggestions,
or whatever, that could well fit within the structure of women's
issues. It would even be appropriate for a man to enter a topic
requesting replies from men only in some cases, though I must admit
I am hard pressed to come up with one offhand.
Don't worry. I'll shut up now.
|
621.41 | Here's one MAN's opinion | FROST::WHEEL | Master Card, Excite Me! | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:43 | 17 |
|
One thing I fail to understand, is, why do some people feel as
though they HAVE to reply to EVERY note that is entered??? I have
absolutely *NO* problem with a basenoter's request that only women
reply! When a topic is entered requesting that only women reply,
why...why...WHY do some men get so offended??? Is it because they
feel as though they have to be in EVERY conversation whether or
not it concerns them???
I speak very, very softly in this notesfile, but when I see so
many people get so upset about feeling left out of the conversation,
it really irks me and I just have to speak up and give my view.
Dan
|
621.42 | Maybe it's Freedom of Speach? | YODA::BARANSKI | Oh! ... That's not like me at all! | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:46 | 0 |
621.43 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:49 | 4 |
| Thank you, Dan. May all your preferences be as courteously
respected in return.
Ann B.
|
621.44 | trying to understand R:.37 | MTBLUE::DUCHARME_GEO | | Wed Dec 30 1987 13:06 | 24 |
| You give some examples of unfairness.
>Women's voices are regularly masked out in the larger world;
>most of what we hear on *any* subject out there reflects primarily
>men's views, from the right way to run the world down to the nature of
>female sexuality.
You then used the unfairness you experienced to justify actions
I feel in my opinion are unfair to me.
(So), in here, sometimes, occasionally, some of us
>just want to hear what our sisters have to say. Why? Sanity checks,
>for one--and probably the most important--thing. Seeing if there's a
>split in opinion along gender lines, for another. Not being *told*
>what or how one "should" feel about something, for a third.
If a private women only notes file is indeed impossible I
will reconsider my thinking.
Is a private notes file possible or not???
George D.
|
621.45 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Wed Dec 30 1987 13:56 | 38 |
| <--(.44)
Well, if you consider FWO notes to be unfair, George, then we seem
to be left with two possibilities:
1) always be fair, even when the world isn't being fair to us.
2) mostly be fair, but sometimes not.
I'm afraid that the first course is a guaranteed net loss for women,
not unlike the famous(?) joke about What If The Conditions In The
American Revolution Had Been Decided Like A Football Match:
"Admiral Cornwallis, General Washington won the toss and has
elected the following conditions: your side have to wear red
coats with a big white X on them and march down the middle of
the road. They're not allowed to fire their weapons except
all together on command. General Washington's side can wear
whatever they like, can hide behind rocks, trees, or anything
else, and can fire at your side whenever they think it's a
good idea. Is that clear? Okay, gentlemen, let's begin".
Can a whole women-only file be supported legitimately? I don't
think so; my reading of the policy manual suggests that it would
need to be permitted at Executive Committee level. But more than
that: I'm unconvinced that it's a good idea even if it could be
legitimised.
I know of nobody who is positively trying to exclude men from
participation in the life of our community. I think if you'll check
with the lesbian members...and they are pretty clearly the ones with
least to lose if men are excluded!... they are no different to any
of the straight women: they want women-only space *sometimes*, not
always. For all of us, it's a case of "We don't want you guys to
back off very often, but when we do want you to not write in some
string we REALLY DO want you to respect our feelings".
=maggie
|
621.46 | unfairness is a net loss to all | BAXTA::DUCHARME_GEO | | Wed Dec 30 1987 14:55 | 18 |
|
Couldn't an implied but not excluding title be used.
For instance" Have any other women felt this way"If a male responds
ask him when he had his sex change operation. ;^)
It is the *enforced* exclusion of men from certain notes and not the
expressed desire by individuals for responses from a particular group
that I am concerned about.
I would really like to know if a private notes file for women is
a viable idea.( I would prefer to hear from someone who might have
pursued this possibility.)
George D.
|
621.47 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Wed Dec 30 1987 15:28 | 14 |
| George, you have got me completely confused. Let's presume for the
moment that there is no bar to a women-only file. Let's further
presume that I start it, vigorously enforce the no-men-allowed
membership rule, and that there is some self-supporting amount of
activity in the file.
Are men better or worse off at that point? If better, how? If
worse, isn't it a bit masochistic to lobby for it (which is what it
sounds as though you're doing).
De-confuse me, please. I've the dreadful feeling that I'm missing
something important in what you've been saying.
=maggie
|
621.48 | some questions | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Wed Dec 30 1987 15:31 | 9 |
| Regarding the private notes file for women -
Who is moderating and hosting the disk space? (I feel as Justine
does about taking rides from strangers.)
Also...is the moderator a woman? I have no interest in
participating until this information is available.
Holly
|
621.49 | It is already in here somewhere ;-) | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Dec 30 1987 15:34 | 2 |
| Jim Baranski as has been stated in another note is offering the
disk space but is looking for volunteer moderators.
|
621.51 | RE:.47 I rarely ware pajamas to work | BAXTA::DUCHARME_GEO | | Wed Dec 30 1987 16:37 | 13 |
| I would want this notes file to continue much as it is.The private file
would be the place where notes titled (women only) could reside.Hitting
next unseen and seeing a note titled for women only is in my opinion
blatantly out of place in what I thought was an open notes file.
In my opinion I have not heard one concrete justification for having any
(for **** only) titles being enforced.I have read we need it ,deserve it,
etc..these are not justifiable reasons in my opinion.If this is an open
file it should be open.I have no problem with what you want it is where,
that is bothering me.
George D.
|
621.52 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Wed Dec 30 1987 16:41 | 3 |
| Aha. Okay, I think I understand now. Thanks.
=maggie
|
621.53 | Are you trying to tell us something ?! | CASV07::AUSTIN | | Wed Dec 30 1987 17:02 | 8 |
| Re: .50
Tha'ts really nice of you Kerry...
Are you trying to make some kind of point?
T
|
621.54 | GOALS,RULES,EXPECTATIONS | BAXTA::DUCHARME_GEO | | Thu Dec 31 1987 10:28 | 31 |
| A clear statement of the goals and rules of this conference at
the beginning of note < 1 the welcome note might be helpful.
I read the introduction and welcome and was totally unprepared
for the actions taken by the moderator(s)( the moving of a note
solely because the reply was written by a male.)If I had known
by the introduction that the right to exclude men from replying
to certain notes was an accepted rule and that the over riding
purpose of this file was for women to talk to other women,
I would not have been so surprised and angry.I would not have spent
the energy that I have, to argue for the expectations I had from
reading the first note, the welcome note.I suggest that the first
entry should make the goals and rules of this conference very clear
to avoid potentially going through this every time a new male noter
becomes interested in this file.I still wonder if rules that
exclude a certain group from replying are appropriate in an open
file,but sense this rule is currently in affect,the powers that
be, have at least until now, allowed it.With a now more enlightened
understanding of the goals and rules of this conference I
withdraw.This is a personal decision similar to whether to join a
particular club or social group.I simply feel uncomfortable.
I still may read some of the notes to gain insight but one
rarely frequents were one feels uncomfortable.I will leave the
few notes I entered as they are. The moderator(s) may leave them
or delete them as their need or desire requires.
With a little less anger and a little more
understanding I withdraw George D.
|
621.55 | je va, maintenant | JUNIOR::TASSONE | when life begins :40: | Thu Dec 31 1987 12:40 | 23 |
| In my opinion, people see what they want to see and often do what
they want to do. So, posting "for **** only" might not read the
same for two different individuals. It's like the street sign,
"One Way". "But, officer, I was only going one way". I know someone
who actually did that.
My point: I don't mind what goes on in here. I can take the comments
by men, and I don't have to either. Quiet honestly, I don't feel
as intelligent as some of you and I don't even "get" some of the
notes. So, I pass it by. Sometimes I play games and try to guess
the sex of the individual. Often, I am wrong. Quiet frankly, we're
all sounding alike and hell, maybe that's a step in the right
direction.
Who knows? I don't. All I can see is a mini-conflict between the
sexes.
Hasn't this battle been going on too long? Can't we all be friends
together? Suggestion for some: start a topic, read the replies
and ignore the ones you don't like. I do it all the time.
Cathy (who presses next unseen until she finds something she
likes, or understands)
|
621.58 | Actually... | CASV01::AUSTIN | | Tue Jan 05 1988 00:05 | 8 |
| Doesn't make my blood boil, I could use the mens room if I had to
go...
And I'm sure if I had to go my screaming would do quite well, they
would let me go just to shut me up...and I still would win :^)
T
|
621.59 | my $.02 worth | NECVAX::VEILLEUX | | Tue Jan 05 1988 14:04 | 18 |
| I have thougth about this for a long time prior to commenting. So
here goes.
Until "we" as a people stop thinking in the guise of MEN and WOMEN
we are never going to be able to come together in thoughts or deeds.
I personally feel that everyone has added value and all inputs should
be respected. I believe that the response of the "male" that started
this whole thing did add value. Why not ignore the gender of the
author and think about what was said.
Yes I will agree that there are certain topics that men are unable
to relate to, (try having a baby!!) but take the comments incontext.
I would only be offended by a response that belittled the basenote
and that would be regardless of the gender of the author.
I find that the Womannotes file is of very great value to me, and
am pleased that the male members get involved.
|
621.60 | Civil Rights? Not in here!!! | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Fri Jan 08 1988 12:14 | 29 |
| Re: .58 - Just like here in WOMANNOTES...
Re: .59 - I agree with you 100%
It seems that those who want to enforce XXX-only notes by POLICY
rather than by RESPECT need to feel that they have the power over
their world in WOMANNOTES since they don't have that power in the
real world. REQUESTING XXX-only is a reflection of the author's
opinion on the value of non-XXX members, which in some cases reflects
poorly on the author. However, the moving/reposting of non-XXX
notes from an XXX-only note as a matter of policy is insulting
and degrading. People who have been "excluded" by the basenote
author should have the RIGHT to reply without being harrassed.
This is quite similar to having girls join the boy scouts or the
boys basketball team. All girls may not *want* to join, but they
now have the *right* to join. The same thing applies to social
organizations that exclude on the basis of race. A member of the
excluded race may not *want* to join the club, but they should
have every right to do so.
It all seems fairly clear to me...If some people in here would stop
trying to make this a woman's club, I think you'd find a lot less
flaming in all the notes...
My 2�
Dave
|
621.61 | No fairness for me thanks | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Fri Jan 08 1988 15:48 | 18 |
| Re .59
> Until "we" as a people stop thinking in the guise of MEN and WOMEN
> we are never going to be able to come together in thoughts or deeds.
This is one of those cases where an idea that sounds fair really
isn't. The fact is that, because of upbringing if nothing else,
women are different from men in the way they note. I believe that
there still is a need for woman-space. Demands for "FAIRNESS" only
help the men in this file who wish to flame where ever they want.
Given the choice between "fairness" and loss some of the women's
contributions, I'll do without fairness thank you.
I would be disappointed if every interesting new topic in this file were
marked "for women only".
MJC O->
|
621.62 | huh? | 3D::CHABOT | Wanted: IASFM Aug 1979 & Mar 1980 | Fri Jan 08 1988 16:19 | 10 |
| > It seems that those who want to enforce XXX-only notes by POLICY
> rather than by RESPECT need to feel that they have the power over
> their world in WOMANNOTES since they don't have that power in the
> real world.
Dave, wait: women already have this power--they get together somewhere
where men can't hear and talk. What we're offering you here is
a chance to listen to woman-only conversations, once in a great
long while (it hasn't happened very often in this notesfile).
Where else would you get such an opportunity?
|
621.64 | moderator answers | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Sat Jan 09 1988 11:06 | 12 |
| Al
Speaking as a moderator, there is no message being given that in
the 'so called open file. that men are not wanted'.
individual women have problems with individual men...but it is my
sincere hope that this file will continue to be a valid and useful
forum for communication between women....the first priority and
between women and men...a second priority, true, but also important
and valuable.
Bonnie J
|
621.65 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Sat Jan 09 1988 16:19 | 11 |
| re .63
i think there are only two or three woman-only topics in the whole file
at present (though you may have noticed that discussion of the
phenomenon is nearly endless). It (woman-only notes) may be a new
trend, but that does not imply that men are unwelcome. Respectful
(though not necessarily agreeing) male participation is definitely
welcome here.
just responding out loud
liz the person
|
621.67 | Once I had a thought to share.... | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | An Ancient Multi-hued Dragon | Sun Jan 10 1988 16:01 | 22 |
|
If three, count them one, two, three, notes consitute the WHOLE
of this conference, then this is indeed a biased conference, look
at how many notes that include topics of interest to men are here,
how many notes on medical problems, how many on political issues,
in fact how many topics are there in this conference?
If the FWO notes bother you look to yourself for the answer not
us.
In the past I have requested that a certain topic be handled gently
or not at all by male noters and I received a lot of flack for doing
so, then the topic became to intense for the individuals most in
need to participate in the conversation.
_peggy
(-)
| The power of creation is in woman
The Goddess is the ulitmate creator.
|
621.69 | Please!!!!!!!!!!!!! | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Mon Jan 11 1988 13:01 | 17 |
| Breaking yet another resolve - to ignore rather boring
conversations
It appears to me, a number of men are doing a lot of moaning
about nothing. If a person wants to hear from a specified selection
of the society only, so what. Women only or men only or small minded
people only or broad minded people only, or people who need haircuts
or ... Each of us has the right to listen to or talk with whomever
we choose. We also have the right not to listen to or converse with
...
To an earlier contributor, I will ask uninvited people to not
voice their opinions when appropriate. Asking someone not to
contribute is not ill mannered. Asking someone not to contribute
in the wrong way is ill mannered.
Douglas
|
621.70 | Shame!! | DECWET::JWHITE | mr. smarmy | Tue Jan 12 1988 00:34 | 6 |
|
I am appalled and offended and embarassed (though not really very
surprised) that a male has responded to a note specifically requesting
women's responses only. It displays extreme rudeness and disrespect
to our gracious hosts.
|
621.71 | Such cheek! | COMET::BRUNO | Beware the Night Writer! | Wed Jan 13 1988 20:43 | 5 |
|
Really! How *DARE* he think he has the same rights as a woman.
Greg
|
621.72 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Thu Jan 14 1988 09:18 | 10 |
| Give it a rest, Greg. Please. Rights aren't in it, in this case:
there is no socioeconomic impact here at all, nor any smallest prospect
of one. It's a matter of discourtesy pure and simple: the equivalent
of somebody walking up and joining a conversation uninvited, and
without even a by-your-leave. It's RUDE to do that, and a person who
does it can have every legal right to do it and still add no more value
to what's going on than someone who pees in the community swimming
pool.
=maggie
|
621.74 | O.K. brain, get in gear. . . | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopless but not serious | Thu Jan 14 1988 14:21 | 33 |
| re: .73
Very interesting idea, Eagle. I'm not sure whether or not
I agree with the analogy all the way through - (barking)
spiders need to set and think a while about stuff like this -
but it sure gets my synapses jumping.
Add-on thought: while the idea-forcing-as-violation/rape seems
a bit strong to me, I suspect that part of this is because I
don't often feel as if someone is forcing their ideas on me
(and I have a *real* strong feeling that this has everything
to do with my having grown up male in late 20th century America.)
Nonetheless, I have occasionally had the feeling. For men who
are perhaps having trouble connecting with the idea, these are
some images which made Steven's idea seem more reasonable to me:
o Ever have a boss argue and finally "decide" that your idea
was "wrong"? How did you feel then?
o Ever have a drill sergeant? ("You ain't bein' paid to
think, maggot!")
o Ever, uh, run afoul of the law? Come to think of it,
even running "afair" of the law can yield some pretty strong
feelings of "Your thoughts/feelings don't count. . .this is
the *law* you're dealing with now."
Anyhow, I don't know if Steven's idea is "all right" (for me
only, of course), but I have an intuitio, uh, gut-feeling that
it isn't "all wrong".
Steve
|
621.75 | | VIDEO::TEBAY | Natural phenomena invented to order | Thu Jan 14 1988 14:48 | 3 |
| .73-.74
You all are on the trail here!
|
621.76 | some thoughts on sdt's observation and proposal | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Thu Jan 14 1988 15:15 | 19 |
| From both a moderator and an ordinary noter:
Steven,
Your theory strikes some chords for me. Please remember that in
most cases it's hard for us moderators to draw the line between
abusive/questioning or intrusive/welcome notes. I can sense your
frustration with the quality of conversation in the file at times.
But we mods can't be "note police". I'd like to ask all readers to
take responsibility for implementing Steven's proposal. When you
feel intruded upon or offended, don't wait for someone to "fix"
it for you. You can do several things:
- ask the offending noter to reconsider, delete, and/or rewrite.
- ask another noter what they think (do a reality check)
- contact a moderator; explain what the problem is and what action
you'd like her to take.
Thanks
Liz
|
621.77 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Thu Jan 14 1988 15:40 | 27 |
| I also resonate with the Eagle's thesis. There is certainly an element
of "I can do whatever I want and you are helpless to stop me" in some
of the intrusiveness we've seen in here. It goes far beyond a mere
exercise of de jure rights.
Now, speaking ex officio...
I second Liz's comment about it being hard (maybe impossible) for us to
be general "note police". That's a battle we can't win because our
file would soon become, de facto, a place for "Topics of Interest to
Bonnie, Holly, Liz, and Maggie". That's diametrically opposite to our
actual goal.
I also *strongly* second her request that we all take responsibility as
individuals for social control in here. I would only suggest a slight
alteration in her list of actions (I know she probably didn't order her
list, but it looks that way). I would first do the reality test, then
ask the author for action (perhaps in concert with your reality
tester(s) so it's clear you aren't being a crank), and finally --if all
else has failed-- make contact with one of us for intervention.
in Sisterhood,
=maggie
|
621.78 | | COMET::BRUNO | Beware the Night Writer! | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:07 | 7 |
|
Actually, I think the FWO topics have that element of " We can
do whatever we want (to men) and they are helpless to stop us".
It's all a matter of point of view.
Greg
|
621.79 | ditto | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:07 | 3 |
| May I add a third here....nothing new in addition.
Bonnie
|
621.80 | From 'nother side | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:15 | 11 |
| re: .78
To me it feels more like "We can ask for what we'd like, but
we have no power to force compliance."
As usual, this be just one view. . .
Steve (who parenthetically learned that he can't spot his own
silly typos; like it's spelled "hopEless", dummy; and thanx
to ~--e--~ for helping me reduce my "Fool Quotient")
|
621.81 | I am quite serious | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:32 | 10 |
| Actually, I am quite offended by Steven's analogy and would ask
that it be re-written, leaving out the bit about "having the same
mind-set as a rapist".
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
621.83 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Lyra RA 18h 28m 37s D 31d 49m | Fri Jan 15 1988 05:29 | 25 |
| I think that Eagle's analogy is a bit strong, for much the
reason given in .81, but I have to agree with it in essence.
Thanks to Eagle for putting it into words.
To take it a little further, it seems to me that a "Women Only
Please" note in an open file strikes me as akin to saying "I'd
like to walk down the street without being assaulted", only in
not quite so direct a way. The suggestion that women need a
women-only file in order to have some "privacy" strikes me as
essentially saying, "if women don't want to be assaulted, they
should stick to "their own section of town".
To me, it doesn't matter whether one agrees with "women-only
topics" or not. I don't like them because I feel that they
inhibit communication between the sexes�, but I also feel enough
respect for the women in this file to accept their desires for
such topics and to not intrude in those topics.
� And, in the spirit of the rape analogy, starting such a topic
feels like a woman saying "I want to walk down this street without
fear of assault, so men should please stay off this street."
I know that some of this seems contradictory, but that's life.
--- jerry
|
621.84 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Jan 15 1988 08:49 | 24 |
| re .82:
> If it takes being offensive to generate thought then
> maybe it is because the theory has a disquieting ring of truth?
Perhaps you should read the article in SOAPBOX about improper methods
of argument. To claim that because I am offended by an insult that
the insult must be true is probably more offensive than the original
insult.
As I recall, there is only ONE instance of a male replying to a
FWO note, and it was not me. Is the wish to talk to someone or to
join in a conversation indicative of the "mind-set of a rapist"?
I do not need to be black to offended by the use of "nigger" and
taking offense at the accusation of "rapist" does not indicate that
I am a rapist.
I insist that you retract your statement.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
621.85 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Fri Jan 15 1988 09:26 | 12 |
| Steven,
1) How come you weren't offended when I suggested the same thing?
2) I don't believe that eagles was referring to "fwo" topics, but
the whole tone of the notesfile for the last few months.
3) I don't remember eagles' exact words, but I don't think he said
that the _wish_ to join conversations is "indicative...". I believe
he was talking about the action itself.
4) There has been more than one instance of men replying to fwo
notes. In several cases, this has led to the note being changed.
liz augustine
|
621.86 | Oh, yeah... why don't we step over to note xxx | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Fri Jan 15 1988 11:14 | 6 |
|
Gee, Liz, maybe you moderators could create a "step-outside" note.
You know a place where men could go and shoot pistols (or whatever)
at each other at 50 paces, and leave the rest of us out of their duels.
Justine
|
621.87 | More analogies - but to what end? | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Fri Jan 15 1988 13:47 | 49 |
| Re: .73 "Eagle's analogy"
That's more than a bit strong - it's wrong (in my humble opinion).
That's like saying "I want to walk down the streets and not see
any males around, that way I won't be raped.." Now if that were
changed to "I want to walk down the streets without seeing any rapists
around..." it would be a bit more reasonable. There is a big
difference between "forcing your opinions on someone" and allowing
people to express their opinion.
On this whole issue:
Using racism in an example (replacing sexism):
A black man stands on a New York street corner talking (to anyone
who will listen) about his opinions on the current Government.
On a corner opposite him, a white man does the same thing. The
police come along, and tell the black man that if he wants to speak,
he must go to Noatak, Alaska. Meanwhile, the white man can
continue to speak as he pleases.
The government says that his right to free expression is not being
denyed. He may speak in Alaska. The people in New York feel that
he might attack them, so he is not wanted there.
Is this fair? No. Substitute "Male in Womannotes" for "black man"
and "Female in Womannotes" for "white male". Further substitute
"moderators" for police, and *wow* it all looks very familiar.
"Seperate but Equal" - Civil rights legislation killed that idea
a long time ago. Regardless of *why* people want it, it is still
*wrong*. It seems that "seperate but equal" is OK, as long as
it favors the majority...
I understand the feelings of many of the noters here who feel that
they get more meaningful replies and less "static" when they ask
for Woman-only replies. That does not make it right. Punishing
an entire class of noters for the actions of a few is like saying
(using a previous analogy) that "blacks cause crime - so I don't
want any blacks in my neighborhood". It's just wrong... You
don't *know* that the black family in will cause crime. They may
be more morally upright than anyone else in your neighborhood.
It is unfair to condemn them for the actions of other members of
their race. That is prejudice and descrimination. The same
thing is occuring here, and it's sad.. :-(
Dave
|
621.88 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Fri Jan 15 1988 14:22 | 25 |
| One quick observation (I have several more thoughts, but
very little time at the moment).
.73 stated very clearly that what he had was a theory; qualified
it further by stating it was ". . .opinion" (something like
"bumble-headed"), then started with "Assertion".
I think it's fair to argue whether the theory is valid (preferably
in reasonable, mutually supportive language), but it seems a little
harsh to me to "insist" on retraction.
Please understand, I also have mixed feelings about the analogy,
but, stating the way Steven did, it seems to me that insisting
on a retraction amounts to insisting that he retract is opinion.
Also, I think the intent of using the rape analogy was to highlight
the issue of *force*. While I still feel that the word "rape"
is a little strong, I do feel there is some validity in the analogy
(see .74).
Does anyone else feel that the word "rape" itself, because of the highly
emotional nature of the act, is a risky word to use in an analogy?
Steve
|
621.89 | Back to English 101. . . | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Fri Jan 15 1988 14:29 | 11 |
| re: .88 (mine. . .obviously not my day to write well. . .)
o make that "bird-brained" not bumble-headed
o ". . .highly emotional nature. . ." I shoulda said that the
*reaction* to the act tends to be highly emotional.
Time to re-boot the brain. . .
Steve
|
621.90 | semantics? | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Jan 15 1988 14:34 | 19 |
| RE: Using the word "rape" in the analogy currentyl under scrutiny:
Rape is the most extreme example of the mindset mentioned. Namely,
that male "attention" <in whatever form> may always be forced on
women.
It's just that - an extreme example. A less extreme example was
given as well. As an example of the mindset, it serves very well.
Maybe it even makes people think twice. Maybe people *oughta*
think twice.
So, as an *example*, I have no problem with it - and I believe
that was more the intention. As an *analogy* - well, the level of
violence in this conference certainly can't be said to be equal
to the violence of a rape. The point, however, was the *mindset*,
not the level of violence involved.
--DE
|
621.92 | On Rudeness | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Fri Jan 15 1988 18:28 | 27 |
| re: .72
It's a matter of discourtesy pure and simple: the equivalent
of somebody walking up and joining a conversation uninvited, and
without even a by-your-leave. It's RUDE to do that ...
If I wander over to some collegues/acquaintences at a party, and they
tell me to go away, because they only want to talk to women, I'd feel
they were being quite rude.
I think the issue in this notesfile has always been
-- some men are obnoxious oafs.
-- I don't want to hear their opinions (yet again) on this issue.
-- So, I'll say "no men may reply."
This, in my view, is directly analogous to
-- some <Ethnics> are thieves.
-- I don't want any thieves in my neighbourhood.
-- So, I'll say "<Ethnics> can live in <EthnicTown>."
Martin.
|
621.93 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Jan 15 1988 20:11 | 104 |
| re .73-.91:
I am truly amazed that it is not only condoned but commended when
someone calls a number of people "rapists". Yet earlier a man was
jumped all over for using the phrase "claws extended". I really
did not expect the moderators to allow such an accusation to remain
unedited, yet not only did they let it stand, they actively applauded
it. I am steadily losing my respect for both this file and its
moderators.
================================================================================
Note 621.76 MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE
...
When you
feel intruded upon or [*]offended[*], don't wait for someone to "fix"
it for you. You can do several things:
- ask the offending noter to reconsider, delete, and/or rewrite.
[I have]
- ask another noter what they think (do a reality check)
- contact a moderator; explain what the problem is and what action
you'd like her to take.
[I would have except for the moderators' overwhelming support for the assertion]
[621.76 MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE> Your theory strikes some chords for me.
[621.77 MOSAIC::TARBET> I also resonate with the Eagle's thesis.
[621.79 YAZOO::B_REINKE> May I add a third here....nothing new in addition.
================================================================================
Note 621.84 TFH::MARSHALL
re .82:
> If it takes being offensive to generate thought then
> maybe it is because the theory has a disquieting ring of truth?
...
I insist that you retract your statement.
[This WAS poorly stated, previously I was merely offended at the use of the
term rapist, with the quoted statement, Steven is accusing anyone who is
offended of being so also. It is this that I am asking to be retracted]
================================================================================
Note 621.85 MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE
Steven,
1) How come you weren't offended when I suggested the same thing?
[I must have missed it. Does that mean I cannot be offended now?]
2) I don't believe that eagles was referring to "fwo" topics, but
the whole tone of the notesfile for the last few months.
.73> Males who would "force their ideas" upon unwilling women
.73> in an "FWO Topic" have the same mind-set about proving their
.73> power over helpless women "victims" as the real rapist does
.73> in the literal sense.
3) I don't remember eagles' exact words, but I don't think he said
that the _wish_ to join conversations is "indicative...". I believe
he was talking about the action itself.
[This was in response to Eagle's statement that the reason I am offended
is due to his assertion's "ring of truth".]
================================================================================
Note 621.88 HANDY::MALLETT
.73 stated very clearly that what he had was a theory; qualified
it further by stating it was ". . .opinion" (something like
"bumble-headed"), then started with "Assertion".
[Oh, okay then, in my "humble opinion" I will make an "assertion" that you
are a child-molester. Do you see my point now? This is the semantic equivalent
of what Eagle was saying in .73]
================================================================================
Note 621.90 VINO::EVANS
RE: Using the word "rape" in the analogy current[ly] under scrutiny:
Rape is the most extreme example of the mindset mentioned. Namely,
that male "attention" <in whatever form> may always be forced on
women.
[it was not just an example or an analogy, read this again:
.73> Males who would "force their ideas" upon unwilling women
.73> in an "FWO Topic" have the same mind-set about proving their
.73> power over helpless women "victims" as the real rapist does
.73> in the literal sense.
[He is not saying that an intrusion is like a rape, he is saying that men who
intrude are rapists, I see a world of difference between the two statements.]
================================================================================
Note 621.91 PARSEC::THOMPSON
Sometimes you gotta say what you feel even if nobody "agrees"
and you end up apologizing (or retracting or over-qualifying)
because nothing said in notes ever appears to change attitudes.
[Eagle, I do understand what you were trying to say. But you cannot call
someone a rapist in a corporate document, (which is what this really is,
not a tennis club) no matter what kind of qualifiers you put around it.]
|
621.94 | | COLORS::TARBET | | Fri Jan 15 1988 21:04 | 28 |
| <--(.93)
No, Steve, Eagle was *not* calling anyone "rapist"! To call someone a
rapist means to allege that they have committed rape at least once.
Eagle did nothing of the kind. What he *did* do was to allege that men
who would force their opinions on women in the face of a clear request
not to do so share the same sort of confused and unhealthy dominance
needs that rapists do, albeit (we can hope) to a much reduced degree.
<--(.92? Martin, anyhow)
Your analogy to a party feels apt, Martin, but I'm not sure how
far it can be pushed since the two dynamics are so different. Let's
try.
Let's presume that you come upon a small group of women off in some
room at a party, obviously having an intimate rather than a general
conversation. You notice a number of sideways glances directed at you
as you approach, and the conversation clearly falters. From what you've
overheard, it's nothing earthshakingly intimate, but it's pretty clear
that the women have been made uncomfortable by your approach. Do you
wade right in, armored in "right" and uncaring of the obvious
discomfort your presence has produced? No, I'd make book that *you*
wouldn't. Just as you don't here. You, Martin Minow, are sensitive of
and responsive to the needs of others...even if you sometimes neither
understand nor sympathise with them.
=maggie
|
621.95 | | COMET::BRUNO | Beware the Night Writer! | Fri Jan 15 1988 22:56 | 28 |
|
Re: .94
If that is your analogy, perhaps you can answer this: Since
when does a person hold an intimate discussion (even not
"earthshakingly" intimate) in a way so that people on some 22,000
nodes can see and read it? It seems as if 'intimate' belongs in
E-mail. My analogy of this is more like:
A member of a certain group writes a letter-to-the-editor in
the local paper. It is about a topic of interest to many
readers and not just members of that specific group. The
writer, however, insists that no letters-to-the-editor be
written in reference to that person's letter, except by
members of that person's specific group. The paper is not
owned by that group, but that group wishes to exert control
over that paper which is not truly theirs.
Greg
PS: To bring the 'seperate but equal' topics into the analogy, the
writer will allow letters from non-members of her group in the
Dear Abby column in another section of the paper.
|
621.97 | response to S. Marshall | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Sat Jan 16 1988 10:47 | 38 |
| To Steven Marshall:
_I_ am truly amazed that by complaining like this, you're appearing to
exhibit the very behavior that we've been talking about. It doesn't
matter what the analogy is. The fact is that several men have been
using "force" and arguments centering around the first ammendment,
naziism, and south africa to bully their way into (so far 3 out of 650)
conversations that women would like to carry on amongst themselves.
It's just plain rude, intrusive and insensitive. The harder you (all)
push, the more conclusively you prove our point. I hope you will review
previous notes in this string in an effort to understand our message.
That's Liz the person speaking.
Now for Liz the moderator. You say that you're steadily losing respect
for the entire file and its moderators (actually, it's unfair to accuse
Holly, since she's been away this week). Two thoughts come to mind.
People have many differences of opinion. For example, when you can't
convert someone to your own religious beliefs, do you tell them
you're offended and then that you've lost respect for them? I hope
that you'll see the parallel with this situation. (unless, of course,
this argument has been reduced to a semantic discussion about whether
eagles was expressing an opinion or a moral certainty). I've found
that many people argue this way: "I have a belief. Unless you can
prove to me that you share that belief, I will lose respect for
you and announce that loss publicly." This reduces discussion to
emotional nit-picking.
Now (my second thought), you've lost respect for the mods because
we've expressed an opinion different from yours. Actually, I can't
see what else we've done to earn this loss of respect. You claim
that you wouldn't think of discussing this situation with us because
we disagree with you and therefore you'd waste your time. Good point,
but not necessarily a valid one. I don't pretend to speak for all
the moderators, but I'm not willing to make blanket statements about
our future behavior, and I know me better than you do.
With some amount of respect left,
Liz Augustine
|
621.98 | | COLORS::TARBET | | Sat Jan 16 1988 17:56 | 12 |
| <--(.95)
Greg, I can't remember whether you've lived in the Boston area. If you
have (and maybe even if not) you'll be aware of a column called
"Confidential Chat" in the Boston Globe newspaper. It's a women's
self-help "notefile" the content of which looks quite a lot like our
file here, with topics both trivial and poignant freely intermingled.
Yes men also write...though to my knowledge (four years of on-and-off
reading) only very rarely and then very quietly. I wonder why we can't
get the same sort of courteous treatment here?
=maggie
|
621.99 | While waiting for the meringue to cool | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Sat Jan 16 1988 18:24 | 17 |
| re: .93
Let's presume that you come upon a small group of women off in some
room at a party, obviously having an intimate rather than a general
conversation. You notice a number of sideways glances directed at you
as you approach, and the conversation clearly falters.
At which point, I decide I'm at the wrong party and leave. (Taking what's
left of my bittersweet chocolate mousse meringue with me).
Which is exactly what has happened to this file over the past few
months. The men (and to some extent, women) who have continued
to communicate here are either thick skinned or committed -- or both.
Martin.
(To be continued, I suspect, at Ann's tonight.)
|
621.100 | | COMET::BRUNO | Beware the Night Writer! | Sat Jan 16 1988 22:46 | 20 |
|
Re: .98
No, I have never spent any considerable time in Boston. I,
consequently, have not read the column, but your mentioning it does
sort of clarify things. Are you saying that you wish men would
contribute rarely and quietly? This is my main justification for
opposing these FWO topics. They started off being justified by
the very real problem of *SOME* men being rude. Now, the banner
has been taken up by those who have *ALWAYS* wanted *ALL MEN* out.
That initial justification doesn't even seem to matter anymore.
As I said before, the FWO topics are just a piecemeal path to a
gender-exclusive conference. We have been criticized for using
reasoning like 'corporate policy', 'first amendment', etc., but
we just have to face it. They are TRUE. They APPLY. There is
no reason for shutting out those of us who wish to retain the free,
open interplay of ideas that WN once was.
Greg
|
621.102 | | VIKING::TARBET | | Sun Jan 17 1988 12:42 | 27 |
| <--(.99 .. .101)
Since this seems to be a very hard topic, can we try to reduce the
rhetoric around it?
We're interested in providing a space in which women can discuss things
of interest to them. We're not interested in providing a space where
men can discuss things of interest to themselves; that role is filled,
presumably, by =mennotes=. We're also not interested in providing a
place where women and men can discuss things of common interest; that
role is being filled, and very nicely too, by =human_relations=. Now,
none of this says that there isn't a fair amount of overlap and slop,
or that the Note Police should be prowling around vigorously enforcing
some abstract standard of purity. But it DOES argue that each file
should be able to serve the needs of the people for which it was
established without being forced to suffer harrassment or carry
on a running battle.
Now, someone has said that there have been 3 FWO topics out of >600. If
true (I don't remember if anyone has said that they actually checked),
that means that FWO topics represent slightly less than .005 of the
total. One half of one percent! All the rest have been open to equal
participation by both women AND men.
So, whose needs are being better met here?
=maggie
|
621.103 | Respect >> Policy | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Sun Jan 17 1988 18:31 | 29 |
| First, for those of you so fond of quoting percentages of FWO notes,
try looking at the *real* figures. Since FWO notes started, they
have made up
about 8-10% of the new notes. This is a bit more realistic...
(Kinda like saying only 2% of the people in the world have ever
used a car, if you count all the people who have lived since the
dawn of time...)
It seems to me there is a *very large* difference between "respecting"
the wishes of the author (with regard to FWO notes) and making it
*policy* to remove notes from men.
To use the party analogy, if a group of women were talking about
a "sensitive subject" and seemed uncomfortable if I drew near, I
would have the good sense to go elsewhere. If a member of that
group said "Leave. We don't want men here", I would be offended,
because of the *rudeness* of that person. That is exactly what
is happening here. If I want to enter that conversation, I have
every *right* to do so, even if it reflects poorly on me.
"Pre-emptive rudeness" by a member of that group, or by the
policy in this conference is unfair to those who have not done anything
wrong. I would like to see the policy retracted, but allow the
notes to continue, with respect governing the replies, not the iron
fist of policy. I'm suprised no-one has asked for a "vote" on this
:-)
Dave
|
621.104 | I think your off base... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven is a perfectly useless state. | Mon Jan 18 1988 01:05 | 19 |
| Reply to .103, Low,
I think you're whining. 8-10% of *new* notes is not a problem. If you
look at all the replies to determine the percentage of FWOs and replies
to open topics and replies, it's approx. 3.5%. What does it matter to
you?
If you want to enter the conversation you have every right to. The
moderators also have the right and responsibility to hide your replies
where applicable. I will support them 100%. In fact, if the moderators
want I'll volunteer to moderate and I WILL set hidden notes that
challenge FWO topics. Moderators?
Further, I started a topic for women only and a *rude* man replied to the
topic. To save the moderators grief I renamed the topic and made it
open to men also. Respecting the authors will is *nonexistant* by some
men in this conference. I'm convinced that whiners will overcome if the
moderators don't get tough.
|
621.105 | | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Mon Jan 18 1988 08:26 | 28 |
| Re: .104
"If you want to enter the conversation you have every right to"
"The moderators have every right to hide your replies where applicable"
Well, which is it? Does that mean I can reply to a FWO note, and
then have it hidden? What a deal! Just like Russia... I have
every right to say what I want, and the government has every right
to exile me to Siberia!!! WOW! And I thought it wasn't fair!!!
For all the rudeness you seem to see, I beleive that only 1 reply
out of over 100 to FWO notes was from a male. To quote you...
"It's approx 3.5% [actually lower]. What does it matter to you?"
Well, if you think I'm whining because of the treatment of this
subject, then you're entitled to your opinion. I'm sure there
are people who though MLK was whining during his life, too.
[Note: I am *not* comparing myself to MLK - just making a statement
about people who voice their displeasure over descimination]
Also, my first name is Dave, and I would appreciate being addressed
by it.
Thank you.
Dave
|
621.106 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Mon Jan 18 1988 09:25 | 64 |
| This is painful reading.
It's beginning to feel like the high level meeting that was mostly
wasted fighting over the size and shape of the conference table.
We have a powerful resource here. Womannotes has the potential
to be of great value to both men and women. We are the first
generation in history, I believe, that has the capability of having
simultaneous, worldwide, relatively inexpensive discussions on personal
topics. For that reason, all the analogies fall a little short
of being truly helpful.
When women are free to have conversations with one another, some truths
that have been stifled for centuries under layers of cultural
conditioning come to the surface. This is very important to me,
although I first experienced it in a slightly different setting. But it
was the beginning of my finding my personal power, strength and
identity. I think that this medium of communication can be both
very public and very intimate. It's public in the sense that everyone
may listen. And it's private in the sense that FWO topics allow
women to shape the flow of what is being said in some instances.
That's what I'm committed to protecting. I am not so much interested
in excluding as protecting.
I guess my analogy, though imperfect, would be having the good sense
not to walk on newly planted grass in a public park where walking
on the grass is allowed. By right you can walk on it, but if you
can find another place to walk for a while, it will have a chance
to grow.
(I'm still leaning toward the partial solution of FWO topics followed
by a basenote which supports open discussion of the FWO topic.
No one is excluded from participating, and the awkwardness is minimized.
At the same time, women can shape the flow of *one* path of the topic,
but need not feel obligated to respond to entries which feel to
them like intrusive interruptions.)
And it's not often that FWO notes are even going to be appropriate or
needed. I'm sure that the discussion of them already outweighs all the
FWO notes that would be written in the next 2 years.
I started this topic by saying this is painful. For the last month,
women have spoken and written to me to say that they are dropping
their participation in this conference because it's all fighting.
They hung in for a while, but eventually felt that it wasn't worth
it. I do feel that it's worth it, and I do care. I think we all
would rather return to the lively discussions of last year.
It's my personal observation that a number of people are acting out, or
in some other way bringing, a great deal of personal pain from their
pasts to this file. From the bottom of my heart, I firmly believe that
we cannot solve the majority of those problems here. (I went to therapy
for years to work through a great deal of the personal pain I felt, and
I could not have done it in a setting like this one.)
We can all listen, and that sometimes helps. We can support one
another. We can also challenge one another. But when we start going
around in vicious circles on very primal issues, perhaps we each need
to look elsewhere for some of our support and answers. When I start to
feel overwhelmed with the amount of pain I see around me, my friends in
12-step programs often remind me, "You didn't cause it, you can't
control it, and you can't cure it". I try to remember it.
Holly
|
621.107 | | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Mon Jan 18 1988 09:35 | 25 |
| 621.102 (VIKING::TARBET):
We're interested in providing a space in which women can discuss things
of interest to them.
However, in the introduction to Womannotes, the moderators write:
1.0:
Welcome to =WOMANNOTES=, the notefile dedicated to topics of interest
to women.
1.1:
Dr. Tom suggested that I make explicit the fact that participation
by men is welcomed and encouraged.
I sense a contradiction here. If you intend this to be a notesfile
where "women can discuss things of interest to them," I would appreciate
it if you state that in the introductory "groundrules" note, so that
those members of this community who are thereby excluded clearly understand
that we are unwelcome. I would also appreciate it if you would delete
note 1.1 as it incorrectly sets expectations as to the nature of this
notesfile.
Martin.
|
621.109 | Numbers without percentages | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Jan 18 1988 11:04 | 23 |
| Well, Dave, if you want us to look at numbers, I will. Somehow
you failed to define "new" in new notes. I looked at Notes 600-657,
using "new" to mean "since Ann's previous base note".
5 notes were empty. 30 notes were written by women. 23 notes were
written by men. One woman wrote an anonymous note. Two men wrote
anonymous notes. One woman wrote a note asking for replies from
a [sapient] subset of non-terrestrials only. One woman wrote a
pair of notes, one asking for replies from women, and one asking
for replies from men. It was a feasibility study. One woman wrote
a note asking for replies from women, and this is the note which
started all this commenting. One man wrote a note explicitly
asking for replies from women, and a moderator added another copy
of it for men to reply to. Another man wrote a note implicitly
asking for replies from women. One man wrote a note asking for
replies from men. One man wrote a note to which he apparently
expected that only he would reply (but this was ignored).
Dear, dear, dear! It looks like men have been trying to do most
of the excluding in this notefile. Whereever could that have come
from?
Ann B.
|
621.110 | Maybe if we ignore him, he'll go away | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Jan 18 1988 11:27 | 14 |
| Oh dear. I find myself agreein with Dave Low, of all people.
[Is it full moon? :-)]
A man at a party not only has the *right* to join an all-woman
conversation (as frequently happens), but if he does, ignoring all
warnings signals; the women become the *rude* ones if THEY ask
HIM to not to join. Female double-bind. 'Twas ever thus.
For about the 100th time, I will say that this notesfile is a
microcosm of society at large; Women cannot expect any different
treatment here than anywhere else.
Dawn
|
621.111 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:03 | 31 |
| <--(.110)
� For about the 100th time, I will say that this notesfile is a
� microcosm of society at large; Women cannot expect any different
� treatment here than anywhere else.
Dawn, you positively depress me when you say things like that...mostly
because I think you're absolutely right.
Okay, the party example was a lousy one, and I apologetically retract
it.
But whether or not the problem is real doesn't depend on whether or not
I'm clever enough to pick a good example. The problem *is* still real;
men do really control most agendas, and even in here women's control is
fairly regularly subverted. We've lost many women members because of
that fact, and the perceived difficulty of meeting women's needs in
here has caused the creation of a whole new file!
We have a very small (less than six, probably) but very vocal minority
of men determined to enforce their equal-access rights at whatever
cost, a vanishingly-small minority of men (two, if I've counted
correctly) who are willing to speak up vigorously for the right of
women to set the agenda here, and a large group of men who regard
themselves as feminists but who nonetheless either remain silent or
support the "equal-access" claimants. As Dawn says, just like the
outside world.
So how do we solve the problem?
=maggie
|
621.113 | Take Back the File... | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:37 | 12 |
|
I rather liked your party analogy, Maggie, because it reminded me
of the one Womannotes party I attended last summer. A group of
women would get to talking about issues important to them and then
when a man walked by, they would lower their voices. I have been
glad to see women taking responsibility for getting what they need
from this file. I am sorry to see the friction it's caused, but
itt seems to me that we have to stop lowering our voices and stop
asking for permission to talk to each other!
Justine
|
621.114 | Is this the way to go?? | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:41 | 25 |
| Re: .109
I don't care *who* does the segregation, it's still not right.
I think women are more sensitive to the issue of segregation
than men (in a rash generalization). I am opposed to it as policy,
though.
Re: .110
Gee, thanks for that wholesale endorsement! :-)
:-) :-)
Re: .111
Maggie,
Hopefully, we can stop all the fighting in this conference if
we just hide/delete offensive notes (after asking the authors
to re-word/re-consider) and not exclude ideas based on a pre-concieved
notion of what the noter *might* say. This should lead to a less
turbulent atmosphere, and one in which everyone feels safe to
express their thoughts and feelings.
Dave
|
621.115 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:59 | 16 |
| re .114
� Hopefully, we can stop all the fighting in this conference if
� we just hide/delete offensive notes (after asking the authors
� to re-word/re-consider) and not exclude ideas based on a pre-concieved
� notion of what the noter *might* say. This should lead to a less
� turbulent atmosphere, and one in which everyone feels safe to
� express their thoughts and feelings.
Dave, =w= is already accused of having a "radical" [snort] "feminist
party line" and anyone disagreeing with that party line is supposedly
flamed to a crisp. If we were to ask our mods to simply _delete_
the rude notes, we would receive _more_ flame and turbulence, not
less.
Lee
|
621.116 | Pyhhric victory in the making | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Mon Jan 18 1988 14:31 | 45 |
| I had told myself I wouldn't contribute further to this argument,
but I felt I needed to comment on some of what's been said.
First of all, I agree completely with Martin Minow and Steve Marshall
in their views, and to a great extent with Dave Low. I am not trying
to set the agenda here - I am hoping to persuade enough people that
the recent change in direction of this conference is a bad idea. But
if it's going to change to "topics of interest ONLY to women so men
please keep your noses out", please say so explicitly and I will
respect it.
The cocktail party analogy is a very common and very dangerous one.
It is simply not true. As was said earlier, your cocktail party
conversations are not broadcast to 50,000 people. Perhaps a better
analogy is to say that the group of women at the party are shouting
at the tops of their lungs, and what's more saying some things that
touch me deeply, but I am supposed to cover my ears and not pay
attention to some selected portion of what they are discussing.
At some point I decide that, no matter how much I care about the issues
they are discussing, it's just too painful to have to keep track of
when I am and am not allowed to join the conversation, so I just
go elsewhere. You've just lost an ally.
How many more allies are you prepared to alienate before you are
satisfied?
I suppose there are two, entirely incompatible, ways of looking
at this conference:
1. It is a place for women and men to discuss women's issues.
2. It is a place for women to discuss whatever they want
among themselves. Men are allowed to listen if they want to,
but must not disturb the women.
The current introduction to the conference, and the manner in which
this conference has been run until recently, reflects the first
approach. Recent indications from some of the members and moderators
lean toward the second.
My view is that the exclusion of men from full participation will
result in a LOSS in support by men as a whole. If the women here
can live with that, I can accept that, but I think it's a big mistake.
Steve
|
621.117 | absolutely! proves my point | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Jan 18 1988 15:56 | 6 |
| re: .116
Maggie...I rest my case.
--DE
|
621.118 | Time-delayed entry? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Jan 18 1988 16:59 | 23 |
| After thinking about the party analogy for a bit:
Would temporal rather than spatial "segregation" have more/fewer/
same/different disadvantages? For example, would the request,
"Would men please refrain from replying to this topic until January
25th [at 4:45 P.M.]?" be acceptable? Thus, if a man has a unique
contribution to make, he can make it then. (The down side is that,
if it's not a unique idea, he gets to see someone else post it first.)
Ann B.
P.S. Martin, I couldn't help but think of some other scenaria:
You walk into a cluster of women who haven't signalled any unease,
and they ask you if you know where you can get tampons for less
than four dollars per box. (*That* is the time to take your chocolate
meringue and leave.) You pass that cluster of women who signalled
unease with your ears open and hear the fragment "yeast infec",
and decide you are glad they signalled. You walk into a cluster of
men who haven't signalled any unease, and find they are tearing
apart the DECtalk parser. You walk past a cluster of men who have
signalled some unease, and...
Sometimes the personal is political, and sometimes it's just personal.
|
621.119 | should moderators become editors? | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Mon Jan 18 1988 17:38 | 28 |
|
A newspaper is readable because it has an editor. Here the
moderators may have to play the role of editor. If a paper printed
all the letters it recieved it would become as unreadable as this
notes file is getting.
At this point I am begining to feel you moderators should take
a heavier hand, and delete a bunch of the argumentative notes that
do not seem to contribute to the substance of the discussions.
A few might be offended, but that's the way it goes. The editor
(moderator) has a right and duty to help this be a usable forum.
If that means men must be kicked out, well ok, but I really think a few
deletions per day might do the trick. Apologies for deleting
someone's note should not be required, would an editor apologize
to you if he didn't print your letter to the newspaper? This
editorial policy should not be based on sex, and there should not
be any list of persons to be excluded. Each letter should be
judged on it's own merits; Does it merit being 'distributed' to
thousands of potential readers?
I don't think these problems can be fixed by rules or boundaries.
The only real fix will require some conscious controls.
Alan.
PS. I will support the moderators *whatever* they decide to do
about all this argumentative craziness. Maybe it will
just go away with time.
|
621.121 | | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven is a perfectly useless state. | Mon Jan 18 1988 18:05 | 8 |
| Reply to .116; Lionel,
Why do you think that men have anything of value (loss of support) to
add in this conference? Can such value be added in another, more
appropriate conference?
I definitely lean toward the second view and am not threatened by such
a view. Are you threatened?
|
621.122 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Mon Jan 18 1988 18:08 | 35 |
| re .97:
> The fact is that several men have been using "force" and arguments
> centering around the first ammendment, naziism, and south africa to
> bully their way into (so far 3 out of 650) conversations that women
> would like to carry on amongst themselves.
The fact is that several men have simply replied to notes where they
have been requested not to reply. To apply words like "force"
and "bully" is completely inappropriate. There is no violence or
threat of violence involved at all. "It's just plain rude, intrusive
and insensitive", and that is all it is, and hardly comparable to
rape.
> "I have a belief. Unless you can prove to me that you share that
> belief, I will lose respect for you and announce that loss publicly."
This is not the situation at all. I see a friend who used to be
open and fair minded, turning into a bigot. Attempts to point out
this change have been returned with more bigotry and hostility.
It is this that is causing my loss of respect. It is not just a
"difference of opinion".
I am not trying to "force" this file to cater to the whims of men,
or to allow rude obnoxious behavior to go unanswered. All I have
ever been trying to say is that the appropriateness of a note should
be judged purely by its content and not by the sex of the author.
To do otherwise is prejudice, pure and simple.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
621.124 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Mon Jan 18 1988 19:30 | 26 |
| Re: .121
Morgan, I am at a loss to understand your position. What I meant by
"loss of support" is that many men, myself included, have had their
"consciousnesses raised" through full and active participation in
this conference. Many of us want to work alongside women, fighting
against inequality and discrimination.
By turning off the very men who are trying to help, it is a net loss
for women. That is my opinion, and you are free to disagree with it.
However, Morgan, you seem to be frequently misstating the argument
as "men want to talk about men stuff in WOMANNOTES". This is
absolutely untrue (at least for THIS man). I want to discuss women's
issues. I want to exchange ideas, I want to understand, I want to
help in any way I can. If I am excluded, then I won't exchange ideas,
I won't understand, and I'll be less able to help. Can you see this?
I am not threatened by anything that goes on here. I consider it
tacky for you to even suggest such a thing. Nor do I consider myself
a "whiner" as you are fond of saying.
If you truly believe that men have nothing of value to add in this
conference, then, Morgan, why are you here?
Steve
|
621.125 | | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven is a perfectly useless state. | Mon Jan 18 1988 20:09 | 45 |
| Reply to .124; Steve,
You can call me Mikie? or Mike. B^)
And what are the indications that you have gotten from women that the
stated purpose of this conference is one of raising *your* consciousness?
I will freely admit that that has happened in this conference but
is that the stated purpose of the conference? Not that I'm aware
of.
It is not a *net* (pardon the pun) loss. There are other conference
that are more appropriate for human relations. The question is "will
the whiners and net police let women have their own, private space to
do with as they please, un-emcumbered by male whiners". They have
enough problems and issues to deal with on their own. They do not need
net police and whiners.
No, I have stated that men whine about women wanting to exclude
them/men from topics or from this, single conference. Big deal. Let
them do what they want with the conference. And let them make a
decision without having to listen to whiners.
I brought up the comment about feeling threatened because it seems
that some men are threatened and WILL NOT ADMIT IT.
There are things that men can add to the conference but that added
value could be contributed in other conferences.
I am here to support women in their endevours and if they don't
want my help, there are other conferences to contribute too.
Let them have their conference back, it was stolen (borrowed?) with a
smile and not returned.
I think it would be a good idea to restrict the conference temporarily
till women can get back on track with their discussions. Another
effective manuver is to close the conference for two weeks or so and
rewrite the guidlines to conform more closely to that which will meet
the needs of women. I'll support them on that too.
What does it really, I mean really, matter to men anyway if they
are excluded from this conference or from topics? What is the cosmic
and cultural loss? I don't see any.
|
621.127 | | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven is a perfectly useless state. | Mon Jan 18 1988 20:52 | 4 |
| Reply to .126, Holt,
No I don't think so. Maybe they should just leave the women alone for
a while.
|
621.128 | only 2 left? | DECWET::JWHITE | mr. smarmy | Mon Jan 18 1988 21:10 | 4 |
|
Some of us have already said that we will respect any note that
asks us to keep out. Will you not join me?
|
621.129 | | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Mon Jan 18 1988 21:56 | 12 |
| re: .118:
P.S. Martin, I couldn't help but think of some other scenaria:
You walk into a cluster of women who haven't signalled any unease,
and they ask you if you know where you can get tampons for less
than four dollars per box.
I used to buy them at Metro on Framn�sbacken (the local supermarket
around the corner from our apartment) -- they were OB's and cost
about $1.50 for ten. But that was around 15 years ago. Do they really
cost four dollars now?
Martin.
|
621.130 | personal subjects | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Jan 18 1988 22:41 | 24 |
| Well that was actually a good answer...but honestly I would
have trouble talking about some really personal subjects with
most men, and certainly tampax and yeast infections are subjects
that most women would talk about with other women comfortably
but feel embarassed talking about with a man unless they all
regarded him as a close friend.
Sometimes this reminds me of when I was in 7th grade and the
boys wanted to know what it was that we were all talking about
at our girl scout meetings. We were at the time talking about
mensturation etc. and seeing movies on it. One boy became very
friendly with me and asked me to sit with him. (me who was not
*at all social*) and then he asked me to tell him what it was
that we were talking about after school. I felt, betrayed, embarassed,
and very uncomfortable and told him I would tell him. I then went
and talked to my friends and they told me that he had no right
to ask me that...and I felt used....
When a particular male displays a lack of sensitivity in this file
I find myself feeling echos of my embarassment then..
Tho my personal vote is that I welcome Martin and other equally
sensitive men, and enjoy their contributions
Bonnie
|
621.131 | Looking for a Win/Win | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Jan 19 1988 08:38 | 74 |
|
I have been thinking a lot about what a "win/win" could be here
since the situation feels like a losing one all the way
around if we continue to go in vicious circles.
When I try to categorize what I think is happening, I'm seeing 3 sets
of responses:
"Militant" women
"Moderate" women/"Respectful" men
"Militant" men
(please pardon the obvious oversimplification!)
I can't depict this here, but I'm visualizing the 3 groups as 2
overlapping boolean circles of men and women. The intersection
of the 2 circles contains the "moderate" women and "respectful" men.
The people in the last group are the easiest to work with most of the
time. If we somehow eliminated everyone else from the conference,
things would be more peaceful. But I don't think that's why we
are here. I'm grateful that there are a lot of people in the middle
category, but I want to hear from the others as well.
Given that this is womannotes, I feel a strong responsibility to
listen to what the most "militant" women have to say, and to help
create a space where they can participate and share their experiences
with us. I feel sad every time one of them tells me that their
leaving because they have more productive outlets for their resources.
I don't want this conference to be perceived as being here only
to meet this group's needs.
At the same time, I feel responsible to listen and correctly hear
what the most "militant" men are saying, but I also feel that the
moderators may have to make some decisions to get the conference
back on course. For me personally, the preferences of this group
come third if there is a conflict.
Here's my vision of a "win/win":
A large lively conference, open to both men and women
The C-R group model is used whereby all people are considered to
be "experts" on their own life experiences and listened to
respectfully whenever they are clearly speaking for themselves
(the details are in the note on this subject)
People agree to speak for themselves and not generalize, and moderators
take a more active role in this process
People feel free to challenge ideas, yet refrain from attacking
people
The Valuing Differences policy of Digital is posted in note #1,
and used as a guideline throughout the conference
People agree to discuss philosophical and religious beliefs as personal
beliefs, and to speak for themselves only
When there appears to be a conflict of needs, people agree to try
things for a period of time and evaluate the experiment
(For example, I propose that we try the following: For the next
3 months, we will allow FWO notes as long as there is an
adjacent string for open discussion of the topic by all men
and women. For the next 3 months we will not discuss the merits
of FWO notes. At the end of the time, we will evaluate the
experiment. We will listen to all opinions at that time, and
make a decision, with the help of a personnel or Valuing Differences
consultant if necessary.)
Holly
|
621.132 | Win/Win for Whom? | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Tue Jan 19 1988 09:19 | 15 |
|
Holly,
I need to tell you that when I read your last note (.131), I felt
sad and angry. I think that to list 3 groups as you did at least
visually suggests that Militant women and Militant men are somehow
equal fringe groups. What do you mean by "militant"?
Are you using the word the same way to describe women and men?
It almost felt to me like your next sentence might be: Women
talking about their generalized anger at men, and men questioning
the existence of wife abuse in this country are EQUALLY disruptive
to the file. I see the two as very different: one has a place in
a file called WOMANNOTES. The other doesn't.
Justine
|
621.133 | Good ideas! | ASD::LOW | Life begins at 80� | Tue Jan 19 1988 09:41 | 6 |
| Re: .131 - Holly
I like your ideas, and hope that they are implemented soon.
Dave
|
621.134 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Tue Jan 19 1988 10:47 | 32 |
| <--(.132)
Justine, I don't want to go putting words in Holly's mouth but I
read it as:
"Militant" women: overt separatists or other women who consider that
any file such as this has no business allowing men thru the door.
"Militant" men: (I'd've said "reactionary men" myself) overt MCPs plus
men who consider that since feminists are in favor of equality, we've
to provide it to others even though we're still deprived of it
ourselves. (Sorta like a capitalist demanding an equal share of a
socialist's money on the grounds that otherwise the socialist is
betraying her principles ;-} )
The middle crowd: the rest of us, with sociopolitical awareness and
sensitivity in various stages of growth, who want this file to be a
place where dialog can occur in a way beneficial to all people of
good will.
Our priorities here should be first the middle group, second the
"militant" women, and a poor third the "militant"/reactionary men.
That's my take on how she was dividing it out and setting priorities; I
may be very wide of the mark.
=maggie
|
621.135 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Tue Jan 19 1988 11:01 | 8 |
| I just got a mail message from a member of the community who pointed
out that one tactic used by the militant men is to claim that the most
of the women here are militant (i.e., separatist) rather than moderate
(i.e., strongly feminist but not separatist). To those men, any woman
who is not fully supportive of men in a men/women conflict is labelled
a militant separatist.
=maggie
|
621.136 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Jan 19 1988 11:18 | 16 |
| Maggie's explication was very accurate.
Justine, I decided to deliberately oversimplify to make a point.
I didn't feel that I was equating the 2 non-central groups, but
I suppose that by using the same adjective, that conclusion could
be drawn. "Reactionary" men says it even better. And the needs
of the so-called militant women should come before those of the
so-called militant men in this file if we have to choose.
I think *I'm* a militant woman at heart who has learned that I get
much more done using moderate tactics.
I'm sorry if you were offended -- I know oversimplifications are dangerous
for this reason.
Holly
|
621.137 | Militant man != MCP | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Tue Jan 19 1988 11:57 | 42 |
| re -1
> "Militant" men: (I'd've said "reactionary men" myself) overt MCPs plus
> men who consider that since feminists are in favor of equality, we've
> to provide it to others even though we're still deprived of it
> ourselves.
I guess that I would have to identify myself as a "Militant" man.
I am saddend that anyone interested in equality for men is lumped
in with Male Chovanist Pigs.
I had hoped that people who were sensitive to the way the system
victomizes women would also be able to apreciate that men also are
victoms of the same system for some of the same reasons. If I can't
find that here I don't expect it to find it in any other conference.
Men will have to wait and suffer until some future time when their
problems will be addressed. Somedays it seems to be an extremly
distant future.
> Our priorities here should be first the middle group, second the
> "militant" women, and a poor third the "militant"/reactionary men.
It is going to be a tough job for me to support a file that is
ineterested in equality for woman only. I will try to support
what I can and stay clear of all but the most distructive things
that I oppose.
God, this does leave a bad taste in my mouth. Those who are sensitive
enough to understand that they have having a negitive infuence,
leave. The only men that the left are the ones that are insensitive
of the damage that they do.
MJC O->
|
621.138 | Reactionary thoughts | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Tue Jan 19 1988 11:57 | 14 |
| re: .134:
"Militant" men: (I'd've said "reactionary men" myself) overt MCPs plus
men who consider that since feminists are in favor of equality, we've
to provide it to others even though we're still deprived of it
ourselves.
Well, if you're referring to me, I would say that if feminists want
equality for themselves, they must grant it to others even though
they're still deprived of it.
It's a slight change in the wording, but a large change in the meaning.
Martin.
|
621.140 | Lets not make the "Reactionary's" job easier, ok? | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Tue Jan 19 1988 12:40 | 54 |
|
Holly, I wrote this response off-line and then read your clarification,
but I'd like to post it anyway because I think this is an important
topic for women to discuss. I think the point Maggie made (via
mail from another noter) is what really made me boil. Men often
call women militant, strident (often translated to mean Lesbian)
in order to shut them up. I felt that your words (although
not intentionally) were helping those men with that work.
re .134
Well, Maggie, your paraphrase may in fact be what was meant, but I took
strong offense to the use of the word, "Militant" (a highly charged word)
to describe both women and men. I objected to the use of this word because
it seemed to be linking the so-called "strident" women members of this file
with the (as you call them) reactionary men who note here. I was also
offended because the visual placement of these 3 "groups" suggested a
sort of continuum where the most highly valued members were in the
middle (the middle described as a group containing women and men) and the
less highly valued members were on either extreme end of the continuum
and also contained both women and men.
It seems to me that if the women in this file keep talking to each other
when/if they want to and keep working to get what they need from this
space, then the true allies who are male will support us. Sometimes that
support means asking or answering questions and contributing to
discussions. Sometimes that support means listening quietly. I have been
glad to see the support that many of the men in this file have offered.
And I don't think that support will be jeopardized if we sometimes wish
to talk only with each other.
It would be nice if there were less conflict in this file. But I don't
think resolving conflict is the most important thing. Some folks have
described this space as a microcosm of the world around us, and as such,
it is doomed. It strikes me, though, that there's some hope in that
notion of this file as a microcosm, as well. I think there's great
cause for hope when women stand up for themselves and say what they
need. And it's not radical, "militant", "strident" (perhaps lesbian)
women who are doing all this self-assertion. It's women who are
involved with men, who love men, who value men saying something like this:
I'm glad men are in my life, but I want this one space to share
with and learn from other women. I value men's contributions
here, but I don't want men's participation to change the shape
and the direction of the file. If I see that happening, I will
speak up about it even though it's scary, and it means that
I may be opening myself up for attack from men and even from
other women.
I find women's ability to do that very encouraging.
Justine
|
621.141 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Tue Jan 19 1988 12:52 | 2 |
| Beautiful, Justine!
=m
|
621.142 | a clarification | VINO::EVANS | | Tue Jan 19 1988 13:38 | 26 |
| Justine, I couldn't agree more with the gist of your note.
You *did* ,however, make mention of people who has said that
this file was a microcosm of the world around us, and therefore,
doomed.
I am someone who has indeed said that this file is a microcosm of
the world around us. I also said that women probably can't expect
different treatment here.
I never used the word "doomed". "Doomed" implies 2 things: the future
and some negative feeling about it.
I always used the present tense, not the future. And I found the
response to my statement (or rather, the general lack of response
to be interesting, in and of itself).
What the future brings, I don't know. For the present, *I* certainly
notice no significant difference from how women are treated in this
file and in the society at large. I *do* notice some difference,
in that this is the only place I've ever heard a male defend a
women's right to (almost anything except equal pay) - to a group
of men. That is good news. But is it *enough* good news?
--DE
|
621.143 | | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Tue Jan 19 1988 14:02 | 36 |
| RE: .140 I like your indented paragraph at the end.
RE: "separatism, etc."
This argument has been going on for months now, and I
don't think that continuing this argument will force
anyone to agree with the opposite opinion. I second
the motion on a moratorium of this arguement.
I would like to see the "women-only" files continue if
the topic author deems it necessary. I don't always
agree that the topic should be "women-only", but I can
value the needs of the person who posted it. Maybe it's
not fair (read unequal) to those who are left out, but
it's just a tiny part of the world and maybe it will help
someone in some way. I have never expected life to be
totally fair, and I have never asked for complete equality.
(Sometimes I like to be equal, sometimes have the advantage,
and sometimes the disadvantage. Just make sure it
averages out to be equal.) If women have to agree with
men in order to get men to support them in their battle, will
women ever be truly equal?
Well, this is my opinion, and if a majority of women (sorry
men I'm not looking to meet your needs right now) disagree
with me, then I will abide by that majority's wishes. This
file can continue to meet the needs of both men and women,
and once in a while meet the needs of just women. Perhaps
after a while women won't have those needs that exclude men, but
meeting those needs will help us reach that point sooner.
Well, not the most articulate note I've written, but I hope
you get my drift. Let's stop bickering and get on with
the discussions.
...Karen (still reading, but hitting next unseen a lot lately)
|
621.144 | Sorry, Dawn | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Tue Jan 19 1988 14:02 | 11 |
|
Gee, Dawn, I guess I tacked more onto your words than was really
fair. I think that I have sometimes felt that our prospects for
meaningful change were gloomy, and so I attached the word doomed
to those feelings of mine. I'm sorry I misquoted you.
The more I see women asserting themselves, the more encouraged
(and less doomed) I feel.
Justine
|
621.145 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Jan 19 1988 14:44 | 78 |
| Some responses -
.137 (McCarleton)
What I think I said was that I am actively seeking a win/win situation
for all of us. If we are forced to choose and cannot create a win/win
situation, in womannotes my priorities are 1) moderate women/respectful
men 2)more militant women looking for a separatist environment or
at least FWO noting 3) militant or reactionary men.
It's a little bit (but not exactly) like the old system of triage.
Given the resources that we have to work with, divide the people with
needs into 1) those who will benefit greatly from intervention 2) those
who will be fine without intervention and 3) those who cannot benefit
from intervention. (Warning: these are not parallel analogies to my
original groups!) Triage assumes that all people are worthy of help
and attention, but that given the resources we have we sometimes have
to make choices. So how can *we* best choose where to put *our* resources?
This is womannotes, not human relations. We are presumably employed in
some other capacity than as full time noters and moderators. If we
can't create a win/win situation (and I think we can), then we may have
to make choices about what we can do. The list I made reflects my
personal beliefs about priorities *if* we have to choose.
And I'd rather choose than continue the present situation which
consists of a great deal of discord. For me constant fighting is
a lose/lose situation. I'd like to help change it, AND I am not
saying that a file with conflict would be preferable.
Re .140 (Justine)
By using quotation marks, I had intended to convey that my choice
of words was less than perfect. I'm glad you responded as you did.
It allowed me to clarify some things.
I said that working with the "middle group" would be the easiest
course, and that I *didn't* want to see us make choices based on
what was easiest. I tried to convey that I was seeking a win/win
strategy for all 3 groups.
The so-called middle group has generated a great deal of productive
discussion in this file. When people aren't fighting, the needs
of that group will almost be met by default, I think. A large number
of people who have participated in this file fall into that group.
Because this is womannotes, I feel very keenly the need to work
closely with the more "militant" women. I feel a responsibility
to them. This is very much their place, and they have added a great
deal to the file. Women who have chosen a more moderate course
owe a great deal to those who have had the courage to be in the
vanguard of the women's movement.
(I just don't feel as much responsibility towards "militant" men
*here*, though, should it come down to a conflict of needs.)
I was not equating militant women with lesbian women, but I agree,
people who are angry and threatened by feminists have often taunted
them and accused them of being lesbians. Some feminists couldn't
care less what they were called, while others were truly fearful
of being identified in that way and kept a low profile.
Now that I've met a number of people who participate in this file,
it makes me feel good to realize that we have lesbian participants
among our most vocal members, and we have lesbian participants among
our quietest members. I would be glad to see the lesbian women
in this conference have a much higher profile because they are
interesting and valuable women. At the same time, I understand
that many of them don't identify themselves as such because of fears
about job security. They may be among the most "militant" women
here because people who have had the courage to "come out" at work
probably have worked through their issues about speaking up, but
I think they are a much bigger cross-section of this file than that.
Holly
|
621.146 | whoops... | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Jan 19 1988 15:29 | 9 |
| I'd like to help change it, AND I am not saying that a file with
conflict would be preferable.
I meant to say...
I'd like to help change it, AND I am not saying that a file with
no conflict would be preferable.
==
|
621.147 | A good solution will include men | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Tue Jan 19 1988 17:02 | 31 |
| Re. .145 (Holly)
> .137 (McCarleton)
BTW that's MCARLETON as is M. Carleton as in Mike Carleton. Here
in 36 bit land they used to use first initial,last name for a
user name. I did not want to change it when I got my first VMS
account.
> It's a little bit (but not exactly) like the old system of triage.
> ...given the resources we have we sometimes have to make choices. So
> how can *we* best choose where to put *our* resources?
I don't see the equality needs of men and women as being as
disconnected as you do. I believe that any solution that will
work will have to address the needs of both men and women. Because
I hold this view, I feel that resources expended for a one-sided
solution are bound to go to waste because the solution will fail
(or will only work in isolated cases). That's just my opinion
I have seen solutions that have worked for people within the
framework of a woman-centered separatist community. The
conclusion of drawn by some participants is that it worked
because men were the problem. I would hate to see the same
solution and conclusion reached here by excluding men.
I think a better solution can be found that includes men.
It will be much harder to find than a woman only solution.
MJC O->
|
621.148 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Tue Jan 19 1988 17:50 | 6 |
| Mike,
I believe that you're putting words in Holly's mouth (or fingers).
Please reread what she's written today. It didn't sound to me that
she was advocating total separatism.
Liz
|
621.149 | Comment, Questions, and Suggestion | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Jan 19 1988 18:05 | 43 |
| I finally went back and read through all of 479, which seems directly
relevant to the issue of FWO Topics, reverse discrimination, and
sensitivity levels in general. I would reccommend people take some
time to look through the replies and notice 1) what was being said,
2) by whom, 3) how they said it, and 4) what the immediate (next
5 replies or so) reaction to any particular reply was.
To put my feelings, I think both FWO Topics and male replies to
FWO Topics are incredibly insensitive.
Questions:
XX: Is it so hard to believe that a sincere (and repeated) request
for men to be very careful in this topic [since it is a "loaded"
subject and we want/need support] would be respected? And if
some man wandering through put in a hurtful/insensitive reply,
do you really think that a personal reminder to him would be
ignored?
XY: Is it so hard to understand our heightened (perhaps excessively
so, but that is neither mine nor yours to judge) sensitivity
on certain issues makes us very hesitant to welcome the presence
of those who have shown a proclivity for stomping on our faces?
While you, individually, personally, may be very sensitive people
who would be unhappy to know that you have hurt one of us, is
it not possible that you could hurt us (and our file, where
"our" file belongs to both women and men) without knowing it?
Do you _really_ want to wait and make a mistake, ramrod someone,
and _then_ be told that you have hurt someone?
During Holly's (our) experiment, I would suggest a parallel experiment:
we agree on a symbol which means BE VERY VERY CAREFUL CAUSE THIS
IS TOUCHY AS HELL -- TAKE YOUR NITPICKING AND ATTACKING TO MAIL
PLEASE and that goes into the title of the Topic. That way we have
recourse if someone steps on toes ("we _said_ it was touchy and
you were insensitive; take it to mail; here's a copy of what we
deleted/requested to have deleted"), our male contributors would
be free to reply carefully and would be warned in advance that someone
might be very hurt/upset so they might not _want_ to reply, and
we would be less likely to have nasty replies from women [which
does happen from time to time :) ].
Thoughts?
Lee
|
621.151 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Tue Jan 19 1988 19:16 | 69 |
| When I first entered a reply (.74) I said that I felt some resonance
in the analogy, but was not entirely comfortable with it. My
discomfort was (and is) that the emotional reactions to the act
represented by the word "rape" are so intense that the word itself
can trigger those reactions. And clear, successful communication
is difficult enough with "cool" heads; it seems to me that as emotions
rise, misinterpretations increase and successful communication
decreases.
By way of examples, the assertion was made that men replying to
a topic that was requested by the author to be FWO
". . .have the same mind-set. . .as the real rapist does. . ."
Shortly thereafter, a reply was posted that said:
1) "I am truly amazed that it is not only condoned but commended when
someone calls a number of people "rapists". . ."
And later:
2) ". . .I will make an "assertion" that you are a child-molester. . .This
is the semantic equivalent of what (he) was saying in .nn]"
And later:
3) "[He is not saying that an intrusion is like a rape, he is saying
that men who intrude are rapists. . ."
I think that in #2 above, we have the core of a common problem and
one that is most often seen in topics of great emotion:
". . .semantic equivalent. . ."
Is having "the same-mind set" as a rapist or child molester the
"semantic equivalent" of *being* a rapist/child molester/etc? It
looks to me that one side of the equation (mind-set) refers to
attitudes and thoughts, the other with specific actions. Is it
not possible that I could have the attitudes and thoughts of a
criminal but commit no crime? Am I therefore a criminal for my
thoughts?
Maybe yes, maybe no; it's clear (to me, at least) that there
is no universal agreement.
Please understand, my concern is not whether I am in fact what
I think; I believe that might be worthy of a topic of its own.
My concern is the words we're using and how we're interpreting
them. Where the meaning of the words aren't clear, the door
is openned for interpretation. And when the emotions involved
are high. . . I've seen bloody (physical) fights start over less
and it wouldn't surprise me that wars have been fought over less.
Perhaps, particularly when we're looking at very sensitive topics
we can try 1) to think very carefully not only of what we want
to say, but also 2) give some thought to how others might be
reading those words. And perhaps, when in any doubt over meaning
or intent, we might try a little harder to assume that there
might be some semantic difficulty going on and ask for more clarity.
I fear the risks of assumption and interpretation when the subject
matter is extremely volitile; I have too often seen the destruction
that can result.
In peace,
Steve
|
621.152 | Please read (no flames)need =change? | MTBLUE::DUCHARME_GEO | | Wed Jan 20 1988 08:14 | 29 |
| I did some checking into company policy, regarding note files.There is
currently very little written policy,the moderator(S) of any particular
file, have a great deal of latitude in how a file is run.Note files are
a new frontier,a new way for people to communicate to each other from all
over the world.I believe the net work is going to continue to grow and
what we do now will help decide the nature of note files in the future.
If we continue to bicker with out finding real solutions to problems in
balancing different expectations and view points, the note files will,
I believe, become burdened down by rules.No one wants to deal with complaints
so rules get made.I suggest that we give some thought to how note
files could be structured to reflect its purpose,and members.I believe
that the current structure of moderator(S) having all of the responsibility
will lead to complaints and more rules limiting the potential of the network.
I have a couple of suggestions.
The first note could clearly state the purpose and rules of the conference.
New members could also be sent a copy of the purpose and rules by mail.
This would help to give new members clear expectations of the conference.
A format could be set up to have rules decided by members and moderators.
Maybe their could be a conference bill of rights setting the outer boundary
of rules.
We noter's have a great opportunity to harness the potential of a net work
that spans the globe.I believe one of the first steps to achieving that
potential is to develop new ways of managing conferences.
George D.
|
621.153 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Wed Jan 20 1988 09:33 | 7 |
| RE .149 Your experiment sounds good, Lee. I hereby nominate you
to the commitee to design an acceptable 'warning sign' suitable
for such topics.
Example - FHWC - fragile, handle with care
Dana (NOT an acronym buff)
|
621.154 | Striking nerves | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Wed Jan 20 1988 10:48 | 44 |
| Re: .149
> It didn't sound to me that she was advocating total separatism.
Point taken.
Re .149 .151
.149> Questions:
.149> XY: Is it so hard to understand our heightened sensitivity
.149> on certain issues makes us very hesitant to welcome the presence
.149> of those who have shown a proclivity for stomping on our faces?
.149> ... is it not possible that you could hurt us without knowing it?
.151> My discomfort was (and is) that the emotional reactions to the act
.151> represented by the word "rape" are so intense that the word itself can
.151> trigger those reactions.
I think that one of the basic problems here is that it is so easy to
strike a nerve and not realize that you have done it. A conversation
that appears to be purely philosophical and detached from emotion might
strike a nerve at any time and suddenly become very hurtful (like this
note and rape). In face to face communication I can usually detect when
I have struck a nerve. Somehow that gets filtered out in notes. Maybe
we need a "you have struck a never" symbol. I expect that people
might be hesitant to use it because it's use might imply more than the
strikee wishes to make public (that she has been raped, he/she is gay,
he has beat his wife, she has been beaten, etc).
I'd hate to see this conference cleared of all philosophical discussion
in order to protect all exposed nerves. Personally, I am willing
to risk getting salt in my wounds in order to find some truth.
Some may have wounds that are too deep to risk that. We could change
this conference so that we remove all risks. I hope that we can
find some level of risk that is acceptable and still leaves room
for philosophy.
Question:
Is a reqest by me for tolerence of "salt in the wounds" imposing
male standards "emotinal self control" on women? Does it feel
unfair or sexist to you?
MJC O->
|
621.155 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Wed Jan 20 1988 11:03 | 13 |
| <--(.154)
� Question:
� Is a reqest by me for tolerence of "salt in the wounds" imposing
� male standards "emotinal self control" on women? Does it feel
� unfair or sexist to you?
Well, not to me. The "disarming" factor is that you're asking for
it from everyone rather than prescribing it for women (I can't recall
you yourself ever doing that latter, but that has been a "feature"
of some non-trivial amount of interaction in here)
=maggie
|
621.156 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Jan 20 1988 12:29 | 40 |
| re .149:
Lee, I agree completely.
re .151:
Steve,
To me, saying that someone has "the same mindset as a criminal" is the
same as calling him a criminal. The only difference is the actual
performance of the deed.
> Is having "the same-mind set" as a rapist or child molester the
> "semantic equivalent" of *being* a rapist/child molester/etc?
Before he rapes or molests, doesn't he have the mind-set of a rapist or
molester? Or alternatively, after he has commited the crime, he
certainly now has that mind-set, how can it not be terribly insulting
to say that someone has the same mindset as someone who _has_ raped
or molested? To me, the phrase "has the same mind-set as X" is to
call someone X while acknowledging that they haven't actually done
X.
> Am I therefore a criminal for my thoughts?
(semantically loaded question) Thoughts cannot
make someone _legally_ a criminal, but to say about someone that
they have the same thoughts and attitudes as a criminal is to make
a moral judgement about that person. It is too equate them morally
with the criminal. It is to say that the only thing that distinguishes
the two is the performance of the deed. In this case the the
judgement was far too extreme. If I were to make a similar analogy
I would have compared it to vandalism.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
621.157 | Emotions are very hard to suppress | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Wed Jan 20 1988 13:13 | 22 |
| re .154
� Question:
� Is a reqest by me for tolerence of "salt in the wounds" imposing
� male standards "emotinal self control" on women? Does it feel
� unfair or sexist to you?
While I don't think it's terribly sexist or unfair since you would
ask it of everybody, I think we'd lose an awful lot if we kept
ourselves removed enough from a discussion to tolerate salted wounds.
Part of what _I_ want from this file includes giving men an idea
of how badly some of these things _hurt_ -- the assault on our feelings
by what seems like an innocuous remark.
Ex: it is much more likely that I am going to be able to convince a man
here or there that he should be careful not to threaten strange women
when I say that it makes me afraid to be alone and have a strange man
look at me ~that~ way. If I keep myself all removed from the
discussion, I don't think I'll ever be able to explain _why_ I hate
being "up-n-downed" so much.
Lee
|
621.158 | | VINO::EVANS | | Wed Jan 20 1988 13:13 | 23 |
| RE:.156
In the interests of proving that men and women are "two genders
separated by a common language" <paraphrasing the ditty about the
U.S. and England> I submit that:
The "mind-set" is - Women's Space May Be Freely Intruded Upon By
Men
The "action" one takes may fall anywhere on a continuum of that
"mind-set", from feeling free to intrude on women's conversation
to intruding on a woman's body.
What an individual man does with this "mind-set" (presuming he
*has* it to begin with) depends on the individual and his moral,
eithical, sociological standards. There are many men who feel
free to intrude on female conversation; there are relatively few
who feel free to rape.
The "action" is different from the "mind-set".
--DE
|
621.159 | | STING::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Wed Jan 20 1988 14:03 | 116 |
| I find the following statements typical of one of the most severe
problems in this file.
RE .110 -< Maybe if we ignore him, he'll go away >-
> For about the 100th time, I will say that this notesfile is a
> microcosm of society at large; Women cannot expect any different
> treatment here than anywhere else.
RE .111
> Dawn, you positively depress me when you say things like that...mostly
> because I think you're absolutely right.
What utter rubbish, although not one will admit it, there is this
perminating head set amongst a fair number of the women in this file
that ALL men are out to get you. Why is this, when its not true ?
Is the shear presence of a man intimidating enough to cause this
paranoia ? Because you have had bad experiences with certain men,
that automatically justifies your feelings that we're all identical
and our only purpose in life is to control you and put you down ?
> But whether or not the problem is real doesn't depend on whether or not
> I'm clever enough to pick a good example. The problem *is* still real;
> men do really control most agendas, and even in here women's control is
> fairly regularly subverted. We've lost many women members because of
> that fact, and the perceived difficulty of meeting women's needs in
> here has caused the creation of a whole new file!
Oh theres a problem all right, but its not what you perceive it to
be. The real problem here is that in too many cases you and others
can not or will not differentiate between opinion and criticism vs
coercion and control. Both you and I have the right to our opinions
and the right to criticize each other if they disagree. Disagreement
over opinions is a whole lot different that my, as a man using some
implied power or threats of violence to force (control) you or other
women into doing my wishes or bidding.
No the reason that you have lost both women and men in this conference
is the fact that it has not lived up to its advertised agenda. In that
up front agenda the statement of in "discussing topics of interest to
women" and "men being welcomed to participate" is false. Its false in
that at one time or another every man that has entered an opinion here
has been told that he and his opinion have no validity because he is a
man. Not because its right or wrong, not because pro or con popular
opinion. No its wrong became its not from a female. It has grown since
the opening of the file to the point where now there are notes which
openly state that they do not want men's opinions.
Whats even sadder is when similar tactics are employed on one of your
fellow women, all because her opinion doesn't agree with the hard line
stance. Lets admit it folk's, male or female, you've got to be fairly
thick skinned to last around here. The question is why ? Yes, there is
this problem with the occasional extremist, but thats not the norm. Why
then is this air of paranoia that all men are out to exploit you,
so predominant here ?
> We have a very small (less than six, probably) but very vocal minority
> of men determined to enforce their equal-access rights at whatever
> cost, a vanishingly-small minority of men (two, if I've counted
> correctly) who are willing to speak up vigorously for the right of
> women to set the agenda here, and a large group of men who regard
> themselves as feminists but who nonetheless either remain silent or
> support the "equal-access" claimants. As Dawn says, just like the
> outside world.
> So how do we solve the problem?
On the business of equal access, again its back to the opening agenda
statement " men are welcome to participate". If this wasn't made in
good faith, if you as women have collectively changed your minds, and
have decided that active participation by men IS NOT desired, then
why haven't you changed the statement ? If you really want only limited
participation from men, then be honest about it and get a representation
of members together and draft some ground rules and post them. That way
we all know where we stand, instead of bumping into these "unwritten"
rules that tell us your wrong in doing that after the fact.
Now believe it or not I actually believe in equal rights and pay for
like jobs and related things. But why am I getting the impression that
the word "equal" is being used as a guise, a smoke screen to a hidden
agenda of fact.
FROM .134
> "Militant" men: (I'd've said "reactionary men" myself) overt MCPs plus
> men who consider that since feminists are in favor of equality, we've
> to provide it to others even though we're still deprived of it
> ourselves. (Sorta like a capitalist demanding an equal share of a
> socialist's money on the grounds that otherwise the socialist is
> betraying her principles ;-} )
What I detect her is multiple fold. First is that you refuse to admit
that there has been any changes the struggle for equality in the last
100 or so years. Your attitudes are that you are no better off now,
irregardless of the changes and laws passed, when in truth that is not
the case. You act as if you, as women are the only ones that suffer any
forms of discrimination or in equalitys, when in fact that is not the
truth. What I do sense is that equality is NOT good enough for you,
that what you truly seek is a superior position. That equal rights aren't
good enough, that privilege is what you deserve. If this isn't the case,
then why do you insist upon creating situations and making statements
that are giving this message ?
I realize that there is going to be multiple dissenters to what I've had
to say. And true to form MS Conlon will probably brush this off by
saying " Yup, there goes Bob B, saying that the file is fucked again"
or something similar. But in reality I believe I've posed some questions
here that really deserve some thought and answers. This is NOT a criticism
of the file, what it is, is a questioning of the attitudes and headsets
of the participants. What are the real vs hidden agenda of the people ?
What is the real purpose of this file ? And most important, what are the
real ground rules for participation by either men or women ? Lets stop
with the games, put or cards on the table, so to speak, and be truthful
about what it is you ladies really want in this conference.
Bob B
|
621.160 | Warning - flood gates open!! | ANGORA::BUSHEE | George Bushee | Wed Jan 20 1988 14:41 | 46 |
|
RE: .159
Bob, did you ever stop to the think about what the women
are saying before you jump in and claim they are all bitter
men haters? If you do it sure doesn't sound it from this males
point of view. Now I'm not going to agrue with you, this is
only my opinion so if you don't agree that's fine. What I do
see here is pretty much the same as happens in grade school
plagrounds with bullies. Now somewhere along the way the bully
will beat some kids up, but not as the rule. That has already
been established he is stronger than the others. All he need
do is look at another to strike his fear in them. Would it be
true to say there isn't a bully because you watched for say
a weeks period and didn't see it once. Would you be a quick
to jump up and defend the bully in this case and claim all the
other kids are wrong and it doesn't exist?
I've been out of work for over a month, so when I did return
I had some catching up to do. While I'll admit I didn't agree
with some of the more stronger views around men trying to
"set the agenda" then, I am changing my mind on this as I
catch up in my reading. There are just too many topics that
a woman will make a comment on only to have some of the men
jump all over her telling her her opion is all wet/stupid/wrong
man-hating/etc. and that "xxxx" is how she should see it.
If she comes back and disagrees then it resorts too many times
to the men attacking her character saying she only hates men
and that is the true issue.
Why can't we just abide by their wishes? If they request a
topic for women only what is so damn wrong with that? Would
you go into the Bird-watching (if there is one) notesfile
and jump into the middle of a topic on say watching bluejays
in the wild and then try to change the topic around to your
best spots to go hunting for these worthless (in your eyes
anyways) birds? Do you think you'd be very welcome there
if allowed to stay at all? I'd rather doubt it! I know if I'm
having a chat with someone and another will walk right and try
to jump in un-invited, they can count on being told where they
can get off!! Why do some men have to be so sef-centered that
if they can't be the center of an activity they have to make
sure they can atleast insure noone else can enjoy it.
More than my $.02 worth, time to go back to R/O mode
|
621.161 | 'You ladies' is an offensive way to refer to us | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Wed Jan 20 1988 14:52 | 76 |
| perminating head set amongst a fair number of the women in this
===========
?? what do you mean, Bob? pervasive, perhaps?
I don't think most of us act like all men are out to get us unless
we are on a city street at night, where if we do *not* act that
way, we may well not arrive at our destination.
Men's opinions are welcome here, especially when they are expressed
as personal opinions and not generalizations. (I think... or In
my experience... as opposed to Women always ... or Women should...).
The entries by men to which I have objected are the ones in which
the writer attempts to force his opinion on women, trivializes
something a woman says about herself, or contradicts something a
woman says about her experience. (By the way, I don't like it when
women generalize or write rudely, either.)
> that at one time or another every man that has entered an opinion here
> has been told that he and his opinion have no validity because he is a
> man
A generalization. Every man?
For the sake of argument, let's say that you and a few others
have been told that you were rude, that someone disagreed with what
you said, or that there were some things you could not possibly
experience as a woman does. Perhaps an individual woman noter got
furious with you and disagreed angrily. That does not mean that
all women here have rejected you and all other male members.
Unless we have taken a vote on something, it's not fair to assume
that the file has not lived up to its advertised agenda. I'm sure
that you and some of the other men are often *uncomfortable* here.
In my experience, men are often uncomfortable when faced with women's
anger, and especially when faced with women's collective anger.
But as has been stated before, our power is closely tied to our anger,
and many of us have no intention of giving up our power or glossing
over our anger ever again. I do agree that it's unfortunate that some
of you who care about women in a positive way sometimes get the brunt
of anger we have carried around for our whole lives because it was not
safe to express it then.
Lets admit it folk's, male or female, you've got to be fairly
thick skinned to last around here. The question is why ? Yes, there is
this problem with the occasional extremist, but thats not the norm. Why
then is this air of paranoia that all men are out to exploit you,
so predominant here ?
I'm not particularly thick skinned. I've been here since the beginning
and I almost never get flamed or trashed. I think it's because
I almost never generalize.
Like most of my woman friends, I've been hurt badly by men. I don't
hate all men, but I walk very carefully, and trust very slowly.
I'd rather be assertive and make a man feel uncomfortable than let
a man put me down or trivialize me. For that I've been called a
"castrating bitch". I don't get the connection, but I do know it
works better for me to speak up than to feel abused. I try to start
by listening to what each individual has to say, but if things look
abusive, I'm out.
What are the real vs hidden agenda of the people ?
What is the real purpose of this file ? And most important, what are the
real ground rules for participation by either men or women ?
Good questions. I proposed an experiment recently which would
give us a set of working ground rules for the next 3 months.
Perhaps we will try it, perhaps not. It feels like an issue bigger
than ground rules to me, though. It feels like a power struggle.
Holly
|
621.162 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Jan 20 1988 17:53 | 42 |
| re .158:
Dawn,
> What an individual man does with this "mind-set" (presuming he
> *has* it to begin with) depends on the individual and his moral,
> eithical, sociological standards.
Can't you understand that, to me, "mind set" _includes_ one's moral,
ethical, and sociological standards?
Do you remember any of the following quotes?
575.43 38636::AUGUSTINE>
YES you should refrain from telling someone how to feel. That's how
they feel. It's non-negotiable. That's who they are. Why can't you
just acknowledge how that person is feeling and say "Here's a
different perspective that you may not have considered".
sometimes when i write a note and others reply "you shouldn't feel
that way. here's a better way to feel", i feel like i'm drowning
in a wave and swallowing sand. why is it so hard to just listen?
575.44 3D::CHABOT>
As a further note, I often find being told how I should feel to
be rather disorienting. Being a friendly reader, I'll even try
to see what that would feel like, then I'll try to figure out who
I'd have to be in order to tell people how to feel, then I'll wonder
where I am, how I got there, and then I'll go read some other note.
575.45 VINO::EVANS>
But how the ($&* do we get to: "My life experience has been
such-and-such." and somebody feels perfectly free to say "No, it
hasn't - it's been so-and-so." ??????
---------------------------------------------------------------------
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
621.163 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Wed Jan 20 1988 17:52 | 73 |
| re: .154
"I think that one of the basic problems here is that it is so easy to
strike a nerve and not realize that you have done it."
Big time agreement, Mike.
"I'd hate to see this conference cleared of all philosophical discussion
in order to protect all exposed nerves."
Ditto. . .mostly, but. . .
"Personally, I am willing to risk getting salt in my wounds in order
to find some truth. Some may have wounds that are too deep to risk
that. We could change this conference so that we remove all risks.
I hope that we can find some level of risk that is acceptable and
still leaves room for philosophy."
I'm willing to take some risks, too for myself. What you've hit
on (and I agree) is that, particularly on very volitile or sensitive
topics, we might keep in mind that what is low-risk to me might
not be for others.
Also, I feel that there may be risks that some folks aren't seeing.
As an ex-cop (and ex-lots-of-other-things) I promise you that
people have bled and died as a result of things that began as
a "discussion" of a highly-charged topic.
It *doesn't matter* whether "mind-set of x = x" - in honesty I
don't know and, right now, don't particularly care. What I do
care about is that when humans start "discussing" real "hot"
topics, unless great care is taken with the language, the end-point
*can* be the morgue.
When people start throwing around terms like "rapist", "murderer",
"child-molester", etc. with strangers, I believe (because I've seen
it. . .repeatedly) that it is tantamount to playing with fire of
terrible intensity and unpredictable speed. Even with "friends"
it's a risky business. For too many, such "arguments" have ended
permanently before they had a chance to say "But I didn't mean what
you thought I said."
Bob B. - I will not go off the deep end because you might call some-
thing I said "utter rubbish". But how many thousands of people
might be reading this highly emotional topic? Might there be
one in those thousands who is "on the edge" of some radical
behavior? Might that be all they need to go tumbling over? And
might it not be possible to say the same thought with "I respect
your opionion, but I really don't agree and here's why. . ."?
Yes; the "odds" might be one in a couple of hundred. When the
stakes are, say, five dollars, that might be an acceptable risk.
But the stakes here just might be someone's life.
Please know I'm not trying to "pick" on Bob or anyone else; as
a matter of pure fact I agree with things he's said from time to
time. I'm only trying to make people aware of the effects their
(to them) "harmless" words could have when the subject matter is
as loaded and armed as this one.
If the man in my department who was beaten and murdered last fall
(over a highly volatile man-woman issue) could bear witness, I
have an idea he might agree.
Steve
Question:
Is a reqest by me for tolerence of "salt in the wounds" imposing
male standards "emotinal self control" on women? Does it feel
unfair or sexist to you?
MJC O->
|
621.164 | | MORGAN::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Wed Jan 20 1988 18:09 | 38 |
|
RE: .160
> Bob, did you ever stop to the think about what the women
> are saying before you jump in and claim they are all bitter
> men haters? If you do it sure doesn't sound it from this males
> point of view. Now I'm not going to agrue with you, this is
> only my opinion so if you don't agree that's fine.
George
I'am glad to see that you really took the time to read what I
had to write. For your information there isn't one single reference
or statement accusing or stating that anyone in the file is
a man hater. Why don't you read what has been written before you
run off at me because you've pre-judged it based on what other
people have said about me based on my past writings.
You, in fact have done the same thing that I was objecting to in
my note. You have pre-judged me based on only one known fact of
who and what I am and what I have to say, WITHOUT taking the time
to check out the rest of what the note actually said.
To go along with your analogy, lets say that Joe, the school yard
bully has blond hair. I have blond hair, but I'am Bob, not Joe.
Is it fair that I be regarded to be a bully like Joe because I
have blond hair ? My analogy is that too many women in this file
have a pre-set distrust for all men because of what one or two men
have done to them. My objection is to being treated and regarded
like Joe the bully because both he and I are male. It's totally
unfair in that Joe and I are two totally different people.
Are you, or any of these women, under this delusion that I, or
other men haven't had bad things done to us in our lives by women ?
Since I don't judge all women to be like those that did me wrong, Is it
too much to ask to have that same courtesy in return ? To be
judged as me and not every other Tom, Dick, and Harry in the world?
|
621.165 | | MORGAN::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Wed Jan 20 1988 18:14 | 155 |
|
Holly
RE.161 -< 'You ladies' is an offensive way to refer to us >-
This was not written to be a provoking statement, It was written
as to address the entire audience. But on the other side, It is
an example of how you perceive things and how little it takes
to get you into a defensive mode. Why are you and others so quick
to go into this defensive mode ? This is a perfect example of what
I've been trying to point out. This is a public notes file in a
civilized atmosphere of a very good company, not some combat zone
city street.
I'am quite sure that this company goes through some pains to ensure
that its employees are honest, professional type people vs street
hoodlums. Now since I have worked for this company for some almost
seven some odd years, I would expect that if I was anything less then
an honest professional that I wouldn't still be here. With that in mind
would you mind explaining why you are so defensive with me, who you
don't know virtually anything personally about. Why is it that I am
accorded the same treatment as some street hood or bad person from
your past when I am someone totally different from those people ?
This is the headset that I'am talking about.
> perminating head set amongst a fair number of the women in this
> ===========
> ?? what do you mean, Bob? pervasive, perhaps?
Whoops, missed that one, should have been - permeating-
meaning it has spread throughout....
> I don't think most of us act like all men are out to get us unless
> we are on a city street at night, where if we do *not* act that
> way, we may well not arrive at our destination.
NO ??? Humm, then why so quick to be defensive about the way I
used "you ladies" ( see above )
> Men's opinions are welcome here, especially when they are expressed
> as personal opinions and not generalizations. (I think... or In
> my experience...as opposed to Women always...or Women should...).
> The entries by men to which I have objected are the ones in which
> the writer attempts to force his opinion on women, trivializes
> something a woman says about herself, or contradicts something a
> woman says about her experience. (By the way, I don't like it when
> women generalize or write rudely, either.)
I share your objections to "blanket" generalizations. I disagree about
the open acceptance of men opinions. It has been my observation that
many time these valid opinions are regarded the same as the generalizations.
Hence my statement ;
>> that at one time or another every man that has entered an opinion here
>> has been told that he and his opinion have no validity because he is a
>> man
> A generalization. Every man?
I don't think its a generalization, but a fair statement. I believe every
regular male contributor has at one time or another had one of his writings
made light of as if to have no validity.
> For the sake of argument, let's say that you and a few others
> have been told that you were rude,
Rarely happens, I guess I'am too polite
> that someone disagreed with what you said,
Happens every day
> or that there were some things you could not possibly experience as
a woman does.
I never claimed I have experienced "woman" things. But I am human,
and in being so, I feel that I can relate my experiences on the same
subject of thing that happen to us all.
> Perhaps an individual woman noter got furious with you and disagreed
> angrily. That does not mean that all women here have rejected you and
> all other male members.
This I can understand, if I say something that you or someone else
disagreed with. That I don't have a problem with. What I do have
a problem with is those that have that anger at me simply because
I'am a man. NOTE that I did not say hates me, different thing. I referring
to the way too many coincide differences of opinion with someone
trying to control them.
> Unless we have taken a vote on something, it's not fair to assume
> that the file has not lived up to its advertised agenda. I'm sure
> that you and some of the other men are often *uncomfortable* here.
> In my experience, men are often uncomfortable when faced with women's
> anger, and especially when faced with women's collective anger.
> But as has been stated before, our power is closely tied to our anger,
> and many of us have no intention of giving up our power or glossing
> over our anger ever again. I do agree that it's unfortunate that some
> of you who care about women in a positive way sometimes get the brunt
> of anger we have carried around for our whole lives because it was not
> safe to express it then.
Is anger the only way you can derive power ? are you really happy
and comfortable living with that anger ? If so, you've chosen a
tough way to live. I know about that anger, I still have traces of
it from multiple sources. It took me some time to control it and
push it aside and to replace it with more important things in my
personal agenda of life.
To quote some trues about anger, those that live by it, shall die
by it. A long with, all that anger will burn you up. In short, it is
not healthy to live with it as a priority in your life. If you are
convinced that anger is the sole source of power in ones life, you
are sadly mistaken. Belief in ones self generates an inner power
that no one can take away. That inner power can give you the confidence
to go out and do anything you wish. It is the basis from which all
other power is derived.
> Like most of my woman friends, I've been hurt badly by men. I don't
> hate all men, but I walk very carefully, and trust very slowly.
I'll say it again, women aren't the only one that have been burnt and
hurt in relationships. Believe me I've have my share of being shit on too.
> I'd rather be assertive and make a man feel uncomfortable than let
> a man put me down or trivialize me. For that I've been called a
> "castrating bitch". I don't get the connection, but I do know it
> works better for me to speak up than to feel abused. I try to start
> by listening to what each individual has to say, but if things look
> abusive, I'm out.
Do you really listen first ?? or is it a pre-judge that leads to auto
defense mode with the best defense is an aggressive offensive ? Just look
at what you've said;
> I'de rather be assertive and make a man feel uncomfortable than let
> a man put me down or trivialize me.
How many times have you pre-judged a person or situation before word one ?
Think about it for a second, did you really give that guy the benefit
of the doubt ? Is this person rendering an opinion or telling you what
to do ? What I sense, is that you, as so many others in this file, go to
auto defense mode and on the offensive before you really determine whether
the statements are a shot at you or an opinion.
I can understand the caution, I can't understand the continued and
nurthered anger. Its as if you've developed the attitude lets do it
to them before they can do it to us. That no man is trustworthy, guilty
by association until he proves his worth. What an incredibly frightening
insight. No wonder relationships between men and women are so strained
today.
|
621.166 | RE.... .163 | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | renewal and resolution | Wed Jan 20 1988 20:34 | 23 |
| re: .163
It scares me sometimes, the things I read in this conference and
how they could be intrepreted by a reader.
For instance, the note on rape. Supposing the reader had been raped
quite recently and went to that note to see what advice, to test
out their feelings, to possibly make a decision as to whether to
prosecute or not. One of the first notes, by a respected male
contributor, asks the question "When does no mean yes". Think about
what that could do to a person.
I have said this before but it bears repeating. When we are in
face to face conversation we temper our words with the body language
we observe. This medium does not allow such editing.
It would be so nice if each of us would write notes that considered
the many individuals (20,000?) that read this conference. I am
responsible for my own behavior and yet I admit that the mood of
this conference can have a direct impact on my mood for the day.
.163 says some pretty strong stuff...can we face up to the possibility
that our strong statements and opinions could change someone's life?
|
621.167 | On the use of the word 'ladies' | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Jan 20 1988 21:26 | 32 |
| Bob,
I don't think that Holly was being overly sensitive on the "you
ladies" comment. She simple said that many of the readers in
this file object to it. I am also aware that there are women read
or who used to read the file who like the term ladies and get
upset when its use is contested.
However, were I writing in Blacknotes, and tho I know that some
- especially older people of African descent - prefer 'Negro'
and actually dislike 'Black' I would use 'Black' in the file and
save 'Negro' for mail to a personwho had told me that they objected
to 'Black'. In other words...when word useage has become sensitive
it is simple courtesy to avoid emotionally charged words.
For anyone who has any questions about such words please go back
and review the note titled "Don't Call me Girl".
In general the most appropriate word to use for female human
beings above 18 is woman. It is unlikely to ever cause offense,
whereas girl, lady etc can.
and Bob one of the reasons that I tackled this subject was that
about two years ago I found myself getting lectured on the subject
by a young woman who thought I was old fashioned, conservative
and definitely not a feminist or liberated because I used the
word lady...much to my amazement!
in friendship
Bonnie
|
621.168 | set tone low-key for the following... | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Wed Jan 20 1988 22:52 | 210 |
| Bob,
>> RE.161 -< 'You ladies' is an offensive way to refer to us >-
> But on the other side, It is
> an example of how you perceive things and how little it takes
> to get you into a defensive mode. Why are you and others so quick
> to go into this defensive mode ? This is a perfect example of what
> I've been trying to point out. This is a public notes file in a
> civilized atmosphere of a very good company, not some combat zone
> city street.
I wish I could have said it to you in person complete with body
language.
I would have made eye contact with you and said, "Bob, I find 'you
ladies' to be an offensive way to refer to us" very calmly and quietly.
I would have said it about the same way I say "I would appreciate it if
you don't borrow my manuals without leaving me a note" to my
co-workers. The point is to convey information, not to fight.
I'm not attacking a person...I'm referring to behavior I don't
like.
For you, "ladies" may seem like a nice, genteel way to refer to adult
females. Many of us have asked over and over again to be referred to
as women. Women is a more inclusive term than ladies when referring to
employed adult females. I appreciate your intention, as stated, to be
inclusive. For me, the effect is just the opposite. I would *never*
refer to myself or the women in my group as ladies.
Most of the men I know at work would prefer to be called "men" than
"gentlemen". Men is more inclusive, and just more comfortable I
guess.
> Why is it that I am accorded the same treatment as some
> street hood or bad person from your past when I am someone
> totally different from those people ? This is the headset
> that I'am talking about.
I totally ignore street hoods, and I try never to have contact with
abusive people in my past. Some of the things you said earlier made me
want to spend a couple of hours this morning thinking out some fairly
thoughtful responses, thus causing me to still be in my office
working tonight. There's a world of difference! I'm choosing to put a
fair amount of energy and some personal time into communicating with
you. I'm not screaming, flaming or arguing, just thinking and
listening and responding.
> I never claimed I have experienced "woman" things. But I am human,
> and in being so, I feel that I can relate my experiences on the same
> subject of thing that happen to us all.
I agree with you. There are lots of things I would enjoy discussing
with you if I can manage to convey the right body language. (Mostly
calm and thoughtful...) There are a few topics I would like to
discuss just with other women. Examples of these might be how long
different kinds of tampons last, how I felt when I was sexually
abused at age 3, how I felt when I was almost raped and strangled,
how it feels when men do things that make me feel trivialized.
(I'm speaking only for myself here, not for the other women in this
file.)
If I even choose to discuss it here, I do so knowing that I've just
opened it up to a large group of readers. OK. You may or may not have
something you are very eager to say to me about one of the above
personal/sensitive topics. What I need is to discuss some of the
sensitive personal things with the women first. By ourselves, without
having men say much until we've heard from each other. After that, I
might be ready and interested in hearing all the opinions. And that's
why I've been suggesting general discussion strings in tandem with
occasional FWO note. Everyone who has something to say can respond as
many times as they like. The women who are needing to think through
something sensitive with the support of other women can do that as long
as they need to and read the other responses when they are ready to.
(I hope this is the "win/win" I have been looking for.)
> What I do have
> a problem with is those that have that anger at me simply because
> I'am a man. NOTE that I did not say hates me, different thing. I
> referring to the way too many coincide differences of opinion
> with someone trying to control them.
There are some women who will be angry at you just because you are
a man, that's true. There are others who will be angry at you if
you engage in specific behaviors which have been directed at them
by men before and which hurt.
The only parallel I can draw to empathize is that some black people
will be angry at me just because I'm a WASP (by birth, anyway...). When
I think about it, I can understand that because being born into
a WASP family in the 1950s ensured that certain privileges and
opportunities would come to me very easily. I don't like that anger
when it's focused at me, either, but I respect it. I haven't walked
in their shoes. And there are probably other black people who won't
begin by being angry at me, but if I engage in certain behaviors
which they associate with abusive white people they will become
furious.
>> and many of us have no intention of giving up our power or glossing
>> over our anger ever again.
Listen again to what I said, please. I never intend to gloss over
my anger again.
If something makes me angry and I stuff it down inside myself and
don't say anything, there are consequences. If I keep current with
my anger and acknowledge it, I walk around feeling pretty light.
Does that seem like a contradiction?
I stuffed the anger for years, and tried to please people and to gain
the approval of others. I rarely showed anger to anyone in a position
of power because I was scared of getting hurt. On the surface I seemed
sweet and nice, but on the inside I was seething. I *never* want
to live that way again. It looked and felt pretty good to the adults
around me, but I was a wreck inside.
> Is anger the only way you can derive power ? are you really happy
> and comfortable living with that anger ? If so, you've chosen a
> tough way to live. I know about that anger, I still have traces of
> it from multiple sources. It took me some time to control it and
> push it aside and to replace it with more important things in my
> personal agenda of life.
I feel pretty good most days now. Some days I go home and cry. Other
days I get a friend to give me some support when I've gotten dumped on.
Once I get the anger out and get some support, I feel better and am
able to plan how to approach the person who upset me and resolve the
situation. I don't walk around seething...I think my last performance
review said something about being full of cheerful enthusiasm all the
time.
But I couldn't be cheerful and enthusiastic unless I could process
the angry feelings when they happen. And they will happen again.
I hope I will be able to keep working with them and letting them
out when they do.
> To quote some trues about anger, those that live by it, shall die
> by it. A long with, all that anger will burn you up. In short, it is
> not healthy to live with it as a priority in your life. If you are
> convinced that anger is the sole source of power in ones life, you
> are sadly mistaken. Belief in ones self generates an inner power
> that no one can take away. That inner power can give you the confidence
> to go out and do anything you wish. It is the basis from which all
> other power is derived.
This paragraph is harder to read and respond to than the previous
one because it feels like you've stopped speaking for yourself,
started generalizing, and would like to tell me how to be...
It's much, much easier for me to listen attentively when the
writer/speaker says "I" rather than "you".
It seems like it's very important to you to have some of the women in
this file acknowledge that you've been hurt by women. I believe it.
(I've been hurt by some women, too.) Does it seem like some
of us are saying that women are incapable of hurting others?
> How many times have you pre-judged a person or situation before word one ?
> Think about it for a second, did you really give that guy the benefit
> of the doubt ? Is this person rendering an opinion or telling you what
> to do ? What I sense, is that you, as so many others in this file, go to
> auto defense mode and on the offensive before you really determine whether
> the statements are a shot at you or an opinion.
The above paragraph doesn't feel like you are talking to me. I don't
know if you feel like you have a sense of me as an individual or not
from reading the entries I've made in this file. I listen a lot, write
very carefully, and don't respond when I'm actively angry. (I believe
I have one of the lowest flame quotients of the active participants).
It feels like instead of talking to me you are responding in your mind to
a woman or women who have hurt you and shut you out.
> ...I can't understand the continued and
> nurthered anger. Its as if you've developed the attitude lets do it
> to them before they can do it to us. That no man is trustworthy, guilty
> by association until he proves his worth. What an incredibly frightening
> insight.
Are you speaking to me personally, the women in this file, or women
in general? Your reply was addressed to me, so I'll assume it's
me.
I can't relate to that statement much at all. I couldn't work here
at DEC if I felt that way. I work with a number of men whom I enjoy
and have good relationships with. I sort of doubt that the median
male salaries in the group are anywhere near the median female salaries
in the group, which is disconcerting, but other than that the
relationships among us are good.
The only time in my life I really felt the way you describe was the
year I was coming to terms with having been sexually abused as a child.
I began to understand my lifelong fear of men, and of medical people
(the abuse was in the hospital). Years of pent up rage were coming
out, and I warned most of my male friends that I didn't have much of a
sense of humor at that time in my life. I absolutely would not have
participated in this file at that time because I felt like a volcano
going off at the slightest provocation. But that was several years
ago and lasted for about one year.
But it sounds like that's what you think I do now...
I wish we had some smiley-face type icons to convey thoughtful,
reflective, and listening carefully. This whole response is written
in a very calm tone, and I hope it comes across to you as such.
Holly
|
621.169 | thank-you, holly | CYRUS::DRISKELL | | Thu Jan 21 1988 01:18 | 11 |
| Holly,
I think your reply (.168), besides being very logical and consise,
explained many feelings that I also share. I hope that Bob and
others are able to read it through completely, and think about
what it is you have said, and not focus solely on the words used.
Thank-you for writing it. I find that you often express my feelings,
in a much calmer manner than I could myself.
Mary
|
621.170 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Jan 21 1988 07:31 | 5 |
| Thanks for the feedback, Mary. As I was driving home last night it
occurred to me that perhaps no one except Bob and the other 3
moderators would be motivated enough to plow through 190+ lines!
Holly
|
621.171 | My Opinion | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu Jan 21 1988 10:11 | 66 |
| re a few back (Barber)
>I don't think its a generalization, but a fair statement. I believe every
>regular male contributor has at one time or another had one of his writings
>made light of as if to have no validity.
I am not trying to say that your reply or anyone's reply has no
validity, but I do want to respond to a specific point you made.
> How many times have you pre-judged a person or situation before word one ?
> Think about it for a second, did you really give that guy the benefit
> of the doubt ? Is this person rendering an opinion or telling you what
> to do ? What I sense, is that you, as so many others in this file, go to
> auto defense mode and on the offensive before you really determine whether
> the statements are a shot at you or an opinion.
So as I understand your words here, you're suggesting that many
women jump to conclusions (in your words, "pre-judge") men's words
even though the men are just giving their opinion.
But earlier in this same reply you write:
>>Is anger the only way you can derive power ? are you really happy
>>and comfortable living with that anger ? If so, you've chosen a
>>tough way to live.
Now I think the words "you've chosen a tough way to live" are expressed
as fact not opinion. In this next passage you continue:
>> In short, it is not healthy to live with it as a priority in your
>> life. If you are convinced that anger is the sole source of power
>>in ones life, you are sadly mistaken.
Now, Bob, you may think that your words are being attacked because
you are male, but I can tell you that for me that is not true.
When anyone tells me that I am "sadly mistaken," I tend to shut
myself down to anything she or he has to say. Can you see how
other people (men and women) might be offended by words like the
ones I've cited above.
In this passage, you described your experiences. I felt much more
comfortable with that.
>>I know about that anger, I still have traces of it from multiple
>>sources. It took me some time to control it and push it aside and
>>to replace it with more important things in my personal agenda of life.
Bob, I just want you to know that for me it really is the way you
expressed yourself in that note... not the fact that you are male
that made me angry. If you had said something like:
It seems to me that you have a lot of anger, and this disturbs
me because I think anger gets in the way of other things. When
I feel angry...
Those kinds of statements feel very different to me than the things
you said in your note to Holly. Some people think (and I agree)
that men and women *generally* have different ways of expressing
themselves. I think that women are more likely to express things
in terms of personal experience and that men are more likely to
express things as fact. Now if my opinion is correct, if those
differences do exist between men and women *Generally*, then it
may look to some folks that men are being harshly judged because
of their gender... not because of the ways they sometimes express
themselves.
Justine
|
621.174 | Mostly about .159 | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Jan 21 1988 12:32 | 42 |
| Justine,
I found your remarks to be very perceptive. One thing surprised
me, however. Neither you nor anyone else took Bob Barber to task
for the following:
"Oh theres a problem all right, but its not what you perceive it to
be. The real problem here is that in too many cases you and others
can not or will not differentiate between opinion and criticism vs
coercion and control."
No qualification of "I believe" is made, just the simple ~what you see
is wrong~. No examples are cited, no reasons are given. Any easily
peeved sociologist would rip that statement up, throw it to the ground,
and jump up and down on it.
Yes, Bob has the right to his opinions. Nevertheless, if he states
them as facts, then others have a equal right to question their validity
and even their veracity.
Bob, men qua men *are* welcome to participate. However, certain
subsegments of the world population are not welcome because of,
well, shall we say, certain abrasive or distasteful qualities.
(To me, a distasteful quality would be a careless attitude towards
the truth, and and abrasive one would be an insistance on having
the *right* to be careless about the truth.) In our culture, girls
and women have been far more rigorously trained in how to be polite
and in how to withdraw a statement or claim that is disagreed with
than boys and men have been. Therefore, in this notefile (which
has our culture as one of its anchor points), men are far more
likely to be in this unacceptable subsegment than women are. Please
consider seeing that situation in this more diffuse cultural light
than in the absolutist, "post hoc ergo propter hoc" light which
you seem to be using.
Ann B.
P.S. I do not think that there is a single woman (or man) in this
notefile who does not believe that women in this country are better
off now than they were last century. However, I (for one) to not
confuse the concept "better" with "good"; e.g., a 1% raise is better
than no raise, but it is not a "good" raise in this company.
|
621.175 | Ooops. . . | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Thu Jan 21 1988 13:52 | 8 |
| Small editing correction (the price of not double checking
my text.) .163 shoulda ended with my name; I shoulda edited
out the remaining lines - was editing a copy of Mike's reply.
Apologies,
Steve
|
621.176 | | FRYAR::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Thu Jan 21 1988 16:37 | 35 |
|
RE .167 Bonnie
> I don't think that Holly was being overly sensitive on the "you
> ladies" comment. She simple said that many of the readers in
> this file object to it. I am also aware that there are women read
> or who used to read the file who like the term ladies and get
> upset when its use is contested.
I hear you, and I trust that you and other knew that I did not
say (write) "you ladies" to be taken in a derogatory manner.
Things like this are kinda tough for a person with my upbringing.
My mother was from the South and the terms "lady, ladies, and
Ma'am" were common place curtsies to address a woman.
Its almost strange that you bring up the association of terms
applied to Negroes. I can remember back in the 60's when the
accecptable (preferred) terminology to address or refer to
Negroes changed almost weekly, and varied with the political
views of the person. It almost became a weekly ritual to ask
my black friends and school mates "well what do I call you
this week to keep from pissing you off ? "
This whole business of women taking offense at being called girl,
lady or the like is very similar to what I've related above.
I guess I just come from the old school that still views the term
"lady" as a compliment. Back then there were VERY defined words
that were used to insult VS complement. I just find it tough to
believe that people take offense at a term that has traditionally
been a compliment. But this is the 80's and the whole world has
gone tipsy turvy in the process, hasn't it..... :-)
Bob B
|
621.177 | | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven is a perfectly useless state. | Thu Jan 21 1988 17:16 | 16 |
| Reply to .176; Barber,
Don't feel like the Lone Ranger Bob. I made the same mistake with a
about 10 pagan feminist and paid the price. B^) It seemed that to them
the term "lady" meant that women acted in certain ways that culture
*predefined* for them. To them acting the part of "ladies" was more of
a way to conform to society. "Lady" took away options.
Needless these women didn't conform. I "gaurontee" that if these women
were participants in this file there'd be plenty hell to pay. B^) And
you know what? I like women better that way!
It's pretty humorous. I'm from Tenessee and Georgia and was raised
to say Yes mam and No mam, Lady and Gentleman. Every once in a while
I slip and say lady, you should see the faces! But they know where
I was raised so they cut me a little slack...
|
621.178 | definition of lady changes with generations | CYRUS::DRISKELL | | Thu Jan 21 1988 23:26 | 29 |
| re: use of lady
I was born & bred down south, (Alabama, Lousianna, Georgia, etc)
and often heard "it's not lady-like to do (insert almost anything
that is fun and involves dirt...:-) ). When I move to NE, age
14, I deceided that I was _never_ going to be a lady. I would be
a _woman_, polite, sensitive, etc, (even displaying 'lady-like
characteristics'), but I would never be a _lady_. As it had been
defined to me all my life, a _lady_ lived a very restricted life,
while a _woman_ was expected to be responsible for her own successes
and mistakes. One was the life of an adult, and one the life of
a pampered pet.
Now this is a very extremist statement, and I meant it to be, so
that possible some people can understand why I and others object
to being called 'ladies'. It generally comes accross patronizing
and condascending, even if it is not meant to be. (Same when called
'dearie' by waitresses and shop-floor assistants). At the same time,
I must admit that it bothers me less when used by close friends
whom I know respect me (though I _do_ get on their case!)
Of course, this is only my view. My 80 year old grandmother would
be appaled if she was not refered to as a "lady". By all definitions,
she is.
mary
PS, given the time, Ah hope ya'll forgive me ma spelling & gramma.
|
621.179 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Jan 22 1988 07:29 | 17 |
| > I just find it tough to believe that people take offense at a term that
> has traditionally been a compliment.
Bob, I think that's the whole point. I can see why it's tough for
anyone with a southern upbringing to re-hardwire themselves, too.
The term has traditionally been a compliment, and women have
traditionally had extremely limited roles. As we have broken
out of traditional roles and become much more versatile and powerful,
many of us no longer want to be defined by the traditional terms
which have connotations which are quite limiting.
Holly
Mary, I thought you explained it well.
|
621.180 | thoughfulness is needed | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Jan 22 1988 10:52 | 10 |
| re .172 Hank....
I don't think that anyone here is asking men to be perfect...
just to be a little more sensitive....
Women have been strongly disagreed with by other women in the file,
perhaps it has been happening more often with men because of the
nature of how people have been participating in the file of late.
Bonnie
|
621.181 | This IS long, but bear with me | STING::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Fri Jan 22 1988 12:14 | 284 |
|
RE .168 Holly
Let me start off by saying thank you for the way that you've been
responding through all this. I think its been a learning and
enlighting experience for us and others. I really believe this
discussion should serve as an example of a good way for two people
with differing opinions to hear each other out.
> I wish I could have said it to you in person complete with body
> language.
> I would have made eye contact with you and said, "Bob, I find 'you
> ladies' to be an offensive way to refer to us" very calmly and quietly.
I wish you could have too. Unfortunately this medium does not allow
for voice tone, inflection, and eye contact. Hopefully you realize
that the term was not used in a demeaning or derogatory manner.
There is a fair number of us men out here, that are of the old school
of learning, in which the term "lady (ies)" is a commonly used word
to properly address a woman. It's really tough to believe that people
take offense to being called that, when in our book it inplys respect.
Although it will be difficult to deprogram the word to its new meaning,
I will attempt it, for future conversations here.
> I totally ignore street hoods, and I try never to have contact with
> abusive people in my past. Some of the things you said earlier made me
> want to spend a couple of hours this morning thinking out some fairly
> thoughtful responses, thus causing me to still be in my office
> working tonight. There's a world of difference! I'm choosing to put a
> fair amount of energy and some personal time into communicating with
> you. I'm not screaming, flaming or arguing, just thinking and
> listening and responding.
Super, nothing has ever been accomplished by getting into a, excuse
the expression "pissing contest" in which the flames continue to
reach exzorbibant crescendo levels of absurdity. Although you may have
not received everything I wished to covey to you, I am glad to see
that I have got you to think about what I've had to say, rather than
to just react to it. In return it affects my style of writing, hopefully
into one that you will understand what it is I am trying to say.
> I agree with you. There are lots of things I would enjoy discussing
> with you if I can manage to convey the right body language. (Mostly
> calm and thoughtful...) There are a few topics I would like to
> discuss just with other women.
OK, thats understandable to a degree, but bear with me for a second
as we look at your examples.
> Examples of these might be how long different kinds of tampons last,
If I saw this as a subject, I would hit next unseen. This is the
type subject that deserves its form of privacy, since I know of no
man that could contribute to the discussion
> how I felt when I was sexually abused at age 3,
Although this experience was personal to you, it does not mean that
something similar could, or did not happen to a man at this age.
Under those circumstances, if this also happened to me, I may wish
to relate my experiences also.
> how I felt when I was almost raped and strangled,
I could share an experience on how I was beat up and robbed
> how it feels when men do things that make me feel trivialized.
> (I'm speaking only for myself here, not for the other women in this
> file.)
Contrary to the "rough, tough" exterior we put on, many a man has been
put down by a woman, his boss, his parent(s) and others in his life.
My feeling on this is that we're all human beings first and men and
women second. I feel its wrong to exclude men or women from any human
related subject, since it closes the door to the understanding that both
have had these experiences. If you close the door on these people, you
loose the opportunity to be able to relate to one another, and develop
better understandings.
> If I even choose to discuss it here, I do so knowing that I've just
> opened it up to a large group of readers. OK. You may or may not have
> something you are very eager to say to me about one of the above
> personal/sensitive topics. What I need is to discuss some of the
> sensitive personal things with the women first. By ourselves, without
> having men say much until we've heard from each other. After that, I
> might be ready and interested in hearing all the opinions.
If that the case, then my feelings are that you are probably better
off discussing the subject in a more private setting or format than
a public notes file. Ther are in fact may means to do this, extending
from mail to womens groups set up the discuss these things. If you
desise that exclusititvy, why are you putting that subject in a public
place in which there is a mixed audience numbering in the thousands ?
To me thats like putting a meal in front of X amount of hungry people,
and randomly selection whos allowed to eat. Its not fair to all concered,
and it leads to animositys, which is exzactly what these FWO notes
have done.
> There are some women who will be angry at you just because you are
> a man, that's true. There are others who will be angry at you if
> you engage in specific behaviors which have been directed at them
> by men before and which hurt.
Let me try and give you an example. If I go up and strike you, I have
just given you a justifiable reason to be angry with me, for I have
just harmed you. If I disagree with you about subject "X", that
disagreement does not give you the justification to be angry with me.
Its a matter of one's opinion vs the others. I have a great deal of
difficulty accecpting the same anger factor from someone that gets just
as angry with me, as if I had hit then, just because we disagree.
I have a problem with them attempting to rational or justify that
level of anger, which in this case is not warranted.
> The only parallel I can draw to empathize is that some black people
> will be angry at me just because I'm a WASP (by birth, anyway...). When
> I think about it, I can understand that because being born into
> a WASP family in the 1950s ensured that certain privileges and
> opportunities would come to me very easily.
Let me try and explain my point of difference using your good example.
What I am understanding, from your above statement, is that you
think about the reasons for their anger. To understand the reasons for
that anger, first you need to know why their angry. Now that you under
stand their anger, then you think about why its been directed to you.
And when you understand those reasons, you have accepted that in your
rational its correct and justifiable. The problem I have with this is that
it is not taken the step further that it need to be.
I am not disagreeing that certain Black people have had bad things done
to them by White people. But I do have a problem when that anger is
directed to white persons in general, instead of those that are
responsible. I have a real severe problem when its directed at me,
when I did not do a single solitary thing to cause any of them harm.
I am at a total loss to rationalize why I should suffer and pay for
the sins and transgressions of my forefathers and others. They are not
me and I am not them. That same logic applys to the anger I receive from
women, when their only justification for it, is that I'am a man.
> I don't like that anger
> when it's focused at me, either, but I respect it. I haven't walked
> in their shoes. And there are probably other black people who won't
> begin by being angry at me, but if I engage in certain behaviors
> which they associate with abusive white people they will become
> furious.
I don't like that anger either. The difference here is that from your
statements, I am interpreting that you willing to accept their anger
at you because you are guilty by association. That your sin is that you
were born White instead of Black. Sorry I can't accept that, the same
as I can't and won't accept the anger from women for things that were
done to them by other men. I equate that with being a person that fits
a generic description, and as I walk down the street , I get arrested
and put in jail for a crime done by someone else that has similar
features as me. I can't buy the logic which drives those actions.
> If something makes me angry and I stuff it down inside myself and
> don't say anything, there are consequences. If I keep current with
> my anger and acknowledge it, I walk around feeling pretty light.
> Does that seem like a contradiction?
Don't get me wrong, I am not saying that you or other people aren't
justified in getting angry when you been wronged. There is a time
and place for anger. The difference is when its invoked by someone
that deserves it vs blind anger directed at everyone in a class of
people.
> I feel pretty good most days now. Some days I go home and cry. Other
> days I get a friend to give me some support when I've gotten dumped on.
> Once I get the anger out and get some support, I feel better and am
> able to plan how to approach the person who upset me and resolve the
> situation. I don't walk around seething...I think my last performance
> review said something about being full of cheerful enthusiasm all the
> time.
Welcome to the human race ... :-).. We all have our ups and downs.
The difference is knowing and admitting when its our fault VS
someone elses. To carry that one step further, when it is someone
elses fault, that ruined our day, that be upset with that person
and not everyone in general.
>> To quote some trues about anger, those that live by it, shall die
>> by it. A long with, all that anger will burn you up. In short, it is
>> not healthy to live with it as a priority in your life. If you are
>> convinced that anger is the sole source of power in ones life, you
>> are sadly mistaken. Belief in ones self generates an inner power
>> that no one can take away. That inner power can give you the confidence
>> to go out and do anything you wish. It is the basis from which all
>> other power is derived.
> This paragraph is harder to read and respond to than the previous
> one because it feels like you've stopped speaking for yourself,
> started generalizing, and would like to tell me how to be...
> It's much, much easier for me to listen attentively when the
> writer/speaker says "I" rather than "you".
I suppose its my style of writing and thoughts that are being poorly
understood here. What I as really trying to express here was the results
of some very hard learned personal lessons. I've still got a ways to
go, but they were a very good foundation. I was trying to relate my having
anger to you having it. I was trying to pass on what I learned when I
finally came to terms with that anger.
> It seems like it's very important to you to have some of the women in
> this file acknowledge that you've been hurt by women. I believe it.
> (I've been hurt by some women, too.) Does it seem like some
> of us are saying that women are incapable of hurting others?
No , I'am not trying to gain acknowledgment for myself. What I was
attempting was to get some women to admit that they, as a class of
people, aren't the only ones that have been wronged or have problems.
It just seems (from my prospective) that from the writings here have
been done in a style and manner that sounds as if women are the only
ones in the world with problems. That they are the only ones that suffer
these wrongs and injustices. That every other class and group of people
have it easy by comparison. And that ain't so folk's and we all know
it.
>> How many times have you pre-judged a person or situation before word one ?
>> Think about it for a second, did you really give that guy the benefit
>> of the doubt ? Is this person rendering an opinion or telling you what
>> to do ? What I sense, is that you, as so many others in this file, go to
>> auto defense mode and on the offensive before you really determine whether
>> the statements are a shot at you or an opinion.
> The above paragraph doesn't feel like you are talking to me. I don't
> know if you feel like you have a sense of me as an individual or not
> from reading the entries I've made in this file. I listen a lot, write
> very carefully, and don't respond when I'm actively angry. (I believe
> I have one of the lowest flame quotients of the active participants).
> It feels like instead of talking to me you are responding in your mind to
> a woman or women who have hurt you and shut you out.
Possibly a mis interpitation, but I was basing it on the statement;
FROM .161 " I'de rather be assertive and make a man feel uncomfortable,
that let a man put me down or trivialize me"
A personal inturpitation of that statement was that your literally walking
around with a chip on your shoulder, along with a VERY defensive attitude.
It would lead me to believe that you have a tendency to go into that
assertive mode at the slightest hint of provocation, hence the above
statement from my .168 (I believe)
>> ...I can't understand the continued and
>> nurthered anger. Its as if you've developed the attitude lets do it
>> to them before they can do it to us. That no man is trustworthy, guilty
>> by association until he proves his worth. What an incredibly frightening
>> insight.
> Are you speaking to me personally, the women in this file, or women
> in general? Your reply was addressed to me, so I'll assume it's
> me.
> I can't relate to that statement much at all. I couldn't work here
> at DEC if I felt that way. I work with a number of men whom I enjoy
I was speaking to you. based on that "rather be assertive" statement
again. But now that I think about it, it does carry over to include
sone other women that strike me as having the same attitude.
> I absolutely would not have
> participated in this file at that time because I felt like a volcano
> going off at the slightest provocation. But that was several years
> ago and lasted for about one year.
> But it sounds like that's what you think I do now...
Based on that "rather be assertive" statement, yes thats the
impression I got. That statement sends me a clear cut message that
you would go on the assertive if you so much as thought that a man
was going to wrong you in any way. That to me is pre-judging before
the fact. When you make statements like that, it leads me to believe
that you still carry some of that anger with you. The question here,
is that have you thought about that, That the possibility exists for
some of that anger to still exists.
> I wish we had some smiley-face type icons to convey thoughtful,
> reflective, and listening carefully. This whole response is written
> in a very calm tone, and I hope it comes across to you as such.
Yes, it has, hopefully mine has been received and perceived in
the same manner.
Bob B
|
621.182 | DiMaggio,Cooper,Poitier,Stanwick,Hepburn,E.Roosevelt | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Fri Jan 22 1988 12:49 | 24 |
| re .172 Hank, the reality of intimidation exists and it's
not equal. And it is a shame.
re .179 >...and women have traditionally had extremely limited
> roles.
Holly, whose fault was that? The individual in question
or someone or something else?
re .180 I believe men and women should be identified by the
qualities of their arguments (& statements), not by sex.
Most of these (topic) 'divisions' and 'reactions' on
the basis of sex are both *traditional* and *dumb.*
Men love being called a 'gentleman.' So what's wrong with
a lot of women's reaction's here about being called a
'lady' if the sayer thinks the woman has such 'qualities'?
The reaction can't be like a man's being called 'Sir'
can it?? If so, then I come to one conclusion: The 'lady'
in question, quite simply is NOT one. She's honest to
know the difference. And she makes that distinction known.
I have no problems with such honesty. It's believable.
Russ
|
621.183 | fault? | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Jan 22 1988 12:59 | 9 |
| Russ...the fact that tradtionally women had extremely limited
roles was not the fault of the individuals in question but
rather that they were not allowed to vote, not allowed to
attend school, not allowed to own property etc. and that they
had no way to prevent pregnancy and became hostages to their
children's well being...but we have been over this and over this
before...
Bonnie
|
621.184 | p.s. | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:03 | 8 |
| in re ladies....if you mean that the women aren't ladies in the
sense that they aren't eldery, dependant, and need to be taken
care of (and a lot of the other negative steriotypes that go with
the word) then what you said is reasonable. However if you meant
that the women in question are illmannered, lack courtesy, slovenly,
sluttish...and a lot of the other baggage that people often mean
when they say that a 'woman is no lady' then your last few words
were not those of a gentleman.
|
621.185 | Isn't Civilized Discussion _Nice_? | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:20 | 9 |
| re: Bob and Holly
I think you two are _really_ doing a great job explaining to each
other without being the _slightest_ bit offensive. Keep it up:
whether or not you two ever convince each other of anything, I like
what you're saying and how you're saying it -- even if they _are_
long notes ...:) :) :)
Lee
|
621.186 | | VIKING::TARBET | | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:25 | 16 |
| And the ones just before that weren't those of a careful thinker,
either, Bonnie.
<--(.182)
� Men love being called a 'gentleman.' So what's wrong with
� a lot of women's reaction's here about being called a
� 'lady' if the sayer thinks the woman has such 'qualities'?
Russ, I find it difficult to believe that you can play chess *without*
a blindfold when I see you making logical howlers like this. What in
heaven's name does a man liking to be called a gentleman (or liking to
eat steak, for that matter) have to do with whether a woman likes to be
called a lady (or likes to eat Gongbao Ji Ding)?!?
=maggie
|
621.187 | my last comment on this subject | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:48 | 77 |
|
RE: .181
Bob, I read your reply to Holly, and it (along with responses
from other people) give me the impression that if women would
like to discuss topics with other women than either they have to
meet personally or have a private notes conference. This
means that others would not even have the benefit of listening
in on the converstation. People aren't unaware that this
is a public forum, but they are willing to discuss some sensitive
subjects publicly if in a limited way. If we cannot accept
their terms than they might not be able to discuss it at all here.
Which is what you seem to be saying.
� > If I even choose to discuss it here, I do so knowing that I've just
� > opened it up to a large group of readers. OK. You may or may not have
� > something you are very eager to say to me about one of the above
� > personal/sensitive topics. What I need is to discuss some of the
� > sensitive personal things with the women first. By ourselves, without
� > having men say much until we've heard from each other. After that, I
� > might be ready and interested in hearing all the opinions.
�
� If that the case, then my feelings are that you are probably better
� off discussing the subject in a more private setting or format than
� a public notes file. Ther are in fact may means to do this, extending
� from mail to womens groups set up the discuss these things. If you
� desise that exclusititvy, why are you putting that subject in a public
� place in which there is a mixed audience numbering in the thousands ?
� To me thats like putting a meal in front of X amount of hungry people,
� and randomly selection whos allowed to eat. Its not fair to all concered,
� and it leads to animositys, which is exzactly what these FWO notes
� have done.
This means that we all lose. The men who won't even hear what
problems women face, and the women who can't share these feelings
with other women (interactively) and men (by letting them read
their feelings). Your analogy about hungry people is not a good
analogy (I'm beginning to hate analogies). Men do not have some
drive (hunger) to participate in this conversation.
� > how I felt when I was sexually abused at age 3,
�
� Although this experience was personal to you, it does not mean that
� something similar could, or did not happen to a man at this age.
� Under those circumstances, if this also happened to me, I may wish
� to relate my experiences also.
�
� > how I felt when I was almost raped and strangled,
�
� I could share an experience on how I was beat up and robbed
I find this a perfect example of why women want to discuss topics
amongst themselves. Because you are not a woman, because you
cannot experience some of the same things that happen to women,
your input will often de-rail the topic, and cause frustration.
We will get into arguments about why being beaten and robbed are
not the same as being raped and strangled instead of continuing
the topic at hand.
Perhaps it's not quite fair, perhaps there are times when a man's
input to the conversation could help. But don't try and drive
women out of their own conference to get support from other women.
Let's stop this attitude of telling women that if they can't
discuss something with everyone that they can't discuss it at all.
It's like being told to shut up, and that hurts when you're just
learning to talk. Give the topic author enough credit for knowing
her own needs at the moment. I don't think that FWO notes are
here for spitefulness, and I don't think a policy of allowing them
will be abused. In fact I rather doubt very many of them will
occur at all.
...Karen
|
621.188 | Druther be called Dana | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:54 | 8 |
| re .182 >Men love being called a 'gentleman'.
I must take exception. I am a gentleman, to the best of my
abilities, and I don't mind being noticed as one, but being
called one means either "You're moving too slow" or "You're
going home alone, sorry." Nice_guys_sleep_alone syndrome
or being rushed. No thanks. This old set of wheels only has
one speed.
|
621.189 | | STING::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:58 | 131 |
|
RE .171
> I am not trying to say that your reply or anyone's reply has no
> validity, but I do want to respond to a specific point you made.
OK, thats fair, I have always been willing to listen to someone
elses thoughts.
>> How many times have you pre-judged a person or situation before word one ?
>> Think about it for a second, did you really give that guy the benefit
>> of the doubt ? Is this person rendering an opinion or telling you what
>> to do ? What I sense, is that you, as so many others in this file, go to
>>auto defense mode and on the offensive before you really determine whether
>> the statements are a shot at you or an opinion.
> So as I understand your words here, you're suggesting that many
> women jump to conclusions (in your words, "pre-judge") men's words
> even though the men are just giving their opinion.
I wrote these thoughts based on the statement that Holly made in her
reply .161...."I'de rather be assertive and make a man feel uncomfortable,
than let a man put me down or trivialize me." Now I could have mis
understood her intent, but the statement sent me a message that she has
a definite tendency to be defensive to the point of if she even thinks
that a man is about to wrong her she goes into that aggressive (defensive)
mode. That denotes to me a person that has a tendency to pre-judge people.
I am also of the opinion that she is not the only person that does this.
> But earlier in this same reply you write:
>>Is anger the only way you can derive power ? are you really happy
>>and comfortable living with that anger ? If so, you've chosen a
>>tough way to live.
Now I think the words "you've chosen a tough way to live" are expressed
as fact not opinion. In this next passage you continue:
I believe that you have missed the point, that the answers to the two
posed questions as being the qualifier to the follow up statement.
If the person answered yes to either one or both of the questions
then they in fact have chosen a tough way to live. Ask anyone that
has been that way and been fortunate enough to recognize it, to the
extent that they stop letting anger rule their life. Believe me when
I tell you that I've been there and back and know first hand.
>> In short, it is not healthy to live with it as a priority in your
>> life. If you are convinced that anger is the sole source of power
>>in ones life, you are sadly mistaken.
> Now, Bob, you may think that your words are being attacked because
> you are male, but I can tell you that for me that is not true.
> When anyone tells me that I am "sadly mistaken," I tend to shut
> myself down to anything she or he has to say. Can you see how
> other people (men and women) might be offended by words like the
> ones I've cited above.
As holly pointed out , the printed word leaves so much to be desired
in relation to there is no observed body language, eye contact, and
voice inflection / tone attached to it. Had you the ability to hear
the words spoken, you would have picked up on a tone expressing
concern. The voice of one friend explaining to another that their
own experience has shown then that this lifestyle of anger is wrong.
> In this passage, you described your experiences. I felt much more
> comfortable with that.
>>I know about that anger, I still have traces of it from multiple
>>sources. It took me some time to control it and push it aside and
>>to replace it with more important things in my personal agenda of life.
I suppose this just serves as an example of the different way people
can say the same things. My style is to try and get the person I'am
talking to to think about what I'am saying. I do this by posing some
questions and then commenting with my opinion about the possible answers.
Hopefully this gives the person a clear prospective of my thoughts.
I also relate personal experiences to try and round out the discussion.
> Bob, I just want you to know that for me it really is the way you
> expressed yourself in that note... not the fact that you are male
> that made me angry. If you had said something like:
> It seems to me that you have a lot of anger, and this disturbs
> me because I think anger gets in the way of other things. When
> I feel angry...
> Those kinds of statements feel very different to me than the things
> you said in your note to Holly. Some people think (and I agree)
> that men and women *generally* have different ways of expressing
> themselves. I think that women are more likely to express things
> in terms of personal experience and that men are more likely to
> express things as fact. Now if my opinion is correct, if those
> differences do exist between men and women *Generally*, then it
> may look to some folks that men are being harshly judged because
> of their gender... not because of the ways they sometimes express
> themselves.
I see two things here. First is those women that are angry at men in
general. It doesn't make any difference what any man has to say as
far as an opinion because they will disagree with it anyway. The
tell tale here is in the manner that they write answers. The second
is the style or interpitation differences.
I have a tendency to believe it goes a little bit further than
just a style difference. I think were all guilty of getting hung up
on one sentence, or paragraph of thought, instead of looking at the
entire text. A good example of this is above, where as you were
uncomfortable with one section of what I wrote vs another section.
They were both talking to the same subject as a continuous train of
thought. But as you pointed out if the reader gets hung up one one
piece of the total it can destroy the overall meaning of the entire
text.
And this reverts back into one of the things I was saying. That if
a person has that chip already on their shoulder, then they are going
to seek out that one thing that sets them off, rather than receiving
the real message in the text. How many time have we seen some one nit
pic a word, spelling error, grammar error, complain that the persons
style is all wrong, rather than address the opinions expressed ?
How many times have we seen someone complaining that someone is "telling"
them what to do, when in fact the person is giving advice based on their
experience (which BTW half the time was requested).
It occurs to me that there is a fair amount of these nit pic things
happening in here vs discussion of the differences of opinions and why
a person feels that way. This is something we all need to watch for
if were ever to come to a better understanding of each other. I'am really
not trying to complain, I'am expressing my being tired of playing the
one way game some people play.
Bob B
|
621.190 | coming from different places | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Jan 22 1988 15:02 | 18 |
| Bob,
There is a different way to interpret Holly's words. If a person
has accepted being put down for a long time and swallowed their
anger, then deciding to be legitimately angry is not the same as
being hostile, defensive or having a chip on the shoulder.
This may be a difference between men and women. Women were long
taught to hide their anger. So Holly is I believe talking about
going from hiding anger and never getting angry except inside to
being unafraid to get angry with cause. While you appear to be
starting from the point of being unafraid to get angry with cause
and seeing this as moving as getting angry at the slightest thing
with no real cause.
Does this make any sense?
Bonnie
|
621.191 | | VIKING::TARBET | | Fri Jan 22 1988 15:18 | 78 |
| <--(.189)
Jeez, that was tough to follow, Bob. (I think you need a more
consistent way of flagging nested quotes.)
It's interesting, Bob: when I read what you write, and think about the
way you respond to people, the image I conjure up of you (I don't think
we've ever actually spoken at a party yet...my visual impression from
across the room was that you look like a figure out of a nineteenth
century adventure novel!) is of a warm, friendly, strong guy who has
been around in the world for awhile, has learned some important stuff
the hard way, and would really like to share the results of that
experience with others to maybe save them some of the same hard knocks.
And I also see a guy who is concerned about the difficulties men and
women have communicating, and frustrated by the tendency he sees for
women (particularly) to go off the deep end over style rather than
substance.
I get that image, feel absolutely sure that you have the finest
possible intentions, and yet wonder if you would perhaps get further if
you used more psychological "tricks" to get your point across. I call
them "tricks" by the way not because they're tricky or deceitful, but
rather because they're simple things that are easy to learn but still
give a huge return on your investment.
For instance, you say:
� I wrote these thoughts based on the statement that Holly made in her
� reply .161...."I'de rather be assertive and make a man feel uncomfortable,
� than let a man put me down or trivialize me." Now I could have mis
� understood her intent, but the statement sent me a message that she has
� a definite tendency to be defensive....
Now, the trick I would use in this case is to check out the
possibilities first. Maybe she didn't express herself well. Or, maybe
you *did* misunderstand her intent. Or, maybe you understood her
perfectly well. Hard to tell without checking, right? To check, I'd
have asked something like "What would trigger your assertive behavior?"
Then if she replied, for example, "I can tell just by how a man looks
at me whether he's going to put me down", you could be very sure that
your conclusion that she's defensive is accurate and go on from
there.
Further down, you say...
� My style is to try and get the person I'am talking to to think about
� what I'am saying. I do this by posing some questions and then
� commenting with my opinion about the possible answers. Hopefully this
� gives the person a clear prospective of my thoughts.
Now, I find that asking questions is another good trick, so we're
certainly in agreement on that one! But I've always felt that in order
for that trick to work, the questions have to be real questions rather
than rhetorical ones...otherwise when I get an answer back it's
embarrasing rather than informative (and Oy! do I know *that*
feeling!). What sort of questions do you prefer, Bob? I'm interested
because I have a strong sense (please correct me if I'm mistaken?) that
you and I differ there, and that you prefer rhetorical.
� I also relate personal experiences to try and round out the discussion.
Y'know, the only time I can remember you really opening up about your
own experience was when you talked about how miserable it is being a
'Nam vet and having people pull back as though you were diseased or
criminal. Which ones did I miss? (Your experience with that woman and
her mother really got to me, btw, and I wasn't the only one! (Well, you
know that from the reactions you got back.))
Those are the three most useful tricks I know, and it's clear that you
already know two of them too (even if we differ on what exactly we mean
by them, or how much you actually practice them ;')
Anything ring a bell, or does the whole thing sound bogus?
=maggie
|
621.192 | ex | STING::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Fri Jan 22 1988 15:51 | 113 |
|
RE .174
> I found your remarks to be very perceptive. One thing surprised
> me, however. Neither you nor anyone else took Bob Barber to task
> for the following:
Well since you have , I will
>> "Oh theres a problem all right, but its not what you perceive it to
>> be. The real problem here is that in too many cases you and others
>> can not or will not differentiate between opinion and criticism vs
>> coercion and control."
> No qualification of "I believe" is made, just the simple ~what you see
> is wrong~. No examples are cited, no reasons are given.
Well number one the replys have been getting long enough without adding
more to them. But since you've requested it, I give an example of one
of the most common occurrences of which I speak. There has been a number
of time I and others have written an opinion and have been accused of
"attempting to tell that person what to do" What, you don't believe me,
well lets look at a part of .187 right from this note. (With apologies
to Karen)
FROM .187
Let's stop this attitude of telling women that if they can't
discuss something with everyone that they can't discuss it at all.
...Karen
Want more, go back to the Hite report note and some of the other running
controversial subjects that I've been involved in. You will find examples
from Suzzane Conlon, Ellen Gugel, and others all responding at one time
or another with accusations of my telling then what to do, when in fact
the statements from me were opinion. Brushing me and others off as if
our opinion has no validity simply because they don't want to hear it.
Beyond that are the constant accusations that men are attacking womanhood
and the file because our opinion deferrers from some feminist author or
favorite woman in the file. And for that matter I'am not the only man
thats been charged with these and other wrong accusations
> Any easily
> peeved sociologist would rip that statement up, through it on the
> ground, and jump up and down on it.
No , women in women notes don't make light nor say that a man's
opinion has no validity to it now do they..... RIGGGGGGHT !!!!
If thats the case then what is the above....a complement ????
For that matter since when did Sociology become a hard science ?
I've always known it as on of the "soft" sciences due to it being
a matter of conjecture and opinion. So what if a Sociologist gets
peeved, who is to say whether that person opinion is right or wrong
save for them selves.
> Yes, Bob has the right to his opinions. Nevertheless, if he states
> them as facts, then others have a equal right to question their validity
> and even their veracity.
Oh thank you for allowing me an opinion. But excuse me... how do you
differentiate between opinion and facts ? Whatevers convenient for you ?
I guess you haven't been following all the conversations in here
for if you had things that I have been talking about would be hard
to miss. As you are famous for asking for proof and definitions,
please define your personal interpatation of the words opinion
and fact, with examples.
> Bob, men qua men *are* welcome to participate. However, certain
> subsegments of the world population are not welcome because of,
> well, shall we say, certain abrasive or distasteful qualities.
> (To me, a distasteful quality would be a careless attitude towards
> the truth, and and abrasive one would be an insistance on having
> the *right* to be careless about the truth.)
And my problem is when people twist the truth to suit themselves !
AKA your non observance of the accusations of people charging
others opinion of telling (ordering) what to do.
> In our culture, girls
> and women have been far more rigorously trained in how to be polite
> and in how to withdraw a statement or claim that is disagreed with
> than boys and men have been.
BULLPUPPY !!! maybe days long ago, but not todays women. Most every
one I know, especially in this conferences have got their own mind,
speak it and are willing to stick to their gun when they feel their
right. You really know women that will roll over and change their
minds just because they were told by some man that they were wrong ?
I don't believe it .
> Therefore, in this notefile (which
> has our culture as one of its anchor points), men are far more
> likely to be in this unacceptable subsegment than women are. Please
> consider seeing that situation in this more diffuse cultural light
> than in the absolutist, "post hoc ergo propter hoc" light which
> you seem to be using.
What I'am looking at is, I sense an attitude of I am to only do what
you say is OK for me as a man which is different from what you want
and preach that is OK for yourself and other women. I believe the term
is double standard.
> P.S. I do not think that there is a single woman (or man) in this
> notefile who does not believe that women in this country are better
> off now than they were last century. However, I (for one) to not
> confuse the concept "better" with "good"; e.g., a 1% raise is better
> than no raise, but it is not a "good" raise in this company.
If that is the case then I wonder what your goals are and am really
curious as to you definition of the word "Equality". Which sounds
like an excellent topic for a new note.
|
621.193 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Fri Jan 22 1988 16:50 | 16 |
| RE: .192
Bob Barber, you mentioned earlier that people rarely tell
you that you are being rude. Allow me to be the first, then.
I would like to request that you please STOP bringing up my
name in a general way (to describe general behavior or things
that I *might* say in response to your current conversation).
I have not been active in this conference for over two weeks
and would appreciate it if you would *refrain* from talking about
me personally anymore when I am *not* part of the discussion.
(If you need the quotes of your text where you brought up my
name, please send mail and I will be happy to furnish them.)
Suzanne...
|
621.194 | | MORGAN::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Fri Jan 22 1988 17:40 | 92 |
|
RE: .187
> Bob, I read your reply to Holly, and it (along with responses>
> from other people) give me the impression that if women would
> like to discuss topics with other women than either they have to>
> meet personally or have a private notes conference. This
> means that others would not even have the benefit of listening
> in on the conversation. People aren't unaware that this
> is a public forum, but they are willing to discuss some sensitive
> subjects publicly if in a limited way. If we cannot accept
> their terms than they might not be able to discuss it at all here.
> Which is what you seem to be saying.
Not really. look again at what Holly has to say
� > If I even choose to discuss it here, I do so knowing that I've just
� > opened it up to a large group of readers. OK. You may or may not have
� > something you are very eager to say to me about one of the above
� > personal/sensitive topics. What I need is to discuss some of the
� > sensitive personal things with the women first. By ourselves, without
� > having men say much until we've heard from each other. After that, I
� > might be ready and interested in hearing all the opinions.
My contention is that if a woman wants to do a "sanity check" or
what ever with just other women, then shes probably better off
doing it in a closed format scenario. Then if she wishes to open it
up to all concerned theres the file. I just have a problem relating
to the level of privacy that is desired (fort a women only discussion)
when the subject is entered in the file with such a broad mixed
audience
> This means that we all lose. The men who won't even hear what
> problems women face, and the women who can't share these feelings
> with other women (interactively) and men (by letting them read
> their feelings). Your analogy about hungry people is not a good
> analogy (I'm beginning to hate analogies). Men do not have some
> drive (hunger) to participate in this conversation.
If you don't want men to know about it, then why are you exposing
it to them ? The problem with FWO notes is that they shut the door
on the fact that men can in fact either relate from their experiences
or simpathedic feelings. To keep that closed format is to denigh that
we have or are capable of those experiences or feelings
> I find this a perfect example of why women want to discuss topics
> amongst themselves. Because you are not a woman, because you
> cannot experience some of the same things that happen to women,
> your input will often de-rail the topic, and cause frustration.
> We will get into arguments about why being beaten and robbed are
> not the same as being raped and strangled instead of continuing
> the topic at hand.
All I can say here is that I disagree, and that I feel your closing
the door to further understanding and support
> Perhaps it's not quite fair, perhaps there are times when a man's
> input to the conversation could help. But don't try and drive
> women out of their own conference to get support from other women.
> Let's stop this attitude of telling women that if they can't
> discuss something with everyone that they can't discuss it at all.
***W*H*O*O*A.....Hold on there now...Wile some of the men in here
have been strongly protesting and contesting the for women only
notes, I haven't once told you or anyone else what to do. I have
been giving you and other women my opinion on the subject, but
not once have I give anyone a command by telling you what to do.
For that matter I haven't seen any writing by others stating
such "orders". I've come to a point of getting REAL touchy about
being accused of doing that. This is a medium in which, anyone I've
ever seen write in it, has stated either advice, opinions, or personal
experiences. I have not seen it as a way to command others on what to
do . That accusation has been tossed at me a few times already without
a single case of real evidence to substantiate it.
> It's like being told to shut up, and that hurts when you're just
> learning to talk. Give the topic author enough credit for knowing
> her own needs at the moment. I don't think that FWO notes are
> here for spitefulness, and I don't think a policy of allowing them
> will be abused. In fact I rather doubt very many of them will
> occur at all.
I am more than willing to acknowledge the ability of a person to
know their own personal needs and feelings. My sense of fairness
says that FWO note does not acknowledge that men can have knowledge
of them too. To that extent I see them as being a bit one sided
and selfish on the authors part.
Bob B
|
621.195 | There is only 1 Bob Barber, right? | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Fri Jan 22 1988 20:50 | 47 |
| RE: .194
Bob,
I didn't accuse you or anyone of trying to "order" anyone
around. I guess I don't really know how to convey my opinion
that your (and some other people's) opinion makes me feel like
you (and they) believe that you (and they) feel that women
shouldn't discuss things in FWO topics unless those women can discuss
them with everyone. In which case I feel that less will be
discussed if women start to agree with your opinion and this
file starts a policy to not allow FWO topics, because I feel that
these women might not be able to discuss with everyone what they
could discuss in a FWO topic. So we all lose.
Does that make it any clearer? (rhetorical question). Probably
not. So this is a sort of half-assed apology for wording things
without stating often enough that this was just my opinion of
your (collective) opinion and that I now realize that you do not
expect the moderators to form any sort of policy based on your
opinions. I, however, hope they do base policy on my opinion and
am telling them what I think they should do.
> I am more than willing to acknowledge the ability of a person to
> know their own personal needs and feelings. My sense of fairness
> says that FWO note does not acknowledge that men can have knowledge
> of them too. To that extent I see them as being a bit one sided
> and selfish on the authors part.
I said it might not be fair. My point is that all communication
(on some topics) between men and women might be shut off if women
could not have notes that men could read but not reply to. Maybe
once in awhile some women need to be one-sided and selfish. I'm
willing to let men have those needs too. So for now maybe the
men can not be selfish by letting these topics continue.
...Karen
P.S. I had vowed not to contribute any more to this endless
debate and here I am one more time. I won't reply to this
anymore. Bob, I'm sorry if you want to question something I've
said but I'm stopping. If it's really that important send me
mail. I think maybe at this point we should agree to disagree.
|
621.196 | off base | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Jan 22 1988 21:59 | 9 |
| For the record, I think of myself as a "regular contributor to this
file" and I'm male. I have NEVER felt that a note of mine was taken
less seriously than I intended, or that it was "made light of".
Except once.
By a man.
-- Charles
|
621.197 | delete America ...the beautiful | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Sat Jan 23 1988 00:01 | 130 |
| RE .183-4 Bonnie, I am sorry that *Society* in previous times
had inequities that people today find hard to believe,
understand, and (not lastly ...it ever seems) -- accept.
I have been educated to believe that men throughout
history are the vicious villains ( to blame ) regarding
nearly all of these so-called inequities.
I have been totally conditioned into (buying) the
viewpoints that men are the ones who structured Society
and have oppressed and subjugated women thru all times.
Be it most any subject from A to Z, I have been 'trained'
to believe that men have done everything from the building
of Great Cities and homes to making rockets to reach the
moon to writing great classics of literature to building
business empires to achieving super athletic feats to
to feeding and clothing and caring for a wife and family.
I have been 'led' to believe that men are totally to
blame for not always being kind to their soulmates - women.
I am aware of the painful realities of abusive and criminal
men and make no excuses for them or their inhumane actions.
Such 'men are bad influences for Society. More simply-
bad for *Society*. And I think Society (in general) takes
'care of' such men.
So .... I'll admit that some men in history have not
been the best of creatures. But I think that the vast
majority of men have been good - and have held power in
good faith - so ..... therein lies the problem I have.
Why is it that men -- men are sooo blamed for sooo much
of the problems in life when the other half - women, has
SO Much Power in Life? And rarely gets the appropriate
*share* of the blame for the many problems that she has
contributed to.
Salome was able to get John the Baptist's head. That's
power. She had the power to have men listen to a killing
order - and yes - carry it out.
Cleopatra got Caesar's attention, not to mention Marc
Antony's - and millions of Egyptians. Of course 4 years
is not forever, especially when she allowed the asp to
bite her neck ....
Other *non-contributers* in World history must include
Mary Magdalene.
To quote Eisler, "...Mary Magdalene was a *leader* of
the early Christian movement after Jesus died.... Mary
was one of the most important figures in the early Christian
movement.... Mary ...was the Christian leader who had
the courage to challenge the authority of Peter as the
head of a new religious hierarchy...."
Many different kinds of Queens thru the ages.....
Madame Chang-Kai-Shek led the Republic of China for many
years... U.S. President's wives... Eleanor Roosevelt WAS
President for a time ... Golda Meir, Evita Peron, Maggie
Thatcher, Cory Aquino, Raisa & Nancy; Imelda Marcos,
Joan of Arc, Clara Barton, Marie Curie, Florence Nightengale,
Emily Dickenson, the 'Flappers of 1917-21', Simone de
Beauvoir and 'The *Second* Sex", Betty Friedan, Gloria
Steinem, Kate Millet, Marilu Lopez, Shirley Chisholm,
Germaine Greer, Ms Smeal & Yard, Wilma Heide, Helen
Caldicott, Mayflower Madam, Donna Rice, Jessica Hahn
('lady'), last & not least EVE.... Ms 50% chance of starting
it all.
So where was I... oh yes, people & roles. Blame games,
crutches, and such. Hmmmm...
Admissions: Men are bigger & more muscular than women
(in general). And some men thru history have abused such
advantages. Over other men. Over women.
Limitations: Men have been trapped in the limited World
that conditioned stereotyped role expectations bring.
Most 'Men I see are the dull robots that E.V. talks about.
And that scares me. I think men are still in the roles
that have been imposed upon them from time immemorial.
Besides John Lennon, do you know of a man that has been
a REAL FULL TIME F A T H E R for his children?
Do you KNOW .... Really KNOW .... how many Men wish that
they could toss away their rat race jobs and give their
ALL to the Women and Children that they so dearly LOVE?
I hate to say it but a man doen't even THINK of the
*possibility*. He has from day one been expected to Work
away from home - and work he does.
I hear complaints about housework - sorry ITS EASY.
I heard all the complaints from the 'Movement' in the
70's. Sorry - WE never needed it. Civil MEN *ESP.*
And if I may be brash to say so - Gentlemen are a thing
of the past because of the CRUSHING CRITICISM from the
Intellectual 'factual' know it alls.
The last breed of Men had no chance when they got &
virtually had to take it from all *sides* in the 70's.
We even had to prove our worth as 'performers' among
the 'sexually liberated women.'
Divorce and custody laws are fair. Ha. Military equality.
Ahem. Circumcision - ouch. Affirmative Action for 'all
those oppressed *minorities* -- pleeze. I'll find a wife
to support me to be a house husband - that liberated attitude
is out there --yeah. Men get asked out :-). It's *certain
men* who are the troublemakers in a Conf.- aren't WE always.
Always *US*, never the possibility of ... Mennotes knows
what men need - issues to discuss. Do many men know what
a 'male issue' is? Ha. Men have no idea -- and Eisler's
gylanic women are not there (or encouraged to go) to help
them.
As someone said in 'Football' over 'there,' if *I* don't
like it, then *I* can always change the channel. WE all
can. And I've heard from many wonderful Women & Men that
HAVE.
We MEN are often accused of being insensitive. For God's
sake take a look at yourselves. All of you. What kind
of sensitivity IS IT to print a note that says male replies
will be ** DELETED **. Tell the 40% of the 'Community'
what it feels like for somebody to say to you -- "I'm
DELETING YOU...(if...).
The reaction from this one is not the idea of the FWO
notes -- they're OK with me & I've never read a one.
The ISSUE is *some* of the accompanying ATTITUDES that
go along with such ideas. SENSITIVITY is a 2 way street.
So let's be careful before more people DELETE more than
just a few 'gender's'(precious thoughts) notes.
That is not the issue.
re Ann B. There is a difference between 'opinion & criticism' and
'coercion & control.' Yes there is..... and let's make
sure that we all are careful about such possibilities....
Both sexes have done a number on one another thru all
time. Except for one topic, I have nothing more to say
for a long time -- it just isn't worth it.
And yes -- we all do like Jim, Tammy & Jessica - DON'T
WE? Don't WE? don't we . . . .
not a gentleman,
Russ
|
621.198 | Even Miss Manners would say... | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sat Jan 23 1988 15:04 | 11 |
| RE: .72
"It's RUDE to do that, and a person who does it can have every legal right to do
it and still add no more value to what's going on than someone who pees in the
community swimming pool."
Are you saying my note was piss? I don't think it deserves that!
It is RUDE to exclude someone who is present from a conversation.
Jim.
|
621.199 | I wanna second opinion! (:-)) | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sat Jan 23 1988 15:07 | 9 |
| RE: .74
"Ever have a boss argue and finally "decide" that your idea was "wrong"? How
did you feel then?"
Like the boss is a !@#$. I usually go and see what other people think of
the idea, and then either drop it, or keep pushing the idea.
Jim.
|
621.200 | Good way (both ways) to put it jerry! | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sat Jan 23 1988 15:11 | 0 |
621.201 | I do think 'step outside' notes are a great idea | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sat Jan 23 1988 15:16 | 11 |
| RE: .86
"Gee, Liz, maybe you moderators could create a "step-outside" note. You know a
place where men could go and shoot pistols (or whatever) at each other at 50
paces, and leave the rest of us out of their duels."
Odd, it seems to me that most 'duels' have one (or more) woman, and one (or
more) man. I'd like to see the women with pistols to step outside as well as
the men with pistols.
Jim.
|
621.202 | what's good for the goose is good for the gander | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sat Jan 23 1988 15:24 | 8 |
| RE: .90
"Namely, that male "attention" <in [notes]> may always be forced on women."
What is wrong with that, since female attention (in notes) may always be forced
on men? Seems fair...
Jim.
|
621.203 | F=am; ideas have no mass | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sat Jan 23 1988 15:38 | 21 |
| RE: .73
"Males who would "force their ideas" upon unwilling women..."
Come on, how does someone *force* an idea on you? You can walk away, you can
not listen, you can not agree, you can not believe.... Maybe you can
*brainwash* people, but that is lightyears from what is being discussed!
You *should not* force the other person to move away, to shut up, to stop
believing what they believe...
I speak/write, in response to what I hear and what I think. I hope people will
listen, think, and reply. But they may choose not to, and I don't force them
to.
The reply that disagrees with me is just as valuable to me as the reply that
agrees with me, all other things (logic...) being equal... However, I am less
likely to criticize illogic of someone on 'my side', I sometimes just keep quite
and hope that the other side doesn't see the flaws.
Jim.
|
621.204 | my ego, right or wrong | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Sat Jan 23 1988 15:39 | 4 |
| Oh, I don't know about that. And here's a concrete counter-example:
655. Besides, this is a place for women to flex their muscles.
If we want to see you flex yours (or whatever it is), we'll go watch
you in mennotes.
|
621.205 | Sez Who? | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sat Jan 23 1988 16:00 | 17 |
| RE: .104
"The moderators also have the right and responsibility to hide your replies
where applicable."
A meaningless statement without the definitions of "right", "responsiblity", and
"were applicable". Assuming you mean what I think you mean, I ask who gave them
that right? No one. I do not believe that they have that right.
"Respecting the authors will is *nonexistant* by some men in this conference."
And by some women. I have entered several notes and set them nowrite, and they
have been changed to writable.
Jim.
|
621.206 | laziness does not justify discrimination | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sat Jan 23 1988 16:06 | 8 |
| RE: .106
"And it's private in the sense that FWO topics allow women to shape the flow of
what is being said in some instances."
There are infinitely better ways of doing this...
Jim.
|
621.207 | name one, and explain why it's "infinitely better" | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Sat Jan 23 1988 16:19 | 1 |
| Okay, wise guy, put your fingers where your mouth is.
|
621.208 | | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven - a perfectly useless state. | Sat Jan 23 1988 18:51 | 6 |
| Reply to .205, Jim,
There is always a way to defeat a topic and your're pretty good
at that. Why don't you, personally, respect the will and intent
of this file and take whatever banterings you have to somewhere
else?
|
621.209 | what makes you qualified to speak Mikie? | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 11:22 | 29 |
| RE: .125
"And what are the indications that you have gotten from women that the stated
purpose of this conference is one of raising *your* consciousness?"
"I will freely admit that that has happened in this conference but is that the
stated purpose of the conference? Not that I'm aware of."
Would the moderators (or a vote) care to pronounce a verdict?
"And let them make a decision without having to listen to whiners."
That would essentially be an uninformed decision. Why would you prefer an
uninformed decision?
"There are other conference that are more appropriate for human relations."
That may be true, but obviously such notefiles are not fullfilling the needs
that many would wish womannotes to fill.
Why is it that *you* Male Mikie feel authorized to tell people what women want?
"What is the cosmic and cultural loss?"
Men understanding women. Women understanding men. Seems like a significant
loss to me.
Jim.
|
621.210 | "It doesn't hurt to ask" | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 11:26 | 9 |
| RE: .130
"I then went and talked to my friends and they told me that he had no right to
ask me that."
I would say that he had every right to *ask*. And you had every right to
decline with dignity.
Jim.
|
621.211 | Moderator Plea | RAINBO::TARBET | | Sun Jan 24 1988 11:28 | 3 |
| I'd be grateful for a little less contentiousness, Jim. Please?
=maggie
|
621.212 | generalizing / writing inclusively | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 11:36 | 21 |
| RE: .131
I feel that the C-R rules are good ones. However I have a problem following
one of them:
"People agree to speak for themselves and not generalize,"
I often generalize because I *assume* that other people are like me and have
shared a like experience. I don't *insist* that they are like me, or did share
such experiences, but I want them to identify with whatever I am writing, and
hopefully learn what I learned (or learn something else, and point that out to
me) from the experience.
I also see a lot of thoughts / feelings that seem harmfull to the person who has
them. I usually point out how I see them. It is entirely their right to argee
or disagree, but I do feel obligated to point them out...
Is there a better way to do this without "'denying'" someone elses feelings /
thoughts / persons then I am doing? (serious replies only please)
Jim.
|
621.213 | Both good questions that need to be asked, and answered | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 11:39 | 9 |
| RE: .132
"Women talking about their generalized anger at men, and men questioning the
existence of wife abuse in this country are EQUALLY disruptive to the file."
Why does one have a place here, and one not? Both discussions benifit women.
Where better to get an asnwer to the second question then here?
Jim.
|
621.214 | Reactionary is not all bad | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 11:47 | 15 |
| RE: .134
""Militant" men: (I'd've said "reactionary men" myself)"
As one who I imagine is branded as Militant, I agree that "reactionary" is a
better label for me. Not that I believe that the labels are necessarily bad.
Some things need to be "militant" about. Some things need to be "reactionary"
about.
I don't think that I fit in either of the subcategories mentioned. I do feel
that women have some inequality that they need to give up as equality to men,
and that men have inequalities which they benifit from to give as equality to
women.
Jim.
|
621.215 | How does this read? | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 11:50 | 11 |
| RE: .135
How does this read?
'I just got a mail message from a member of the community who pointed out that
one tactic used by the militant women is to claim that the most of the men here
are militant (i.e., separatist) rather than moderate (i.e., strongly feminist
but not chauvinist). To those women, any man who is not fully supportive of
women in a men/women conflict is labelled a chauvinist.'
Jim.
|
621.216 | Why do the 'so called' have to be second class? | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 11:54 | 8 |
| RE: .136
"And the needs of the so-called militant women should come before those of the
so-called militant men in this file if we have to choose."
Why?
Jim.
|
621.217 | I wouldn't want to see that in life! | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 12:01 | 18 |
| RE: .140
Nobody seems to be calling you strident but yourself, (if any). But probably
there is a better term, just as reactionary might be a better term for some men
then militant.
"And I don't think that support will be jeopardized if we sometimes wish to talk
only with each other."
Quite a few people *have* said that that jeopardizes their support.
"I don't want men's participation to change the shape and the direction of the
file.
If you see this file as a microcosm of life, how would you feel about this
being applied throughout life?
Jim.
|
621.218 | excuses begging to be used | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 12:13 | 33 |
| "If women have to agree with men in order to get men to support them in their
battle, will women ever be truly equal?"
Doesn't that depend on what they agree to, rather then who they agree with??
"I have never expected life to be totally fair, and I have never asked for
complete equality."
'That's Life' has been used by *many* to justify unequal treatment! It sounds
like a built in excuse just begging to be used.
But,
"(Sometimes I like to be equal, sometimes have the advantage, and sometimes the
disadvantage. Just make sure it averages out to be equal.)"
I can agree with that; sometimes it's good to just go along for the ride for a
while, and let someone *else* take the flack that goes with being 'top dog'.
People have the right to delegate authority if they choose. The question then
is how much right do they have to complain if they don't like the results?
The problam is that people will have a ***lot*** harder time agreeing what
averages out to be equal, then what is equal in each case. Different things
are important for different people.
"sorry men I'm not looking to meet your needs right now"
That ranks right up there with "Would you mind taking your silly assed problem
down the hall?" I think that the lack of concern and rudeness in both sucks.
Sure, we can't solve all the world's problems, but 'tough luck' doesn't strike
me as a good answer.
Jim.
|
621.219 | Loyal Opposition | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 12:21 | 22 |
| RE: .145 militant sides
I believe that each side exists out of reaction to the other. I think that they
are both necessary. (I still think 'no men' is going too far)
"It's a little bit (but not exactly) like the old system of triage."
By your definitions, I would conclude that the ones who need it the most
would be the extremists. But unfortunately, I think they would be the least
likely to benifit. :-)
"(I just don't feel as much responsibility towards "militant" men *here*,
though, should it come down to a conflict of needs.)"
It is very much necessary to have the "Loyal Opposition", of which I number
myself, to point out flaws, to play the devil's advocate so that improvement may
be made.
Jim.
|
621.220 | mostly sounds good | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Sun Jan 24 1988 12:29 | 28 |
| RE: .149
"Is it so hard to believe that a sincere (and repeated) request for men to be
very careful in this topic [since it is a "loaded" subject and we want/need
support] would be respected?"
No.
"And if some man wandering through put in a hurtful/insensitive reply, do you
really think that a personal reminder to him would be ignored?"
No.
"Is it so hard to understand our heightened (perhaps excessively so, but that is
neither mine nor yours to judge) sensitivity on certain issues makes us very
hesitant to welcome the presence of those who have shown a proclivity for
stomping on our faces?"
It is not hard at all to understand. But it is very difficult to accept. There
is a large generalization in your question, namely that the 'stompers' includes
everyone who is being made to feel unwelcome.
"TAKE YOUR NITPICKING AND ATTACKING TO MAIL PLEASE"
I believe that it would be helpfull to have a series of topics where nitpicking,
if necessary can be taken to... these should be used by women as well as men.
Jim.
|
621.221 | Moderator Request | RAINBO::TARBET | | Sun Jan 24 1988 12:58 | 13 |
| <--(.220)
Jim, I think it's pretty clear to everyone now that we made a mistake
in asking you to break up your responses into separate notes. We
thought it would make them easier to read (and adding exact quotes
certainly has had a good effect), but overall I think we're less
well off now than before. I'd like to express our official
appreciation for your courtesy in being willing to change your style
when asked. At the same time, I'd also like to offically request
that you go back to concatenating all responses into a single entry.
in Sisterhood,
=maggie
|
621.222 | ask for clarification | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 11:25 | 7 |
| RE: .151 semantic problems...
What I has been trying to do lately is not assume that I understand what is
being said, which seems to be such as to make my blood boil, but instead to ask
if that is indeed what is meant, and go no further.
Jim.
|
621.223 | valued by me | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 11:34 | 9 |
| RE: .157
"Part of what _I_ want from this file includes giving men an idea of how badly
some of these things _hurt_ -- the assault on our feelings by what seems like an
innocuous remark."
This is a very important part of the file for me...
Jim.
|
621.224 | what's your solution? | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 12:38 | 22 |
| RE: .158
"In the interests of proving that men and women are "two genders separated by a
common language" <paraphrasing the ditty about the U.S. and England> I submit
that:"
I agree that it sometimes seems like that! :-) But is the solution then to talk
together less, IE seperatism? I would think the solution would be to talk
*more*.
"The "mind-set" is - Women's Space May Be Freely Intruded Upon By Men"
I would phrase it as 'Notesfile Space May Be Freely Intruded Upon By Men And
Women'.
"The "action" one takes may fall anywhere on a continuum of that "mind-set",
from feeling free to intrude on women's conversation to intruding on a woman's
body."
Are you equating Men in WOMANNOTES to Rapists?
Jim.
|
621.225 | I missed that, Bob... | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 12:58 | 9 |
| RE: .169
"What utter rubbish, although not one will admit it, there is this perminating
head set amongst a fair number of the women in this file that ALL men are out to
get you."
I didn't read that, at least not in the quotes you gave...
Jim.
|
621.226 | Holly... | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 13:39 | 14 |
| RE: .168
(I think :-}) I understand how you feel about anger, Holly. I think that
you put it very well.
"Does it seem like some of us are saying that women are incapable of hurting
others?"
Yes, it does. But most of the time I know that that is not what is meant, so I
ignore it.
Very good note Holly, I could read the 'thoughtfullness' between the lines...
Jim.
|
621.227 | forms of statements? | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 13:54 | 18 |
| RE: .171
"Now I think the words "you've chosen a tough way to live" are expressed as fact
not opinion."
I would say that those words are expressed as fact as Bob believes them. But I
do not feel that they are anything to get upset about. It would be quite easy
for me to disagree with him. I would not feel that Bob's opinion has been
'forced' on me. I do not understand very well why this form of a statement
causes so much anger.
"It seems to me that you have a lot of anger, and this disturbs me because I
think anger gets in the way of other things."
I would be much more upset by this form then the previsou one, because it
explicitly makes an assumption about me, namely that I am angry.
Jim.
|
621.228 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Mon Jan 25 1988 14:00 | 53 |
|
re: .199
Jim, I think your replies may point to one of the difficulties
of this (and some other) discussion.
In .74, I suggested a couple of ways men might consider what
having an idea "forced" upon them might feel like. F'rinstance,
I wrote:
"Ever have a boss argue and finally "decide" that your idea was
"wrong"? How did you feel then?"
You replied:
"Like the boss is a !@#$. I usually go and see what other people
think of the idea, and then either drop it, or keep pushing the idea."
A bit later (.203) you replied to .73:
RE: .73 "Males who would "force their ideas" upon unwilling women..."
Come on, how does someone *force* an idea on you?
**********************************************************************
If I had said that the boss not only says that your idea is wrong
but that you must work to comply with *his/her* idea, would it
change the picture? The other two examples I gave in .74 probably
serve better as illustrations (one was of a drill sergeant "sharing"
his/her ideas with you, compliance mandatory or of the legal system
"suggesting" what it think is good and fair for you/me/the people).
I apologize for not making the analogy clear in the "boss" example
(i.e. that the boss would/could enforce compliance with the idea),
but what I was getting at was that for some, such an event *feels*
like "force". I've a notion that what feels like force differs by
individual and that, if we poke around a bit, we'll find that there
*are* some generalities which differ by sex.
I have a hunch that men have (in general & historically) been
conditioned to "push back", "stand up for their rights", etc.
But this simply indicates *how* we were taught to react, not *what*
we're reacting *to*; and I think that "what" is a feeling of
being forced. Even if situation "x" doesn't feel like force to
me, it might to you (& vice versa).
Ach! Nutz! Y'know when ya gotta run to a mtg. and you got more
to say. . .I hate when that happens.
Steve
|
621.229 | excuse for double standard? | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 14:03 | 8 |
| RE: .173
"Perhaps the greatest gift men can get from participation in this conference is
the real understanding of how it feels for women in the work-place."
I do not feel this should be used as an excuse for double standards to exist.
Jim.
|
621.230 | depends on what else Bob said... | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 14:12 | 11 |
| RE: .174
"No qualification of "I believe" is made, just the simple ~what you see is
wrong~. No examples are cited, no reasons are given. Any easily peeved
sociologist would rip that statement up, throw it to the ground, and jump up and
down on it."
Not without looking at the context around that quote, I hope...
Jim.
|
621.231 | you never know who you can learn from | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 14:44 | 14 |
| RE: .181
"If I saw <tampons> as a subject, I would hit next unseen. This is the type
subject that deserves its form of privacy, since I know of no man that could
contribute to the discussion"
Not necessarily... a man may not have personal experience using tampons, but may
have aquired knowledge of them from a female SO, or through reading, etc... This
applies to many supposed 'woman only' topics.
Jim.
Jim.
|
621.232 | no, Jim, just the opposite | LATOUR::EVANS | | Mon Jan 25 1988 14:53 | 10 |
| Jim, my point in the note in which I placed actions based on
mind-set on a continuum was to REFUTE
those who were claiming that those who said men who had that
particular mind-set WERE rapists.
My contention is that this conclusion CANNOT be drawn, not the reverse.
--DE
|
621.233 | pre 1940's? | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Mon Jan 25 1988 14:56 | 6 |
| RE: .183
Bonnie, I don't know of many people in womannotes who "were not allowed to vote,
not allowed to attend school, not allowed to own property"... :-}
Jim.
|
621.234 | | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Jan 25 1988 15:07 | 3 |
| re .233
Jim the operative word was 'traditionally'
|
621.235 | 15 years ago in Quartz Hill | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Mon Jan 25 1988 19:58 | 23 |
| Depends upon the school. In 1973, Caltech sent me a letter saying
that the next year was the first year they were going to admit women
as regular students. True, I could have gone to Caltech, but I
don't know about my friends a year ahead of me. I couldn't have
gone to Harvard (okay, so the difference was dissolving even then).
In 1973, because of a lack of funds, my high school cut the women's
tennis team. They didn't drop any men's teams. The women's tennis
team had been active. Women's sports teams weren't provided uniforms;
most men's teams were. (Okay, so I was in band and the math team.
Nobody had uniforms for the latter.) Extra-curricular activities
are a part of education, if not schooling. In essence, my school
spent more on young men's educations than on young women's. (Do
you know how much it cost every week just to get those football
uniforms dry-cleaned?)
I haven't looked around lately because it's not like there's been a need,
but 15 years ago, many states had laws that stated that a married
woman could not own property--it belonged to the husband. I know
there are women in this file who've been married more than 15 years.
Anybody have any cold hard facts? At the time, I'd heard, in fact,
that California was one of these states.
|
621.236 | School, did someone say school? | BSS::POGAR | | Mon Jan 25 1988 21:50 | 6 |
| Just this decade, I think ... admittance to military academies for women.
West Point
Air Force Academy
Annapolis
ap
|
621.237 | fraternities | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Mon Jan 25 1988 22:20 | 24 |
| Fraternities.
My fraternity got thrown out of their national because the national
alums got upset when they thought a woman was in charge of our chapter.
Well, sort of, she was commander (pres.), but she didn't do the
secret stuff, only the men did that. And I was annoyed, because
I wanted to be a Sigma Nu just like my grandfather.
Yeah, and I was a man of Alpha Phi Omega, but the semester I was
initiated, they backed down at taking the women through the secret
stuff, so they hauled us off to this room where we just stood while
the men got to know the secret stuff. I was told it later, but
I still can't remember it because it wasn't told in a special way.
And if you don't think frats are important, it's just because you've
never had two Epsilon Thetans together in the same room with you.
(You haven't been attending enough womannotes parties.)
Yes, military academies are more important than fraternities. Women
had to prove themselves there, and they did.
For that matter, some ROTC was closed to women. I had a friend
two years older than me who was a trial participant in women's Navy
ROTC at MIT, back when it was an experiment.
|
621.238 | Phew, caught up at last, at least in this note... | YODA::BARANSKI | Riding the Avalanche of Life | Tue Jan 26 1988 08:26 | 37 |
| RE: .207 "infinitely better"
1: judge each note on it's merits.
2: if you want to complain about 'being told what to do', or sexist statements,
etc, do it in Mail, or a side topic.
Need I say that these rules should apply to both male and female?
RE: .228 steve "forcing ideas"
Like I mentioned, the forcefull boss, or drill sergeant example of 'forcing
ideas' is not a very good analogy. Either you are forced to physically *do*
something, or there is no "force" involved. Neither a boss or sergeant can
*force* me to change my thoughts. In any case my words on the screen have no
force, threat or authority except for their meaning.
The legal system is a much better analogy of what "forcing ideas" means to me,
but I doubt that notes have the threat of authority that the legal system has.
And again, the threat or force is physical, even the legal system cannot change
my idea of what is right.
RE .232 DE "mind-set"
Thank you for clearing that up... Does that mean that the statement "you have
the minds-set of a rapist" is acceptable here or not?
RE: .235 Lisa "school choice"
There is a big difference between not being allowed to go to school, and not
being allowed to go to the school you might like to go to. I would like to go
to Harvard, but there are many reasons why I will probably not.
Certainly these need to be addressed, and many of them have been, but the bald
*unqualified* statements are untrue.
Jim.
|
621.239 | ex | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Tue Jan 26 1988 10:39 | 34 |
| re: .238
We're getting closer, Jim. For you, the court analogy "worked best".
I'm simply suggesting that for other people, while the court situation
would not feel like force but the boss analogy might. Or some other
situation.
What I think I'm hearing in the discussions around force is that
people attach the word "force" to different experiences (or, in
a slightly more contorted fashion, people give meaning to the symbol
"force" through their experiences). It seems to me that while part of
our defining the word "force" comes in the classroom, the personal
definitions/connotations we attach to the word come from our various
experiences. I'd hazard a theory that most or all of us don't like
it when we feel "forced" - no matter what the circumstances; when
such an event occurs, we attach that experience (feeling) to the
word force. If the theory (or "thee-rrry" as A. Elk would say)
is right, it would lead to the word "force" meaning different things
to different people. . .
Thus, in my own twisted view of the cosmos, it sounds to me that
some of what's going on here is that some people are saying "X
is (i.e. feels like) force" while others say "No, Y is force".
Problem is that when couched in terms "Force is. . ." (vs. "Exper-
ience X *feels* forceful"), there is bound to be disagreement.
But maybe it would help us all to remind ourselves that what
feels like force is valid for all of us individually and that we
all might find common ground in understanding that though we've
attached different experiences to this word, the pain and pressure
we felt when "forced" was remarkably similar.
Steve
|
621.240 | Ooops. . .heh, heh | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Tue Jan 26 1988 11:03 | 11 |
| re: (my) .239 (odd title, no?)
Oh see the boy. See the boy edit text. See the boy smile smugly
to himself as he blazes over the keyboard, loading that type-ahead
buffer.
Oh see the system laughing at the boy who obviously doesn't know
when to slow down (and make sure the reply title is right. . .ack!)
Steve (of the Helsinki Institute of Going a Bit Red)
|
621.241 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Tue Jan 26 1988 11:18 | 3 |
| Titles are easily changed:
MOD NOT/TIT="Some string"
|
621.242 | Frats :) and Schools :� | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Jan 26 1988 11:20 | 44 |
| re .237 Lisa, Frats
Yes, for what it's worth, Lisa Chabot and I are Brothers. I used
to say Sisters, but people thought that meant we were "Little Sisters"
of some frat, rather than full members. And the first =w= party
we both attended, we spent some time boring the gourd out of several
people. Our frat was an important part of our life at school, even
though we attended at different times.
re .238 Jim Baranski, Schools
You hit a hot spot for me Jim.
> There is a big difference between not being allowed to go to school, and not
> being allowed to go to the school you might like to go to. I would like to go
> to Harvard, but there are many reasons why I will probably not.
If I was more than qualified to attend Harvard, and the reason for
my choice of Harvard was that they had the country's best facilities
for studying the subject of my choice, there is no reason _whatsoever_
that I should not be permitted, even encouraged, to study there.
After all, there is a high likelihood that I will become well known
for my work, thereby making Harvard's reputation all the better
and attracting more better-qualified candidates and research $$.
If West Point is the best place to learn [some arcane military subject]
and I am equally or more qualified than other candidates, there
is no reason _whatsoever_ that I should not be permitted, even
encouraged, to study there. It is not at _all_ unlikely that a woman
will distinguish herself as a brilliant military strategist. If
that woman has received her formal training at West Point then when
she becomes widely recognized, so will West Point, thereby improving
its reputation, perhaps attracting more $$, certainly attracting
more and more excellent candidates.
Not only is it unfair to me, it is unfair to the school trustees
for a school to act against its best interests that way.
I'm afraid I feel the same way about all-women's schools, all-black
schools (though most of them _do_ admit qualified whites I believe),
Catholic schools, etc, etc, etc. But I suppose discussion of schools
is more appropriate in the school topic.
Lee
|
621.243 | name one women-only engineering school | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Tue Jan 26 1988 11:38 | 26 |
| Who cares about Harvard! Consider Caltech. Caltech is the most
prestigious engineering and science school in California. California
had at the time I was in high school a very good scholarship program,
and once you qualified at all you would get a scholarship based
on the cost of the school you selected, but only for California
schools. In other words, poor students could go to the prestigious
schools in state. However, prior to 1973, only poor male students.
You probably don't have any idea what it's like to know you're good
but that no matter how good you are you can't get the education
you don't just want, that you burn for.
I got accepted at Caltech, I got the big scholarship, I turned it
down to go to a school with a better track record for women. I'm
still paying for that education, I'm proud of it, I know many people
have received other excellent educations at other schools but I
wouldn't have traded my experiences for anything.
And then there's ROTC. Sure, it's not for everyone, but depending
upon the program, it may pay for your education. This was closed
to women, until very recently (I'm not that old).
Until about 1973, I couldn't have taken shop in high school or junior
high. They didn't allow girls. This was schooling denied to me.
I could have used the skills shop teaches, in college.
|
621.244 | no problems with that... | YODA::BARANSKI | Im here for an argument, not Abuse! | Thu Jan 28 1988 15:48 | 9 |
| RE: .242 Lee
"If <qualified> then go to <school of choice>..."
True... (waiting for the other shoe to drop...)
No argument here, that was not what I was disagreeing with...
Jim.
|
621.245 | new policy starts today | HARDY::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Mon Feb 01 1988 06:36 | 7 |
| This topic has been write-locked until May 1 since it is essentially
a discussion of FWO topics.
(Please continue the college discussion in 252 if you wish.)
Holly
moderator
|