Question:

What have you learned in G&WS?

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What have you learned in G&WS?

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  1. That some people lead pathetic lives based on hate.


  2. That feminists think they are better than everybody else and their feeling toward men ranges from simple resentment to bitter hatred.

  3. I have learned that men are* mouthy* like broken records,picking on feminist women,and feminist women are trying hard to explain about women rights in society I respect these women here they are highly educated,these men that insults feminist are making them self like buffoons.

  4. That there are some unsharpened tools in the shed...

  5. That feminist continue to use false studies to prop up their side, even after it has been proved the study was flawed.

  6. There's a kind of conservation of energy at work here, making for a grim equality between effort and wasted effort.

  7. That people are narrow minded and think that they should be able to do what ever they want with no consequence... Oh and also, people are robots who allow the media to tell them what is right and wrong.

  8. People are mad...

  9. misogynists have nothing else to do but rant online against women.

  10. I used to think that feminists were out of control.

    Now, I see that feminists are totally out of control.

  11. that people are generally good

    shocking.

    I know.

  12. That misandrists have nothing else to do but rant online against men's shortcomings and that men who don't kiss women's butts are misogynists.

  13. That for an anti-feminist woman/man to say that all women are human-beings are regarded as an anti-feminist feminist.  

    Tex's Avatar Tex

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        March 18, 2008

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    Tehabwa asserts: "Being anti-feminist means rejecting the notion that women are human beings"?

    and "accepting that women are human beings IS being a feminist." Agree or disagree?

    Is tehabwa what we call a "radical"? Will you ignore her meaningless hysteria or listen up and take notes?

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    52 minutes ago

    To not be accused of taking tehabwa out of context , this was tehabwa's answer in it's entirety:

    "Nails what? Self-contradiction?

    Hardly deserving a "brava" (assuming a woman wrote it).

    Being anti-feminist means rejecting the notion that women are human beings; accepting that women are human beings IS being a feminist.

    Thus, she's either a person who thinks women aren't human beings who does think women are human beings, or is an anti-feminist feminist.

    What is it that what people who understand that women are human don't have anything to say ABOUT that doesn't fly?"

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  14. A LOT.  I really didn't know any history about the woman's movement in the U.S. and Canada and reading everyone's links has led to quite an education in that field of study.  I especially enjoyed being introduced to Mary Woolstonecraft's writings for not only their rationality of content but also for the exquisite beauty of her writing style.  

    Also, I have been educated here about the rise in female initiated domestic violence.  I examined this phenomenon on my "own" time not from the silly "gender" dichotomy pre-sexual gonadal way this issue tends to be examined here but from the perspective of 1) Have women always been this likely to initiate domestic violence and it simply was not reported as such prior to feminism bringing the issue of domestic violence to the attention of the social consciousness, OR, 2) Has there instead been a rise in violent behavior among women, and if so why?  The answer is there's DEFINATELY a rise occuring in violent behaviors among women that surpasses the rise in violent behaviors that is also occuring among men, only young men, though, but throughout ALL ages among women.  I'm still working on the ". . . and if so why?"

    I also learned to have a thicker skin emotionally here.  I am not so easily frightened off in real life discussions anymore, thanks to the practice I've gained here speaking safely with men.  I have a speech problem related to speaking with men and since this experience, it has nearly completely resolved.  I have also, most unfortunately, learned here that We the People are in trouble as a society that seems to prefer these days and times apparently to gnaw like a mere dog on parts of itself rather than lucidly form any honorable consensus together for the good of all.  I have learned that people in general are far more afraid than I am and that makes me wonder how to fix that.

  15. That (apparently) all men who don't kiss women's butts are misogynists.

  16. That there are some seriously frightening, angry, bitter people out there.

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