• NickwithaC@lemmy.worldOP
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    7 months ago

    Yeah, I was kinda hoping for better when I posted. Seems like many of the sons who need this talk are on here.

    • GeneralEmergency@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      The sad part is, you can tell some of them understand the point being made. But are either over reacting and making this about gender warfare. Or taking the scenario seriously, and trying to mock it that way.

    • Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Its disparaging to an entire gender. I would argue lots of people need many talks. Lots of evil out there and many of it goes unnoticed or is accepted due to current cultural climate. Including passive aggressive disparaging questions meant to vilify men.

      • Leg@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I’d say we’re right to be disparaged against, up until we get our collective act together as men. Women should be wary of us for the simple fact that it aids in their survival. A comment like hers is at the very bottom of my list of things to change.

        • ECB@feddit.de
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          7 months ago

          Honestly, I know you mean we’ll but I find statements like this extremely dangerous and damaging.

          There isn’t some ‘international council of men’ that could collectively sort anything out. Ideas like blaming the whole gender is part of the reason why we have a rise in far-right sentiment among young men, as it’s easy to feel like the world is against you for things that you personally have no say in. Young men (just like anyone else) need support, and not to be blamed for bad-behavior of others!

          Instead it’s up to those of us (the vast majority) who don’t represent toxic masculinity to set a compassionate example

          • Leg@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Women are going to be wary for as long as they have reason to. You’re essentially just stating that we shouldn’t talk about this fact because it hurts the feelings of men who were probably part of the problem to begin with. It’s on those men to listen to the feedback and internalize it, not on women to keep their opinions to themselves.

            • Stromatose@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              They didn’t say that at all. What they are trying to express is that stereotypes, such as “men are usually dangerous to women”, or “women should fear men just in case”, are disingenuous ideas that harm both sides.

              Some men are good people and some are bad. Some women are good people and some are bad.

              Condemning either group for the actions of a few perpetuates the stereotype by making impressionable indiviuals on both sides of the equation start accepting the “complimentary” stereotypes just because they observe a few correlations from time to time.

              Before long, critical thinking goes out the window, correlation is assumed to be causation and you’ve got men reacting aggressively to posts that say they are dangerous and women saying “I chose the bear!” even though they know that is staticallyess safe because it aligns with the message they think they need to share because they buy into the same stereotype the men did and vice versa.

              It runs parallel to the same sort of thing playing out in politics around the world though it’s certainly more pronounced in the US thanks to the two party system and volume of communication.

              Talking about the issue is fine but this discourse is flawed. Imagine how it would play out if the question was “white people, would you rather be stranded on a island with a black person or an alligator?”

              And now your argument would be “white people should be afraid of black people until they are given a reason not to be.”

              Doesn’t that sound really messed up to say? I hope so because it felt bad just to type out for the purpose of this comparison.

              Each person is an individual unto themselves and I think if you can agree with that, then there is no rationale that can support group stereotypes in human psychology.

              • Leg@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                I do understand the point you’re making, but the example in the OP has more layers to me than strictly speaking about a bear vs. a man.

                It shouldn’t take an incredible leap in logic to ascertain that the comparison is meant to present simply that “men are dangerous to women”. Actually picking the bear is evocative hyperbole. All any man would need to take from this is “I should strive not to make women feel this way”.

                If a man takes this sentiment personally and then becomes a threat to a woman, that man is interpreting in bad faith and in fact wants to threaten women. We have a system of patriarchy precisely because men feel superior to women, and women have little they can do about it. I’d wager these angry men were going to find their excuse to exercise their superiority regardless of what a woman says. This rift exists without anyone else’s help, regardless of if you want to accept that’s what it is. We need more clueless yet compassionate men to understand a woman’s struggle, not less. If we pretend that there aren’t a worrying number of dangerous men, we are those dangerous men.

                I could write excessively about how a white person describing a black person as dangerous is far and away a completely different conversation from this, but I don’t want to expend the characters. Tiniest tl;dr, the power dynamics and history are not the same (they’re roughly inversed, in fact), and your example has a legitimately sinister reason to happen. It’s far from a 1:1 comparison.

                • Stromatose@lemmy.world
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                  7 months ago

                  I do not disagree that the two things have vastly different histories but that isn’t the point of the conversation to be had. A woman’s fear of interactions with any random man is her perception molded by her life experiences.

                  I am not a woman so of course I can not speak with my own experiences on this through my own lens but I have had many conversations with the various women in my life to atleast recognize a portion of their perspectives.

                  I do also concede that they have explained feeling more fearful around men than I can relate to as a man with a physically imposing stature most of my life.

                  I totally understand that I don’t know what it’s like to be a woman in a male oriented society and to be looked at like an object as they sometimes are.

                  HOWEVER, not one of these female friends, family, or partners had ever been sexually assaulted and of all of them, only two had ever been in physical altercations with a 1 man each.

                  Now before you jump on that as an “aha!” moment, consider that theae incidents occurred in their 30s.

                  As a generally mildly mannered person, I have also found myself in physical altercations with other men a few times in my life… More so than my female friends.

                  Only one incident in your whole life as evidence of violence and ready to consider all men as dangerous? Wtf?

                  How can you have such a low opinion of 50% of the people in your life that you think they are worse than a wild animal? It’s unfounded in reality

                  • Leg@lemmy.world
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                    7 months ago

                    An alarming number of the women I’ve spoken with have been sexually assaulted as children. The women in your life are blessed with untroubled pasts I guess. Perhaps this may be why you’re not properly grasping the bigger picture here.

                    Spelling it out, no one is saying literally “all men”. They are saying “guilty until proven innocent keeps you safer against strange men”. This is generally good advice.

                    Who exactly are you trying to defend here? The only ones with a finger pointed at them are men who willingly threaten women. Are you that? Do you think this messaging will turn you into that? Some advice, in that case: Accept that you are going to be scary to some strangers because you are bigger and stronger than them, and treat them kindly. I promise you, you will be fine. If someone tries to tell you this is why they hate women, get the fuck off of 4chan.

          • Leg@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            We have to keep trying. Speaking as a black American who knows America’s history with black people, it’s important that we don’t give up just because we haven’t succeeded yet. Change of this magnitude takes a proportional amount of time.

            • AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Yep. “Not all _____” just sidesteps the point and tries to make it all about you. When someone not of my demographic says people in my demographic are hurting them, it’s time for me to shut up and listen. It’s not about me.

    • yamanii@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Seriously OP, what did you expect by posting the textbook a example of a clickbait article?

      • NickwithaC@lemmy.worldOP
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        7 months ago

        That at least one comment would get that men need to start challenging other men to get this problem solved?

        • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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          7 months ago

          How does hyperbole help foster an open conversation?

          I’m male, though I consider myself non-conforming, for context. I’ve ridden home on the metro with coworkers in their thirties because it’s 8 PM and they don’t feel safe - and I have friends that are SA survivors. The difference in perception is absolutely something to be aware of and if you think most women can enjoy a nice 3 AM walk without massive anxiety you’re clearly out of touch.

          This is an important conversation to have and it’s important to be more aware of what gestures we might make that can be perceived as threatening, however, this article was posed with such a hyperbolic title that it won’t ever spur those conversations. Were the misogynistic assholes that responded with “You’re gonna wish you had a man” to the author assholes? Absolutely. But even a charitable reading of the title doesn’t yield a helpful place to start a conversation.