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SlyReaper wrote:How does any of that imply that feminism is not a subset of egalitarianism? Albeit the subset that you think is getting the most attention? Feminists, generally, don't only support sex equality, it's just that that is the particular type of equality they are most involved with and that they have the most interest in. Most people who call themselves feminist (let's ignore the militant misandrists who have tried to subvert the word) also support equality in other areas, they're just a bit busy with their particular subset.
Zamfir wrote:This argument would work against most specialization. We should have transportation engineers. We have been designing aircraft for over a century, we have major university departments aimed solely at aircraft, people make careers in one kind of transportation only.
Zamfir wrote:This argument would work against most specialization. We should have transportation engineers. We have been designing aircraft for over a century, we have major university departments aimed solely at aircraft, people make careers in one kind of transportation only.
Zarq wrote:I now have a newfound fear of mimes appearing above me. ThanksObamaKewangji!
Zamfir wrote:But "promoting all kinds of equality" is an abstract goal. It's like "making music".
If you actually want to achieve something, you'll have to focus on particular issues, study them, collect data, identify critical causes, think about possible approaches to improve the situation, convince others of the importance of the issue, convince people to take action or to change their views and ways. All of that requires specific knowledge and experience in a particular environment, and those things don't transfer one-on-one to other issues.
Are you actively involved in some equality issue? Do you feel your efforts are hindered by the existence of feminists pursueing other issues? Do you think feminists should drop theirown particular goals and start supporting your particular goals? Have you tried to convince them of that? What do they say?
Kewangji wrote:How is this not a/the common way to criticize feminism? I've heard it dozens of times.
Kewangji wrote:How is this not a/the common way to criticize feminism? I've heard it dozens of times.

Azrael wrote:Kewangji wrote:How is this not a/the common way to criticize feminism? I've heard it dozens of times.
Yeah, it's a variation of one of the most common themes regarding any kind of activism, some where between the "But this over here is more important!" line and "But that's only part of the problem!". It's also a convenient way to dismiss feminism without addressing the argument covered therein. In the end, it is readily dismissed by the same line of logic as those argument as well; since there are lots of people, and each person is capable of expending efforts in multiple places, the concept that there's a hierarchy of what should be addressed first can't be logically supported.
The more salient point being that egalitarianism is a higher-order goal. Rejecting, for instance, women's suffrage because it did not also include universal suffrage is typically a short-sighted and unrealistic. History has repeatedly demonstrated that progress is a gradient.
Iulus Cofield wrote:Kewangji wrote:How is this not a/the common way to criticize feminism? I've heard it dozens of times.
Really? People 'round where I live have been looking at me like I'm an alien.
Iulus Cofield wrote:By labeling ourselves feminists, or Dalitists, or Asianists, I believe we are impairing our ability to most effectively campaign and persuade for wider equality.
phlip wrote:(Scholars believe it is lost to time exactly which search engine Columbus preferred... though they are reasonably sure that he was an avid user of Apple Maps.)
Iulus Cofield wrote:Campaigning for sex equality has it's time in place, post 14th Amendment America comes to mind.
But so does racial equality, religious equality, etc. By labeling ourselves feminists, or Dalitists, or Asianists, I believe we are impairing our ability to most effectively campaign and persuade for wider equality.

doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
Iulus Cofield wrote:I will not pretend that I am an expert in either of those issues, but I am doing what little I can.
HungryHobo wrote:it's a worthy cause but I know quite a lot of young women are alienated by feminism first because they see it as ignoring wider issues and second because of old school feminists.
At my university there was one lecturer who I can only hope was intentionally parodying feminism.
I remember one girl who was in her module being flabbergasted by how utterly insane she was: rockets were that shape because male engineers were obsessed with penises, if your father tended to eat more at the dinner table that was a sign he was oppressing your mother... rather than a sign he had physically more body mass than your mother and never mind the food left over at the end of the meal. everything bad in the universe was because of the patriarchy. etc etc.
that kind of nonsense actually puts young women off .
Ehh...the thing is that our culture nominally frowns upon sexism, but sexist attitudes are still very much encouraged. I remember my mom saying that she didn't trust Obama because his name wasn't American. She denied that she was racist, and she gets along with different races, etc, but that doesn't mean that that belief wasn't racist. There are still pretty strong double standards between men and women, as well as stereotypes.Mahou wrote:This is the reason I have a slight problem with the term feminist. My observation is these days women are, for the most part, equal to men. Obviously there's still a lot of room for improvement, but legally they're equal and our culture now frowns upon sexism. The glass ceiling may be there, but the room beneath has plenty of hard, throwable objects.
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
Jessica wrote:Feminists get flak for being feminists, not for what they call themselves. If they were called anything else, they still would get flak for it.

TheGrammarBolshevik wrote:... but the point of the broader passage is that [Feminists are] condemned for [their beliefs], [and] nothing about [them] would change if [the] name were anything else.

In many (most?) dimensions of American society, feminists are the mainstream, and misogynists are the minority. Something else has to be going on.Jessica wrote:they're doing something that's not accepted by the mainstream, and they're going to be given problems for it.
This suggests there is a substantial, rather than superficial, difference between feminism and egalitarianism: that feminism (as you put it) is focused on the inequalities between women and men, whereas egalitarians are focused on the obstacles individuals face. Those differences lead to real differences in thought, opinion, and action- egalitarians and feminists will be bothered by different things for different reasons (though there's quite a bit of overlap).Jessica wrote:Names like humanist, or equalist, or egalitarianism are just ways to hide the main issue that feminists deal with - the problem that there are some inequalities between women and men.
Iulus Cofield wrote:You may be asking yourself, what's the problem? Sure, it would probably be better to promote egalitarianism, but sex equality is something worth fighting for and supporting and surely there is no harm in it.
But the problem is we have over a century and a half old movement, departments in major universities (sorry gender studies, I'm rhetorically reducing you), and people who make careers working for only one kind of equality. What do we have for egalitarianism? The closest organization I can think of is the American Civil Liberties Union, an admirable institution which is nonetheless often vilified and criticized for promoting egalitarianism and particularly for defending freedom of expression by the unpopular and sometimes even straight up evil people (looking at you Westboro).
Right, it doesn't make the problem go away, and they, of course, continue to get flak for their beliefs alone. It's not a binary thing though...my point is that they may get less flak and more support if they change their name.Jessica wrote:Feminists get flak for being feminists, not for what they call themselves. If they were called anything else, they still would get flak for it. That's the point - they're doing something that's not accepted by the mainstream, and they're going to be given problems for it. It doesn't make the problem go away by choosing a new name. If the name was womanist (which is the name of a group of people, specifically a lot of disenfranchised feminists who aren't white and middle class), people would make fun of them, and paint them as men hating lesbians. Names like humanist, or equalist, or egalitarianism are just ways to hide the main issue that feminists deal with - the problem that there are some inequalities between women and men. It also won't stop the criticism of the movement.
Feminism keeps it's name for historic reasons mainly, and because changing the name won't actually stop people painting them as straw-women.
Wait, they are? That's not been my impression of America. But, I'm not American, so I might be wrong about that.Vaniver wrote:In many (most?) dimensions of American society, feminists are the mainstream, and misogynists are the minority. Something else has to be going on.Jessica wrote:they're doing something that's not accepted by the mainstream, and they're going to be given problems for it.
The only difference I see between egalitarians (like what people are talking about in this thread) and feminists, is that egalitarians seem to dismiss issues that women are bringing up. The theory otherwise is the same, both seek equality for all, just one has "feminine" in it's name and the other does not. Essentially, in my view, the only difference is that egalitarians want to minimize female issues in the name of all issues for whatever reason.This suggests there is a substantial, rather than superficial, difference between feminism and egalitarianism: that feminism (as you put it) is focused on the inequalities between women and men, whereas egalitarians are focused on the obstacles individuals face. Those differences lead to real differences in thought, opinion, and action- egalitarians and feminists will be bothered by different things for different reasons (though there's quite a bit of overlap).Jessica wrote:Names like humanist, or equalist, or egalitarianism are just ways to hide the main issue that feminists deal with - the problem that there are some inequalities between women and men.
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
SJE - I don't believe changing the name would have a significant beneficial impact on the equality movement, and would have a detriment of alienating women from that movement as men take dominant positions in the movement, like they do in most other things in our society.
Stephen Crane wrote:...For truth was to me
A breath, a wind,
A shadow, a phantom,
And never had I touched
The hem of its garment.
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
Jessica wrote:Wait, they are? That's not been my impression of America.
Jessica wrote:The theory otherwise is the same, both seek equality for all, just one has "feminine" in it's name and the other does not.
Jessica wrote:and would have a detriment of alienating women from that movement as men take dominant positions in the movement, like they do in most other things in our society.
It's supposed to be. It fails at it often, but many believe (within feminist circles) that the point of feminism is to attain equality for all.eugene wrote:So you are saying that the goal of the feminist movement is to achieve equality for all regardless of their sex, race, age, social status etc? Are you sure?Jessica wrote:The theory otherwise is the same, both seek equality for all, just one has "feminine" in it's name and the other does not.
I say that they would because they have in the past. Often in equality movements have men attempted to wrest control from female leaders, and left the women disenfranchised. Like how white women wrest control from black women and leave them disenfranchised.Why would that happen? Supposedly feminists are not really favoring women but rather gender equality. So why would they be alienated from a movement if some (or many) leaders of it would be male?Jessica wrote:and would have a detriment of alienating women from that movement as men take dominant positions in the movement, like they do in most other things in our society.
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
That's fair, and I'll readily admit that I'm not familiar with the modern evolution of feminism, so I can't speak to what it's doing right now, or in what respects it's improved.Jessica wrote:Hippo: It's getting better... kind of...
I still call myself a feminist even though the movement has fucked over people like me for years. I used to say I was a trans feminist, but right now feminist works fine for me. But, I guess I've gone pretty far into lefty territory now, so my views should be taken with the grain of salt that entails...
Stephen Crane wrote:...For truth was to me
A breath, a wind,
A shadow, a phantom,
And never had I touched
The hem of its garment.
Jessica wrote: It's supposed to be.
Jessica wrote: I say that they would because they have in the past.
Better analogy: Physics doesn't rule out math; physics is a specialized form of applied mathematics. Similarly, feminism is a specialized form of applied egalitarianism.eugene wrote:And yes, I understand that feminism does not rule out egalitarianism (just like physics doesn't rule out egalitarianism), but that doesn't mean that feminism (or physics) is all about egalitarianism.
Stephen Crane wrote:...For truth was to me
A breath, a wind,
A shadow, a phantom,
And never had I touched
The hem of its garment.
The Great Hippo wrote:Better analogy: Physics doesn't rule out math; physics is a specialized form of applied mathematics. Similarly, feminism is a specialized form of applied egalitarianism.
eugene wrote:Jessica wrote: I say that they would because they have in the past.
Doesn't that seem a bit hypocritical to you? It's as if they were saying "I support equal opportunity for genders, but only as long as a woman is in charge of this movement".
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
podbaydoor wrote:No, she said, "I support equal opportunity for genders, but there is a really, really long tradition of even well-meaning men dominating and dismissing women in popular movements."
I would like some version of citation for this. 75% of people don't think women should take their husband's last name when they marry? 75% of people don't see women as primary caregivers for children? or is it 75% of people think it is okay for women to have a career?eugene wrote:Yes; for example, about 75% of people rejected the idea that women should fulfill their "traditional roles" in society. This seems in agreement with feminist values. Note that you originally said not that "feminists are mainstream", but "what feminists do is not mainstream".
sophyturtle wrote:I would like some version of citation for this. 75% of people don't think women should take their husband's last name when they marry? 75% of people don't see women as primary caregivers for children? or is it 75% of people think it is okay for women to have a career?
sophyturtle wrote:As a woman, I can safely say 75% of the people I have met is way off. And I hang out with liberals. I know, I know, n=me. but really? I need more than this to have any kind of faith. We cannot get that many people in this country to believe in evolution. You really think they are all for female run households and such?
sophyturtle wrote:If you don't like the word, don't use it. If you don't like how people see the word, when they see if as man hating pointing out their ignorance is an option.
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