Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Because if you dismissed the same type of concern from people of color, or it never bothered you when non-whites were depicted negatively it would make your concern for how whites are depicted questionable.In what way would that be relevant?
I reject that that would be inherently questionable or negative.It would indicate a preference for whites.
Do I complain? Depends, but not as much, no. There are plenty of people who will do that. Do I like negative depictions of other groups, particularly if they're untrue? Not particularly, no, but I don't react the same way because they aren't depictions of the group I find myself a part of, and thus aren't as personal in quite the same way.So what is the answer to my question?
I'm not trying to make myself seem virtuous. I think men who believe it is okay to grab a girls' butt need to change that behaviour CERTAINLY doesn't make me think that I am virtuous.
Trust me. You toss that label at me every time we discuss this; it's tiring. The thing I'm trying to avoid is labels so the focus would be on the issue instead of it (apparently) being about me being self righteous.
But all that aside...what if I did. What if I DID think I was a better person? How would that affect the quality of the message?
Which behaviours in the ad did you specifically think should be continuing unabated? Are there any that could occur with less frequency?
I'm surprised at how difficult it has been for some men to take a moment and reflect on how they treat women. More than a few just seem to be all up in arms about an advert that suggests grabbing womens' butts or speaking condescendingly towards them is not some inaliienable right.
The funny thing is that I didn't realize you had a good example of virtue signaling in another thread before I brought it up in this one. You may have noticed a poster in another thread of yours posting little memes on racism. It's a bit of an odd response given the context...almost as if they wanted to establish that they aren't racist just in case someone might have taken their posts that way.
If we're all being honest, kneeling during the anthem won't do anything to reduce police brutality/racial profiling/unjustified shootings....or whatever it was supposedly about.
The left has been retreating from logical and reasonable arguments to moral and emotional ones.
If I wanted to be preached at then I know a number of priests who would do as good a job, and probably throw in tea and cake.
What's really toxic is the sense of entitlement that underlies the catcalling and hitting on women, and really, many of these behaviors.
Perhaps you forgot what you wrote.
What I'm addressing here is this bizarre notion that the advertisement addresses....where women seem to think that that they can step out their front door, into public, and they have some sort of right to never face any unwanted interactions with the public.
If anything, I think the sense of entitlement is coming from those who think they should get to control the terms of all human interactions they have.
So what's causing it? Demonic possession?
I have personally never heard of a successful courtship and relationship that started with a dude catcalling a girl on the street.
Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
Because throughout my life, the VAST majority of times (95%+) I have performed a Cat Call it was met with an overwhelmingly positive response by the female. The responses consisted of: smiles, laughter, positive retorts like "you couldn't handle this" said with a smileCat calls are inappropriate. How could you not know that?
Do you honestly want strange men making objectifying comments to your wife or daughter when they walk down the street?
I didn't.
The part that feels "iffy" to me is a company that sells shaving products is attempting to sermonize about proper behavior for half the population.
Can we agree that no one should really care what Gillette has to say about men's behavior? We're talking about a company that makes advertisements like this...
View attachment 249398
So forgive me if I find their lame attempts to pander to some feminist narrative....lame.
Beyond the simple fact that Gillette doesn't really have any relevance to the topic of male behavior....I find it rather condescending that they just depict men as violent sex crazed animals in need of restraint. It's the equivalent of depicting women as overly emotional/fragile. It's nothing more than one-dimensional stereotyping.
So I'd call this a cheap and desperate attempt to commoditize a rather shaky political narrative.
Well, no. But that's because it's my wife and my daughter. They're mine. I own them.Cat calls are inappropriate. How could you not know that? Do you honestly want strange men making objectifying comments to your wife or daughter when they walk down the street?
Where did they diss positive use of force in the video? I didn’t see it.
Some women smile hoping that the encouter will quickly end, you can't simply use that response as an indicator whether they consider catcalling acceptable. "Well, if they don't like it, they should speak up," but that pretends as if women haven't been killed for refusing the advances of a man. "That's not me!" Yeah, it's not you, but how are we supposed to separate the good from the bad. The simple fact is that if you were to speak with most of these women in private afterward, they would say they don't like such behavior, even if they smile it off. I've been in scenarios where someone made me nervous, so I laughed it off so as not to cause a scene (depending on if that person will be set off by you reacting negatively to their behavior).Because throughout my life, the VAST majority of times (95%+) I have performed a Cat Call it was met with an overwhelmingly positive response by the female. The responses consisted of: smiles, laughter, positive retorts like "you couldn't handle this" said with a smile
the negative responses tended to be just completely ignoring the cat call with no response or rolling eyes
But for many women, they could hear a guy say the same exact thing and then she is followed. Or it could be a girl who is 14 and finds herself being catcalled by an older man. As I said, I think the issue is you do this on occasion and ignore the fact that many woman experience this constantly and they are more than comments.So in my opinion it is all about the situation. Cat Calls are a way of expressing your sexuality and with all types of expression there is a right way and a wrong way to do it. There is also etiquette. I mean, if you are a 40 yr old man cat calling a 16 yr old girl that is appropriate. Then there is the intent of the cat call, if you are just trying to give a compliment without any objective that is one thing, if you are doing a cat call in the context of hopefully picking someone up that is another. Then there is the matter of your attractiveness relative to the person you are cat calling...
And which of those instances were a positive use of force? Can’t we all agree that in a civil society not at war, most use of violence or force by civilians is wrong? Why would you have a problem with an ad discouraging aggression?The only times we saw any sort of force or aggression in the ad, it was depicted as being negative, no questions asked.