Lil devils x said:
This guy sounds just as bad as she does. He is attempting to claim that her being a snot somehow represents "feminists" and negate the work that actual feminists do.
I agree, there are far better examples if you want to point to feminists being, dare I say...problematic. It's not hard to find a multitude of examples of people who are or were noteworthy due to feminism or who built careers out of feminist activism or teaching who have said and done some awful things, shooting Andy Warhol not withstanding.
This one is just a whiny <insert insult that makes anything I say for the rest of this post just misogyny because cis-het-white-male> being awful over nothing important (we can argue about the percentage of such running around but you'll just disown them as "not a monolith" in exactly the same way other ideologies aren't allowed to do with their own nutters, and in some cases with other groups' nutters).
It's worth noting that she did get the driver in question fired until this video became public, though. She did actual harm to someone because she decided a hula doll on his dash was offensive and he should be punished as a result.
Lil devils x said:
If people want to know about feminism, they go here:
http://everydayfeminism.com/2014/12/male-rape-epidemic/
Myth 4 is certainly a myth (or very nearly so) if you use the same definitions as the folks who gather stats on rape and sexual assault. Of course, they're using the broader "rape is sex without consent or when consent is legally impossible" that gets used in cases like this, while there's a tendency to switch to definitions that all but prevent women from being rapists when the goal is to emphasize how men are the problem or how male victims don't need resources available.
It's likewise noteworthy that the same woman (Mary P. Koss) who coined the terms "date rape" and "acquaintance rape" and devised the "1-in-4" statistic and the methods used to measure rates of rape and sexual assault also stated "It is inappropriate to consider as a rape victim a man who engages in unwanted sexual intercourse with a woman" and that a case where a woman had sex with a drugged man was not even sexual assault but rather "unwanted contact." This is a tendency in the stats, to minimize cases of male victimization, especially when it happens at the hands of women. If you can't do it by designing the data collection method to give what you want, you can always massage the definitions or the numbers, and if that doesn't work you can simply dismiss or ignore them in your conclusions and summaries which are what most people are going to report on or make decisions based upon.
Dizchu said:
But these days it all gets conflated into this big singular entity, to the point where issues relating to transgender people and blacks will for some reason be tied to feminism.
Isn't that the literal point of "intersectional feminism", to make race and trans issues "about feminism"? Kind of like how Atheism+ was an attempt to make atheism "about feminism" rather than merely about lack of faith in a divinity of any description.
Lil devils x said:
It is like claiming Jeffrey Dahmer is representative of all men because he says he is a man.
I could quote all manner of notable feminists saying all manner of awful things. None of them individually represent all feminists (let alone all women, as the two are not synonymous), but when enough of them pile up, you have to wonder why we're supposed to pretend they're all just random nutters of no significance. Random nutters with long careers in academia or media, random nutters with gender-related administrative positions in universities, random nutters with best-selling books or books that are required reading in gender studies. That sort of thing.
My personal favorite was Adele Mercier, a professor of feminist philosophy at Queens who once argued that underage boys in juvenile detention facilities who had sex with female staff were consenting to it and thus weren't victims of sexual assault. Let's be clear here -- she claimed that
underage boys who were prisoners could meaningfully consent to sex with female staff at the facility in which they were imprisoned. Talk about a fucking power imbalance.
Or the whole "women are the primary victims of war" because the men in their families die violently in the conflict bit from our likely next POTUS.
I could invoke Catherine Comins, assistant dean of student life at Vassar talking about how male students could benefit from being falsely accused of rape because it might make them think about if that's a thing that they could potentially have done.
I mentioned Mary P. Koss above, as well.
That's without going too far back. The Clinton example was the oldest one, being from the 90s.
There are so many examples it's mind boggling. I'm half tempted to start a "horrible things said by feminists" thread over on Wild West just to see how many people can come up with.
Lil devils x said:
Gender equality=feminism. The reason it isn't enough for some people is because many claim to believe in gender equality that actually don't, both male and female. They often do not understand what equality actually is. It isn't "I like apple pie so you have to eat apple pie too so it is equal". That isn't equal at all. It is like this: Say Apple is my favorite pie and cherry is yours. I get a piece of apple pie and you get a piece of cherry pie and it is equal because we both get a piece of our favorite pie.
You mean like how the Affordable Care Act explicitly requires programs to cover at least one example of every category of contraceptive recognized by the FDA without cost so long as they get a prescription, including barrier methods and sterilization, but only if the contraceptive in question is for women? Literally the only reason this hasn't gone to a court case over equal protection is that most insurance covers vasectomy (but aren't required to because that's sterilizing a man rather than a woman) and vasalgel is apparently the second hardest thing to get through the FDA for no reasonable reasons (the moment it hits the market in the US and insurance refuses to cover it, Obamacare will have an equal protection lawsuit).
Or to put it in your analogy, "You like apple pie and I like cherry. Therefore, the law should be that I should pay for all of my cherry pie unless someone is willing to help, and everyone collectively should be required to pay for your apple pie."
Or maybe I should point out that women outnumber men in college, to a degree that was used to justify special resources for women when it was the other way around in the 70s.
Lil devils x said:
Feminists focus on both male and female issues of equality, like providing rape hotlines and counseling for male rape victims.
...and like lobbying for federal domestic violence law that explicitly permits discrimination with respect to actual or perceived sex or gender while simultaneously requiring all funded programs serve women and law enforcement training under such to be built around "saying but not saying" that you should always arrest whatever man is involved (to the point that there was a case where a woman called the cops on her mother and the cops arrived and beat her father to death, and that isn't seen as a significant problem).
Earl Silverman tried to run what was the only shelter for male victims in Canada at the time, he couldn't receive any kind of government funding for it because it wasn't a program for women and eventually hung himself when he could no longer afford to operate it. The ManKind Initiative, one of only a few charities in the UK to help male victims receives no government funding despite similar groups providing services for women being funded, and operates entirely under private funding.
Lil devils x said:
"Feminists" do much more than just focus on female issues, as true equality will allow men and women to be able to do things it was previously considered "socially unacceptable" to do in a male designed society.
Name something that men or women are "unable" to do. I can name things that aren't looked as well upon, but "other people don't support me as much if I do $X" is a far cry from not being able to do something.
At least you didn't invoke "equal rights" for women...