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- #25
scout86
VIP Member
Maybe I wasn't clear. I don't want anyone to get hurt. But, if someone is going to set up a situation where they are making someone getting hurt more likely, I feel like I have more of an obligation to try to keep everyone else safe than I have an obligation to the one who's creating the problem. Besides, that person isn't going to listen to me anyone. Exactly like the situation @ShikibuZ described.Wow. That's your "GOAL" when you work with a person who you perceive is insensitive?
I suppose. So they might not understand that being demeaned because of your gender gets old. Not being sarcastic there, I can see how they might not get it, because it's something they don't experience. But it DOES get old. Because, even when they joke among themselves, putting men down, I doubt they really mean it. Actually, it's kind of like someone who's black could use the N word in a joke and it wouldn't be offensive, like it would be if someone of another race did it.Guys like to joke about women because guys often don´t understand women.
No. But, I also have to deal with the rest of the world. And, like I said, I guess I'm just getting a bit tired of having to do twice the job for half the credit. Or having to convince people that maybe I'm the "exception" who actually IS competent. Personally, being tired of it is probably just a phase, but right now, I'm tired of it.And are you going to let stereotypes and jokes define who you are?
Agreed!But isolating yourself from society as a group (and deriving some type of identity from being victimized) does not help anyone.
There, you lost me. Men and women experience different emotions?and experience other emotions than the set of emotions that guys have.
That I can understand, and relate to. And that kind of thing doesn't bother me, because I KNOW it's just that they don't know better and they'd never mean to be hurtful. What bothered me about this was that it seemed to come from a place where "respect" wasn't part of the picture. And it seemed like they were so confident of their own superiority that they were entitled to point it out.People who have been friends with me for years and greatly respect me sometimes ask the most crude and distasteful questions about gender like you wouldn´t believe. It´s just because they´re uninformed.
I guess, personally, I see a bit of a slippery slope from this kind of thing to actual harassment. Or any other kind of bigoted behavior, for that matter. If you don't see the person you're talking about as a person worthy of respect, then how they feel about your behavior doesn't matter, does it? Isn't that why someone who runs around groping women thinks it's ok? Because what the women think doesn't matter? (The same in reverse, obviously.) Aren't a lot of the problems between people amount to one person or group not respecting the value of another, or valuing them less, or something? What do you do about that? Nothing?