See, here's the thing with "earning". There will always be folks who are born into a position they didn't earn. Changing who is in that position doesn't change that fact. It is not anyone's right to take that away whether they earned it or not. And its far from my point, because there's a human quality that factors in that folks tend to miss. Most folks tend to feel their offspring are more important than other people, are more special and deserving. It has nothing to do with social justice and it is definitely not social justice to take away what some people have simply because others do not have that. That is a misconception, and no I'm not putting words in your mouth, just pointing out an issue that I see when it comes to the whole SJ idea.1Life0Continues said:Without wishing to offend, equality isn't something you can apply the libertarian ideal of 'market forces' to, because if that were the case, I am pretty sure market forces would dictate that African-Americans would still be slaves, women wouldn't have the right to vote and a whole slew of other progressions in human rights we've had in the last 100 years. Equality is something you have to work at, often against the status-quo and indeed market forces. Because market forces tend to favour the majority. That's how it works.
Yes, there are variations on BOTH sides that want an advantage, except one of them happens to already have those advantages and seems very very upset that someone else might want them too. And many of them didn't "earn" it at all, they were born into it by virtue of being...well, born.
And the overall aim, once again, is for equality for both men and women. It just happens to use the lens of women because, surprise, women are the disadvantaged ones.
Thanks for the response.
We're all born, we live, we die and those are the only guarantees we will get. In the US, the foundation of the country is upon the pursuit of happiness, but not guaranteeing we'll all be happy. We won't all be rich, powerful or treated fairly. Equality is a grand goal, but it is very difficult to accomplish because people aren't in agreement on what equality actually means. We are all born equal, in the sense that we all have the same guarantees of birth life and death, but beyond that it is up to us to overcome the obstacles we encounter in life. Equality has nothing to do with finances in reality. Being rich isn't a guarantee of happiness, only access to what some might consider the "finer" things. So lets dump the financial part.
What sort of equality are we asking for? Are we asking that no one objectify women, that people stop being racist or homophobic? How do we go about accomplishing that? You cannot change someone's perspective, only they can. And human beings are notorious for self-deception when faced with rational, logical, fact-based arguments. They tend to cling to their perceptions, right or wrong, with no rational basis for doing so other than its comforting.
History does tell us that viewpoints change over long periods of time, and awful practices that don't work don't survive forever. Slavery, for example is on the decline. It still exists of course, but it is not sanctioned by most of the progressive countries these days. Its in the shadows, and in countries that are still very backwards when compared to the more contemporary ones. It is by no means eradicated, but it is not the status quo any longer. Other things have changed drastically in the last century for women too, though some may feel its not changing fast enough. Right to work, right to vote, etc. are relatively new ideas, though it is still a struggle in a lot of areas. Still we are progressing as a society, something people seem to be forgetting. Social revolution is not instantaneous, and when pushed too far it will only tip the scales from one side to the other, therefore nothing has changed except what side is in charge. Thats not equality.
I don't have answers on how we become more "equal" in society but it is definitely not just shifting around who are the haves and have nots.
Education is the only thing that I believe can change the way people think and perceive each other. That means that ivy league colleges and their exclusivity are not the answer, but part of the problem. That also means pre-college education needs to be examined and reworked completely. I can only speak from an American point of view, and I don't see the education system getting better. In fact its just changing paradigms from one set of indoctrination to another, but its not improving. I don't have real answers on how things should be handled, or how education can be made better, but I know education is the key to improving anyone's quality of life.
The real thing we should examine is what "quality of life" means and what people really want out of "social justice."
Honestly though life is unfair, we don't get to pick where we're born, who our parents are, what gender or race or sexuality we are. We just get to play the cards we're dealt as best as we can, and sometimes we lose, and sometimes we lose big. Sometimes we have to do what we can locally, make small changes in our fourth dimensional spatial location and hope that it affects things in the larger sphere. We can't change the world, we can change ourselves and the small parts of the world we live in.
I know I have a lot of digression in my reply, its a byproduct of the hand I was dealt in life and I make due with what I have because it cannot be fixed. Not by today's science, it can only be managed. I don't expect anything, no pity or handouts or equality for my mental issues. I just deal with what comes to me from or because of them. And I also deal with people's intolerance, not with anger but with tolerance for their inability to understand my life and my perception. That is the best I can hope for, and yet my quality of life is wonderful. I'm far from rich or successful, and I have been discriminated against because of my issues, and yet I am happy because I don't give up, don't expect others to understand me or even like me.
Maybe I just don't believe in equality in society because we're not equal. We are all different, except that we're human, we are born and live and die. That is the only true equality. Society will change, or we'll end up killing ourselves.