Holy shit...he's literally an armchair intellectual...the internet has come full circle people, be very afraid.
Misogyny is the detestation or hatred of women. It's literally in the name, the roots are "I hate" and "Women."ccdohl said:Seems like you have applied misogyny in an overly broad manner. Sure, hating women and seeing them as objects may be misogyny, but the discomfort that women might invade a sacred male space certainly is not.Darken12 said:No, it doesn't. Misogyny covers the superiority and the non-intentional sexism too. The men who use women like objects that exist only to serve them are misogynist not because they angrily hate the women they're using, but because they have contempt (which is a form of hatred) for the idea of women as their equal, or as fully realised human beings. The man who hates the idea that women might invade his "sacred male space" or expresses contempt at the idea that a woman might be his equal (or anything more than a sex object), is a misogynist.Callate said:But "misogyny" implies an attitude in which some kind of destruction or subjugation of females isn't a hypothetical byproduct of behavior, but a goal.
Nor is viewing women as unequal, or discriminating on that basis. That's just sexism.
Not saying that those views are right, just that you're wrong.
What, like the fact that 50% of consumers are women?ccdohl said:Pretty spot on about video games. I'm tired of hearing about sexism in video games. It's no worse in that media than any other, sexist idiots in online games notwithstanding. It doesn't need to change until there is a market reason to do so,
If those sexist actions/conceptions stem from contempt, hatred or anger at women or their status as fully realised human beings and/or their status as the equals of men, that's misogyny.ccdohl said:Seems like you have applied misogyny in an overly broad manner. Sure, hating women and seeing them as objects may be misogyny, but the discomfort that women might invade a sacred male space certainly is not.
Nor is viewing women as unequal, or discriminating on that basis. That's just sexism.
Oh my lands that was hilarious! XD Because women apparently belong in the kitchen according to him (guy in video). But like I said before, there are some valid arguments, they just are never backed up by any evidence other than "I've met women before, they're meanies." Most of it is just bullshit and entitlement, however.boots said:"Modern Women are completely out of control. They have gone completely feral, and their behaviour is completely unacceptable in a civilized society."Desert Punk said:Nope, just the hatred of women.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/misogyny
Some people like to apply it to "anything that happens to offend me today" though. You can notice a few people in this thread calling him misogynistic when he doesn't really seem to be, he is more chauvinistic and bigoted, as he is a douche but does not appear to hate women.
I'm so glad I wasn't the only one that though that lol. Though I doubt Joseph Kurgen is anywhere close to this guys level of douchebag.Worgen said:Shouldn't this guy be busy leading NOD against the forces of GDI?
I know, it almost sweeps you up, because he's well spoken, and admittedly charismatic. But fuck me, it's like he's never heard the word "spectrum" before.Calibanbutcher said:Well, that was fun, it's always nice to see someone make an ass of himself, and he does it in such an eloquent way and with such flamboyancy, that it's just a joy to behold.
I think I want to watch more of his videos now, this could turn out to be great entertainment.
Half of human population is female, that was the statistic I was referring to.ccdohl said:Actually, I take serious issue with that statistic. I know that Jim Sterling used it to make a point in his video yesterday, but I don't think that it applies to the types of games that we are talking about.Lieju said:What, like the fact that 50% of consumers are women?ccdohl said:Pretty spot on about video games. I'm tired of hearing about sexism in video games. It's no worse in that media than any other, sexist idiots in online games notwithstanding. It doesn't need to change until there is a market reason to do so,
The only thing that I could find on it when I did my own research was a study by the ESRB that notes a sharp rise due to casual pad and phone games. In other words, not the games that we usually consider in our discussions.
In a sense, Jim was guilty of equivocation of one type of gaming with another. Women aren't underrepresented despite being 50% of the gaming market, they are actually part of a market that may may as well be separate.
I know it will be anecdotal, but think about that 50% claim. Does it seem right to you? My experience tells me that it is probably wrong, what does yours tell you?
Ohh ya wasn't saying they were the same at all just that it was a similar topic and that this brought some interesting ideas to the table worth thinking about. The other video is just ridiculous.OtherSideofSky said:You can only call Warren Farrell 'related' to trash like this in the loosest sense, that they both deal with sort of the same subject matter. He's a real academic who does actual research, has a history of organizational involvement, and a number of books in print. It's like the difference between a post on Jezebel and a paper by Kristeva.aba1 said:Edit2: I was watching a few related videos out of curiosity and I thought this video hit some interesting points.
OP: If you can't tell, I don't think much of that video.