A Question for the Good Ol’ (blog) Boys About the Choices They Make

I know how committed you are to free speech. I know how intelligent and articulate and creative you are. I know how technologically innovative you are. For those qualities, you have earned my deepest respect. You have earned your professional reputations on the Net in general and in blogdom in particular. Professionally, you are men of vision.
Perhaps, on a personal level, you have wives with professional careers that you wholeheartedly support

8 thoughts on “A Question for the Good Ol’ (blog) Boys About the Choices They Make

  1. I really don’t get this.. is this a post/letter to a specific person or a specific group of people or what?
    Am I, as a man, supposed to feel singled out? Am I supposed to recognize myself at all in this?
    Because, if this isn’t a letter/post directed towards a specific person or group of people, you are being very sexistic as well as prejudice in this very letter/post.

  2. I believe that I linked to the people to whom I was referring in this particular instance. When a man posts something that reflects an attitude that is demeaning to me as a woman, he is setting up an “us” and “them” situation. I didn’t set up the situation; I’m just responding to it. In this case, if the shoe fits, it’s yours. If not, what’s the problem? I think it’s a valid question to any man who chooses to sound sexist on his blog. Why choose to do that?

  3. You explicitly stated that “women can be […] without being sexist” in one of your comments (at burningbird, to which you linked), and that men could not. That in itself is a sexist statement.
    Or is it not sexism if a women speaks it?

  4. Are you really unaware of the vivid prejudice that which you drench your comments in?
    Let me quote you (from burningbird):
    “Why can’t men treat us the way we treat them. We can be funny and clever and flirtatious and even sexy without being sexist. What’s their problem?”
    This is smiply pure prejudice, and sexism, talking. Judging from how you enunciate yourself, this might come as a shock to you; but “men” don’t all think and act alike, we really are individuals, too.

  5. Well, I’m writing this stuff in the context of many many other of my posts, including my interview with Frank Paynter, that put my words in a perspective that you don’t have because you haven’t read all of that. Of course all men are individuals. As are all women. I suppose I should always use the word “some” before men and women to avoid this kind of nit picking. I will do that, for sure from now on. But until you become more familiar with other points I have made in other posts, including on my old blog, I give you the last word, should you choose to take it. I’ve asked the question that I wanted to ask: Why do some otherwise bright, visionary men seem to need to manipulate the idea of “woman” and relegate women to a demeaning status? I don’t think doing that makes the world a more humane and “easy” place for either men or women to live in, and I don’t expect an answer to my question.

  6. I’m confused here: I suppose I should always use the word “some” before men and women to avoid this kind of nit picking. Why is it that it’s “nit picking” (a phrase which implies the complaint is trivial and unimportant) when you do it, but if a man made an over-generalization about women — say, “God dammit, why are women such BITCHES?” — you would probably go all apeshit over his not using the word “some” first?

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