Rainbow_Dashtruction said:
I'm not saying thats what they should do. Humanity became top of the food chain through intelligence, not brute force. I'm saying I'm sick of stupid feminists saying "I'm as strong as any man!" Their not. Their stronger then some lanky nerd who sits in front of a computer screen all day which means nothing. A women will never run circles around a man who's job is to run in an ovally circle, no matter how much she tries. A women will never beat a male bodybuilder without steroids. Theres a reason sports don't combine genders because to combine genders is the same thing as kick women out of sports.
I'm just sick of feminists saying they are as strong or fast or have the energy of a man.
There is only one person in the entire world who is able to say "I'm as strong as
any man", so naturally, neither "feminists" or "non-feminists" (stupid or otherwise) in general can say this. If you interpret the statement to be "I'm as strong as any [random] man", then it becomes a matter of probability: it depends on who the random man selected is. Any person (feminist or otherwise) could be correct with that statement, and any person could be wrong.
You're mixing data levels. You're citing the collective level to explain the individual level, by saying that "women in general are weaker than men in general, hence any given woman can not claim to be as strong as any given man". This does not hold. Zhou Lulu [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhou_Lulu] (female) has a higher weightlifting record than Oscar Figueroa [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%93scar_Figueroa_(weightlifter)] (man), for instance. I am also willing to bet that she can lift more than either you or me. There is no rationale that explains Zhou Lulu being grouped with all the weaker people in her gender; she should rather be grouped with all the other strong people regardless of gender.
Your argument becomes even stranger when you add in capacity to the equation, in saying that "a woman will never be as strong as a man with equal training". Not only is this factually incorrect, as you're disregarding genetics (a man with bad genes will never reach the level of a woman with good genes, regardless of their respective levels of training); you're also assuming that everyone is operating at peak capacity. In reality, this is not so. Very few, if any, people are. Capacity therefore becomes something of a non-issue, because any given women is likely to be as capable as any given man to achieve
the level required for the task specified, which is different from the limit of human capacity.
The gist of my point is this:
Why separate humanity (in terms of physical prowess) according to sex? Why not separate humanity by a more relevant categorisation, such as according to fitness? Athletes are stronger than non-athletes. This should be much harder to argue against, and also much more relevant. And even if you have to use biology as a basis for categorisation, why pick sex? Why not pick genes instead? People with tall, muscular body types who lack hereditary diseases are stronger than people with short, skinny body types who have hereditary diseases. Again - much harder to argue against, and also much more relevant. These patterns also hold regardless of sex(an athletic woman is stronger than a non-athletic man), but the reverse is not true; a separation according to sex does not hold if you do not adjust for fitness.