for crissakes stop saying "not all men", pez
Of course nobody deserves it.I'm not sure why people are having a hard time with this. Nobody deserves abuse or neglect, whether men or women. The MRA crap does nothing to help either's cause.
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Crazy usually rallies around something to justify itself.Has anyone stopped to consider that this guy may have just been batshit crazy?
And do you really think the way to encourage better behavior among men is to promote negative stereotypes? Because I guarantee you that people will live down to your expectations of them. If another generation of men grows up hearing "all men are like this", "men are to be feared", "men never change", "all men this and all men that", some of them are going to hear that and end up being just as bad as you say they are. The way to make the world a better place for women is not to tear men down. You can never make the world a better place by bullying or fear mongering.Do I like that women are taught to fear men? No. I wouldn't want to live like that. But the way to change that is not to get defensive when the pieces of shit are brought to light. The solution is to encourage better behavior among men.
When you read about women being afraid of men and the kinds of instructions, do you feel personally under attack? Have you felt bullied? Not on the internet; in the real life that you can't turn off by walking away from your computer. Do you feel this has somehow affected your rights as a human being? Not hyperbole--serious questions.Except those are stereotyped generalizations that aren't always true. Some women hold more power than men, and some black people hold more power than white people. It's not an absolute, and that's why blind prejudice against a group is so wrong. "The man holds power" isn't always true. It's true quite often, and men as a gender are far from oppressed, but that doesn't make it right to promote prejudice against men just because some of them are in power. Saying, "I have to be careful when I go out at night because a criminal might rob me" is a vastly different statement than "My demographic can't go out at night because other demographic exists".
Not in the legal "wasn't responsible for his own actions" way. The guy was an aberration, and not at all reflective of any group, but his brand of crazy is still most-likely fully culpable for his actions. He didn't kill because he had mental problems, he killed because he hated people. He hated women, he hated men, he hated ugly people, he hated pretty people, he hated himself. He hated and the people around him knew it. He wasn't known as a "nice guy", his own family reported him to the police (who did nothing).Has anyone stopped to consider that this guy may have just been batshit crazy?
Except only the fringe elements say 'all men'?And do you really think the way to encourage better behavior among men is to promote negative stereotypes? Because I guarantee you that people will live down to your expectations of them. If another generation of men grows up hearing "all men are like this", "men are to be feared", "men never change", "all men this and all men that", some of them are going to hear that and end up being just as bad as you say they are. The way to make the world a better place for women is not to tear men down. You can never make the world a better place by bullying or fear mongering.
Okay, I'm pretty sure that in the part you quoted, I said encouraging better behavior. I'm gonna scroll up and look at it right now to be certain.And do you really think the way to encourage better behavior among men is to promote negative stereotypes?
Men are feared because they have behaved in ways that are to be feared (not all men, no, not all of them, of course--in fact, I'm pretty sure the only time the phrase men is made so absolute with the word "all" is when used on the defensive, because to disprove an "all men are like this" you'd only need one individual example. Now, I feel like you and others, when you read "men are like this", what you see is "all men", but if that was intended, I'm pretty sure the person would've written it that way, and again, it's not hard to disprove. You just need one man that doesn't fall under it. There are over 3.5 billion of us.)Because I guarantee you that people will live down to your expectations of them. If another generation of men grows up hearing "all men are like this", "men are to be feared", "men never change", "all men this and all men that", some of them are going to hear that and end up being just as bad as you say they are. The way to make the world a better place for women is not to tear men down. You can never make the world a better place by bullying or fear mongering.
Now this I understand. That said, there has been force against feminism before these recent years. There's even been force against equality itself. There are interviews during the women's rights movement in the last century where women said they didn't feel women should have equal rights. A woman on another forum years ago told me she felt women were supposed to be subservient to men.Moreover, I'd like more people to be willing to identify as feminists, but so many of them think that feminism is man-hating. It's because of all these negative stereotypes about men going around. These things are not unconnected! It's not just some random prejudice or "the patriarchy", the young women I know have heard specific things from "feminists" that have made them think the movement is bullshit. Then they hear men object to being stereotyped, get shouted down, and that just confirms to them that feminism is about hating men. This isn't just me, I'm just one of the few speaking up about it because I want feminism to have a better image. I'm not promoting the men's right's movement, I'm hoping to promote a smarter way to talk about feminism. One that doesn't demonize men, and doesn't alienate women who object to such.
Not all Halforum members ...(This is not to say some haven't already done this. Not meant to attack anyone, please don't take this as an attack on you if you've been respectful and done this)
I feel ashamed. I got frustrated earlier.Not all Halforum members ...
Well, yes, but only in my really deep depression when I wasn't thinking straight at all. That's not reflective of reality, any more than any traumatized person's view of their own personal safety is reflective of reality. (Note, my trauma wasn't caused by women, it was caused by years of pain from a medical condition, but my fear of the world was still a result of that trauma.)When you read about women being afraid of men and the kinds of instructions, do you feel personally under attack? Have you felt bullied? Not on the internet; in the real life that you can't turn off by walking away from your computer. Do you feel this has somehow affected your rights as a human being? Not hyperbole--serious questions.
Seriously? I have never said that Men's Rights groups are equivalent to feminism. NEVER.We should try to explain to him why Men's Rights groups aren't the equivalent to feminist groups. Why the work of feminist groups isn't an attack on men.
First off, everyone around Elliot Rodger knew he was poison. His roommates wanted to move out, his parents reported him to the police, women wouldn't date him. He wasn't just another person. People knew exactly where the problem was, but nothing was done about it.As one person said-
"You say not all men are monsters?
Imagine a bowl of M&Ms. 10% of them are poisoned.
Go ahead. Eat a handful.
Not all M&Ms are poison."
Look man, I get that maybe you feel like thats the message you are hearing but I don't really think it's reality. I think if anything what you might be a hearing, and this might be worth considering, is that there is a SERIOUS problem with the way our society has conditioned men to treat women.a lot of people are saying "all men should be treated as evil because of this"
So true. This happens all the time. I have some regrets, but one I'll never have is not reporting disturbing student behavior. There was a boy who come here for about 2 years before his mom carted him off to some old-school academy that still uses paddles. This kid was always stewing, talking about violence against his peers, and was convinced that everything that his peers did was to spite or annoy him. He and I talked a lot. He told me about how much he wanted to hurt the kids who annoyed him and how tired he was of being told to smile. Freakin' eight years old. Everything about his speech and mannerisms cried "future violent criminal." One of the relatives who shared custody was a police officer who kept guns all over the house. I know that being a police officer meant that this person probably knows better than to just leave them lying around, but it's still scary to think about an angry young person in a house full of firearms.SEP (Someone Else's Problem)
I'm not sure what generation you are talking about, but my generation (30 somethings) never really heard this. All we heard was people like you talking about how much we supposedly heard it and how much it hurt us. Sadly some people bought into it and used it as a broad paintbrush to excuse every personal failure. You guys are creating paper tigers to justify issues of intersectionality that are often really more about classism or ableism. It's the same thing with people talking about how everyone is terrified of adult males talking to children. Sure, if you wear a dirty raincoat with a neckbeard then yeah, maybe people will draw some conclusions, but I've never had an issue with this.If another generation of men grows up hearing "all men are like this", "men are to be feared", "men never change", "all men this and all men that", some of them are going to hear that and end up being just as bad as you say they are. The way to make the world a better place for women is not to tear men down. You can never make the world a better place by bullying or fear mongering.
If you're a "nice guy" but get angry because the girl didn't make the decisions you wanted, then just own up to what it was you really wanted. If you really just want to be nice, then her not giving it up or dating you shouldn't matter. If it does, then just be honest and admit what your true goal was. If you're just trying to manipulate her with kindness to get her into bed, then that's not very nice at all.
Well, let's not just count death here. There's also physical and mental abuse that could lead to years or even decades of mental anguish.I've had numerous people quote that comedy routine as truth to me. There are people who really think that men are the leading cause of death in women. Okay, they're idiots, but I don't think most people realize just how rare it is to die from violent crime.
Then it's unfair to put "heart disease" as the biggest worry for men, because there are a lot of other stressors that men face.Well, let's not just count death here. There's also physical and mental abuse that could lead to years or even decades of mental anguish.
Damn fucking straight. Which is why it pisses me off that this is being quoted and repeated all over the place right now. It's a joke, and a damn funny one, but it's not an accurate reflection of reality. It's an intentional distortion for the sake of humor. It should not be referenced as an example of why things are so bad for women (namely because we don't have to compare women to men in order to show that women are threatened).Comedians, sadly not the most accurate source of information.
Well, not ALL comedians.Comedians, sadly not the most accurate source of information.