Moiraine Posted September 22, 2017 Author Share Posted September 22, 2017 3 minutes ago, teachercd said: I agree! The idea that we need a term for this is silly! The idea that people patronize each other holds merit! You were saying everyone was doing what the word mansplaining was describing, and that wasn't the case. People weren't being patronizing nor were they being patronizing due to gender. That you don't think there should be a word for it is a separate discussion. The one we were actually having. Link to comment
teachercd Posted September 22, 2017 Share Posted September 22, 2017 It is...and now you are doing it. we all do it! like you said, its not really a gender thing. Link to comment
Moiraine Posted September 22, 2017 Author Share Posted September 22, 2017 5 minutes ago, teachercd said: It is...and now you are doing it. we all do it! like you said, its not really a gender thing. We've come full circle again. People are patronizing to others due to their gender. That's what the topic is about. Like I already said, you're talking about one thing. Everyone else is talking about something else. Acting patronizing because someone's being a willful moron is not nearly as bad as doing so because they're male/female. 1 Link to comment
teachercd Posted September 22, 2017 Share Posted September 22, 2017 Agreed, again! Like you keep saying, the name is fake...there is already a name for it. Link to comment
Moiraine Posted September 22, 2017 Author Share Posted September 22, 2017 4 minutes ago, teachercd said: Like you keep saying I didn't say that (but don't necessarily disagree). There's also a name for dogs and cats - mammal. Link to comment
teachercd Posted September 22, 2017 Share Posted September 22, 2017 And canine and feline! Link to comment
Landlord Posted September 22, 2017 Share Posted September 22, 2017 2 hours ago, knapplc said: You can be offended without me being offensive. That's a you problem, not a me problem. All women have experienced fear walking alone at night, or being catcalled or sexually harassed or having to deal with unwanted advances from men. But not all men are predators or harassers. Is that a women problem, or a men problem? Also of note, I don't have any need to make men out to be bad guys. We're (Moiraine and I) just trying to talk about a specific context and a lot of people in this thread are giving the classic, "what about the other side?" response. I'm very comfortably and gladly male, I quite enjoy masculinity, and I don't feel burdened by any guilt or shame about any of that. 1 Link to comment
knapplc Posted September 22, 2017 Share Posted September 22, 2017 Those aren't remotely the same thing. In my example, my benign action somehow offends you. That's on you. In your example, someone is intentionally inflicting themselves on someone else. Link to comment
teachercd Posted September 22, 2017 Share Posted September 22, 2017 First off...I am 6'3 and 210 and I am scared of walking alone at night. Aren't most people? Link to comment
Landlord Posted September 22, 2017 Share Posted September 22, 2017 "but to tell me that my gender is guilty of this is simply wrong. SOME of my gender is, but it's not common enough..." The point being that nobody has said in this thread or, at least as far as I can tell, ever in real life, anything to the effect of, "all men mansplain. that's just what men do." Nobody has accused your gender of being guilty of this. It's a term reserved for when SOME of your gender actually do it. If your issue is that your gender is singled out because "womansplaining" isn't considered appropriate or whatever, then the response to that is that it's not equal both ways. Then your response is "according to who?", which of course the natural response back, in classic male-on-male-splaining fashion, would be, "well according to who is only SOME of your gender guilty of this?" Also of note, benign intent doesn't equate to benign functionality. It could be on you, or it could be on the other person, or it could be a degree of both of those things. Link to comment
knapplc Posted September 22, 2017 Share Posted September 22, 2017 14 minutes ago, Landlord said: Nobody has accused your gender of being guilty of this. The term itself presents a guilty-until-proven-innocent idea. Mansplaining. Who does this? According the the word, men. We are either guilty of this or potentially guilty of this, by the very spelling of the word. In the past feminists have expressed a desire to change the word woman to womyn to eliminate the inherent from-maleness of it,. Link to comment
Landlord Posted September 23, 2017 Share Posted September 23, 2017 something something "women's benign explanations for what happens to them offends you. that's on you." But yes. Men are the people who mansplain. Nowhere has it ever been intimated that all men do this, but that when it is done, that's what it is, and that all women have experienced it. Do you have a similar dismissal of and problem with terms such as 'white privilege'? Link to comment
teachercd Posted September 23, 2017 Share Posted September 23, 2017 And women...womensplain, right? Link to comment
B.B. Hemingway Posted September 23, 2017 Share Posted September 23, 2017 51 minutes ago, Landlord said: something something "women's benign explanations for what happens to them offends you. that's on you." But yes. Men are the people who mansplain. Nowhere has it ever been intimated that all men do this, but that when it is done, that's what it is, and that all women have experienced it. Do you have a similar dismissal of and problem with terms such as 'white privilege'? Link to comment
Moiraine Posted September 23, 2017 Author Share Posted September 23, 2017 1 hour ago, knapplc said: The term itself presents a guilty-until-proven-innocent idea. Mansplaining. Who does this? According the the word, men. We are either guilty of this or potentially guilty of this, by the very spelling of the word. No it doesn't. 20 minutes ago, teachercd said: And women...womensplain, right? Some women, sometimes. Link to comment
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