Good article for gender equality nuts

areyoustillthere

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http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/strategy.html


Men!

Ever wondered why your buddy got fired and prosecuted because of the female glamour photo on his office wall, though the woman who complained has even more male glamour photos that are seen as 'cute', 'liberated' and 'progressive'?

Wonder what all this has to do with feminism?

Have you ever been publicly eviscerated for referring to a certain woman as "attractive", by a roomful of savage women, each of whom reads four novels a week, that have fabulously wealthy, ruggedly handsome heroes who are 6 foot 3, with massive muscles and a name like 'Fabio' or 'Baron Kalashnikov'?

Have you given up expressing opinions on any female because you are attacked for every view, whether you call her beautiful or plain, dumb or smart, gentle or rough, rich or poor, fat or thin, sweet or sour? Have you noticed that you are now 'not permitted' to have views on women in general because you are male? Do you sense you're in a censored, never-win situation?

Have you noticed that women are 'permitted' to say what they like about men, whether in private or in the media?

Ever tried to get equal rights in a court of law over a family matter?

It's no accident ... it's ... (drum roll) ....













Strategic disempowerment








"'It's sexy and eye-catching", says Janet Hogan, 42,
co-creative director of the advertising agency Streamline,
who created the campaign for her client Kolotex.
"Women love the ballsiness of it."
Sydney Morning Herald, April 13, 2002

Click to read how Australia's Advertising Standards Board
explained to Pip Wilson that this billboard is only "a satirical comment"







Good news for men about gender relations

If you are a man, the subtitle of this article might raise a laugh. What good news could there possibly be about male-female relations, right? Feminists have ruined them for all time, correct?

I have to tell you that for a while I felt like that, too. When I became fully aware of how men are disadvantaged in gender relations by what I have named 'strategic disempowerment' (SD), I was sure that there was no way out and I felt ... well, disempowered.

Before I go on to tell you some ways that I have found to not feel helpless in the face of the onslaught of feminist's belief in the superiority of women, I'd like to describe some of the phenomena associated with SD.

Double standards to disempower

SD is used by some (not all) women in order to boost their self esteem, and probably to gain power over men, or a man. It is sometimes used consciously, and sometimes unconsciously, but at all times it is backed by the woman's belief system. At the root of SD are beliefs that women are superior to men, that men owe women, and that women are oppressed by men (see my article Twelve Great Myths of Feminism, which addresses these false beliefs). The women who are most likely to engage in SD tend to be those who have accepted the persuasive, convincing myths of feminism.

The basic method of SD is the use of double standards. Many of these involve the most deep-seated of all human feelings, sex, because it is there that all human beings are often most sensitive and vulnerable. It's in the area of sex that the most leverage can be attained for increasing one's dominance, whether the woman is trying consciously or unconsciously to disempower. However, not all of the tactics used by practitioners of SD involve sex or sexuality, so we mustn't be too quick to overlook other areas of engagement by these women.

Let's take a look at some of the disempowering tactics these women use. It should be noted at this point that many of the tactics have gained wide enough currency for them to have been enshrined in legislation in many Western nations, where a concerted effort has been made over many years by feminist activists. In fact, much legislation is clearly disadvantageous to men, and it is possibly because many men also have accepted the myths of radical feminism as outlined in my aforementioned article.

Oppressed minorities syndrome

The double standards that are the engine of SD are many, and may be schematised in terms of what feminists label unacceptable, and what they label acceptable. These examples always involve permission for women to do one thing, and the denial of permission of men to do the same.

The effect that occurs when a man is subjected to an SD tactic is identical to that suffered by any disempowered person. Wherever one class, caste or section of society enjoys privileges denied to another, the latter group suffers feelings of powerlessness, shame, guilt, hurt and confusion. The results are well documented in the study of disenfranchised and oppressed minorities around the world, and include suicide, drug abuse, alcoholism, ill health and a host of other factors. These factors, by the way, are exhibited by males far more than females. (Unfortunately, men's health, despite being in a more parlous state than women's, is drastically less funded than women's, so research is thin on the ground. Nonetheless, enough exists for us to know that men are experiencing symptoms akin to those associated with underprivileged groups.)

More research should be done in academia to explore my hypothesis that men share with indigenous and other disenfranchised groups a common set of underlying causes leading to congruent syndromes. While anecdotally it is clear that there is a female hegemony in many fields, such as health funding, family law, anti-discrimination legislation, and so on, what is not so clear is what can be done about it, nor what role men play in allowing and even facilitating it. Again, it is a field ripe for research, but one suspects that funding bodies and academic institutions would be loath to risk persecution under the very tactics that we are discussing.

It should be noted at this point that the effectiveness of the following tactics of SD lies in the following methods: discriminatory interpretation of legislation; withholding of affection; withholding of compassion; shaming and other emotional abuse; verbal abuse; private vilification; and public vilification. At all times, however, the most effective element in the table below is the frustration experienced by the person or group who is forbidden to do what the other person or group self-encourages.

The psychology involved here is simple: SD sets up a paradigm of 'to the victor the spoils'. The selfish child who has an ice cream gains further victory by flaunting the victory of eating ice cream in front of the child denied permission to eat. Similarly, ruling castes who have expropriated material wealth from oppressed minorities maintain their high status not only by owning wealth, but by making their wealth conspicuous.

In both cases, and in the case of SD, the frustration engendered in the oppressed actually disempowers them further, and often leads to self-harm rather than militant action against the oppressor. The child slips into depression and feelings of being 'less than'; the oppressed minority accepts an inferior status, and disintegrates with drink and drugs; the frustrated man thinks it serves him right for being a 'mere male' and slowly self-destructs with self-hatred and unhealthy behaviours.
 

areyoustillthere

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Some examples

Many feminists play on this to their advantage, as most Western men now know. Take, for example, an incident that happened to me a couple of days ago, but which is fairly typical and common enough in essence.

I was in a supermarket checkout queue. Just ahead of me was a woman, 40-something, who was being served. Next to the cashier (a young woman), was a young male supermarket employee who was struggling to get a plastic bag from about 20 or so that, in the manner of supermarket bags, were stuck together. His difficulty arose from the nature of the items, and perhaps his youth. However, the woman being served had another explanation, one that is rather predictable from a feminist.

"Men can never do fiddly things," she opined. "They haven't the fingers for it." The cashier smiled and the young man blushed and fumbled further.

I wish I had said something to soothe the young man's embarrassment at being so deliberately and uncaringly humiliated by the customer, but as my male readers will appreciate, I have a sense of honour and did not wish to shame the customer as she had shamed the lad. Also, I confess, and male readers will no doubt empathise, a reason other than a sense of duty and propriety was at play in my mind. I didn't criticise the silly statement because to have done so would have, from my experience, almost certainly occasioned some kind of illogical, ad hominem, under-the-belt answer from the woman, and I've developed a strong and self-protective antipathy to being attacked while my hands are tied by the cords of reason and ethics. Meanwhile, as I could detect from my peripheral vision, the woman customer tried to gauge my reaction, but I maintained as inert a look as possible.



Naturally, my mind was not as blank as my face. The rejoinder that came to my mind was something like "You're so right; that's why the great engravers, watchmakers, jewellers, brain surgeons and tailors of the world have always relied so heavily on women to do the 'fiddly work' on their behalf."

This customer's comment, of course, is hardly a hanging offence, nor should it be. However, the significant fact is not that a woman made a fairly lighthearted, however insensitive and unkind remark. The significance lies in the fact that were the genders involved to be reversed, the offence at the remark would have been labelled 'sexist' by any feminist present, and quite possibly an escalation of offence would have occurred. In Australia, litigation has been successful for such infringements.

Imagine what hissing would come from the teeth of a feminist had she heard a man try to embarrass a young woman with a statement such as "Women can't add up. They haven't the brains for it", or "Women can't sing, they haven't the voices for it".

Being a mere male with an inferior sense of decorum and honour, I restrained myself, while the female customer walked off with an delusional air of victory.

Here's another fairly typical example. Led by feminist theory, it has become egregiously fashionable to denigrate fatherhood. This is done in many ways, such as the wild inflation of statistics of male parental faults, but sometimes by more anecdotal techniques. I had to shake my head recently when I heard a woman praise her father for not having brought her up to do "boys' stuff" (she had no brothers and she was pleased that her Dad didn't treat her as a surrogate son). She was just as emphatic about this as those many other women who rail against their fathers for not sharing "masculine" skills such as car repair. Thus we have Rule 1 of strategic disempowerment: Disarm the enemy by forcing him into a no-win position.

http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/strategy.html
 

ketostix

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This article is so true, and is what I was alluding to in my post regarding feminism. It all sort of goes to the point of why a guy has to be a DJ just to get anything out of girl at all. But the real cause is universal and deeper, and we're forced to individually develope schema to cope and succeed in this system, but that's just a band-aide over the real problem.




Imagine what hissing would come from the teeth of a feminist had she heard a man try to embarrass a young woman with a statement such as "Women can't add up. They haven't the brains for it", or "Women can't sing, they haven't the voices for it".
Not only that but women would deny him pvssy and all affection. Plus many neutered male, feminist collaborators would side against him too partly because of the first sentence. Well maybe we can't change this madness or even actively oppose it, but at least we can passively reject it in our minds and never give support to it.
 

StringShredder

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Whatever guys.

That stuff was written by some whiny, social scientist type. Nobody with balls uses words like ``disenfranchised''.

One of the recurring points is that women can get away with things that men cannot. (Waaah! Unfair, sniff, sniff!)

Does that mean they have more power?

No, the proper way to understand it is to look at it this way: it means they are not taken seriously!

When women treat men as objects, they are just being cute. They are off the hook for any real responsibility, just like children.

So they get together and talk about their partner's bodily attributes and sexual performances. Big deal, they are just women having fun, who cares.

The reason a man is chastized for the same behavior is because what comes out of a man's mouth is serious, as are his actions.

Being taken seriously is a form of power.

Next time you catch a woman making some anti-male remark, like something like that supermarket incident described in the article, say this: ``That's very funny! Sometimes I want to say light-hearted things like that, gender-reversed of course, but, being a man, whatever I say is likely to be taken seriously, and I'm going to be held responsible for it.''

That will put her in her place by telling her she can only get away with sexist crap because as a woman, she isn't accountable for what comes out of her flapping gums. She is just being cute, like when something adult-like comes out of a child's mouth.
 

Teen Spirit

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Very well said StringShredder.

The amount of beta males on this site is sickening. :rolleyes:
 

FrancoPUA

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Originally posted by areyoustillthere
"Men can never do fiddly things," she opined. "They haven't the fingers for it." The cashier smiled and the young man blushed and fumbled further.
Franco:"Do you mean lady all the ELEVEN fingers?" (with smile)

Probably the lady had her last orgasm in 1800 century and is terribly horny for the young guy..
 

PRMoon

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I think this article could potentially have some valid points about society. However further research and evidence is needed to back the idea. I think a few of the ideas are out of proportion because if there were a class system in our society between the sexes Women would rank #2. It's been that way since, oh the dawn of time and I don't see it changing anytime soon.
 

MsThang

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While I agree with this article, I would like to point out that this article would be true of any sort of conflict concerning human inquality. Replace the term "man" with "white man" and the term "woman" with "black man" and you have the same case.
 

ketostix

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Originally posted by MsThang
While I agree with this article, I would like to point out that this article would be true of any sort of conflict concerning human inquality. Replace the term "man" with "white man" and the term "woman" with "black man" and you have the same case.
Uh, except for the fact there's Affirmative Action, "Diversity" programs at all university; corporations and government, plus a sh!tload of programs and (sexist) laws that "empower" women. It isn't about a conflict concerning inequality, it's about a systematic designed attack against maleness.
 
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