- Sep 23, 2005
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Just last week I read about a not small group of men who have banded together to rail against “forced abstinence” in dating and how it has damaged them psychologically. They feel the women that they date unfairly deny them sex for being too “unattractive, unsuccessful, or unintelligent” and are taking steps to fight back. Is this group of well-organized idiots representative of all men and their feelings? No, of course not. Every movement has its fringe. The fringe doesn’t define the movement.
Agreed!
Most men are not on board with the MIGTOW, or more radical wings of the Men's Rights movement. Just as most women are not on board with the more radical feminists, as I acknowledged in my first post. Both are reactions to pain experienced, and at times real problems faced.
However, I would say that the reach of the radical feminists is much higher than that of the radical men's rights through channels such as educational facilities etc.
And the question becomes how to acknowledge any valid points brought up by either group, but still push back on some of the venom?
So there’s a group of people who feel so marginalized by the patriarchy that they rail against it. They are not representative of all, or even a majority, of women. They don’t represent feminism, never have, never will. The only people who embrace it as a slice of feminism are the people who follow it and the people who want to hold it up and say “see? Feminism is terrrrrrrible!!!!”
I already indicated they are not representative of most feminists. However, to say they don't represent feminism is a different claim. If they are represented in educational institutions they are the feminists the young people are hearing from.
Yes, we know the #killallmen hashtag was just witty fun.Feminism is feminism. There is no “push the evil men out” wave of feminism no matter how much those who want to pretend they’re against feminism wants to believe there is. The fact that one of the cores of feminism is sexual freedom and empowerment, if doesn’t even make sense to say that any part of feminism is about getting rid of men.
We all know that "toxic masculinity" is just a clinical way to describe things.
But there are actually feminists out there who do discourage women from marrying, etc. And so they are not for all choices.
The last part I’m not even dealing with because it’s one step above “having periods is a biological reality of being a woman which explains why women can’t work as much... It’s not patriarchy, it’s science.”
Well, you don't have to choose to deal with it. But such things as leave for pregnancy are one of the reasons for the "wage gap", as well as innate biological differences that generally result in women self-selecting jobs that emphasize work with people and empathy, as opposed to STEM fields.
And yet, we are bombarded with media constantly talking about the wage gap being due to patriarchy and toxic masculinity. It is that difference in exposure that accounts for a lot of the backlash. And it is the unwillingness to listen on both sides that accounts for a lot of the discussion becoming "fringe" as both sides polarize.
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