In a similar vein to some of Apt's and BL's posts above, it does sort of seem like there a lot of opinions being expressed here that require both expressing empathy and trying to change a societal system as zero-sum entities.
The scale, scope, frequency, etc, of any societal injustice does not automatically invalidate another. There's no need to rail against men's inequality in custodial court hearings being brought up as an issue because people can work towards changing both that and, say, reshaping police biases against women in rape investigations. One issue does not take away from another unless they are mutually exclusive.
Furthermore, just because there are vocal examples of MRAs or other groups that are... well let's just call them total misogynist assholes, does not mean that *all* such people who use that label or talk about such issues can be painted with the same brush. There's a lot of feminist extremists out there who take things too far, but it doesn't make all feminists like that. Even if 99.99% of Christian parishes acted like the Westboro Baptist Church, it wouldn't mean we should just assume the other 0.01% are the same just because they fall under the same umbrella term. Oscar Schindler was a member of the Nazi party, etc, extreme example, etc.
Even at the level of an individual - one person having a single opinion you don't agree with doesn't necessarily invalidate their arguments on any other topic.
Grief, on 30 January 2015 - 05:30 PM, said:
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).
MRA is a tricky topic. While most of what I've seen of the movement itself has been extremely toxic, I do think there are gender inequalities facing men. As Worry says, I think mostly these stem from the same roots as gender inequalities facing women. The construction of gender stereotypes is relative, and mostly operates on a binary. I think the core issues are essentially the same, it's just that the particular symptoms are different (which is in part why I'm not sure that "patriarchy" is a really great term, and I'm not super sold on "feminism" either, since I think it isn't ideal for representing what the movement is about).
I also wonder if the general tone of the discourse, such as Worry telling men who feel discriminated against to "cry me a river" isn't actually a product of the same gender stereotypes; that it's essentially saying men should "man up" and not complain. The argument that "other people have it worse" is not usually a legitimate way of silencing a complaint, and would be shouted down in other circumstances.
There is of course a fine line here -- I think the causes of inequalities facing men is at heart the same thing that cause the inequalities faced by women, so the idea that fixing areas where men are discriminated against would happen somehow at the expense of women's rights just doesn't seem right to me; it isn't some sort of tug of war. I think it would be good to see more men trying to address gender inequality (because I think in part the reason I don't see this is because of gender stereotyping), but that this should be done as one movement. I think that MRA movements do highlight some of the specific problems of gender inequality as it affects men (which I'm not sure the feminist movement always does a great job of doing), but mostly these seem used to justify attacking the feminist movement, which to me seems counterproductive, and mostly the movement seems to call for "more rights for men" instead of "equal rights for everyone".
I agree, a lot of the problems of both sides do probably often stem from the same cultural roots.
Not sure I agree about having more unified movements, though. IMO, one of the problems with modern feminism is that it is all one big umbrella term for a whole slew of movements for different societal changes, which any given 'feminist' may or may not agree with every single aspect of it, and the overall thing not having a very concrete goal - a far cry from the more unified and coordinated push for women's voting rights, for example.
Especially nowadays, it's so easy for people to hear some crazies spewing nonsense and lump everyone under an umbrella term like "MRAs" or "feminazis" and dismiss it. Whereas I think something like an "Association of Men for Military Service Equality" and a separate "Movement for Men's Parental Rights" would do a better job of creating specific, organized action that might actually achieve something instead of an "MRA" that just kind of sits still and complains because it has too many heads. There'd probably be a lot of overlap between the members, and that's not a problem at all. To some extent feminism is already quietly doing that - you hear a lot more in the news about action/talks from, say, the local "Women's Business Association" or "Date Rape Prevention Center" then from the vaguer "Feminists Are Us" and "Anti Patriarchy Society" groups.
Of course, there will always be people who prefer to sit and complain about it, especially on the internet. If only the news outlets and social media trends would stop listening to them and realize there are actual other organizations that are less vocal because they're working on making change really happen.