• Neato
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    468 months ago

    The answer to “not all men” is indeed “enough men”.

    The issue isn’t that it’s 100% of men that do a thing. It’s that it’s enough you have to plan for it to happen every time. Ah in that case you may as well just assume it’s all and be pleasantly surprised if you’re wrong.

      • @thefactthat
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        8 months ago

        I’m sorry, what even is this argument?? The commenter above you is saying that women have enough proven experience of men being shitty to have to prepare for it in every interaction. Even if they know that it’s ‘not all men’ it’s enough that they have to assume it could be any single one.

        The only way this could be comparable to racism is if people had legitimate reasons to mistrust other races, which is not the case. Racism is the result of exaggerated stories and mistrust being created about a community with whom the racist generally has no connection.

        Most of the time women being wary of men doesn’t lead to misandry, it just leads to world-weariness and guardedness around men until we know we can trust them. But even if it did, misandry and misogyny are not equivalent. Misogyny is a prejudice which has been embedded in society for millennia and which has only begun to be deconstructed in the last century. Misandry is a response to this condition, but it is not structural, it’s the position held by a handful of women exhausted by their shitty experiences with shitty men.

        It’s honestly a wonder that more women don’t viscerally hate every man in existence, and men should be thankful that we continue to go out and put ourselves out there despite the plethora of bad and downright dangerous things we’ve experienced. Knowing that men can do awful things and preparing for that possibility is just a survival tactic for remaining in the world.

      • @Dry_Monk
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        68 months ago

        …sure, I guess? An argument can be repurposed to try and make a lot of different points. Here’s the thing though…

        A logical argument is considered valid if its conclusion follows necessarily from its premises, meaning that if the premises are true, the conclusion must also be true. However, an argument can be valid but not necessarily true (like the argument you’re suggesting). This is because validity only concerns the form of the argument, not the truth of the premises or the conclusion.

        Here are some examples of valid but not necessarily true arguments:

        Modus ponens: If it’s raining, then the streets will be wet. It is raining. Therefore, the streets will be wet. This argument is valid because it follows the form of a valid argument, but it may not be true if the streets are not wet for some other reason.

        Modus tollens: If it is not raining, then the streets will not be wet. The streets are not wet. Therefore, it is not raining. This argument is valid because it follows the form of a valid argument, but it may not be true if the streets are not wet for some other reason.

        Hypothetical syllogism: If it is raining, then the streets will be wet. If the streets are wet, then the roads are slippery. Therefore, if it is raining, then the roads are slippery. This argument is valid because it follows the form of a valid argument, but it may not be true if the roads are not slippery for some other reason.

        In each of these examples, the argument is valid because it follows a valid logical form, but it may not be true because the premises or conclusion may not be true.

        Now think about the “enough men” argument. It’s not translatable to misogyny and racism because the context (the premises) is vastly different for people who don’t identify as men, and for people who are not white, straight, or really any other centered group (these things vary a lot depending on the specific culture you’re looking at and the intersectional dynamics that exist). Not enough women are violent towards men (though this does happen, and it is also bad) for men to have a realistic need to protect themselves in as many interactions.

        Using the argument out of specific context, without true premises, nearly guarantees that the argument will no longer be true, while still being logically valid.

      • @[email protected]
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        28 months ago

        It’s not misandry to be wary around men. Rape culture is a thing. It is not equivalent to racism.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          It is misandry to generalize and discriminate against men because “all men are dangerous scumbags” or something.

          Besides, it doesn’t help anyone, really, and fosters extra anxieties and aggression.

          We absolutely need cultural shift that would help everyone (both women and men) to expose rapists and any sort of harassment. We need to eliminate any cultural acceptability of those actions that remain.

          We do not need to propagate hate based on gender/sex.

          Absolute majority of men are perfectly normal human beings, like absolute majority of black people aren’t criminals, or absolute majority of gays are not child molesters or whatever the stereotypes were. Besides, all of those traits are immutable.

          • @[email protected]
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            08 months ago

            It’s a good thing literally no one actually thinks that all men are dangerous scumbags

              • @[email protected]
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                18 months ago

                People might say that on the internet, but how many of those people have male SOs, or dads, or brothers? Could they be engaging in hyperbole?

                • @[email protected]
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                  8 months ago

                  Some women go as far as to reject any heterosexual relationships despite being attracted to men for precisely this reason, and they often come from bad families, so relationship with men in the family is also negative.

                  Sure, most women are less radical, but even for them this constant hyperbole often sends anxiety levels to the moon, makes them unhealthily cautious, obsessed, in some cases paranoid.

                  Many women who have never been abused or threatened (at least from what they say) in any serious way can develop fear and loathing of men simply by leaning into this narrative.

                  And this seriously messes with very real relationships.

                  And it’s not a case of “women stupid”, no. Men can and do absolutely fall for the similar traps, growing stereotypes about women and leaning into them. It’s a universal human trait, and the one we have to address.

          • @[email protected]
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            08 months ago

            People use arguments to justify everything. Sometimes they’re right, sometimes they’re wrong. This is a stupid point.

            and rape culture isn’t really a thing, it’s not a culture… it’s a problem but that’s the wrong word.

            If you can’t be bothered to so much as type “what is rape culture” into google, I’m done talking to you

              • @[email protected]
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                8 months ago

                in most cultures, rape is seen as pretty bad.

                Yes, literally everyone agrees that rape is bad. The problem is that in our culture, we have a bad habit of rationalizing what we do as not really rape. How many times have you heard someone ask what a woman was wearing, or why she was walking home at night instead of driving, or why she was alone at a bar, or why she didn’t fight back, or why she didn’t report sexual violence as soon as it happened? Why does nearly every woman have at least one experience with sexual violence? Why did we elect a guy who openly admitted to sexual assault as president? It’s almost like we have a culture around enabling and forgiving rape, in large part by rationalizing it as “not really” rape. I wonder if there’s a word for a culture that enables sexual violence.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    08 months ago

                    the way he said it was framed as joking… and a lot of people accepted it as just a joke (it turned out he was actually bragging…)

                    YOU HAVE JUST DESCRIBED RAPE CULTURE.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        Lemme try again. The same argument is not used (at least, not legitimately) to justify racism, because you do not have to actively take precautions to defend yourself from people of other races.

    • @[email protected]
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      38 months ago

      That’s not how assumptions work though. You might be “pleasantly surprised”, then the guy realizes “wow, I super hated being treated like that just for being male” and wisely stays the fuck away.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        Ask any woman, they’ll let you know that some guys take that “wow, I super hated being treated like that” and don’t wisely stay the fuck away. Someone who cannot empathize with the caution women have to show around strangers is probably not the best partner anyway.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          “Caution” alone is fine, it’s cute you think that’s the extent of what gets justified by that line of thinking.

    • @[email protected]
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      38 months ago

      But why have people I know given me a ton of flak for the actions of men that I’ve never met nor had the opportunity to try to correct the actions of, merely for having a penis? Like, sorry for not being a clairvoyant and not stopping something from happening to you before I met you.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        Do people give you a ton of flak, or do they complain about things they’ve experienced exclusively at the hands of men and you’re getting defensive about it?

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          If it were just venting to me, I wouldn’t say I was getting flak. Its the venting but also the finger pointing, acting like I was there and egging it on, when I wasn’t around it at all.

      • Neato
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        08 months ago

        Maybe because you defend them. Or they see you not being a proactive force. It’s not enough to stand by and wait for something horrendous to happen to try to stop. You need to be part of the culture of change which means changing how you joke and talk about things to actively pursuing to change even bad and minor habits of those you socialize with.

        Anything less is condoning.

        • @[email protected]
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          -18 months ago

          Thanks for assuming I’m the problem or at least perpetuating it.

          Because I’m a man, right?