
Originally Posted by
Gelatinous Cube
Like someone said above, Feminism is one of the worst activist causes when it comes to getting people over-riled. In America (and I suspect most of Europe) this is not a god-damned problem. It detracts from the very real issues at hand (like, oh, I dunno--the imminent collapse of the global economy, and the likely very short window of time we have left to do anything about it?) by polarizing people against eachother, who might otherwise work together on bigger and more important issues.
Point me to one polarising statement from a feminist in this thread and I will point you to several from those who oppose it. Further, why can't we discuss multiple things at once? Surely we as a society are at the point where we can hold several conversations?

Originally Posted by
a completely inoffensive name
Pretty much spot on. I don't understand where the systematic oppression of women still comes into play in modern (past 25 years) Western, increasingly secular (and increasingly anti-religious) societies. America as a more conservative nation overall, still has Democrats and Republicans not thinking twice about putting women in positions of power, like Hillary or Palin. In California, Meg Whitman was the Republican contender for Governor and was a very strong candidate until she performed badly in the debates. Hillary herself made some sort of statement in her concession speech to Obama, something like, if we haven't broken the glass ceiling yet, we sure put over 1 million cracks in it.
A greater presence of women in public situations is great, yes. However, that is only one aspect of the entire discussion. The majority of the time they only discuss "women's" issues, whilst there is an entire female consituency that is considered somehow different to the rest of society and can be pandered to as an "interest group". And yet men aren't? That strikes me as a thoroughly gendered society where people are expected to care about one thing or another because of a characteristic that they possess at birth.

Originally Posted by
Andres
There's no more need for a movement. If women are discriminated against, then they don't need to start a movement, they need to use the tool that is already at their disposal: the law.
What about discursive situations that can't be solved by law?

Originally Posted by
Gelatinous Cube
Being a male accused of sexual harrassment or sexual assault is like being a 1940s Black Man in front of an all-white Alabama jury--anything but fair.
Far from it:
The government estimates that as many as 95% of rapes are never reported to the police at all. Of the rapes that were reported from 2007 to 2008, only 6.5% resulted in a conviction on the charge of rape. The majority of convictions for rape resulted from an admission of guilt by the defendant, whereas less than one quarter of all those charged with rape were convicted following a successful trial.
[...]
Victims were found to experience delays, "unpleasant environments", inappropriate behaviour by professionals, insensitive questioning during interviews and "judgmental or disbelieving attitudes" when coming forward with complaints of rape.
As a result, between half and two-thirds of rape cases did not proceed beyond the investigation stage. The majority of victims decide to withdraw their complaints, while high levels of rape complaints are essentially ignored, with reports pointing to scepticism on the part of the police and "the view that the victim lacks credibility".
The highlighted section is what I'm talking about in terms of the discursive need for feminism - there is just a general unwillingness to believe victims of rape.

Originally Posted by
Gelatinous Cube
Rape is awful. Marital rape is also awful. Sending innocent men to jail is awful too, and the more steam feminists pick up the more they try to demonize men that really are just trying not to offend anybody.
The same argument can be used for literally any crime.
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