T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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353.1 | Ya just can't beat this argument. | EXT::PRUFROCK | No! I am not Prince Hamlet,... | Tue Sep 04 1990 23:14 | 12 |
| All societies are based on rules to protect pregnant women and
young children. All else is surplusage, excrescence, adornment,
luxury, or folly which can--and must--be dumped in emergency to
preserve this prime function. As racial survival is the only universal
morality, no other basic is possible. Attempts to formulate a "perfect
society" on any foundation other than "Women and children first!"
is not only witless, it is automatically genocidal. Nevertheless,
starry-eyed idealists (all of them male) have tried endlessly--and
no doubt will keep on trying.
--Robert Heinlein
|
353.2 | a collectivist concept IMHO | SA1794::CHARBONND | in the dark the innocent can't see | Wed Sep 05 1990 07:37 | 19 |
| Maybe a tangent or a rathole. "WACF" is oriented not toward the
survival of any individual so much as the survival of the species.
(It could be the ultimate collectivist statement.) If you put the
individual first, the phrase is somewhat repugnant. If you put
'humankind' ahead of the individual it makes perfect sense.
It all depends on your values.
(In a war or other disaster, as long as one male survives the
species can repopulate, *if* there are females. In wildlife
management the game biologists control herd size by controlling
the number of *females*. For instance, deer hunters could harvest
80 % of the bucks in a herd and the herd could still maintain
and even *increase*. To keep the herd from overpopulating it
is necessary to harvest a certain number of does. Simple
arithmetic - 10 bucks plus ten does = 10 offspring. 1 buck plus
ten does = 10 offspring!)
(entered for informative purposes only, please let's not get into
the hunting rathole here.)
|
353.3 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Sushido - The way of the tuna | Wed Sep 05 1990 09:27 | 26 |
| Ayup!
The Persian Gulf crisis has really been shoving this one in my face too.
"There are over 3000 American Hostages in Iran, at least 1000 of which are
*women and children*!" *Gasp* Horrors!
Yeah, my sympathies are with those who are being held against their will,
but the adults *men and women* CHOSE to be there. I can understand a special
emphasis on the plight of the kids. They are in danger through no choice of
their own. But if it's bad for a woman to be a hostage, it's equally bad for
a man to be a hostage. Likewise, if it is no big deal for a man to be a hostage,
it's no big deal for a woman either. I realize no one is saying that it is
no big deal, but it *feels* like it.
So I don't like it for two reasons: 1) It devalues the lives of the men
who are held, and 2) there is an element of women=children.
re: .1 "ya just can't beat this argument!" Bullshit! RAH, although
he is one of my favorite authors, is just that -- an author. Not god or the
oracle of light and holder of all truth. If we were a frontier society
in danger of falling below the "critical mass" of population needed to keep
going, the argument has merit. Alas, we are in NO danger of running out of
people any time soon. (Unless we bomb ourselves into oblivion, and so far I
know of no bombs that affect men and not women and children.)
Tracey
|
353.4 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Wed Sep 05 1990 09:47 | 12 |
|
If the children being released are young, they'll need a parent
to take care of them. In the past, the primary child-caretakers have
been mothers. I thought maybe this is where 'women & children first'
came from. Because it's assumed that the children need women/mothers
to take care of them. Of course, I don't agree that it need be
women/mothers, as it could as easily be men/fathers.
re a few:
Survival of the *human* species? Harumph! We don't seem to have
*any* problem with that!
|
353.5 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Wed Sep 05 1990 10:02 | 6 |
| OH yes, it's just so romantic--'woman and children' first. Remember
the scene in the movie, the Titanic, the women and children sailing
(safely?) off in boats while the men sank. Right. Just another
way of romanticizing/glorifying war.
Maia
|
353.6 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | water, wind, and stone | Wed Sep 05 1990 10:53 | 6 |
| re: .0
no, no women in combat topic yet here....feel free to start one!
-Jody
|
353.7 | personally, i wouldn't look back... | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I don't see how I could refuse | Wed Sep 05 1990 11:26 | 45 |
| re .5, speaking of the Titanic and "women and children" first, I
believe that it was only the first class women and children who were
saved. I seem to remember reading that most of the women and children
in steerage went down with the ship. In the past I think "women and
children first" usually meant rich or upper class women and children,
the possessions of the wealthy, white men who ran the world and made
the rules. I think poor women have often met the same miserable fate
that the poor men have. Of course, I don't imagine that any of the
hostages in the middle east are poor or working class people, or they
woiuldn't be over there in the first place.
To discuss another aspect of the "women and children first" business, I
have to admit that it annoys the hell out of *me* when people complain
about "women and children first." Just because a few women here at DEC
have the same advantages as most men in the U.S. do, doesn't mean that
all women, as a group, have the same opportunities, or are equal with
men, as a group, at this time. I think that it is still a "man's
world" and that men are still pretty much running the show, here in the
U.S. and in the middle east. I think that there are still many average
American males who really believe that men and women are not equal and
that women are more suited to be wives, mothers and do certain jobs
where they help men but are not equals. These men cannot have it both
ways. It seems to me that when we say we want to be equal many men do
not want us to be equal, but then complain because women are not in
combat or female hostages are released first. It's almost as if the
attitude is, "Oh, you want to be equal. Go fight and die, and stay be
tortured if you're a hostage, then!" Gee, thanks a lot. It seems that
women could lose everything this way. We could wind up going to war
and getting killed, not being let out first if we're hostages or on
sinking ships, and *still* wind up never getting the best jobs because
of the glass ceiling and still wind up having our SO's and husbands
angry at us if we dare to disagree with them in a political argument.
When women have just as many important jobs as men do, and when there
is no threat whatsoever to reversing Roe vs. Wade, and when women in
the U.S. make a dollar to every dollar a man makes, THEN I'll complain
about "women and children first." Things aren't so great for women, as
a group, yet, that I'm ready to complain about it.
Besides, so far, as a society we are still raising girls differently
from boys. More boys are raised to be stronger, more athletic, and
more capable of surviving in an atmosphere such as hostages are likely
to be in. Most women are still smaller than most men afterall.
Lorna
|
353.8 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Sushido - The way of the tuna | Wed Sep 05 1990 11:57 | 20 |
| re: .7
Actually, I'd be willing to bet (vast generalization coming here, insert
all standard disclaimers :-) ) that women would hold up better in a hostage
situation than men. Physical strength and ability have very little to do with
how well you stand up to this intense mental and emotional ordeal. In fact, I'd
go so far as to say that the very socialization that you mentioned would work
AGAINST men in this situation. If they are used to be physically active, the
strain of foregoing that would be even greater. (Whereas computer dweebs like
me are used to staying under the flourescent lights for seemingly months at a
time and would be hard pressed to give you a weather report upon demand. :-) )
AND women have been shown to to be able to hold up under long-term stress better
than men.
Tracey
Feel free to substitute "many", "some" or "most" wherever it'll make
this more readable to you.
|
353.9 | But their not hostages are they? | POETIC::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Wed Sep 05 1990 12:24 | 23 |
|
Lorna,
You got most of it right, but there are women who are poor
or at least by our standards poor, who are trying to get out
of Iraq. They are Asians or Africans or Indians - who went
to the area with their family or alone to find work and now
have found that their employers are gone. They are the ones
alone with the men in the camps along the boarder of Iraq, who
don't have a goverment to bring them home, who don't have the
money to "just fly home". Do we here about getting them out
of the area - There are tens of thousands of them not three
thousand (or less). But then they are not "our" women and
children, and if they starve or die from illness there is so
many of them that it doesn't make a difference, does it.
_peggy
(-)
|
All people are my people
|
353.10 | | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Wed Sep 05 1990 12:34 | 22 |
| Okay, let's have some fun with this topic by putting it into a
practical application of a situation:
You are the captain of the brand new 1991 PACIFIC TITANIC cruise
ship with 500 passengers. History (or herstory, if you will) repeats
itself and we hit an iceburg. And, again, we only have just enough
lifeboats for 300 passengers. Now, 100 of the passengers are children.
No one from either sex would argue that they should be the first to be
boarded onto the lifeboats. Maybe followed by 100 elderly and
handicapped people. That leaves a balance of 300 people on board
the cruise liner still.
We don't have much time as the ship is sinking rather quickly. Now,
the captain has to make a decision as to whom should be placed into
the remaining liferafts next. He can only choose 100 people.
How do you decide on that? Draw lots? No time. Take a vote?
No time. Who stays and who goes? I'll make it even tougher by saying
that there's 150 women and 150 men, so that means that no matter
how you decide, 200 souls will be lost at sea...mixed of both male
and female. Now who goes, and who stays?
|
353.11 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I don't see how I could refuse | Wed Sep 05 1990 12:43 | 5 |
| re .10, I think the only fair thing is that they all drown. More
fools they for getting on a ship called the Titanic.
Lorna
|
353.12 | ... | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Wed Sep 05 1990 12:49 | 3 |
|
they shouldn't have lifeboats for only 60% of the passengers.
|
353.13 | | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Wed Sep 05 1990 12:55 | 5 |
| RE: 12
But the actual TITANIC did. That's why they don't have only 60%
anymore. But, like I said, history in this case has repeated itself.
|
353.14 | Should easily eliminate 50% of the passengers | STAR::RDAVIS | Man, what a roomfulla stereotypes. | Wed Sep 05 1990 13:40 | 5 |
| Whoever isn't carrying luggage gets to leave the ship.
That means I would drown with my books, but that's how I'd like to go.
Ray
|
353.15 | | EXT::PRUFROCK | No! I am not Prince Hamlet,... | Wed Sep 05 1990 13:50 | 15 |
| .3,
> Yeah, my sympathies are with those who are being held against their will,
>but the adults *men and women* CHOSE to be there.
Ya know this is not Lebonon where everyone knows it is a dangerous place.
Most people in iraq and especially in Kuweit never realized the danger until
too late. Next time you go some place, make sure to bring with you a fortunate
teller who has absulote knowledge as to what is gonna happen.
> re: .1 "ya just can't beat this argument!" Bullshit!
Calm down. Nobody is trying to save you from drowning or an hostage situation
right now.
Alf
|
353.16 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Sushido - The way of the tuna | Wed Sep 05 1990 14:04 | 14 |
| You don't have to be a fortune teller to know that the middle east is
a rather unstable place. That does not mean that it is stupid to live there
or that the hostages "deserved what they got". You will note that I said my
sympathies are with them. I meant, and only meant, that as adults they made
had the capability and opportunity to weight all factors and make choice. This
is not so of the children in this situation. My point was to show that I
could see a distinction between adults and children in this case but that the
distinction does not extend to differentiate between the genders.
re: "Calm down". PPPPBBBBB! (That's a raspberry) I am not angry
(or at least I wasn't). Merely vehement. BUT! who the heck are you to tell
me I can't feel anger (and express it) if I want to???
Tracey
|
353.17 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Sep 05 1990 14:22 | 13 |
| I don't think RAH's comments can be so easily put off by saying we
don't have a population problem. I think centuries of survival with
WACF are almost part of our subconscious. Of course, that is a
generality. (If the movie about the TIANIC was acurate weren't there
men who tried to sneak on the boats when they weren't supposed to?)
I too feel strange when I keep hearing about the women and children
leaving. Something in it grates at me that I have the responsibilty as
much as the men. I also believe it's true that all these concerns are
about the wealthy and not the poor. No one cares if they die.
As for the new Titanic, I'd leave the older folks and put young couples
on the boat after the children. liesl
|
353.18 | feeling cryptic and weird | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Wed Sep 05 1990 14:25 | 4 |
|
i think it's a primal urge for men to die, ostensibly so that others
may live. in this way, they approach god-hood.
|
353.19 | | EXT::PRUFROCK | No! I am not Prince Hamlet,... | Wed Sep 05 1990 14:29 | 12 |
| I think there ought to be a principle above the "Women and Children
First" principle-- the "Alfs and Babies First" principle. Despite its
degrading connotation of equating Alfs with Babies, this Alf will have
no objection to such principle.
...
I have yet to see any conciencious objectors refusing rescue because
they are against the principle of "Women and Children First" or
even "Alfs and Babies First".
Alf
|
353.20 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I don't see how I could refuse | Wed Sep 05 1990 14:36 | 14 |
| re .18, sounds good to me. :-) I'd gladly climb aboard the life boat
so that I wouldn't stop some guy from approaching god-hood.
I think Liesl's idea of making the old people sink with the boat and
letting the young couples with children on the lifeboats is good. I
also think mothers should be able to go with their kids.
Of course, if I really were the *captain* of the ship, which is the way
the question was phrased, I would solve the problem of who to save by
first getting on the life boat myself, and then picking the 99 people I
liked best and letting them on.
Lorna
|
353.21 | fixed and thrilled | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | Leave the poor nits in peace! | Wed Sep 05 1990 14:42 | 10 |
| errrr.......gulp......Do the last few responses mean that women
*without* children, and no intention ever to *have* children are going
to be shark food?
Maybe I should change my mind!
Naaaahhhh! I'd rather be shark food!
E Grace
|
353.22 | Funeral Order | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Wed Sep 05 1990 15:18 | 6 |
| The British navy had a rule (which they did use), called "funeral
order". The youngest people got in the lifeboats, the theory being
that they had the longest lives in front of them, so they were
most worth saving.
--David
|
353.23 | It's the phrase, not the concept, that bothers me | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Wed Sep 05 1990 18:45 | 35 |
| A couple of thoughts.
First, I do not and never have liked the phrase "women and children first".
Not because I disapprove of the sentiment but because it contains the
phrase "women and children", and phrase so common in this society it has
become trite. It isn't always "women and children first". Sometimes
it is "women and children should..." or "women and children do...".
But that phrase, "women and children" is really pronounced "womenandchildren."
The words run together, they ways words that are so often put together that
are almost considered synonymous and are never see apart run together.
"Various and sundry". "Intents and purposes." "To and fro." "Women and
children". And *that* bothers me. I see it like Lee does - it seems to
assign women and children to one class, inseperable, defined by one another.
Synonymous. Women and children are *seperate*, even in situations where
they might be treated similarly. So I object to the phrase "women and
children first" even when I might not object to a similar phrase "children
first, and then women."
Secondly, the hypothetical Titanic II example, while it might perhaps be
an interesting mental exercise, tells us nothing about the topic at hand.
*Yes*, it would be incredibly difficult to choose who lives and who dies.
Choices like that happen in our society all the time, from individual
("which Siamese twin gets saved if they must be separated to live and
only one can survive") to global ("which cause gets the money, cancer or
AIDS?"). They are difficult, but that doesn't mean that an *easy* answer
"women and children" is better (or worse) than a more difficult answer.
It's ridiculous to try and justify the WOCF *philosophy* by saying "Well
which would you do?" Well I just don't know what I would do. And I
never hope to find out. Nor do I know what I would do if I had to choose
between my children (hypothetical) or between my parents or... But I
can still critisize another's choice, and I can *especially* critisize
a philosophy which dictates one choice or another.
D!
|
353.24 | families, then couples, youngest to oldest | SNOC02::WRIGHT | PINK FROGS | Wed Sep 05 1990 23:04 | 18 |
| <<< MOMCAT::PIGGY:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES-V3.NOTE;3 >>>
-< Topics of Interest to Women >-
First, *I* don't and haven't ever seen/heard the phrase "women and
children" used in a manner which equates women with children. That's
not to say it doesn't happen but might you be reading too much into it
THIS time?
re .20
>I think Liesl's idea of making the old people sink with the boat and
>letting the young couples with children on the lifeboats is good. I
>also think mothers should be able to go with their kids.
What about fathers!? Either parent is just as capable of looking after
their own child. To my mind this is the *same* as saying WACF.
Holly
|
353.25 | A question of philosophy.. | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | D R A B C = action plan | Thu Sep 06 1990 03:20 | 13 |
| G'day,
In Japan, the question of one spare place to safety, and you can pick
your 80yo mother, your wife, or your child, would be answered...
Mother....
you can always remarry, always have more children, but you can't
replace your Mum!!!
derek
|
353.26 | | SHAPES::SMITHS1 | | Thu Sep 06 1990 05:17 | 26 |
|
Okay, so the "women and children first" philosophy may not be fair -
I'm not saying it is.
But, you may have noticed that in Iraq there were women who opted to
stay behind with their husbands (or the men, however you like to put
it) and they were allowed to do so. No woman was *forced* to leave, they
were all given the opportunity to take if they wanted to. Granted, it
is definitely not fair that the women and children were given that
opportunity and the men weren't.
However, I still believe that many of the women who left may not have
wanted to, but were urged to do so by their husbands. In a life or
death situation (hypothetical), if my husband were given the chance to
leave but I wasn't, there is no way I would say to him "I'd rather you
stayed and die with me please" than go to safety. This is very likely
the same principle that encouraged many of the women who left Iraq to
go.
I maintain that it is not fair that women/children should be allowed to
leave and not men. But if you are put in that situation, there is
little point in hanging around to argue it. If the ship was sinking,
you would drown before anyone had a chance to hear your argument. And
at least some of your family would be saved.
Sam
|
353.27 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Sushido - The way of the tuna | Thu Sep 06 1990 08:57 | 12 |
| re: -.1
Oh hey, I'm no fool. If I were in Iraq and they let me go, I'd go!
I'm not saying that the people who have the opportunity to leave are bad/wrong/
immoral for taking it.
What I am saying is that the media coverage keeps talking about "NNNN
American hostages, MMMM of them women", as if it were worse for a woman to be
held than for a man. That's what I'm saying is wrong. And it is all caught
up in this philosophy of "women-and-children first".
Tracey
|
353.28 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I don't see how I could refuse | Thu Sep 06 1990 11:15 | 8 |
| re .23, D! if you ever do have real children, I'm willing to bet that
you'd easily be able to put their lives above those of anyone else.
Most people put their kids first. (My mother would want me to put her
grandchildren first, too.) I think it's instinct to guarantee the
survival of the species. (If your parents won't save you, who will?)
Lorna
|
353.29 | In my opinion | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Thu Sep 06 1990 11:29 | 18 |
|
Well, in my humble opinion, women as a group are NOT treated equally
even in this enlightened U.S. They are treated even worse in the Middle
East. In Pakistan ( I think ) if a woman reports she is raped, SHE is
jailed and even beaten by her male relatives for disgracing the family
name..only one example.
So, until women are treated equally, then I think that they should
take ALL the few advantages given them.
I also think that this phrase has its origins in the continuation
of the species. Let's face it, one man can impregnate 10 women
in about 2 months if he so desires. To date, there is no woman
alive who can give birth to 10 babies in 2 months. It is medically
impossible.
Desryn.
|
353.30 | | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Sep 06 1990 12:42 | 21 |
| re. Lorna
When I read D!'s .23, I thought her intent was to say that she would have a hard
time ever choosing between children [child vs. child] or between parents
[mom vs. dad].
I am of course filtering this through my own rather visceral filters -- having
once had an inhuman git ask me, if I could choose, which of my two children
I would magically bring back to life.
re. topic
'women and children first' -- OK by me. It would get me out of a situation
more dangerous than the one I live in now. I am somewhat ego-centric.
Do I like what it might imply? not in the least. Therefore, I refuse to
live by any of the excess baggage that people care to attach to it. _No_one's
life is any more intrinsically valuable in the grand scheme of things than
another's.
Annie
|
353.31 | I'd take Mom over rugrats anyday. :-) | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Thu Sep 06 1990 15:00 | 7 |
| >When I read D!'s .23, I thought her intent was to say that she would have a hard
>time ever choosing between children [child vs. child] or between parents
>[mom vs. dad].
Yup.
D!
|
353.32 | | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Thu Sep 06 1990 18:22 | 12 |
| RE-.23
I understand that it's the phrase and not the concept that bothers
some of you. My example merely was to illustrate how this concept,
through either man-made (person-made) or natural disasterous
situations, came into being. And, to emphasize how this "rule" is
applied in many situations which require quick and decisive responses.
I wasn't trying to make light of any of the subsequent conversations
surrounding this matter, I just wanted to clear up any misconceptions
of where and how this "rule" has been applied in recent times.
|
353.33 | Maybe the women face added danger? | RAMOTH::DRISKELL | waiting for day AFTER Xmass.... | Thu Sep 06 1990 21:47 | 36 |
|
One thought to add (if i can w/o being offensive...):
given the cultural bias's, and restrictions placed on
women in traditional islamic countries,
wouldn't the women face the added risk of being sexually
mistreated?
It's not likely that the guards would be women. But it IS
likely that the guard would believe that only a prostitute
would not cover her face any time she is in the presence of a
non-family member... (course, many islamic women are simply
NEVER away from proper family male escort - even if that
male escort is only 5 years old!)
I have some islamic friends (male) who had a hard time
grasping the fact that women are allowed to say 'NO' as
well as 'YES' in the US. They wern't bad people, they
just couldn't comprehend some of our culture at first.
Given that, and given that the guards are not likely
to have been chosen from those with lots of exposure
to western cultures, if it came to extended time chained
to each other, or chained to furniture, what are the odds
they wouldn't be attacked?
Our own history is filled with such examples, from armies
pillaging and rapeing, to the slaves, and so on.
So the idea of being more concerned about the women's fate
may stem from the fact that they face an added danger.
m
|
353.34 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Fri Sep 07 1990 01:37 | 26 |
| If I were the hypothetical captain of the hypothetical Titanic II,
I would probably take Lorna's approach, and get in first, then
pick the people I liked best. After all, the ship is sinking:
This is no time to be rational and methodical!
More realistically, there is no time to choose. First come, first
served. If parents take care of their kids, so much the better.
If you take away the element of urgency... I'd group the people
into family/friend units, and arrange them into boats restaurant-style,
keeping the groups together (dividing them into smoking and nonsmoking
boats is optional. But at that point, I'd be tempted to let my
personal biases show).
Yeah, this "women and children" stuff irks me too... partially for
the reasons D! and others have cited, but there's something else
there too which I can't quite put my finger on. Sure, if I were
an Iraqi hostage given the option to leave because I was female,
I'd go... but with the words "d**n sexist a**h*les" under my breath.
Perhaps it's because it's the same sort of discrimination that I've
encountered directed at me, as a woman, that's being directed at the
men, and it's *wrong* to categorically deny people opportunity that
way. I *can't* support it.
Sharon
|
353.35 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Follow *that*, Killer | Fri Sep 07 1990 07:31 | 12 |
| This whole discussion makes me wonder if the male 'protect the
women and children' ethic is entirely social, or (and I *hate*
to use this term in re. humans) instinctive. Consciously I
work hard at treating people equally. On an emotional level
I get boiling when I see women and children being hurt by
stronger people. I'm very protective of my sisters. (Even the
one I can't stand.) I don't _think_ I view them as 'property',
I don't _think_ that a threat to them is a threat to my ego.
So why do I react this way ? On the Titanic II the 'rational
self-interest' part of me says "I'll make d*mn sure *I'm* on
a lifeboat," but there's another part that says "women and
children first." Conflict.
|
353.36 | m take... | CAESAR::FOSTER | | Fri Sep 07 1990 10:22 | 11 |
|
Its probably fairly instinctive. Reminds me of elephants, who form a
circle around the mothers and babies.
When there is no birth control, and a lot of sex, a woman can have a
child at least every other year. Which means she's either pregnant or
nursing. Protecting the mother is therefore a form of protecting the
child, and thus preventing extinction.
Things aren't like that anymore, but as is obvious from the state of
the world, old habits, MANY of them, die hard.
|
353.37 | re this interesting note | CAM::ARENDT | Harry Arendt CAM:: | Fri Sep 07 1990 13:50 | 59 |
|
Having read all the replies, a pain when you enter so late but
needed if you are not going to offend or say something stupid.
re Women and Children first
Most of the replies to this concept have taken it as a racial
concept applying to the human race as a whole. This is probably
not accurate in terms of application or origin. Human beings
are, and allways will be, organized along genetic lines. This
means that the typical genetic survival order would be;
1. Family
A. Children
B. Female Parents
C. Male Parents
2. Tribe or extended family next.
3. Strangers
Most of human history has been organized around the ideas of family,
clans and tribes, ie genetically related groups of humans. Hence
the concept of children first and women second is still valid based
on genetic survival of the near gene pool.
This also throws cold water on the 1 men plus 10 women equals
10 babies vs 10 men plus 10 women = 10 babies theory. The first
case yeilds children which are more genetically similar and so
the genetic group has lost 40% of it's gene potential.
Re the Titanic example
1. Load all children.
2. Ask for volunteers to remain behind.
3. Load one parent for each child and let the parents choose which
one will go. If only one living parent exist and that parent
is on board then load that parent.
4. Load remainder by age.
re womens equality
Unfortunatly equality, liberty and justice cannot be given. They
must be taken and then defended by all who want them for themselfs
and others. I do not have a daughter, however I will have one and
I will teach her how to fight for her rights and how to defend the
rights of others both by word and deed.
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353.38 | | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Fri Sep 07 1990 14:07 | 19 |
| re-.37
The only problem I have with your answer to the TITANIC II hypothetical
situation is that there is normally not enough time in an increasingly
hostile and dangerous situation to be *that* democratic. There can
usually be no vote of any kind (such as in the actual Iraqui crisis)
and usually only one person (male or female) will ultimately make
the final decision as to "who stays and who goes".
There's simply no time in that kind of a situation for a democratic
selection process. It usually has to be a decision of a huge group
of people broken down into several smaller groups, then deciding
which of these smaller factions may be escorted from danger first.
And that's a split-second decision which must be made and is FULL of
what could later be misconstrued as either racially or gender-biased.
I'm sure, though that it was not originally intended to be as such by
the one who made the decision. That's when you have to take a look
back at the origins of this "process of natural selection".
|
353.39 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Fri Sep 07 1990 20:21 | 16 |
| re "Women and Children First"
The "Women and Children First" approach to the hostages
in Iraq has been in the news for at least a week now. In
all of that time I haven't heard it discussed once, by
government (or U.N.) officials or reporters, on either ABC
or CNN headline News. I'm surprised at this. It is almost
as if the thought never occurred to any of them to not do it
this way. Has anyone seen *any* discussion of this by the
tv networks?
Dan
p.s. When I first came here to find this topic ... it hadn't
even been created here yet (it was started later that night).
That was a bigger surprise.
|
353.40 | | MOMCAT::CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Mon Sep 10 1990 23:01 | 23 |
| .23 > But that phrase, "women and children" is really
> pronounced "womenandchildren."
D!,
That made me smile and irked me at the same time. Irked
because the pronunciation is true. The phrase is loaded
with sanctamonious hogwash.
For one thing, if you read the news stories all the way
down to paragraph N, we often find that some men came
out too. But tossing men in the headline ... somehow
fails to evoke that heart-warmy-jolts that comes from
"womenandchildren."
I think people are fond of singing "womenandchildren"
for the same reasons they like saying "you will grow
up and fall in love and live happily every after" and
"It was his time to go, and it is not ours to quesion."
Screw reality. It is more important to cook up
some heart-warmy-jolts.
Which way to the vomitorium, please. Meigs
|