“b-but bears are actually dangerous!” Shut the hell up.

  • UnfortunateShort
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    516 months ago

    That’s quite the universal statement. I think first and foremost, men need to learn that they might not be part of the problem, but that there are many very problematic ones among us.

    The feeling of general suspicion is what we need to tackle. If you don’t grasp the problems and their magnitude, you will naturally take offense in being suspected.

    We need to take this feeling and turn it into anger towards the disgraceful people that are the reason for the suspicion.

    So on the contrary, I think men’s feelings actually matter a lot, if you want to reach a world free of misogyny and violence against women.

    • @[email protected]
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      376 months ago

      Sometimes things aren’t your fault but are your problem. And men making excuses like “just locker room talk” and not confronting other men in their lives who do or say toxic things or espouse ideas or personalities that generally make women uncomfortable are our problems, whether or not they are our fault.

      • @[email protected]
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        146 months ago

        I wish I could do this at work. The most inappropriate things I hear in a regular basis are from my own leadership.

      • @[email protected]
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        146 months ago

        I have no heard a man express what you would call a toxic opinion in like twenty years. And yet women are still just as afraid. Crime rates are at an all-time low, yet women are more afraid than ever.

        Whether it’s my problem is my decision. Primarily, it is women’s problem. And they have practical steps they can take to fix that problem. I refuse to make someone else’s problem my own problem, if that other person is ignoring steps they themselves can take to fix it.

        I’m all for helping out, but only people who have done the first step themselves.

        Women’s general attitude toward this is “It’s my problem but it’s your responsibility to solve it” and I say fuck that. I have my own problems to solve. My life is, in fact, absolutely full of problems that take all my energy to solve.

        • @[email protected]
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          176 months ago

          I have no heard a man express what you would call a toxic opinion in like twenty years.

          Your personal experience is not representative of the experience of the rest of the world. Though I am very glad that this has been your experience!

          • @[email protected]
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            66 months ago

            You’d think that it would appear on video maybe once, somewhere on the internet, if it were happening. Can you link to a place where men are saying these things? If not, does that indicate something about the rate at which it’s happening?

            I can link to videos of UFOs and videos of dogs walking on their hind legs. Are these defining our culture? If not, what does that imply about something you can’t find a video of?

      • @[email protected]
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        56 months ago

        I mean, it depends. I am not my own gender police, I don’t see my life with my peers as “shaping the culture of manhood” because having gender in common is basically irrelevant and there is absolute no sense of belonging for me into “manhood” as a gender. We are not talking about contributing to shape the culture of your organization, or club or something, where there are (or should be) some form of shared values.

        In fact, I find this whole idea between silly and sexist, where by sexist I mean rigid attributes applied based on gender.

        The way I see it is that I - as a man - have absolutely nothing to do to help with the overall problem and the only way that I can help improve is by not being part of it (in this case, not assault, rape, stalk, harass etc.). That’s pretty much the end of it.

    • @[email protected]
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      96 months ago

      The feeling of general suspicion is what we need to tackle.

      I agree. This general suspicion is not good. As Bruce Lee says, “Do not be tense, but ready”.

      I recommend women take concrete steps to protect their own safety, so they don’t have to be constantly on high alert. That’s a terrible way to live.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      This, except that shouldn’t be anger, really.

      Anger is a feeling that leads to alienation, and an alienated beast is the most dangerous one.

      We should be on a watch for potentially dangerous behaviors and offer help so that people gently unlearn their ways.

      That’s not to say people who have already committed some form of abuse shouldn’t be punished, but that we should fight for those who can become dangers and support those who recognize their mistakes and genuinely strive to do better.