T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
669.1 | laughing 'cause it hurts | SA1794::CHARBONND | Yeh, mon, no problem | Thu Jan 24 1991 12:40 | 2 |
| It is one mighty screwed up world where getting your a** shot at is
referred to as a "career-enhancing opportunity". And it really *is*.
|
669.2 | Violently Agree on This One | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Thu Jan 24 1991 12:58 | 13 |
|
Premise 1: Females should have the same priviliges as Males in this
society.
Premise 2: With any privilige comes responsibilities.
Premise 3: If women should have the priviliges, they should have the
responsibilities as well.
Conclusion: Women should experience the same possibility of being shot
at (and of shooting back, of course) that Men do.
-Robert Brown III
|
669.3 | zzz... | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Jan 24 1991 13:18 | 15 |
|
.0 -
> Speaking to a news conference, Ireland said Congress would not have
> authorized the war if women comprised half its members, instead of 5
> percent.
> ''The Congress that authorized use of force is 95 percent male, 95
> percent white and has no acknowledged lesbians. It is hardly a
> representative body,'' she said.
I'm glad somebody's awake out there.
D.
|
669.4 | as always, IMHO | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | an existential errand | Thu Jan 24 1991 13:29 | 17 |
| re .3, really, what a privilege for women to have the opportunity to
kill and die in a war they didn't get to vote on.
Perhaps soon men (in congress) can actually send women out to fight and
die in wars that only men get to decide on? This is equality for
women?
Thanks, anyway, but I'd rather wait til there are more women in
congress before I'd agree women should be drafted.
I do think that women who *volunteer* for combat duty should be
eligible.
I don't think anyone (men or women) should be drafted, anyway.
Lorna
|
669.5 | re .-2, just an ancillary point | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Jan 24 1991 13:29 | 3 |
|
hmmm I thought that a lady from the north east had come out. (but I
sure ain't gonna repeat her name here, cuz maybe i'm wrong)
|
669.6 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Thu Jan 24 1991 14:36 | 12 |
| Well, if women are given the privilege of fighting and dying in
war, then they'd better be given ERA as well. If I remember correctly,
one of the arguments some women had against the ERA was that then
'we would become equal enough to go to war.' I agree with Lorna;
let's see women senators, representatives, supreme justices in
equal numbers first.
I've seen so many pinstriped suits and red-white-blue ties on the
TV this past week to last me a lifetime.
maia
|
669.7 | women are already in danger | CSSE32::RANDALL | Pray for peace | Thu Jan 24 1991 14:39 | 13 |
| There are more women in combat than the public realizes.
In last night's briefing, Lt. General Kelly very carefully
referred to the men *and women* who were flying the reconaissance
missions that were assessing the bombing damage (planes getting
shot at just like the bombers) and operating the refueling jets.
The only position he's consistently used only male pronouns for is
the crews of the bombers and fighters.
I think it's more a matter of getting credit for work that's
already being done than of women into new areas.
--bonnie
|
669.8 | I disagree | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:12 | 23 |
| Molly Yard and other members of NOW have had many profound things to
say. For the most part I support them. Women in combat is not an area
I agree with them. I spent a year in Viet Nam and would not wish the
combat experiene on ANYONE. Military personell are exploited in ways
too numerous to mention. To view combat as a 'career enhancing
experience' is just so ludicrous. In Viet Nam I had three friends die
in my arms and I wasn't a Medic or Corpman. I flipped out and tried to
push one of my friends intestines back in his body. It's a scene that
took me years to balance out. The sight of the blood and steam mixed
with the mud, leaves and organs will be with me forever. The point is
that we have to find a better way to settle our differences. We have
to find a way to get men OUT of combat, not women IN.
The other assumption is that women in the drivers seat would make
better decisions than men. I see no evidence of this. Margaret
Thatcher's invasion of the Falklands seems just as fascist as George
Bush's invasion of Panama and our current involvement in the Middle
East. Golda Meir had the same rascist attitudes toward Arabs as
Yitzach Shamir.
While I feel strongly that women need much more representation in all
branches of government, I see no evidence that simply because they are
women they will do a better job.
|
669.9 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | an existential errand | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:13 | 7 |
| re .7, but what about ground forces?
Usually nobody gets to fly a plane who doesn't want to, and I agree
that women who are already doing this should be given credit.
Lorna
|
669.10 | Is Pat Schroeder a mole on the Armed Forces Committee | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:41 | 26 |
| <let's see women senators, representatives, supreme justices in
<equal numbers first.
And then theoritically we might see our elected officials do a better
job of peace?
Let me suggest an alternate hypothesis
The only way they could get to be in a position to exercise such
power would be to nurture their competitive instincts, (and suppress
their nurturant instincts). In so doing they would (likely) compromise
those values which are consistent with maintaining peace.
All of which is a very fancy way of saying ...
In order to get elected, women, in large part typically lose or at
least compromise extensively, or - i dunno- never had?, those
attributes/drives/instincts that y'all would like to believe are female
character traits.
herb
|
669.11 | *then* what do we incarnate as? | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:52 | 14 |
| RE: .10
Then again, when enough women have "seen combat" and gotten into
(finally) positions of power in places like the Pentagon, Congress,
and the Executive branch....maybe *then* we'll have the leadership
that figures out how to manage without violence.
If you're right, and those qualities do not exist in females, either,
the species might as well blow itself away, anyway, for as useful as it is.
One way or another, the situation will be solved.
--DE
|
669.12 | Women/War | AUNTB::DILLON | | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:54 | 12 |
| .8 I agree completely.
I very much believe that we need greater numbers of female
representation in all branches of government. That will not ensure,
however, that we have better government. Or even different government,
although I'd WISH that it would.
Women and men in the armed services are there by choice. They should
have (based on rank, job, etc) the same responsibilities, be subject to
the same risks, and be afforded the same privileges.
But like .8 said, the key is getting men OUT, not women IN.
|
669.13 | can't pick and choose when to be equal | CSSE32::RANDALL | Pray for peace | Thu Jan 24 1991 15:58 | 25 |
| re: .9, Lorna
I don't know as much about ground forces. I know women don't
actually operate the rocket launchers, but they do operate the
radar and sighting equipment that controls the rockets' course.
Many supply units (driving munitions trucks, etc.) have many women
in them; such convoys are frequently targets of bombing attacks.
My daughter's best friend's brother is in a Marine Corps unit
includes women; they expect to be part of any large ground
movement. I don't know what exactly their specialty is, though.
re: .8, the awfulness of death
When I heard my male friends telling stories like that, I wished I
*had* volunteered for Viet Nam. It did not seem fair -- still
doesn't seem fair -- that they should have to face suffering like
that when I didn't even have to think about it.
I figure that if I want equal rights, I have to take it across the
board, even if that includes being forced to choose between dying
in an unjust war or leaving my country.
--bonnie
|
669.14 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Support the liberation of Kuwait | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:07 | 9 |
| re .4
> re .3, really, what a privilege for women to have the opportunity to
> kill and die in a war they didn't get to vote on.
Huh? Did the Nineteenth Amendment to the US Constitution
get repealed while no one was looking?
Tom_K
|
669.15 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:20 | 37 |
|
I think there's a direct connection between the number of women in
Congress and the fact that women are barred from combat duty, although
I am less willing to accept the premise that this war would have been
prevented if Congress were half women.
Military service is typically seen as a positive factor in political
candidates. (When was the last time you read a summary of the backgrounds
of various candidates for Congress - or president - that *didn't* include
mention of military service?) However, women are discouraged from joining
the armed forces because of the fact that it is *not* an equal opportunity
employer. For an ambitious women who wants to be running the show herself
someday, the military is not an optimal career choice, because her
advancement is limited. Yet, this is the same sort of ambition that
leads people into government. So it becomes a vicious circle to some
degree.
It also affects the decision-making level. A woman, for example, would
never be in Colin Powell's position - and yet his influence over those
in Washington who make the decisions about whether or not to wage war is
undeniable. If women are barred from some positions, and men are not,
it is unlikely that women will be represented proportionally.
Women are in combat today, even if they personally are not dropping the
bombs. They're just not going to get the credit for it, because of
institutionalized discrimination. Saying that this is a policy that
shields women from the dangers of the front lines makes it publicly
more palatable than it would ever be if it were in the civilian sector
- but it doesn't make it true, and it doesn't stop it from being
patronizing.
Although I agree fully with .8 that the key is getting men OUT of combat,
not women INTO it, .0 is right on target. I'm so glad to hear someone
else saying what I've been thinking all along.
Sharon
|
669.16 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:25 | 4 |
| .10
Pat Schroeder is one woman.
|
669.17 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:38 | 18 |
| re .15
I saw a repeat of a Colin Powell Q & A session this morning. At one
point -discussing the Iraqi soldiers in Kuwail, Powell said (with about
the same affect as your tax advisor has when he tells you will be
receiving a $15.00 rebate) Powell said something like ...
First we will cut him off from his supplies.
Then we will kill him
Precise, sterile, surgery
I totally agree with you.
I think -as already said- the personality traits that female
representatives would value (statistically at least) would include
those associated with war service. Time to ship our girls 'over there'.
Sounds like you may see some 'truth' in the hypothesis that the more
*power* women have, the 'less like wimmin' they will become. (or perhaps
I missed something?)
|
669.18 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:42 | 9 |
| re .16. Yup!
(I don't pretend to suggest that the Pat Schroeder citation says
anything, except possibly a bit of anecdotal trivia)
( i think she is quite a lady by the way. She has done a superb job of
working to improve our society's sensitivity to child care issues.)
h
|
669.19 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:52 | 6 |
| The solution is NOT to "get men out" it is to make sure that both men and women
believe in peace. I personally don't have a lot of faith that a woman who
would volunteer for combat duty is going to have the same attitude about going
to war that I do...
-- Charles
|
669.20 | Right, Charles! | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:58 | 18 |
| RE: .19
Yup. That's the crux of it.
Although, "believe in peace" might be a bit general. I doubt there's
anyone, including Mr Bush, who would say he didn't believe in peace.
How about: "believe in peaceful, non-violent actions; and
peaceful, non-violent solutions."
And BTW, I often wonder how much we can tell about what women's
actions/ideas are in this society, and what they would've been
without centuries of patriarchy.
--DE
|
669.21 | please explain | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:58 | 10 |
| re. 19
<<The solution is NOT to "get men out" . . .>>
What do you see as the solution?
What makes you think that your attitude about going to war would be
different than that of a woman's?
patrick
|
669.22 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:02 | 12 |
| > What makes you think that your attitude about going to war would be
> different than that of a woman's?
I believe that killing people to achieve your ends is always immoral. I doubt
that my hypothetical woman combat aviator feels the same way.
> What do you see as the solution?
Universal belief in the tenets of non-violence.
-- Charles
|
669.23 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:11 | 13 |
| re. 22
When I said the solution was to get men OUT instead of getting women
IN. I meant that we should solve our differences in a non-violent
manner instead of finding different ways of killing each other. I
think we are both saying the same things in different ways.
I feel that your attitude toward killing would differ from *some*
combat soldiers but certainly not all. I had your feelings about war
when I was in the middle of the Viet Nam war so I personally know of
one exception. I just don't see it divided along gender lines.
patrick
|
669.24 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:19 | 10 |
| > I feel that your attitude toward killing would differ from *some*
> combat soldiers but certainly not all. I had your feelings about war
> when I was in the middle of the Viet Nam war so I personally know of
> one exception. I just don't see it divided along gender lines.
I said in .19 "... a woman who would volunteer for combat duty."
Note the word "volunteer." I chose my words carefully.
-- Charles
|
669.25 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:49 | 39 |
| re. 24
Charles,
Ok I see what you're saying but I don't agree. I just personally know
too many exceptions. Grant it the exceptions are all men. I spent 4
years in the military and a year in Viet Nam. There was a draft then
and I didn't volunteer for combat duty but I knew a lot of soldiers.
While it's true that naive, young, testorone driven males may volunteer
for combat, it didn't take long for them to realize the folly of their
ways. The military pumped us up to believe that we we're fighting
for a cause, that the enemy were somehow sub-human, godless beings that
really didn't mind dying anyway. The human element was replaced with
acronyms and other substitutes. We didn't kill people we 'hit
targets', or 'held strategic positions'. Missions were often described
in terms of football games. There is no doubt that even volunteer
women would buy this BS. There is also no doubt that many of them will
realize that they have been exploited just as many of the men do.
There is a disproportionate number of blacks in todays military and
particularly in ground troops. When you realize that in America today
a black male between the age of 18 and 25 is TEN TIMES
more likely to be killed violently, you can understand why many of them
'volunteer' for the military. It beats working at MacDonalds. Many of
them are lied to and told that their lives will be much better in the
military. When these ground troops are eventually sent in to Kuwait to
attack a heavily armed and well protected Iraqi army, thousands of them
will be slaughtered. Did they volunteer? YUP! Do they want to kill?
NOPE! If there were women in these troops would they feel any
different? I don't think so.
Charles, I feel like the biggest dove I know. I am very upset about
what's going on in the East right now. It brings back all kinds of
feelings for me. I also feel that I would not be a such strong pacifist
if I hadn't seen the effects of war first hand. I feel that many
soldiers will return from this war with the same feelings that I did.
My point of all this is that just because someone 'volunteers' for the
military or even combat duty doesn't mean that they feel different than
you and I about killing.
|
669.26 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Thu Jan 24 1991 18:08 | 3 |
| NOW has my support for their demands that women be given equal
opportunity to serve in combat positions.
|
669.27 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jan 24 1991 18:13 | 9 |
| > NOW has my support for their demands that women be given equal
> opportunity to serve in combat positions.
I strongly agree. Women have the moral right to choose for themselves. I respect
any woman willing to fight and die for her country - however strongly I disagree
with her.
-- Charles
|
669.28 | Interesting ideas | BROKE::FEBONIO | | Thu Jan 24 1991 19:08 | 33 |
| I think this topic is fascinating. I also support NOW's insistence
that women be allowed to serve in combat postions, although I for
one do not believe in the efforts of war. I don't think women will
ever be considered equal to men if we are excluded from hand to hand
combat. If we want equality--which I desperately do--then we better
be ready to take it all the way across the board.
One of the issues in this note that a friend and I were just discussing
is the attitudes of women in government. I made the statement that
if women were ruling this world, I don't think we'd find ourselves in
wars (please note: IMO). Yes, we would find ourselves at each other's
throats, but I don't think we would be as apt as men to use war
as a solution.
She pointed out Margater Thatcher's handling of the the Falklands,
and said it was no different than the way any man would handle the
same situation.
Ah, BUT, I told her, you're missing the point. Margaret Thatcher
is a female politician operating in a white man's world. She has
to play the white man's game or she looses everything she had hoped
to gain for women (when in Rome do as the Romans, and all that).
I'm sure Margaret has had to ignore her own principals on numerous
occasions just to be able to maintain and accumulate her power.
It won't be until women have a true representation in politics
before we start to see women politicians acting like women and
not men. It's sad but true. I see it every day. You can't change
the rules until the majority of the people playing want the same
rules as you do.
Shirley
|
669.29 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Go Bills. | Thu Jan 24 1991 19:36 | 5 |
| I would give Margaret Thatcher some credit; I think she really believes
what she says. While I don't agree with her principles, I think she
does adhere to them.
-- Mike
|
669.30 | otherwise, don't fight. | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Thu Jan 24 1991 20:03 | 10 |
| .17, Herb,
well, I feel strongly that if you are going to fight at all, you should
fight with all your heart and will, to win. Given that, and his role
and job (aside from any judgement of that role, for the moment), I have
no problem with what Gen. Colin Powell said.
And ain't I a woman?
Sara
|
669.31 | | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | a Friend in mourning. | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:36 | 9 |
| >>I don't think women will
>> ever be considered equal to men if we are excluded from hand to hand
>> combat.
I find this the most depressing concept I have ever heard. More so
becuase it is almost certainly true.
E Grace
|
669.32 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:38 | 8 |
| re .30
If I am reading your reply correctly I think you may have misunderstood
my comments in 17. I quite agree with your comments. simply meant to be
underlining the clinically chilling reality that war is.
herb
|
669.33 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:41 | 41 |
|
> She pointed out Margater Thatcher's handling of the the Falklands,
> and said it was no different than the way any man would handle the
> same situation.
I disagree completely, If the Labour government were in power with
Kinnock at the head - I bet thinks would have been slower, messier,
and half-hearted.
> Ah, BUT, I told her, you're missing the point. Margaret Thatcher
> is a female politician operating in a white man's world. She has
> to play the white man's game or she looses everything she had hoped
> to gain for women (when in Rome do as the Romans, and all that).
> I'm sure Margaret has had to ignore her own principals on numerous
> occasions just to be able to maintain and accumulate her power.
I do not believe that Maggie is the type of person who would ever ignore
her own principles.
Whether you agree with her or not, she always did what she said she
would do, and I cannot think of anyone else we've had as PM that
has stuck by their beliefs and priciples.
Maggie didn't care what other people thought, she was not swayed by
anyone else.
> It won't be until women have a true representation in politics
> before we start to see women politicians acting like women and
> not men. It's sad but true. I see it every day. You can't change
> the rules until the majority of the people playing want the same
> rules as you do.
What do you mean by "women acting like women, not men"?
Heather
PS, Maggie did not invade the Faulklands, the Argentinians tried to
invade the Faulklands, we went to protect the Faulklands at their
request.
|
669.34 | Thatcher to the contrary notwithstanding. | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:41 | 15 |
|
.28 -
I agree -- electing a whole lot more women to public office, especially
Congress, might make a big difference in how likely we are to get into war.
(Remember women -- the ones who create, generally care for, and in many
cases value, human life, and who've been all but absent from the news
lately?)
oops - better duck
(duck)<------------------------------------------------------------(Thatcher!)
|
669.35 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I swear I'd drive for miles | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:42 | 9 |
| re .31, I wonder if that means that to be a man, as well as to be equal
to men, one must participate in hand to hand combat? That is a
depressing concept, to realize that a person's importance is still, in
these enlightened times, determined by hand-to-hand combat.
That's okay...I'm not sure I really wanted to play anyway...
Lorna
|
669.36 | | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:46 | 8 |
| Patrick,
Your comments on Vietnam are very illuminating. Thanks for sharing
them.
john
|
669.37 | as always, IMHO | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I swear I'd drive for miles | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:47 | 7 |
| re .33, Heather, "Maggie didn't care what other people thought..."
That's the trouble with most world leaders. Half the time they *don't*
seem to care what other people think! :-(
Lorna
|
669.38 | new word needed? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:52 | 11 |
|
I suggest we coin a word that means to throw Thatcher at you when you
just suggested that a world run equally by women and men might be a
less warlike one than a world run almost entirely by men. To "thatch"?
As in, "She 'thatched' me when I said that"? or "She 'maggied' me when I
said that"? "He 'ironed' me?"
Fresh out of ideas here,
D.
|
669.39 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Jan 25 1991 09:19 | 21 |
|
I do not believe that the percentage of women in a government has any
effect on the likelyhood of that country of going to war.
People are people.
Now, a government full of Kinnocks might be a different matter.
Another interesting fact.....
It has been announced that WRENS are to be recruited to fly navy
aircraft.
By the mid-90's women will also be serving alsongside male fliers.
This decision has come about because of the "impressive performance" by
female pilots and aircrew already under training in the RAF.
Heather
|
669.40 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 12:51 | 14 |
| People who have never been in a combat situation (including Pat
Schroeder) are not showing me any superior intelligence by volunteering
their sisters for combat trauma and death.
By definition if you say that women would be better at making war/no
war decisions simply because of their gender you are a sexist. In my
opinion gender still has nothing to do with it. Power has a lot to do
with it. To accept a position of power in a government is to indicate
to me that this person has a MEGA ego. That is where these decisions
come from not from the genitals.
Testostorone doesn't cause wars.
patrick
|
669.41 | Biff Pow | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Fri Jan 25 1991 12:57 | 20 |
| RE: .39
Women no more likely to affect war/peace policy? How depressing.
We're totally out of genders to effect peace, then.
RE: hand-to-hand combat necessary for males?
Certainly. Ever supervised an elementary school playround? Junior
High school corridors? Hand-to-hand combat starts early among males.
I believe a large part of a boys' growing up (at least in the US,
which is the only country I'm that familiar with) has to do with
concerns about this combat, and either how to *do* it or how to
*deal* with it.
Remember all those 50's movies with Dad teaching Junior how to
"handle himself" so he won't be seen as a <note the word, here>
wimp. Or worse, a pussy.
--DE
|
669.42 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 12:57 | 10 |
| well, not to get into a rathole but testosterone may have a larger
role than we think in causing wars; I'm simply thinking of the
'boys will be boys' comment; how boys are expected to fight in
school, how hockey players spend most of their time swinging at
each other and not at the puck...
This isn't meant to offend, simply that hormones, chemicals, genes,
whatever do tend to play role in our actions and reactions. Look
at all the PMS hype nowadays.
|
669.43 | A good question | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:13 | 22 |
| The Nature/Nurture controversy probably won't be solved by us. It's
extremely difficult to determine what affects a person more.
Still, testosterone hasn't adversely those who demonstrate peaceful
attitudes and solutions...and have beards, for example. ;-)
How we treat boys vs girls starts AT birth. How infants are picked up
differs depending on their gender. And it only gets worse from there.
Boy babies are far more likely to get thrown up in the air and caught
that girl babies are. A boy baby is far more likely to have Dad "play
fight" (soft punches, etc) with him, than a girl baby.
It starts so immediately on birth that it's extremely difficult to
say Nature or Nurture.
We're in a situation in which two men from different cultures obviously
believe that certain behaviours are signs of "weakness". It may, then,
be Nature...or it may be that (patriarchal) Nurture is that pervasive
on the planet.
--DE
|
669.44 | see 39.19 | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:15 | 1 |
|
|
669.45 | re .-1, 39.19) | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:27 | 7 |
| aw cummon...
Since Alan Alda played the role of a Doctor in M.A.S.H (mobile army
surgical hospital?) he obviously speaks with authority about such
matters, right?
|
669.46 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:33 | 10 |
| re. 669.44 and 39.19
I understand the argument . . . I just feel it's over simplication.
If there is Testostorone poisoning then there must be Estrogen
poisoning. This gives the camp that says women should not be allowed
to fly commercial airliners ammo. To say that humans have no control
over their chemistry is to accept a victim status. Testostorone and
Estrogen (in my opinion) is fuel. You can use that fuel to torture
captured pilots (Saddam Huessin) or you can use that fuel to pursue
peace (Perez de Cuellar).
|
669.47 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:38 | 2 |
| Alan Alda is as much an authority on Physiological Phychology as Ted
Bundy was on pornography.
|
669.48 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:39 | 4 |
| re 669.46
I think I understand the argument in .44 too. I think its called
guerrila warfare.
|
669.49 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:48 | 20 |
| I don't think Alda's comments were meant to be taken at face value,
ie, he is not seriously suggesting that we take an inbuilt hormonal
situation and call it a malignant condition. He is using medical
terminology to make a point about social behavior. It's rhetoric.
His point is not necessarily that men are poisoned by their hormones,
but that there is *something* about being male that leads nearly all
males in all societies to activities more violent than those engaged
in by women. That *something* may be environmental; it may be all
the traditional stereotypical conscious and unconscious roles forced
upon young male children, which are different from the roles forced
upon young female children. I find it far more valuable to recognize
the symptoms, the conditions, the background of his hypothesis, and
recognize that his label "testosterone poisoning" is merely his way of
tying all those observed facts together. If you don't like the label
or the implication that male hormones do influence the behaviors of all
men, then it behooves you to come up with an alternate explanation for
the observed facts; ie, men are statistically much more prone to commit
acts of violence than are women. Why?
DougO
|
669.50 | .48 - no, just plain ole monkeyshines ;-) | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:50 | 1 |
|
|
669.51 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:54 | 5 |
| Can somebody tell me what ;-) means
I can't tell whether that's a
smile, a smirk, or a sneer
|
669.52 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:56 | 18 |
| re. .49
To say that male behavior is affected by a myriad of factors including:
1. Environment
2. Heritage
3. Diet (ie sugar, caffiene etc)
4. Religous training
5. Schooling
6. Peers
7. Siblings
8. Body chemistry
9. on and on
is realistic.
To say or imply that ONE of these factors is the predominent factor is
drastic oversimplification.
|
669.53 | whoa | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:59 | 5 |
|
Hey wait a minute. Can we say t*st*st*ron* in here?
D.
|
669.54 | *This* is a smirk: :-> | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:01 | 7 |
| It's a smile with a wink, Herb.
Nit: Estrogen and testosterone are so different in their capabilities
that it is grossly inaccurate to say `Estrogen is to <a> as
testosterone is to <b>.'
Ann B.
|
669.55 | re .52 | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:03 | 7 |
| re .52
I suggest you not bother. It seems clear to me that .49 is serving the
purpose of an apologistic entry.
you know, sort of like -oh say- William Buckley explaining perhaps
Anita Bryant?
|
669.56 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:04 | 1 |
| thankyou, Ann
|
669.57 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Yeh, mon, no problem | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:06 | 3 |
| re .53>can we say...
Yes, *if* your tone of voice is properly respectful >;-)
|
669.58 | So it's not genetic. Let's go demean some women over it | COBWEB::SWALKER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:10 | 28 |
|
re: .38
> I suggest we coin a word that means to throw Thatcher at you when you
> just suggested that a world run equally by women and men might be a
> less warlike one than a world run almost entirely by men.
Dorian,
Much as I sympathize with your frustration, I can't believe that the
solution lies in coining another term which demeans a woman. Thatcher
can no more be taken as a representative of all women than Gandhi or
Hitler are of all men. I think that's understood - but the fact remains
that until the world *is* run equally by men and women, there won't be
any hard data about the correlation between the gender of the rulers
and the degree to which the world is warlike.
It drives me crazy to see women in politics held up and scrutinized as
examples of "what women in power are like" by the same people who insist
there's a world of difference between, say, Bush and Dukakis (even though
they're both men). Coining terms which encapsulate the stereotypes those
women have come to represent does nothing to help the situation.
All that Margaret Thatcher proves is that the mere fact of having two
X chromosomes won't prevent a leader from declaring wars.
Sharon
|
669.59 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:16 | 11 |
| Herb,
if Alda is too subtle for you, just say so and we'll leave it at that.
The observations upon which his hypothesis was based were clearly
spelled out. Go ahead, try this on yourself:
> men are statistically much more prone to commit acts of violence
> than are women. Why?
DougO
|
669.60 | :-/ | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:19 | 7 |
|
.57
I'm afraid this could be *mb*rr*ss*ng to the m*n.
D.
|
669.61 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:25 | 11 |
| re. .59
re: Men being statistically much more prone to commit acts of
violence.
Statistically, a black male between the age of 18 and 25 is TEN TIMES
more likely to die violently than his white counterpart. The people in
this note that blame violence on testostorone would have to conclude
that black males have TEN TIMES more testostorone that while males. I
conclude, (and I think you concur Doug) that there are many other
factors involved.
|
669.62 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:31 | 27 |
| re .52,
> 1. Environment
> 2. Heritage
> 3. Diet (ie sugar, caffiene etc)
> 4. Religous training
> 5. Schooling
> 6. Peers
> 7. Siblings
> 8. Body chemistry
> 9. on and on
I'd reformat that, myself:
1- environment(Diet, Religion, Schooling, Peers, Siblings, Parenting, etc)
2- heredity(heritage, body chemistry (incl gender-based differences), etc)
So, we look at the question again:
> men are statistically much more prone to commit acts of violence
> than are women. Why?
And we see Alda proposing either (per Herb) an hypothesis that cat 2 is
more important or (per my interpretation of his rhetoric) that while
cat 2 is the obvious difference, his evidence clearly falls into cat 1
as well, and we are all supposed to think about it.
DougO
|
669.63 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:32 | 5 |
| re .61, dieing violently is not the same as committing acts of
violence. 10x higher probability of death by violence .ne. 10x
higher probability of committing violence.
DougO
|
669.64 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:36 | 5 |
| re. .63
The KKK is not going into the inner city and killing blacks. This is
blacks killing blacks. This violence is the result of poverty,
desperation, and many of the other factors I've already mentioned.
|
669.65 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Go Bills. | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:41 | 5 |
| So Doug, does the content of your participation in this discussion
indicate that you have now become enlightened and thus oppose the war
in the Persian Gulf? ;-)
-- Mike
|
669.66 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:50 | 14 |
| Mike, you know what you're supposed to do if you meet the Bhudda on the
road, right? No, I'm not making any claims to be 'enlightened'. What
the content I'm describing is about is recognizing the human frailties
that are part of being male; as discussed by Alda, as misunderstood by
Herb. I'm still opposed to the war in the gulf, the one that began
last August, yes. I'm still of the opinion that so long as there are
so many of these prone-to-violence people, mostly males, in this world,
their more heinous acts of aggression must be opposed. Interpret that
in a catchy two-liner if you wish. Please recognize that some of my
bitter irony in this situation is indeed reserved for myself.
DougO
ps- congratulations on your impending transition. I mean it :-)
|
669.67 | * | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:51 | 7 |
|
***************************************
******************************************
***********.
D.
|
669.68 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:54 | 8 |
| re .64, so, don't get me wrong. I'm trying to follow this. You're
suggesting that the evidence of black-on-black violence, interpreted
through Alda's testosterone-poisoning argument, suggests that blacks
have 10x the testosterone of white, which is patently false, which
invalidates Alda's hypothesis. Did I get that right, is that your
position?
DougO
|
669.69 | re .66 | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:21 | 23 |
| 'Testosterone poisoning'in this conference is not used as a diagnosis, it
is used as a cuss. Although I don't *know* the cause of violence I
do deplore it. I even tried to deal with the matter seriously in among
other places 669.10,.17.
I don't know why 'males are more violent'. Neither do you. Neither does
D. Kottler. Neither does Alan Alda.
And it doesn't help to get nasty about it.
(and in case there was any doubt, *i* feel the nastiness was started by the
ridiculous reference to an earlier reference to Alan Alda
who by the way is one of my all time favorite people, both as a man and
as an actor.
But for information on the etiology of violence, i would prefer someone
slightly more orthodox.
Of course, maybe Laetrile (ground up apricot seeds) cures cancer.
And maybe the occasional 'bitchiness' in this conference can be attributed
to the menstrual cycle too.
p.s.
If someone feels the nastiness was started by me, please point out the
response if I agree I will delete it and apologize
|
669.70 | my position | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:21 | 45 |
| In answer to .68
My position is:
a. Body chemistry, including hormones, is only one factor driving human
behavior.
b. Saying that women would do a better job running this country simply
because they are women is by definition, sexist.
c. I see more correlation between power and war than testostorone and
war.
d. To suggest that men in genral are singularly influenced
(testostorone again) is oversimplication. And if you hold this to
be a truth, then you must conclude the same for estrogen in women.
e. The reasons for the disparity of behavior between men and women are
many and body chemistry is just one factor.
f. My reference to black violence is merely to point out the
discrepancy of thinking that testostorone alone causes violence.
What I'm saying is that IF testostorone alone causes violence then
logically we must conclude that black males have ten times more
than white males. This, of course, is absurd and so is the
argument that testostorone alone causes violence and/or war. And
so is the implication that
because women's levels of testostorone are much smaller than men's
they would necessarily make fewer choices to engage in war if given
the authority.
g. I support more women in governing bodies but not because I think
they are superior simply because they are women. I support them
because they have new and innovative ways of looking at old
problems. Problems that the 'Good ole boy' network can't see
reasonable solutions to.
h. I am a Dove. I used to belong to Viet Nam Veterens against the
war.
i. Everyone has the right to defend themselves. The people of
Nagasaki and Hiroshima did not attack the United States and neither
did the citizens of Iraq.
patrick
|
669.71 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:26 | 4 |
| Herb, my .49 was not an attempt to be nasty. But I sure didn't like
your .55 in response.
DougO
|
669.72 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:28 | 3 |
| Patrick, my .49 is not in disagreement with you.
DougO
|
669.73 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:30 | 9 |
| re. .72
DougO,
I have felt that we have been in agreement all along. I hope you
didn't think I was ripping you.
patrick
|
669.74 | please. | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:41 | 5 |
|
.69
I think you mean b*tch*n*ss.
|
669.75 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:42 | 9 |
| I intended to be angry in .55. I did not believe that .49 was a sincere
attempt to understand. I believed .49 was intended to be 'damage
control' for .44. Which is where I feel the nastiness began. If that
interpretation is incorrect I apologize. In any case, I am glad to bow
out of this discussion.
herb
|
669.76 | Nit alert | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:57 | 21 |
| Patrick,
This makes the second time you've objected to the idea that women
would make `better' leaders than men. I have read the base note
twice, and I have not found that concept in there -- unless you
mean "more representative" == "better". In short, I think that
you are objecting to an idea that has not been presented.
Testosterone is a steroid; estrogen is not. Testosterone is one
of the few hormones in the whoooole world that operates by tying
two molecules together (This is how it builds muscles.) rather
than by tearing one molecule into two parts, the way dull, ordinary
hormones work. An excess of testosterone is the cause of at least
one mental disorder; there is no such implication for estrogen.
An injection of testosterone has a good chance of killing you; again,
estrogen carries no such risk.
Now that you know something of what makes testosterone so special,
I hope you won't treat it as the mere equivalent of estogen anymore.
:-)
Ann B.
|
669.77 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 16:19 | 18 |
| Ann,
I think you missed my point which is that to assume that testostorone
ALONE causes violence (see the Alan Alda note) is oversimplification.
I'm not saying that testostorone and estrogen are identical chemically,
I'm saying that I don't believe that we as humans are controlled by our
chemistry. Influenced, yes, controlled, no. This is true for men and
women.
There are a couple of replys that make reference to Margaret Thatcher
and state or imply that if she were left to her 'nature' (ie female)
she would not have been agressive and would not have ordered troops to
the Falklands. I maintain that gender has nothing to do with it.
I also maintain that gender has nothing to do with leadership or
superiority/inferiority.
Also check your reference again, estrogen is a steroid hormone.
|
669.78 | a woman cutting up other women excluding herself | DCL::NANCYB | You be the client and I'll be the server. | Fri Jan 25 1991 17:02 | 53 |
| EASTERN SAUDI ARABIA (UPI) -- While women soldiers may remain confined
to support roles in the Persian Gulf war, some of them have been pushed
ahead of infantry troops to set up supply lines near what is likely to
become the front in a ground battle.
``I didn't think I was going into the combat zone,'' said Pvt. 1st
Class Amy Deever, a 20-year-old from Alabama as she trudged along with
backpack and flak jacket. ``I didn't think women could go so close.''
She pondered the policy restricting combat role by women.
``They said as long as we were up here and we were attacked we would
have to fight, but otherwise we're not considered a combat unit,'' she
added. ``It sounds silly now we're so close up. At night you hear the
firing and you wonder when they're all going to get us.''
Women, although remaining in support roles, have been pushed forward
along the lines this past week in Saudi Arabia, even ahead of most of
the infantry, by the need to establish forward supply bases.
The female soldiers make up 8 percent of the troops at a main forward
Marine logistics base, where Marine Lance Cpl. Patricia Perez has begun
having second thoughts.
``I don't feel women should be up here unless their job calls for it,
'' said Perez, who works for the decontamination unit of the base and
would be expected to go forward and treat soldiers caught in a chemical
attack.
``I see a lot of females here doing nothing,'' said Perez of
Rochester, N.Y. ``There's no sense of having a female out here when it's
pretty clear that they can't accomplish as much as a man can and can't
compete in strength.''
But, she said, ``If they need me I'll have to go and I want to go.
This is the furthest women have been in the combat zone. I want everyone
to know the part I played, because when it happens I will have been
right in the middle of it.''
Some support units decided to leave their women behind when they were
ordered to the Persian Gulf. Initially, the Marines were slow to deploy
any women.
Their arrival has drawn mixed reviews from men. While many are
pleased to have female companionship, others claim women receive special
treatment and could simply get in the way if fighting breaks out.
``It's a big adjustment for the guys,'' Perez said. ``There's a lot
of things they have to hold back on, like swearing.''
And sex, she said. ``When men are living in the desert, their loins
start tingling. They see a female and their heads aren't clear. They
want to go into combat with a clear head. Having women around can be a
pain in the butt.''
Sexual relations between Marines are prohibited while on duty. And
during war, they are considered to be on the job 24 hours a day. At this
point, all seem more concerned about death than sex.
``Nobody's going to keep me here in a body bag,'' Perez said. ``I
plan on going home.''
But Staff Sgt. Jacqueline Bowling, 29, of Nice, Calif., said female
casualties are almost inevitable.
``The day the first woman Marine is killed is going to cause problems
with public opinion,'' she said. ``I just don't think that the public in
general is quite ready to accept it.''
|
669.79 | wow! | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 17:40 | 17 |
| re.78
Amazing because:
1. The military censors let UPI print this. I understood that because
of Saudi's views of women, they were ordered to keep a low profile.
2. Lance Cpl. Perez is ripping her fellow female soldiers.
3. The Marine Corp allowed her to speak to the press. Usually the
people you see on camera etc. are screened and briefed as to what
they can say and how they are to say it. Bad mouthing any member
of your unit if definitely a no-no.
4. This supply unit is seemingly un-protected as they are "ahead of
the infantry troops" and thus there is nobody between them and the
Iraqis.
|
669.80 | Let's do it scientifically. | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri Jan 25 1991 18:39 | 11 |
| We will never resolve the hormone debate until we have facts.
Therefore, I say we check out Maggie Thatcher's hormone level and see
if it is unusual. Would someone over there volunteer to collect a sample?
After we check that out, and if the result is inconclusive, we can
compare the hormone level of Dorian and Heather. Finally, to have a
male perspective (us men want equal representation too), we can collect
Doug and Patrick's. We can only hope that, by then, this deep and
inspirational debate will come to an end.
Eugene
|
669.81 | | THEALE::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Jan 28 1991 04:50 | 23 |
| > RE: hand-to-hand combat necessary for males?
>
> Certainly. Ever supervised an elementary school playround? Junior
> High school corridors? Hand-to-hand combat starts early among males.
> I believe a large part of a boys' growing up (at least in the US,
> which is the only country I'm that familiar with) has to do with
> concerns about this combat, and either how to *do* it or how to
> *deal* with it.
I don't think so, there were just as many fights in the boys playground
as in the girls playground.
And I can remember jumping over the chains into the boys playground to
protect my younger brother who was being bullied by older boys.
However, we shall see how much hand-to-hand combat actually occurs in
this crisis. I, personnaly believe it will be Zero, and if not, so
minimal that it won't make any difference.
Heather
|
669.82 | | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Mon Jan 28 1991 14:14 | 9 |
| Re: -.1
Heather,
You had sexually segregated playgrounds? With chains no less! That's
something I never encountered in the US. Is it still that way in the
UK? What was the reasoning behind it?
Mary
|
669.83 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Mon Jan 28 1991 17:20 | 14 |
| School playgrounds were segregated in the 40's in Boston, too.
What was the reasoning behind it in Boston, you ask?
I don't know
To 'protect' the girls, maybe? I think the tenor of the times would
have said that it was *unnatural* for boys and girls to play together,
and that boys were too 'rough' for girls.
One might reflect on some other things that happened in Boston of
the 40s. For instance, there were municipal laws requiring that female
teachers be unmarried. And had to leave school if they got married! My
hunch is that laws/customs of that kind were *intended* to *protect*
spinster women.) (Boston of the 40s, remember; the only 'professional'
positions available to unmarried women at the time were teacher, nurse,
and, nun)
|
669.84 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I swear I'd drive for miles | Mon Jan 28 1991 17:27 | 7 |
| School playgrounds were segregated, by sex, in the town I went to school
in, in Massachusetts, in the 1950's, too. There were no fences but we were
told to play in separate areas and, for the most part, did. How dull.
I don't know when it changed, the 60's or 70's I guess.
Lorna
|
669.85 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | she is a 'red haired baby-woman' | Mon Jan 28 1991 18:31 | 11 |
| Schools in many towns had separate entrances for boys and girls.
Also i think the prejudice against married teachers was more
that the kids would be exposed to 'gasp' pregnant teachers...
tho the reason for this, since their mothers were often pregnant
escapes me..
autre temps..
|
669.86 | The Dark Ages (my j.h.s. years...) | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Mon Jan 28 1991 18:42 | 10 |
| I never *did* understand the reason for segregating the playgrounds...
boys and girls of that age simply do NOT play together at school,
anyway! (Cooties and all that!)
When I was in junior high school, there was a boys' entrance and
a girls' entrance to the school. Incredibly weird. At least, *we*
all thought so...
--DE
|
669.87 | The not-so-dark ages?? | SCRPIO::LIZBICKI | | Mon Jan 28 1991 19:04 | 4 |
|
I remember being separted on the playgrounds in grades 1-3 (1970-72).
I also remember that the boys had about 3/4 of the playground...
|
669.89 | They didn't manage to chain me in | THEALE::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 29 1991 04:27 | 34 |
|
In the infants 5-7 we were NOT segregated in the playgrounds.
In the juniors 7-11 we WERE segregated in the paygrounds, and also, we
had segregated classes in the last year.
In senior school 11-18, I was in a single sex school, we were all girls.
This was in the 60's/70's.
My senior school went mixed sex in 82, but they are still not
comprehensive (you need to pass what we call the 11-plus exam, to
attend).
I was reading articles in the Sunday newspapers, over the weekend, where
some educational authorities want to go back to the 11-plus, and single
sex schools.
I think that single-sex schools can be good for some people, not so good
for others, and it doesn't matter to the rest.
I class myself as "it didn't make any difference", I had a lot of
contact with boys outside school - 2 younger brothers, friends brothers,
and with the swimming club, and the youth club............
One of my friends was very shy, and she did very well academically, I
believe she would not have done as well in a mixed school, HOWEVER,
she rarely had any contact with boys, and grew up to be very
uncomfortable in male company. I believe a mixed school would have
helped with this.
She went into teaching in a mixed school, and never could handle this.
She eventually got a job in a girls-only school, and was much happier.
Heather
|
669.90 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Passion and Direction | Tue Jan 29 1991 05:04 | 23 |
|
I was not segregated at school up until the age of 12, but when I
moved into senior school the playgrounds were segregated in "lower
school" (12-14 years).
Then we were moved to another building for 15-18 schooling - that
wasn't segregated.
This was in 1971.
Because the school used to be a fully segragated grammar school the
buildings had all been built with separate boys and girls entrances,
and fully symetrical so that classes could be segregated too.
Needless to say, the "mirror image" of the boys woodworking shops
were the domestic science rooms on the girls side....
Luckily, by the time I got there, both sexes were using most of the
areas, though the gyms stayed separate.
I thought it was weird at the time, but then I was too stunned and
delighted at finding a building with curved corridors to really care...
(I'd only ever been in straight corridors before :-)
'gail
|
669.91 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | trial by fire | Tue Jan 29 1991 07:54 | 23 |
|
I've never had either my classes or my play areas segregated, nor have
I lived in any town where that was done. Of course, later in life, my
career choice often made me the only female in an all-male group, but
that was because of the content, not through any official decree.
It's really interesting, I waas speaking with my sister a while ago and
she mentioned that segregating schools (be it boy/girl, racial, or
whatever) had the primary affect of crippling the children socially to
some degree. Because when they hit the REAL WORLD, it wouldn't be like
that. People tend to formulate ideas and opinions (superior, inferior,
afraid, nervous, awkward) and attitudes about the unknown, and this
really hits them when they go from protected place to real-world place.
-Jody
p.s. I am not saying that people who choose to go to an all-boys or
all-girls school are making a wrong choice, or that it is bad to
support such things, I am merely stating there may be ramifications of
an anything-only school (which I'm sure may be counterbalanced by
other things that school can provide which another may not be able to)
that might affect the person socially later on.
|
669.92 | | THEALE::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 29 1991 08:21 | 34 |
| > I am merely stating there may be ramifications of
> an anything-only school (which I'm sure may be counterbalanced by
> other things that school can provide which another may not be able to)
> that might affect the person socially later on.
Actually, at the time, there was no other choice, all the schools in
my area were run this way!.
The only time I think it is "bad" is when the person is not sociable
and has no interests outside school.
My friend - who I mentioned before, had two other interest, one was the
piano, and she had home-teaching for that, the other was the Girl
Guides, which was also single sex. She had no brothers, but 1 younger
sister who was autistic.
Most of my friends had other interests outside of school, where they
mixed with girls and boys, and these people didn't have these sort
of problems.
I believe my friend who has the problems, would have had them to some
extent anyway. A mixed school may have inhibited her ability to develop
academically, and so not have been able to become a teacher, although
it may have helped her socially.
The benefit for me, was that I always thought of boys and girls as
equal. I had no "conditioning", we were all taught we could do whatever
our ability enabled us to do. (This was re-enforced at home too).
I hadn't even heard of sexual discrimination until I was 21, and had
then been working 3 years, and married for 2 years!
Heather.
|
669.93 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I swear I'd drive for miles | Tue Jan 29 1991 09:32 | 10 |
| My school had separate entrances for boys and girls from 1st through
6th grades. It seems ridiculous now, although at the time I just
accepted it. It was just the way things were.
I sometimes think that because there were so many efforts to keep girls
and boys apart when I was a kid, that it helped to make me think that
males were much more interesting than girls.
Lorna
|
669.94 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Tue Jan 29 1991 09:50 | 7 |
| in Springfield Mass, the boys and girls were never seperated in school
except for the bathrooms, and from 7th grade on, gym, and shop-vs-home_ec.
I did have a teacher yell at me, when I was in 2nd grade, for hanging
by my knees on the monkey bars. "Ladies don't show their underpants to
boys" was her remark. I thought she was dumb, anyone could see I had
shorts on under my skirt!
|
669.95 | | LJOHUB::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:06 | 5 |
| Huh. I never heard of segregating the girls and boys in school.
I guess that was to keep the girls from chasing the boys and
kissing them, eh?
Kathy
|
669.96 | | THEALE::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:24 | 5 |
|
Nah, it was to stop them beating the boys at football, and games,
and maths, and English, and.............. :-)
Heather
|
669.97 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:44 | 20 |
| > It's really interesting, I waas speaking with my sister a while ago and
> she mentioned that segregating schools (be it boy/girl, racial, or
> whatever) had the primary affect of crippling the children socially to
> some degree. Because when they hit the REAL WORLD, it wouldn't be like
> that. People tend to formulate ideas and opinions (superior, inferior,
> afraid, nervous, awkward) and attitudes about the unknown, and this
> really hits them when they go from protected place to real-world place.
Jody, from reports from some women of my acquaintance who have attended
all-women's colleges, I'd have to disagree with your sister's
assessment. I'd understood that finally out from under the cultural
burden of always catering to male egos, that an all-women academic
environment could be a wonderful developing ground for self-assertion,
self-confidence, and to develop respect for the other women around one.
Because nobody had to be quiet when Johhny speaks, anymore. I'd call
that primary affect not at all crippling.
I'm sure that both affects can happen, though.
DougO
|
669.98 | Pass the cheese? | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:50 | 10 |
| Actually, there have been studies done that show that women develop
more self-confidence and assertiveness in all-female schools. Studies
of newly-integrated ex-single-gender schools show that even when
boys/men are in the minority, they dominate all interaction in the
classroom.
Erm...is this a rathole?
--DE
|
669.99 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Tue Jan 29 1991 16:59 | 7 |
| > is this a rathole?
I was wondering when someone would notice? I felt rather proud of
myself for ratholing a war topic so well :-)
Mary
|
669.100 | Now if we could just rathole the war! | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Tue Jan 29 1991 17:08 | 1 |
|
|
669.101 | Good idea! | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Tue Jan 29 1991 17:29 | 1 |
|
|
669.102 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 30 1991 04:46 | 28 |
| > It's really interesting, I waas speaking with my sister a while ago and
> she mentioned that segregating schools (be it boy/girl, racial, or
> whatever) had the primary affect of crippling the children socially to
> some degree. Because when they hit the REAL WORLD, it wouldn't be like
> that. People tend to formulate ideas and opinions (superior, inferior,
> afraid, nervous, awkward) and attitudes about the unknown, and this
> really hits them when they go from protected place to real-world place.
Having spent most of my education in single-sex schools, and lived in a
city of 250,000 people - where all the schools were single-sex schools,
(after the age of 10 - and many before) I don't agree. (there are
400,000 now - something must work!!!!!).
I believe this happens only if the girls had a problem anyway,
and a mixed school would actually make them more introverted, and
cause more problems.
The other thing to consider is that school isn't everything.
You mix with people outside of school, in groups , in youth clubs, in
sports clubs, with family, with friends, during the holidays, in the
evenings, at weekends, with "discos" and outings organised between
all-boys and all-girls schools.......etc....
I never thought of boys as "unknowns", just kids who I played with.
There isn't the distraction of having your "boyfriend" in the same
class!
Heather
|
669.103 | In search of a quote | STAR::RDAVIS | Untimely ripp'd | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:02 | 13 |
| Who was it who pointed out that co-ed schools are bad for women because
it makes them act more like "women", but good for men because it makes
them act more like "humans"?
(BTW, all the evidence I've personally seen supports this theory. The
men I've met from all-male or overwhelmingly-male schools seem to have
more difficulty coping with Real Life than women from overwhelmingly-
female schools. Pace Denis Diderot....)
(Also BTW, but on the topic, some of the arguments against integrating
combat troops were used in the past against integration of schools.)
Ray
|
669.104 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:10 | 15 |
| > Who was it who pointed out that co-ed schools are bad for women because
> it makes them act more like "women", but good for men because it makes
> them act more like "humans"?
> (Also BTW, but on the topic, some of the arguments against integrating
> combat troops were used in the past against integration of schools.)
Ah, me, I always act like a "woman"
pass the hockey stick,
Heather
|
669.105 | Bryn Mawr field hockey roolz OK! | STAR::RDAVIS | Untimely ripp'd | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:14 | 5 |
| � pass the hockey stick,
Hey, wait 'til I get the padding on!
Ray
|
669.106 | wish I'd had the sense to go there... | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:46 | 18 |
| well the only all-women place I have been is Brownies.
My niece is in her first year of college. She is the younger of 2 kids
in her family; her brother is 3 yrs older. All her life, she has known
that _she__comes__second_. He was raised to believe himself the hub of
the universe. For ex, she wanted a horse. They live on 30 acres in a
rural town, and her uncle has a dairy farm (ie, he has a barn) just up
the road, but her dad doesn't like horses and she couldn't have one.
Her brother went sailing on the lake with a friend on a Friday, and
came home raving about sailing. His dad, whose sister says he has not
opened his wallet in 30 years, and who I have seen freeze in panic in a
canoe, went out Sat. a.m. and *borrowed* $1200, bought a sailboat that
day. I could bore you all day and into the night with this, but you
get the idea.
Well, she was accepted at every college she applied to, but when she
chose Smith College (Northampton, Ma) I cheered wildly. My niece
*needs* to be in a place where WOMEN COME FIRST!
|
669.107 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:49 | 6 |
|
At age 8 I received 6 strokes of the cane for "entering the girls playground".
That I hadn't done so was no defence...
/. Ian .\
|
669.108 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 30 1991 12:09 | 24 |
|
>At age 8 I received 6 strokes of the cane for "entering the girls playground".
>
>That I hadn't done so was no defence...
Ian, I had similar punishment on numerous occaisions for entering the
boys playground.
I had extra strokes for fighting the boys who were beating up my
brother.
I also read the note regarding girls colleges.
I have been thinking if I would choose a girls-only school if I had
the option.
Yes, I would, but I wouldn't choose a girls-only university, however I
had the advantage of being treated equally at home.
I really can't believe that parents can still be so one-sided, they are
very lucky that their daughter seems level-headed enough to make
her own decisions, and has not rebelled completely.
Heather
|
669.109 | one of my special topics | WMOIS::B_REINKE | she is a 'red haired baby-woman' | Wed Jan 30 1991 23:03 | 56 |
| Heather,
You show all the charateristics of a woman who has gone to all
woman/female schools, you are strong minded, arguementative and
don't take any garbage from anyone.
and I mean the above as a compilment.
Further...
at my 20th reunion at Mt Holyoke college, ( the oldest college that
admitted women in America ) people spoke on the the achievements
of women at women only schools..
I already knew we were far more outspoken....I used to be a 'shy
person' (to paraphrase Garrison Keelor) but a woman's college gave me
the courage to speak up for my self...
but also, more women's college grads have gone on to advanced degrees,
to graduate from law school and med school and to take advanced
positions in universities and corporations.
Yet women's colleges, now that most of all mens colleges have been
made open to both sexes are under attack.
The number of all women's colleges that remain are less than 1/3
of those that existed when I was in college.
reasons:
my guesses
1. meeting men is/was artifical. the all women's academic colleges
that survive have found ways (shared courses between other schools
as the 5 college system here in Mass) for women to interact socially
with men (those who wish to) in a way prob far more natural than
in my day when we met only at parties.....a lousey way to really
get to know people as people for the vast majority of men and women.
2. People now use homophobia, now that homosexuality is more open..
'why do you want to do there, it is a lesbian college?' is a common
remark.....this hits not only a kind of nasty homophobia, but
it attacks the value of an education free of men for many straight
women......i.e.
you study harder, learn more, and are more out spoken when you
separate/compartmentalize your academic and social life for a
period of time in your late teens.
Bonnie
p.s. how about we start a sep note on all women's schools, and
ask Jody to reference the earlier notes on this subject in
v-1 and v-2?
|
669.110 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Jan 31 1991 08:53 | 39 |
|
> You show all the charateristics of a woman who has gone to all
> woman/female schools, you are strong minded, arguementative and
> don't take any garbage from anyone.
and people tried to tell me it was because I'm an Aquarian! :-)
....do you remember me saying that all the schools in the city I lived
were like this, well, my mum and gran attended all-women schools, as did
my sister, friends, friends mums, and.....etc....
(You should have heard some of our "discussions"!)
The city itself is known for it's independance, and non-conformity.
It still has the eleven-plus, and still has single-sex schools for
those who choose. It was the last place to adopt comprehensive
education, and this was 1 token school.
It had Micheal Foot, it still has David Owen, and Janet Fookes as
MP's.
> Yet women's colleges, now that most of all mens colleges have been
> made open to both sexes are under attack.
I wonder if it is "supply and demand?" , or just a trend-of-the-day.
It would be interesting to see how the number of applicants-per-place
there are for the all-women, all-men, and mixed colleges.
> p.s. how about we start a sep note on all women's schools, and
> ask Jody to reference the earlier notes on this subject in
> v-1 and v-2?
It looks like a good idea, with the discussuion that's gone on in the
last few weeks.
Heather
|
669.111 | Equal rights = equal responsibilities | CUPMK::SLOANE | This is kinder and gentler? | Fri Feb 01 1991 09:32 | 56 |
|
Excluding women from war is another example of male domination.
Men don't want women to go to war because they don't want their
personal property (women) damaged. The ultimate fear is that their
women will be taken prisoner and raped. That concern is the core
behind every male objection about women fighting. In truth,
females can fight equally well as males can fight. There is no
logical reason to exclude women from any and all war activities.
In ancient times rape was a consideration, but not the major concern,
to exclude women from battle. Women were excluded from battle
for two reasons: 1. Brute strength was extremely important in
ancient wars because wars were primarily hand-to-hand combat; and
2. women were needed at home to take care of the children and
crops.
These reasons do not exist today. Brute strength has little to do
with war. Women can shoot rifles, drive tanks, fly airplanes,
shoot missiles, repair trucks, navigate ships, maintain and run
electronic equipment, hand out supplies, cook for hundreds, etc.,
etc., as well as any man. Women can endure heat and cold, thirst,
fatigue, etc. as well as any man. They can endure the fear,
boredom and interminable waiting between active battles better
than most men.
There are a few jobs, mostly in the army and marines, that do
require brute strength Few men and even fewer women qualify for
them. There are very few men or women, for instance, who can
qualify to join mountain troops, be paratroopers, underwater
demolition divers, etc. Most of these jobs, in peace and war, have
been filled by volunteers. Those who do qualify and volunteer,
male or female, should be given the chance.
In frontier America women shot bears and Indians (and let's not
get ratholed on that), often putting down a nursing infant to
pick up the rifle. In colonial New Hampshire, for instance,
Hannah Dustin killed and scalped several Indians who had
kidnapped her, another woman, and a boy. There was no question as
to whether this was appropriate feminine behavior.
Women in occupied countries have always played important
resistence roles. During World War I and II they helped escaped
prisoners of wars, provided valuable information and often
performed sabotage. In Vietnam 200-pound American male soldiers
were killed by 85-pound Vietnam women. In Isreal today both women
and men serve in the aremd forces.
If we exclude a few androgen-driven gung-ho males in their late
teens and early 20s, few people want to fight a war. But people
of both sexes are willing to fight if they believe the cause is
strong enough. People who feel that way should be given that
choice, regardless of their gender.
Bruce
|
669.112 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | snow sky | Fri Feb 01 1991 09:46 | 19 |
| well, speaking only for myself, if I was a soldier in war and was taken
prisoner, *I* would worry about being raped, and not because of how any
man or anyone else felt about it! I would want the means to take my
own life, if I felt it was necessary.
as a citizen, I should have all the rights and responsibilities that
any other citizen has, and gender should not affect responsibility for
military service, or for type of service. I believe that a citizen
(volunteer, or universal-service) army is the right kind for the U.S.,
and that combat or fighter-pilot or latrine-sweeper jobs should be
available options to any and all who qualify, and that gender itself
should not be a determining factor.
I do feel that, in a family with children, only one parent should be
required to serve in war. Sort of like the "sole surviving son" rule
used to be.
Sara
|
669.113 | WHAT? | TPAU::DUNCAN | | Fri Feb 01 1991 10:32 | 9 |
|
RE .112
Sara,
What is "sole surviving son" rule and why is it not done any more...
You used the term "used ot be".
A non-American
|
669.114 | | TALK::THIGPEN | | Fri Feb 01 1991 10:53 | 10 |
| vets, correct me if I'm wrong.
Used to be a draft in the U.S., drafting men only.
There used to be a rule that exempted a man from (the draft? a combat
assignment?) if he was the only, or the only surviving, son in a family.
If that rule were kept, I'd guess it would have to be "sole surviving child".
Similarly, I would favor a rule that said that both parents in a family with
minor children could not be required to serve.
|
669.115 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Feb 01 1991 11:01 | 21 |
| > I do feel that, in a family with children, only one parent should be
> required to serve in war. Sort of like the "sole surviving son" rule
> used to be.
I agree that the armed services/reserves should be volunteer only.
I don't agree with your other comments.
If both parents , or a single parent, join the armed services/reserves,
then they should be eligible to fight if a war breaks out. That's what
we pay them in peacetime for - to fight if we have war.
Also, if they have joined, we shouldn't stop them going to war because
they have children.
If they are not prepared to go to war, they should not volunteer to
join in the first place.
If we're going to stop them going to war, then we should turn them down,
or expel them when they find themselves in this situation.
Heather
|
669.116 | carry on the family name | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Fri Feb 01 1991 11:11 | 5 |
| only or sole surviving son exemption meant that said son was exempted
so he could carry on the family name, us being a sorta patrilineal
society. goes back to old right of succession traditions.
sue
|
669.117 | | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Fri Feb 01 1991 11:14 | 17 |
| Did anyone see the little spot on NBC news last night that mentioned
that in the field, the men were assigned to do the "fighting", and the
women were out running supplies and fixing the planes, etc?
This seemed to me to follow traditional gender roles and put women in
a lower position than men. Those women running the supplies are just
as close to the enemy as the men, and if there was an attack they'd be
just as likely to die.
A question for those more familiar with the military, if your specific
task in the army is to run supplies, and there's an attack, and you
save lots of lives, would get the same recognition as someone who's
official task is "combat" who does the same thing?
Just a question.
Lisa
|
669.118 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Feb 01 1991 11:15 | 10 |
|
>If that rule were kept, I'd guess it would have to be "sole surviving child".
>Similarly, I would favor a rule that said that both parents in a family with
Zminor children could not be required to serve.
Now that's an idea, if each couple/single parent had one child, then
there would be no more war!
Heather
|
669.119 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | southern comfort-er | Fri Feb 01 1991 12:14 | 17 |
|
hi lisa,
�A question for those more familiar with the military, if your specific
�task in the army is to run supplies, and there's an attack, and you
�save lots of lives, would get the same recognition as someone who's
�official task is "combat" who does the same thing?
my understanding is that you have to be in a _combat_ unit to be
awarded the honor medals that may result from service while under
attack. i seem to remember that this came up during our invasion of
panama, where women were directly involved in the conflict but because
they were part of the Military Police they were not given the same
accomodations as the men who were part of the combat unit.
~robin-who-spent-the-first-9-yrs-of-her-life-"in-the-military".
|
669.120 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | this must be what it's all about | Fri Feb 01 1991 12:28 | 7 |
| re .118, I don't think the "sole surviving son" rule applied to
families that only had one son, or child, to begin with. I think it
only applied to families that had already lost a son in war. Does
anyone know for sure?
Lorna
|
669.121 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Create peace. | Fri Feb 01 1991 12:30 | 11 |
| I believe you are correct, Lorna. Here is an extract from note 342.251
on the 4-G classification:
4-G (Surviving Son) is what most people think of as the "only son"
deferment. In short, if you have had a father, mother, or blood sibling
killed in action or in the line of duty, killed by wounds received (in the
line of duty), or declared MIA, you are eligible for a deferment. *This is
not available, unfortunately, if Congress declares a war or a national
emergency.* There is no "only son" deferment.
-- Mike
|
669.122 | | TALK::THIGPEN | | Fri Feb 01 1991 13:00 | 7 |
| .115, which quoted me as follows:
"...only one parent should be required to serve in war..."
^^^^^^
required <> allowed.
|
669.123 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Feb 01 1991 13:21 | 4 |
| On this subject, my dear friend Tony Lewis always says, "No culture
ever voluntarily arms its slave class." Tony loves to be provoking.
Ann B.
|
669.124 | just a thought... | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | with these romantic dreams in my head | Fri Feb 01 1991 13:32 | 10 |
| Also, what about any women who might not want what is thought of as
"equal status" and who are happy playing a traditional role? If women
were drafted for combat duty, I wonder if some women could be considered
exempt on the grounds of not being feminists? After all, who are we
feminists to tell all women that they should be required to do
everything men do. Perhaps some women don't want to. Maybe these
women could stay home and tend the crops.
Lorna
|
669.125 | the draft registration form | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Fri Feb 01 1991 14:33 | 13 |
| In a recent visit to the Post Office, where young men turning 18 can go
to register for the draft, the form has a male AND female block (ok,
pick one).
It doesn't have a block for heterosexuality or homosexuality or for
Conscientious Objector status.
BTW, it has been determined that gays are good enough to die for their
country, the US military won't discharge them during the war. After
the war, they are still subject to discharge. So much for loyal and
faithful service in defense of the country.
sue
|
669.126 | re commendations etc. | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Feb 01 1991 14:39 | 58 |
| re: .119
I'm not sure if it's the same now as when I was in Viet Nam but here's
how it was then.
If you were in country while there was an offensive (ie Tet) you
received a medal, in this case the Viet Nam Service Medal. You also
received a tiny bronze star that went through the fabric part of the
medal one for each offensive or campaign.
If your unit was given a citation for whatever, each member of the unit
regardless of participation was cited. From clerk to gunner. For
example if your unit was MEDEVAC and your pilot put the ship down in
the middle of a firefight and evac'd wounded everyone in the unit might
get cited even though the jockey made the decision and you were just
along for the ride. The wounded would not receive the citation because
they were not part of the unit even though they were in the same shi*
as you were.
If an individual 'saves lots of lives' they would be individually
cited. I saw very few American women in Viet Nam. The only ones I
knew were nurses. If they had 'saved lots of lives' through some act
other than hospital duties I can't believe the military would not cite
them. It just didn't happen in Viet Nam.
I am opposed to women in combat. Not for the trite reasons like
strength etc. as I believe women can be just as sadistic and brutal as
men. I want to find a way to get men OUT not women IN. I have stated
this before. The one thing women should consider is the history of
blacks in combat. Blacks were forbidden to be members of regiments etc
up to the Civil War. They were segregated for a long time after that.
Of course in Viet Nam there was no segregation but I believe there was
and is undue exploitation. Here we have a group of people who felt
that they HAD to fight to achieve any equal opportunity. What has
happened is that there is now a DISPROPORTIONATE number of blacks in
the military and most of them are ground troops. How many black pilots
did you see interviewed? Well you're going to see a lot of blacks being
packed into body bags because even though the ground war is just
beginning there are already more KIAs and WIAs in the ground troops
than in the rest of the war casualties put together. Of the 500,000
American troops in the Middle East, 475,000 are Army and Marine ground
troops. They won't give the percentage of these 'grunts' that are
black but you can bet your butt it's more than 20%. It's probably more
like 35%.
Women in this note seem to want to follow this path. Blacks wanted to
fight, women want to fight. Blacks wanted equal rights, women want
equal right to 'career enhancing opportunities'. What a bunch of horse
shi*! What have blacks achieved by their brothers blood? SQUAT! The
only thing they got was the opportunity to give more blood. You won't
see Niel Bush in Kuwait carrying an M60. What you will see is
thousands of black soldiers trying real hard not to piss their pants.
Sure Collin Powell is a hot dog and he probably deserves to be there but
for every Collin Powell there are 500,000 young blacks that joined
the Army to escape the ghetto. They are being duped! Women will
follow in their footsteps.
patrick
|
669.127 | equal treatment, not paperwork bs | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Feb 01 1991 14:53 | 22 |
| Patrick, this isn't argument, just more information.
Since (by law) women are not currently assignable to 'combat'
positions, they are not allowed to earn certain decorations
that are reserved (by military regulation) for veterans of combat.
The particular decoration that was disputed in Panama was the CIB,
the Combat Infantry Badge. Two instances occurred where women were
unexpectedly involved in combat; I only remember the details of one.
An MP Captain and her troops were assigned to take a kennel, where
no resistance was expected. They got resistance, they took their
objective anyway. The Captain herself crashed a jeep through a locked
gate to lead the assault.
The argument being made herein is that in modern warfare, women in
support units are quite likely to see combat situations. All people
exposed to such should be similarly decorable. One can go about it by
appealing to have the military reg overturned or (better, imo) the law
against women in combat rescinded, because it conflicts with other laws
regarding composition of the forces, and it ignores real life.
DougO
|
669.128 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | these romantic dreams in my head | Fri Feb 01 1991 14:53 | 4 |
| re .126, I agree with you completely.
Lorna
|
669.129 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Fri Feb 01 1991 14:58 | 10 |
| oh, and one other thing.
> American troops in the Middle East, 475,000 are Army and Marine ground
> troops. They won't give the percentage of these 'grunts' that are
> black but you can bet your butt it's more than 20%. It's probably more
> like 35%.
They have given it. It's around 31%.
DougO
|
669.130 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:07 | 7 |
| RE: .126 Patrick
It's nice of you to be so concerned about women making a choice
you think would be a mistake, but it should be up to women as
individuals to make such decisions about our own lives.
Don't you think so?
|
669.131 | women should decide their OWN fate | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:28 | 29 |
| re. 130
I acknowledge women's rights to make a choice BUT, and this is a big
one, when the law is passed and then couple that with the draft, you
have no more right to refuse than blacks did in Viet Nam. Pat
Schroeder, in my opinion, is cheering for women combatants in wars she
will never fight in. I see this as expoitive. She is not volunteering
herself but rather she is volunteering the lives of others. When this
happens you as a woman have given up rights. By getting men OUT of
combat instead of women IN everyone gets more choices.
In 1968 my draft number came up. I was 18. I did what I thought was
right. It was only AFTER I got out of the service that I realized that
I had been painted a picture of valor and honor and 'career enhancing'
stuff. Being a Viet Nam Vet was not an advantage as they had promised.
I finally quit telling people that I had served. The point is that
women are believing the same lies I believed back then. I'm here to
tell you that it's a lie. There is no honor in killing. No one 'wins'
a war, especially the soldiers. And by the way it's not just women I'm
talking to, I will tell anyone who will listen and even some that won't
listen that 'Fighting for peace' is like drinking salt water; it may
feel right at the time but it's futile.
If women want to fight and die in combat they eventually will. I'm not
here to 'protect' women, I'm here to be the voice of someone who was
there.
patrick
|
669.132 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:43 | 14 |
| RE: .131 Patrick
If we allow men and women to volunteer as individuals, we won't ever
need another draft. Then, each person can choose (rather than having
the choice made FOR women as a group, regardless of what each of us
might choose for ourselves as individuals.)
You can think and say what you like about combat, but what right do
you have to force your views on women as a group (by supporting laws
that prevent us from having a choice about it?)
It's paternal, Patrick. Nice of you and all, but I'd rather see
women have the opportunity to make such a personal decision on
our own.
|
669.133 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:59 | 25 |
| re. 132
I have never seen myself as 'paternal' but anyway. I don't expect you
to really understand what I'm saying. Each combat veteren knows what
I'm talking about but you can't.
Think of it this way. You're in a street gang. Everyone tells you how
great it is to be a member of the (fillin)s. You are very young and
they won't 'let' you go with them to drive by shootings etc. You don't
really know what it's like to face another human being (other gang)
that hates you and wants to see your guts on the pavement. The other
gang members do. They tell stories of the 'glory' and 'honor' of it
all. You want to be a part of it to increase your status in the gang.
They are not telling you the whole story though. The only way to
experience the 'whole story' is to go out and kill. Kill people who
are just like you but wear a different colored bandana. By the time
you realize that it was not as glamourous as they said, you are either
dead, wounded or have killed or wounded another. Then you will have to
sing the chorous' songs to justify your perverted actions.
I'm not denying you choice merely trying to explain that combat is not
what it seems. When you are in the middle of it you've given up your
choice to participate. What was once 'seeing action' quickly becomes a
reoccurring nightmare. Choosing not to have these nightmares is very,
very difficult.
|
669.134 | Equal rights, equal responsibilities | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | therrrrrre's a bathroom on the right | Fri Feb 01 1991 16:20 | 9 |
| do I want women to be drafted? NO
but it is discriminatory to draft only young men.
do I want women to serve in combat? NO
but it is discriminatory that only men are exposed to this risk.
Indeed, I feel that no one should serve in combat.
Annie
|
669.135 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Feb 01 1991 16:28 | 13 |
| re: 135
Show me where I said women do not have the right to choose.
I'll say what I am saying a little louder:
I'M NOT SAYING YOU DON'T HAVE THE RIGHT TO CHOOSE. EVEN IF YOU CHOOSE
SOMETHING THAT WILL SCREW YOU UP FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE. I'M SAYING
YOU SHOULD KNOW WHAT YOU'RE GETTING INTO BEFORE YOU MAKE THE CHOICE.
I'M TRYING TO EXPLAIN TO YOU WHAT YOU'RE GETTING INTO.
If your get what I'm saying I have nothing more to say. If you still
don't get it I have nothing more to say.
|
669.136 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Feb 01 1991 16:34 | 18 |
| RE: .133 Patrick
> I have never seen myself as 'paternal' but anyway. I don't expect you
> to really understand what I'm saying. Each combat veteren knows what
> I'm talking about but you can't.
Patrick, I'm not debating your views on combat. You can think anything
you want about it.
I'm talking about choice. You shouldn't have the right to decide for
tens of millions of women that you know what's best for us (by supporting
laws that keep us from making individual choices that men are allowed to
make.)
Is it so hard to understand the concept of women having the opportunity
to make the same sorts of life-decisions that men are allowed to make?
It's all I'm trying to say.
|
669.137 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Feb 01 1991 16:40 | 12 |
|
RE: .135 Patrick
No need to yell. I haven't been discussing the merits of the
choice itself - you did this on your own.
I've only tried to address the statement you originally made in
.126 - "I am opposed to women in combat."
It should not be your choice to make. This is all I've been
trying to point out to you.
|
669.138 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | these romantic dreams in my head | Fri Feb 01 1991 17:20 | 6 |
| re .137, the way I saw it Patrick was only expressing his opinion - "I
am opposed to women in combat" is an opinion. I think he has just as
much right to express his opinion as anybody else.
Lorna
|
669.139 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Feb 01 1991 17:26 | 14 |
|
RE: .138 Lorna
I'm sure you'll agree that I had every right to express a strong
disagreement with his position, too.
"I am opposed to women in combat" is very similar to saying, "I am
opposed to women having the right to vote" or "I am opposed to
women in management."
It's especially bothersome when someone expresses this as being
for our own good in some way.
I'm allowed to express how bothered I am by it.
|
669.140 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Feb 01 1991 18:10 | 15 |
| re: 139
Wow you don't make small leaps do you?
<<"I am opposed to women in combat" is very similiar to saying, "I am
opposed to women having the right to vote" or . . .>>
I guess since I also stated that I'm opposed to MEN in combat that I'm
opposed to everyone having the right to vote. Let's hear it for
anarchy!
(In case anyone misses it, I'm being sarcastic. Please don't send me
hate mail because you think I'm an anarchist)
patrick
|
669.141 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Fri Feb 01 1991 18:13 | 5 |
| > Let's hear it for anarchy
Sarcasm, eh. I hope you weren't maligning us anarchists :-)
Mary
|
669.142 | | COOKIE::BADOVINAC | | Fri Feb 01 1991 18:18 | 7 |
| re: 141
Mary,
I won't malign you, but of course I can't vote for you.
patrick
|
669.143 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Fri Feb 01 1991 18:45 | 15 |
| RE: .140 Patrick
Great - so you're also opposed to men in combat. Then you didn't
need to make such a point of being opposed to women in this
capacity - you could have declared your distaste for combat in
general (and I wouldn't have commented to you about it at all.)
The thing that bothered me was the speech about how you think
blacks were duped into taking combat roles and that women seemed
about to follow this path (to be "duped" as well.)
It's condescending and insulting. (And paternal.) :-)
Never mind, though. It appears we had a failure to communicate,
that's all.
|
669.144 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri Feb 01 1991 18:58 | 7 |
| re .0 .1,
No, I have no objection to women serving combat duties in the front
line if that is what they want. Just don't call it a "career-enhancing
opportunity".
Eugene
|