Hypersonic
Well-known member
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First and foremost I would like to add that I am personally against feminism due to the idea that feminism does not universally address the problems of all women (hence the notion of Black Feminist, Muslim Feminist etc), rather I believe the women's suffrage movement was more appropriately in addressing the sexism portrayed by white patriarchy in its time of development. According to some feminist, feminist philosophy is about equality and about challenging patriarchy, however despite this noble cause, feminism does not challenge notions of social biases towards women such as child support (which displays a clear bias towards women), journalism (male reporters are barred from entering the locker rooms of female athletes, but women aren't), and societal depictions of female frailty (men shouldn't hit women, but men are expected to take assaults from women). I've even seen some hardcore feminist (most notably Catherine Mackinnon) assert that softcore pronography objectifies women, and that male objectification is not objectification because pornography is about enticing men and satisfying patriarchy
I would like any self-acclaimed feminist if they would, address some societal double standards that feminism does not address?
Declaring a position to be insufficient because it is not all-encompassing is an empty cop out to discredit a legitimate enterprise. No movement ever involves every possible aspect. The racial equality movements of the 1960's didn't address every single problem for all blacks, nor for all races. That hardly makes it an invalid endeavor. Feminism is a perfectly legitimate movement. You can take issue with any individual parts of it that you like, but the "it doesn't include everything" is a meaningless argument to make.
Plenty of feminists do. As you yourself have pointed out, there's lots of kinds of feminists. Saying you don't support "feminism" is almost meaningless, and it's also really silly considering that you're obviously aware feminism isn't just one thing.
I do, plenty of other feminists here do, and so no, I don't think this is an oversight by "feminism." Plenty of feminists do pay attention to these issues.
When I say I don't support feminist I do not support any philosophy that has a schism just as I do not support any religious philosophy that claims to be universally applicable, yet also has divisions from within for example I do not believe in Islam as its idea of theology has several variations from within (Shia and Sunni come to mind as an example). If something is universally true, I don't believe it would have division from within its philosophy.
Different branches of feminism are, essentially, different philosophies all together.
You have a "religious philosophy" by the rejection of religion. You have an idea about what religion is and what it does.
With respect to the woman's suffrage movement, it developed to combat white male patriarchy, and it did not address the issues that women of color faced.
Yes but anything universal does not have branches...That is my point.
For example I have an idea about equality, in that I believe all human beings should not be denied nor restrained what they aspire less it is something that harms another. This idea of thought encompasses the right to vote, the right to sell one's body (unless he or she aspires to infect others intentionally), the right to do drugs etc. I firmly believe if the idea of feminism is to address societal patriarchy, and to develop equality among the sexes, then it should address all aspects that effect women AND men, White, Black, Asian, Hispanic. I guess when it comes to feminism, I take an analytic and philosophic approach as to how it addresses women and society. A minor example who be societal expectations of men and women. I mentioned earlier how in sports journalism, men are not allowed to go in the female changing rooms yet women are allowed to go into male changing rooms. some may see that as an arbitrary example but it seems that society tends to oversexualize the female body and create rules for men and not for women. The same can be said about defending oneself. It's socially unacceptable for a man to hit a woman (even if he is legitimatelly defending himself), but its ok for a woman to hit a man because women are biologically weaker.
Yes but anything universal does not have branches...That is my point.
For example I have an idea about equality, in that I believe all human beings should not be denied nor restrained what they aspire less it is something that harms another. This idea of thought encompasses the right to vote, the right to sell one's body (unless he or she aspires to infect others intentionally), the right to do drugs etc. I firmly believe if the idea of feminism is to address societal patriarchy, and to develop equality among the sexes, then it should address all aspects that effect women AND men, White, Black, Asian, Hispanic. I guess when it comes to feminism, I take an analytic and philosophic approach as to how it addresses women and society. A minor example who be societal expectations of men and women. I mentioned earlier how in sports journalism, men are not allowed to go in the female changing rooms yet women are allowed to go into male changing rooms. some may see that as an arbitrary example but it seems that society tends to oversexualize the female body and create rules for men and not for women. The same can be said about defending oneself. It's socially unacceptable for a man to hit a woman (even if he is legitimatelly defending himself), but its ok for a woman to hit a man because women are biologically weaker.
Contradictions are part of every movement, part of every philosophy. In fact, having a unified, fully consistent ideology would have actually been detrimental to the cause. For many of the benefits women finally justly earned, it was on behalf of a modified patriarchy. The reforms were good and just, but it still objectified women to a "natural role." All that changed was the surrounding rationale to what was needing to be done.
Furthermore, I have no idea what you mean by: "rather I believe the women's suffrage movement was more appropriately in addressing the sexism portrayed by white patriarchy in its time of development." Was it more appropriate in that it was typically more limited in scope? Was it appropriate because it held no contradictions? Was it more appropriate because you seem to think it was more universal? Each potential conclusion would be rightly critiqued by any women's, political, and/or gender historian.
Nothing is universal. You always have people who zig when others zag. Name one religion, one political movement, one philosophy that is universal.
And the way doesn't have a nose. Your first statemement makes as much sense as this.
It is very easy to include these examples under feminism in a variety of different ways, including yours. You can even include it more directly by means of ethical responsibility within movements, or indirect sexism, and probably other ways.
If nothing is universal, then feminism is null and void, because the main goal in feminism is equality.
Ok...White men were a privileged bunch. The women's movement was more about white women's rights than about people of color. Which is why you have black feminist like Angela Davis and co. Who highlights the struggle of white male patriarchy and racism. Women of color experience not only racism, but sexism. The first wave of the women's suffrage movement didn't address that. That is what I mean
First and foremost I would like to add that I am personally against feminism due to the idea that feminism does not universally address the problems of all women (hence the notion of Black Feminist, Muslim Feminist etc), rather I believe the women's suffrage movement was more appropriately in addressing the sexism portrayed by white patriarchy in its time of development. According to some feminist, feminist philosophy is about equality and about challenging patriarchy, however despite this noble cause, feminism does not challenge notions of social biases towards women such as child support (which displays a clear bias towards women), journalism (male reporters are barred from entering the locker rooms of female athletes, but women aren't), and societal depictions of female frailty (men shouldn't hit women, but men are expected to take assaults from women). I've even seen some hardcore feminist (most notably Catherine Mackinnon) assert that softcore pronography objectifies women, and that male objectification is not objectification because pornography is about enticing men and satisfying patriarchy
I would like any self-acclaimed feminist if they would, address some societal double standards that feminism does not address?
Ok...White men were a privileged bunch. The women's movement was more about white women's rights than about people of color. Which is why you have black feminist like Angela Davis and co. Who highlights the struggle of white male patriarchy and racism. Women of color experience not only racism, but sexism. The first wave of the women's suffrage movement didn't address that. That is what I mean
My approach is like MLK's, when he speaks on the content of one's character as oppose to one's color. A philosophy on equality has no schism, and if it does its not universal
First and foremost I would like to add that I am personally against feminism due to the idea that feminism does not universally address the problems of all women (hence the notion of Black Feminist, Muslim Feminist etc), rather I believe the women's suffrage movement was more appropriately in addressing the sexism portrayed by white patriarchy in its time of development. According to some feminist, feminist philosophy is about equality and about challenging patriarchy, however despite this noble cause, feminism does not challenge notions of social biases towards women such as child support (which displays a clear bias towards women), journalism (male reporters are barred from entering the locker rooms of female athletes, but women aren't), and societal depictions of female frailty (men shouldn't hit women, but men are expected to take assaults from women). I've even seen some hardcore feminist (most notably Catherine Mackinnon) assert that softcore pronography objectifies women, and that male objectification is not objectification because pornography is about enticing men and satisfying patriarchy
I would like any self-acclaimed feminist if they would, address some societal double standards that feminism does not address?
And that is why feminism continues to progress and change and has included women of color and other marginalized disadvantaged groups such as the LGBT community.
The movement may have started with white, middle class women, who would of course not be aware of the plight of women of color. Women of color brought their struggle to light and now most modern feminists recognize the intersectionality of people, which can include their gender, race, sex, socio-economic status, able-bodied-ness and how each individual experiences life in our society through the lenses of their own experiences.
You keep referencing the first wave of feminism, why have you failed to educate yourself about modern feminist ideals?
So do many feminists.
Keep in mind, being a feminist is not mutually exclusive with being pro-equal rights in any other way.
If you ask me what my position is specifically on women's rights, I will tell you I'm a modified first-wave feminist.
If you ask me what I am in general, I'm a fan of the MLK-style meritocracy (which is to say, it doesn't matter what your good at, and your worth shouldn't be judged on what it is; only that you do it).
So you're anti-feminism because you tripped on basic logic and fell headfirst into the Perfect Solution Fallacy? Bully for bull**** justifications and half-assed rationalization.
And that is why feminism continues to progress and change and has included women of color and other marginalized disadvantaged groups such as the LGBT community.
The movement may have started with white, middle class women, who would of course not be aware of the plight of women of color. Women of color brought their struggle to light and now most modern feminists recognize the intersectionality of people, which can include their gender, race, sex, socio-economic status, able-bodied-ness and how each individual experiences life in our society through the lenses of their own experiences.
You keep referencing the first wave of feminism, why have you failed to educate yourself about modern feminist ideals?
I haven't failed to educate myself, I just believe if the core philosophy of an ideal is based on equality, then it would also include men. Feminism doesn't. Feminism is about uplifting women. I don't subscribe to any philosophy that demonstrates bias at the expense of other people.
When male sports journalist are barred from female changing rooms not only are such restrictions counter-productive, but it oversexualizes the female body which no contemporary feminist today has spoken out against. Why is it that a naked man's body is ok to display or seen by a female journalist but a woman's isn't? To me a feminist would speak out against it.
So alas, any universal philosophy based on equality that has to progress is not universal at all.
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