[RD] Feminism

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Quote me saying that or retract.

Not a verbatim quote, but throughout the thread when I mentioned the vast majority of homicides are male you tried to make it sound like it's not a big deal. You were arguing with me for a long time.
 
You do realize that the poster you are addressing just personally attacked two members of this forum by name?
That wasn't a personal attack. He asked me which members of the forum argued against me when I mentioned the vast majority of homicides are male. You were one of them.
 
Not a verbatim quote, but throughout the thread when I mentioned the vast majority of homicides are male you tried to make it sound like it's not a big deal. You were arguing with me for a long time.
That is not the same as saying we should not teach men not to kill. I await your retraction.

Also, that is a mischaracterization of the point that I was making - my point was that men take higher risks and thus end up more likely to be targeted by a killer.
 
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"Men" as a group do not start wars. Certain world leaders start wars. As a man I don't have any more influence over these world leaders than you do. So I don't see your point. How about we just get rid of the draft?
Why not both? If you're going to stop having wars, the draft will not be needed.

I see that I should have clarified that I meant male leaders. Most societies throughout history, whether large or small, have had male leaders, and therefore most of the wars that have been fought have been started by men.

So because one male forum member was anti-abortion that means that men's rights activism is about taking away abortion rights for women?
Read my post again. That's not what I said.

Cool, that wasn't my point.
Of course you're going to say that, because it denies your rant that men support women financially but women don't support men. I simply refuted your point.

yet another personal attack
We're done. You've been misrepresenting my posts to mean whatever you want them to mean, instead of what I actually said, and you've been doing it in an insulting way.

This conversation is over.
 
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Moderator Action: This thread stabilized for a few pages but is back to being on the precipice. As mentioned earlier, further personal attacks from anyone will be cracked down upon and possibly lead to the thread's closure.
 
Why not both? If you're going to stop having wars, the draft will not be needed.

I see that I should have clarified that I meant male leaders. Most societies throughout history, whether large or small, have had male leaders, and therefore most of the wars that have been fought have been started by men.
I just don't understand your point. I'm still subject to the draft. I can't just "not start wars" because I'm a man and other men are starting the wars.

Read my post again. That's not what I said.
That's my interpretation of it. What were you saying then?

Of course you're going to say that, because it denies your rant that men support women financially but women don't support men. I simply refuted your point.
I never said that women don't support men. The thing you quoted was in response to Tim seeming to place the blame on men for family court bias. I simply provided the mirror perspective to show that it goes both ways.

edit: remove mischaracterization
 
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I never said that women don't support men. The thing you quoted was in response to Tim placing the blame on men for family court bias. I simply provided the mirror perspective to show that it goes both ways.


See, since that never happened most people would have a hard time understanding this "mirror perspective" business.
 
It does matter. It's really important to talk about these things. When these people are making personal attacks it just makes them look bad, especially to any neutral people reading this thread. A lot of people have simply never been exposed to this side of the argument before.

Perhaps, but it's clearly not doing any good. Or if it does, the good is not worth the blows it does to me to fight for it. In the civil rights movement during the boycott of the bus system (starting with Rosa Parks) some blacks chose NOT to boycott, not because they thought the segregation was appropriate, but because it would simply inconvenience their lives too much to not be able to ride.

The truth is these people have the overwhelming advantage. At nearly every university campus (especially the top ranked ones, the rich, powerful, influential ones) they universally support feminism and openly bash every 'men's rights' group on the table.

The media does the same. We have more proof of it on this very forum. And then they're going to pretend THEY are the ones being oppressed, thus allowing them to have their cake and eat it too.

I have exposed countless people to these arguments, and none of them have given a damn. Not unless they already agreed. You're not going to convert anybody, or if you do, it will a very small number and not worth the sacrifices.

My advice to you is to completely give up and stop talking about it. I've been a much happier person ever since I did. Pick up some hobbies, do whatever you enjoy. You can't possibly fight the system when it's heavily stacked against you. You'd need a crap ton of money (millions, if not billions) to even try.
 
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We're done. You've been misrepresenting my posts to mean whatever you want them to mean, instead of what I actually said, and you've been doing it in an insulting way.

This conversation is over.
On the contrary, I've represented what you actually said - and which is pretty representative of a big part of what I find irritating in this thread, i.e. switching conveniently between personal responsibility and collective gender-based one as is convenient to support a point.

You can put your fingers in your ears and misrepresent it as just "personal attack" (how convenient and ironic), it won't change facts.
 
Obviously I understand there is a deep difference with both, but it's irrelevant to the point, so I'm not sure you understood it.
Evidently you don't. Conscription may be a Bad Thing, but it's also a known result of a declaration of war. The draft is a collective consequence of a collective decision, whether or not any given individual supports that war or is happy being drafted, and it can be avoided by a collective decision to avoid war. Mass-rape is not a known result of war, or at least we mostly try to believe that it's not, and it is in fact a war-crime, punishable among civilised nations by a short step and a long drop.

Further, popular wisdom is that conscription is, occasionally, in sufficiently dire circumstances, a Not So Bad Thing; in contrast, it's flatly not possible to imagine a circumstance in which rape is a Not So Bad Thing, so on that level alone, the analogy is deeply offensive.

It's just a bad, bad analogy, and moreover, one that's completely unnecessary to make your basic point.

The truth is, it doesn't matter how reasonable and rational you are. It doesn't matter how many statistics and evidence you bring up, as demonstrated in this very thread as well as tons of other places I've had this discussion. These people are 100% set on not changing their minds, and they won't compromise an inch. In their minds, we're all a bunch of woman haters, and there's not a thing you can do to change it.
"It doesn't matter how often I repeat myself, people just can't understand how right I am."

To me, many MRAs appear to be anti-female, hung up on unobtainable sex, and whiny.
What's really striking is that they're quite profoundly anti-male as well. For them, the vast majority of the male gender is divided into brutish Neander-jocks or emasculated liberal ****s. They don't seem to have much respect, let alone affection, for anybody.
 
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The draft is a collective consequence of a collective decision, whether or not any given individual supports that war or is happy being drafted, and it can be avoided by a collective decision to avoid war.
Where can I sign up to make these collective decisions about war?

What's really striking is that they're quite profoundly anti-male as well. For them, the vast majority of the male gender is divided into brutish Neander-jocks or emasculated liberal ****s. They don't seem to have much respect, let alone affection, for anybody.
I think if you looked at the movement with an open mind, you would find that this isn't true.
 
Where can I sign up to make these collective decisions about war?
In the UK, you can register to vote by post or online. I don't know how it works in the US, and I suspect it might be a state-by-state thing, but I believe that there are a number of non-profits that'll walk you through things.

I think if you looked at the movement with an open mind, you would find that this isn't true.
Well, maybe. But only to the extent that they imagine a middle-ground of disenfranchised, culturally-castrated men like themselves, and may extent this category to cover a plurality of even majority of men. But pity is not respect, and self-pity is not self-respect.

RedPillers regard themselves as rebels and mavericks, and even the Men-Going-Their-Own-Way harbour a tenuous self-image as what I can only call "revolutionary onanists". There's at least a degree of self-regard, however misplaced. Mens Rights Activists, in contrast, take an almost universally dim view of men, and certainly of all men under the age of fifty. It may not by a misogynistic movement, but it's a fundamentally misandric one.
 
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In the UK, you can register to vote by post or online. I don't know how it works in the US, and I suspect it might be a state-by-state thing, but I believe that there are a number of non-profits that'll walk you through things.
I don't know how it works in the UK, but here in the US the government doesn't hold a vote before engaging in military action.

Well, maybe. But only to the extent that they imagine a middle-ground of disenfranchised, culturally-castrated men like themselves, and may extent this category to cover a plurality of even majority of men. But pity is not respect, and self-pity is not self-respect.

RedPillers regard themselves as rebels and mavericks, and even the Men-Going-Their-Own-Way harbour a tenuous self-image as what I can only call "revolutionary onanists". There's at least a degree of self-regard, however misplaced. Mens Rights Activists, in contrast, take an almost universally dim view of men, and certainly of all men under the age of fifty. It may not by a misogynistic movement, but it's a fundamentally misandric one.
Do you not think the issues they raise are valid or important? I listed some of them a few pages back for reference. And what do you mean by "dim view"?
 
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I don't know how it works in the UK, but here in the US the government doesn't hold a vote before engaging in military action.

The pretense that American wars are not expressions of the collective American will went out the window when we reelected GWBush.
 
Are they expressions of collective American wealth?
 
I don't know how it works in the UK, but here in the US the government doesn't hold a vote before engaging in military action.
We elect representatives, the theory goes, so that the government doesn't have to hold a referendum on every policy decision. There are certainly criticisms to be made of that theory, it'll come as no surprise that I'm pretty sceptical myself, but that goes some way outside the terms of this thread.

Do you not think the issues they raise are valid or important? I listed some of them a few pages back for reference. And what do you mean by "dim view"?
I think the issues are important, but I don't think that the Men's Rights Movement actually raises them as anything more than a cudgel to attack feminism. I do not believe that these people are sincere advocates for men, let alone effective ones, rather, they're anti-feminists with enough of an attachment to liberal values to feel they need to make their case in the terms of a reverse-feminist egalitarianism, rather than in more traditional terms of religious or pseudo-historical fantastical frameworks of gender relations. (That is, respectively, God gave Eve to Adam and Nature gave Raquel Welch to Ug the Hunter.) There are serious advocates for these issues, but they do not as a rule feel the need to position their rhetoric in terms of how men have been hard done by women, or even simply in comparison to women.
 
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