Originally posted by Canarr
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As always, the plural of anecdote is not data.
Originally posted by Canarr
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By the time a woman is old enough to identify the issues with subtle sexism in education, it's typically a point in our lives that we've already dedicated a lot of time and effort towards another field or have obligations that we can't just set aside to pursue a field more to our interests.
I had many interests as a teen.
Writing. People asked if I was going to write romance. >_>
Court Reporter. Sure. That's like advanced typing, that's women's work.
Professional Flautist. Oh, well, you know all the famous flautists are men, right?
Engineer. You know, men are typically better at math than women. "But I'm the best in my class in math." Yeah, well, you just don't have smart classmates. >_<
Originally posted by Canarr
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Did you even know that until 2012, the FBI's definition of rape only counted if the victim was female? It was through the actions of Feminist Majority Foundation that the FBI was pressured into changing their outdated definition.
Do you know that NOW is spearheading the fight to ensure that FMLA applied equally for men as it does for women?
The list goes on. Mostly, men benefit as a side-effect of leveling the playing field, such as having occupations typically considered 'women's work' opened up when it was made possible for women to break into male-dominated fields. Men benefit from increased reproductive rights, more equitable custody rights (most men don't get custody because most men don't ask, which just reinforces the stereotype we're all fighting against), etc, etc, etc.
Originally posted by Canarr
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The same patriarchy that guides women into literature and history is insisting that men are strong and powerful and thus cannot be the victims, even from other men. This is why insults against masculinity are so often inherently sexist. People get called "pussy," asked if they have a "mangina," told to "man up" or "grow a pair," or a host of insults that all do one thing: Enforce the idea that men are strong and powerful and that women are weak and powerless and that if you're womanlike in any fashion, you're not good enough to be a man.
This is all the same fight.
This is the issue that feminism is fighting against.
The claim that, somehow, men get the shaft when women are no longer seen as delicate flowers in need of protection and champions is a lie, propagated by those who don't want to see women on the same footing as themselves because they know, in their hearts, that they are inferior.
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