Gorefest, on 30 January 2015 - 12:16 PM, said:
Apt, on 30 January 2015 - 09:23 AM, said:
The fact that you ask if this is a thing probably says a lot about our society.
http://en.wikipedia....rights_movement
EDIT: Keep in mind that a bunch of the issues raised in this article is certain groups trolling feminists. It's simple counterarguments to feminist requests, made more to slight the other, than an actual perceived need.
Like when one half-jokingly demands that if there should be a Women's rights day, then men should have one to. Or how if there's a black history month, then there should be a white history month.
But surely that's a load of bollocks? The whole point about having civil rights movements is because the chosen position is a minority or suppressed sector of the general society. Historically and culturally, most Judeo-Christian and Muslim societies are heavily patriarchal. The men have been at the top for centuries. Denying that echoes of that situation still reverberate through in today's society is quite blinkered in my opinion. Sure, some civil rights movements can tend to verge on the extreme with their demands, but to have a reactionary movement by the empowered majority to reinstate the structural imbalance is just farcical and petty.
Just because the scales of equality are imbalanced does not mean you should ignore the bigger picture. If you want equality, if you want political correctness, then you can't just turn a blind eye to the things you care less about.
Why should men as a social group care about equality, if the part of the system that favors women, is not also criticized?
If your argument in the case of custody for example, is "because women are obviously better parents" then you might as well throw the whole debate out the window, "because obviously men are better workers", therefore women should stay at home in the kitchen.
Illuyankas, on 30 January 2015 - 12:46 PM, said:
Quote
List of bad things that happens or happened to women
But you're right, guys have it so much worse.
Now first of all, I NEVER said men have it worse. That was the illogical, outraged typically self-righteous conclusion that you jumped to as usual Illy, please stop that.
Second of all your logic here is that because, perceivable, statistically, women get more shit than men, men as a whole should just eat their shit and be happy about it?
What kind of shitty self-deprecating bullshit is that?
worry, on 30 January 2015 - 12:38 PM, said:
TotalBiscuit minimized the very real threats against Anita by saying they weren't credible because "she's still breathing" and consistently derides the concerns of feminist-friendly gamers. He has his followers swarm SJWs or anti-GG people or whatever you want to call them to do his dirty work while keeping his own hands clean. He also consistently interacts in a friendly way with GG's harrassers (such as serial harassers RogueStar and Internet Aristocrat). He's a scumbag (IMO) who pretends he's above the fray.
You could say the same thing about Zoe Quinn, Sarkeesian and lots of other people associated with the anti-GG side of this debate. Zoe Quinn has, and I have seen the Tweets, more than once singled out individual people on her Twitter that she disagreed with and the internet has descended upon them. Most notable was the "Fine Young Capitalist" fiasco where she torpedoed a project for women entrepreneurs simply because she didn't agree with their approach. I'll come back to that below.
Quinn uses her role in the industry to say and do stupid shit but she is of course beyond approach because she is the heroine in this tale.
I have seen TotalBiscuit single out the people in the media who were most definitely full of shit. Like for example the "gamers are dead" people, who instead of siding with their fanbase, decided to turn against it. TotalBiscuit is allowed to disagree with the writers of Kotaku, Polygon, etc. He is also allowed to associate with people on both sides of the fence. That does not make him a racist and a misogynist.
Am I a misogynist because I argue against Sarkeesian and Quinn? Are we going to get into some kind of "degree's of free speech" debate here?
worry, on 30 January 2015 - 12:38 PM, said:
GamerGate started with the persecution of Quinn, period (Adam Baldwin even named it within that context). The more general "ethics in game journalism" issue was the pretext, not the other way around. Any argument to the contrary is false. You start there, or you're wrong. Quinn is a "bully" in the same sense that fighting off your attackers is, technically, "violence."
Listen to how dug in you are on this topic. Any argument to the contrary is false?
Here we go:
From this article which criticizes both sides but is arguably is in favor of GamerGate.
http://reason.com/ar...-and-gender-gam
Quote
Last February, Quinn learned about a women's videogame contest sponsored by a charity called The Fine Young Capitalists, or TFYC—artists and entrepreneurs who seek to encourage the creation of videos and videogames by women and minorities. Women were invited to submit ideas for videogames; the winner was to work with TFYC's designers and programmers to develop her concept into a game and get a cut from its sales. Quinn was outraged by what she felt was the contestants' "unpaid labor"—but even more so by the rule requiring transgender participants to publicly identify as female prior to the start of the contest. In dozens of angry tweets, Quinn accused TFYC of exploiting women and "policing transwomen's transition points," then gloated over accidentally crashing their website with her Twitter storm. (In August, Quinn claimed that she had only "posted 4 tweets saying I didn't know how I felt about their approach.") In a recent interview, a TFYC spokesman said that Quinn later continued to publicly attack the contest as "exploitative" and "transphobic," resulting in online harassment toward the group, loss of financial backing, and the cancelation of several planned articles about the project. Quinn and her supporters have cited a conciliatory statement TFYC issued in late August as a rebuttal of those accusations; but that statement was a "peace treaty" TFYC withdrew a few days later, saying that Quinn had not held up her end of the bargain.
Here's her Tweets in a spoiler box because of the size:
Look at the shit she is posting there. Is this a woman protecting herself or is it an angry feminist, using her following to ruin somebody else's life? Notice how much fucking fun she is having here. I will remind you that the head of this project was doxxed and threatened just like Quinn has been.
I will repeat what I have said every time Zoe Quinn has come up in this thread. It's really fucking awful the shit she'd been subjected to but she is not a victim. Zoe Quinn has power. Like TotalBiscuit, when she says or does something it has a ripple effect.
worry, on 30 January 2015 - 12:38 PM, said:
Re: men's rights arguments. Short answer: No, I do not ignore them. Yes, I do dismiss many of them. Men can cry me a river on the child support issue. The custody thing is a myth built on misinterpreting stats and avoiding nuance (high rates of domestic abuse, for instance). But hey, don't take my word for it, take it from the American Bar Association:
http://www.americanb...uthcheckdam.pdf
You're going to have to explain the significance of these myths. None of the 10 examples listed have anything directly to do with men vs women custody issues, unless you factor in an abusive relationship.
But you did make me do a bit of googling. Various searches does indicate that for example custody issues have become much more fair over the past 40 years. I will give you that.
But seeing as I have some kind of pathological need to win my arguments I went on reddit and searched for statistics and rights and other good stuff. There's this thread among many others:
http://www.reddit.co...male_oppression
Are these issues worse or somehow more important than the issues women face daily in the Western world? Of course not but they are real. They are problematic, And stating that ”men can cry you a river” is incredibly unproductive. I might even say that you are marginalizing men and making me feel oppressed, if I hadn't suppressed my emotions decades ago to better fit societies image of how a man should behave and express himself.
worry, on 30 January 2015 - 12:38 PM, said:
Issues like men-only military service, lack of paternity leave, social pressures of masculinity: all results of patriarchy. Exactly the thing most "SJW"s/feminists are concerned with (also, one neat thing announced recently with Feminist Frequency's financial disclosure report is that they will be starting another series on depictions of masculinity in gaming this year).
But just so we are clear. This is an issue. It is infringing upon men's rights. So there is an equality. This isn't some sub-subject that can only be solved after we smash the patriarch-machine it should be addressed head on. Not as a part of a feminist movement but as a broader, societal reform.
This post has been edited by Apt: 30 January 2015 - 03:02 PM