Thank you for this lengthy and thoughtful reply. I, too, am encouraged to notice the points on which we agree or are not that far off.
I don’t really think you are the “thought police,” and I didn’t mean to imply that. But I do stand by my assessment of your post as vaguely coercive. There is such a thing as coercion by public shaming. I think this is what Roko might have been getting at in his recent post. If you do not see how this is a legitimate concern, then perhaps I can pull an “Alicorn” and just insist that if you were a man, you would know what this feels like. And if you think I am being overly sensitive, well you are just swimming like a fish in a sea: a world that favors your right to say anything you damn please about any gender without automatically questioning your self-awareness, your motives, the amount of serious thought you have put into the issue, and your fish-not-knowing-water-tude.
“I’m sorry you feel creepy. It would be nice if it were possible to confront privilege without feeling creepy.” Obviously I’m not saying it feels creepy to confront privilege. That seems like an almost deliberately obtuse statement on your part… though taken in context of your otherwise respectful comments, I’ll assume it’s meant sincerely.
What feels creepy is the notion that there is some vaguely defined “offensiveness” out there that I — as a person with great affection for and deference to my mother, my three sisters, my wonderful female friends, my respected female co-workers and my stupendous female lovers — cannot sense, and that I must take another’s word for it that I am wrong and the other is right. I can perceive most sexism, but there is a special class of sexism lurking everywhere that I am blind to, even though I’ve thought seriously about these matters. The evidence you link to, incidentally, is rather weak — it is all internal comments, and one might just as easily point to the comments you object to as counter-evidence as each instance is by definition an example of yet another person who feels differently than you on this topic, hence raising your hackles.
Incidentally, Alicorn, for the record (and my apologies to all if this comment is out of place here… I can edit it out if need be...), I actually used to think much closer to the way you do on these topics. I am by no means “blind” to the things you point out, and in fact I used to have a highly developed radar for them. I still pick them out all the time. I just think it is a particular form of contemporary ideology that teaches many people (men and women) that these things are hurtful and must be banished from all hearts and minds, when no one perceived them that way in the past. They are supposed to be inidicative of a disdainful attitude towards women even when, as I assure you is the case with me, no such attitude exists. Or, if the complainant grants that there was no harmful intent, she can still gain traction with the argument that “Well, no, you didn’t mean to insult me, but these kinds of so-called innocuous comments are the stuff with which the patriarchy keeps women down and belittles them etc and is therefore unethical. I am insulted, therefore you are the one who did the insulting.” This is supposedly what makes gender non-neutral statements about women unacceptable while gender non-neutral statements about men are considered by the same people to be regrettable (or occasionally a laff-riot!), but par for the course. When men point out that people make casual blanket generalizations about men all the time and that men rarely complain and usually just chuckle along, they are told that they can’t possibly understand what it feels like from the woman’s point of view, and may also be accused of “calling all girls whiney,” a specter you raise in your disclaimer.
You come very close to this realization when you say to me “I am more offended than you by a certain class of things—specifically, by things that have to do with a group I belong to and you do not”. You see, I’m essentially saying the same thing. Yes, you are more offended than I am, and that’s your problem and not mine. As you say in your rejoinder to my “coercion” comment, no one here is trying to “threaten, intimidate, trick, or otherwise exercise pressure or force on” you.
If, in the absence of threats, intimidation, tricks, pressure, or force —that is: in the absence of any actual harm done to you or anyone else— you persist in feeling offended, that is your business. As I said in my earlier comment, that is every bit your right and I would never want to mock or belittle someone for feeling set-upon as you quite apparently do. It’s a very unpleasant feeling, I know, and I am in no way trying to say that you are imagining your own feelings. But I feel that it is precisely that: your business, and not that of the community.
So what that means for me is that while, naturally, you have every right to say whatever you want on this topic, I remain unconvinced. Perhaps you never intended for me specifically to change anything, as I note that I personally am not linked to in your catalog of offenders. If that’s the case, then bully for both of us, as I have no plans to alter my manner of talking or writing.
I feel this might be the right time to re-state the definition of feminism: “the theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes.” (Websters)
“The theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes” is not the sort of thing that I feel should have a word for it. So I prefer not to identify as “a feminist” on those grounds.
“The theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes” is not the sort of thing that I feel should have a word for it. So I prefer not to identify as “a feminist” on those grounds.
I am perplexed by this statement. Do you mean that discrimination is always wrong, and so we don’t need words for persons who are against particular types of discrimination? Would you therefore also object to the word “abolitionist,” for example, if slavery were still a current issue? Or “suffragist”? I’m really just speculating here; maybe you mean something completely different.
Why is the above downvoted below 0? It is the only post by Alicorn on these issues that seems to warrant upvoting!
I stopped identifying myself as a feminist some years ago, following the same reasoning. (With the added observation that feminism isn’t about equality as my naive assumptions had led me to believe.)
Thank you for this lengthy and thoughtful reply. I, too, am encouraged to notice the points on which we agree or are not that far off.
I don’t really think you are the “thought police,” and I didn’t mean to imply that. But I do stand by my assessment of your post as vaguely coercive. There is such a thing as coercion by public shaming. I think this is what Roko might have been getting at in his recent post. If you do not see how this is a legitimate concern, then perhaps I can pull an “Alicorn” and just insist that if you were a man, you would know what this feels like. And if you think I am being overly sensitive, well you are just swimming like a fish in a sea: a world that favors your right to say anything you damn please about any gender without automatically questioning your self-awareness, your motives, the amount of serious thought you have put into the issue, and your fish-not-knowing-water-tude.
“I’m sorry you feel creepy. It would be nice if it were possible to confront privilege without feeling creepy.” Obviously I’m not saying it feels creepy to confront privilege. That seems like an almost deliberately obtuse statement on your part… though taken in context of your otherwise respectful comments, I’ll assume it’s meant sincerely.
What feels creepy is the notion that there is some vaguely defined “offensiveness” out there that I — as a person with great affection for and deference to my mother, my three sisters, my wonderful female friends, my respected female co-workers and my stupendous female lovers — cannot sense, and that I must take another’s word for it that I am wrong and the other is right. I can perceive most sexism, but there is a special class of sexism lurking everywhere that I am blind to, even though I’ve thought seriously about these matters. The evidence you link to, incidentally, is rather weak — it is all internal comments, and one might just as easily point to the comments you object to as counter-evidence as each instance is by definition an example of yet another person who feels differently than you on this topic, hence raising your hackles.
Incidentally, Alicorn, for the record (and my apologies to all if this comment is out of place here… I can edit it out if need be...), I actually used to think much closer to the way you do on these topics. I am by no means “blind” to the things you point out, and in fact I used to have a highly developed radar for them. I still pick them out all the time. I just think it is a particular form of contemporary ideology that teaches many people (men and women) that these things are hurtful and must be banished from all hearts and minds, when no one perceived them that way in the past. They are supposed to be inidicative of a disdainful attitude towards women even when, as I assure you is the case with me, no such attitude exists. Or, if the complainant grants that there was no harmful intent, she can still gain traction with the argument that “Well, no, you didn’t mean to insult me, but these kinds of so-called innocuous comments are the stuff with which the patriarchy keeps women down and belittles them etc and is therefore unethical. I am insulted, therefore you are the one who did the insulting.” This is supposedly what makes gender non-neutral statements about women unacceptable while gender non-neutral statements about men are considered by the same people to be regrettable (or occasionally a laff-riot!), but par for the course. When men point out that people make casual blanket generalizations about men all the time and that men rarely complain and usually just chuckle along, they are told that they can’t possibly understand what it feels like from the woman’s point of view, and may also be accused of “calling all girls whiney,” a specter you raise in your disclaimer.
You come very close to this realization when you say to me “I am more offended than you by a certain class of things—specifically, by things that have to do with a group I belong to and you do not”. You see, I’m essentially saying the same thing. Yes, you are more offended than I am, and that’s your problem and not mine. As you say in your rejoinder to my “coercion” comment, no one here is trying to “threaten, intimidate, trick, or otherwise exercise pressure or force on” you.
If, in the absence of threats, intimidation, tricks, pressure, or force —that is: in the absence of any actual harm done to you or anyone else— you persist in feeling offended, that is your business. As I said in my earlier comment, that is every bit your right and I would never want to mock or belittle someone for feeling set-upon as you quite apparently do. It’s a very unpleasant feeling, I know, and I am in no way trying to say that you are imagining your own feelings. But I feel that it is precisely that: your business, and not that of the community.
So what that means for me is that while, naturally, you have every right to say whatever you want on this topic, I remain unconvinced. Perhaps you never intended for me specifically to change anything, as I note that I personally am not linked to in your catalog of offenders. If that’s the case, then bully for both of us, as I have no plans to alter my manner of talking or writing.
My memory informs me of no instances in which you’ve said anything that tripped my “gah sexism” switch.
I feel this might be the right time to re-state the definition of feminism: “the theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes.” (Websters)
Why isn’t everyone a feminist?
No offense meant, rela
“The theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes” is not the sort of thing that I feel should have a word for it. So I prefer not to identify as “a feminist” on those grounds.
I am perplexed by this statement. Do you mean that discrimination is always wrong, and so we don’t need words for persons who are against particular types of discrimination? Would you therefore also object to the word “abolitionist,” for example, if slavery were still a current issue? Or “suffragist”? I’m really just speculating here; maybe you mean something completely different.
“Abolitionist” and “suffragist” referred to groups who advocated specific well-defined policy changes. “Feminist” does not so refer.
Why is the above downvoted below 0? It is the only post by Alicorn on these issues that seems to warrant upvoting!
I stopped identifying myself as a feminist some years ago, following the same reasoning. (With the added observation that feminism isn’t about equality as my naive assumptions had led me to believe.)