Yeah I know. I didn't blame the entire feminist community in my post. I clearly said "some".
Nope
I respond with I'm a "humanist"
Women's rights, All lives, Black lives, LBGT lives Etc..etc should all be covered under that umbrella, No?
Yes.
Anyone who says other wise has two options.
1. They are confused by what it means.
2. They are an asshole.
I imagine he means as long as abortion exists, child support shouldn't be mandatory. Makes even less sense otherwise.So you want women to be forced to have children no matter what and then don't want men to have to be responsible for \those children they helped create?
Oh I didn't mean to call you out in particular but this thread is full of a lot,"Well I can't call myself a feminist because there are extreme fringe elements" which is funny as I'm willing to bet that a lot of these people are a part of a huge wide spread groups whether its religion or something else that almost certainly has own extreme fringe elements. Yet you don't hear a lot of people making similar comments about anything but stuff like Feminism.
But practically speaking how does that play out concerning modern day feminist issues? I'm not saying the assertion isn't unscientific but like one of the biggest feminists fights today, reproductive rights, kinda inherently assumes there is biological differences between the two sexes.It's not hard finding examples in academia, such as some saying there are no innate differences between the sexes. Sexes not gender. That's plain unscientific.
This.Fuck No!
Feminism in its current form is pure insanity to me. Rife hypocrisy and double standards.
No.
First off I'm married and have both a son and daughter. This might seem like a ramble but here goes...The politics of fringe feminism bother me too much. I also believe men and women are intrinsically different in terms of personality and this leads to them usually having different goals and means to achieve them. This often creates a false perceived inequality both directions. Sexual politics and the societal view of a females role in sex is always going to muddy the waters as does childbirth, motherhood and so on. The biology isn't equal but that doesn't mean better or worse just different.
In terms of equality of personhood, treatment under the law, employment, anything less than equal shouldn't be possible and really this goes for anyone.
Because these theories filter down into actual policy, such education.But practically speaking how does that play out concerning modern day feminist issues? I'm not saying the assertion isn't unscientific but like one of the biggest feminists fights today, reproductive rights, kinda inherently assumes there is biological differences between the two sexes.
So you want women to be forced to have children no matter what and then don't want men to have to be responsible for those children they helped create?
I would say those biological differences do exist but they aren't absolute + so much of it is influenced by the environment that as such, dismissing feminism because of such "women and men are inherently different" reasoning is kinda BS.It's not hard finding examples in academia, such as some saying there are no innate differences between the sexes. Sexes not gender. That's plain unscientific.
Nope. And as long as abortion exists and child support is mandatory, I won't be.
Well obviously. We're taking about distribution here.I would say those biological differences do exist but they aren't absolute + so much of it is influenced by the environment that as such, dismissing feminism because of such "women and men are inherently different" reasoning is kinda BS.
Women and men are different in certain areas on average. (Example - sexuality: https://www.psychologytoday.com/blo...rs/201102/does-sexuality-differ-men-and-women)You're of course welcome to believe whatever you want, but this is not reality.
Different people have different personalities, and women and men are socialized in different ways. Some naturally fit their gender's societal-defined mold; and some don't, and those people are often pressured or forced, starting at a very young age, to "act like a lady" or "stop acting like a girl" and such. It's cultural, not biological.
I support women's rights and gender equality, yes.
What about consenting adult who acted in a scene that shows the female counterpart being abused? This seems to be running rampart in the Japanese AV industry. I think that starts to step into the questionable territory for sure.
My interpretation does not really matter. I do not view feminism or rather some of its stated goals in a negative light. The problem is that the nature of such movements is there is a lot of disagreement as to what the term even means. As a result the general public views the term in a negative light and I don't feel the blanket term properly identifies my views, and would carry the unfortunate disadvantage of associating with groups I definitely don't agree with.
Moreover the question of 'Are you a feminist' isn't a question about one's views but of one's identity.
No. If women have the right to choose to be mothers, men should be able to choose to be fathers. If women can't choose, then men can't either. Fair is fair.
No. If women have the right to choose to be mothers, men should be able to choose to be fathers. If women can't choose, then men can't either. Fair is fair.
I would say those biological differences do exist but they aren't absolute + so much of it is influenced by the environment that as such, dismissing feminism because of such "women and men are inherently different" reasoning is kinda BS.
I support women's rights and gender equality, yes.
I support feminism but I wouldn't label myself one as Im a man
Feminist doesn't mean "woman".I support feminism but I wouldn't label myself one as Im a man
I agree on the principle. Many feminsts don't. I do not like the label, and definitely don't want to identify with it. I don't see why this is difficult to grasp.So you view it as tainted even though you don't view it negatively? The general public doesn't matter, they're not the ones claiming it is tainted. You did.
In this example above the woman can choose to terminate the child which is fine, it is her body after all, but the father not only has to accept that decision, they also have to pay child support, when whether to terminate the child or not was not their choice. There is many aspects to the law here that are out of date with modern social norms which create pressure on both sides.They can. Condoms and/or vasectomy