• Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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    8 months ago

    It’s almost like she’s trying to be polite because she knows that sometimes guys turn violent when they’re rejected.

    EDIT: Look, I’m getting tired of this. Not a single person arguing with this is having a conversation about this that is based in reality, they are just trying to twist words to make it sound like maybe there’s some equivalence here. Have some statistics from Australia. You can look them up for your country if you care:

    https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/crime-and-justice/personal-safety-australia/latest-release

    Those discrepancies are shocking but not really that surprising if you’ve lived in society at all. Also, this is just rates of violence, of any kind. It says nothing at all about the consequences of that violence. I’ll bet if you looked into that it’s worse for women too. If you’re wondering why so many categories don’t have rates of violence against men, it’s because they have a “high relative standard error”, which is statistics speak for “the rate is so low we can’t properly measure it”.

    But if you’re saying, “NOt All mEn” in the face of this reality then let’s be real, you don’t actually give a shit about this. You just feel personally attacked and you want to deflect. Men getting mad because their fragile egos are bruised. Maybe some of them would turn violent if a woman said it to their faces. As they say, a hit dog will bark.

    • Tyfud@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      This. And I’m a guy. I completely understand why women are “overly” nice.

    • Seasoned_Greetings@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Woah now, you better not be insinuating that men and women are anything but exactly equal in their temperament. The salty dudes on Lemmy won’t let you get away with telling them otherwise.

      I’ve been in a handful of conversations over the last couple weeks with men on this platform that don’t understand the concept that women have to treat men a specific way for fear of the few of them that can be violent.

      Apparently watching out for your own safety as a woman by treating men differently is sexist and completely unacceptable.

      • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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        8 months ago

        No, no, you’re supposed to treat everyone fairly, the exact same way and always assuming they are the best, most stable people who would never react adversely to a “no” or any other negative occurrence.

        And then when you run into that statistically inevitable crazy person, just let em beat you to death! You wouldn’t want to hurt the feelings of all the perfectly decent people you met before then, would you?

        Big giant /S

        This is unfortunately one of those cases where the mere existence of dangerous individuals makes being a little unfair with the rest of us completely warranted.

      • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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        8 months ago

        Men killing women and women being afraid of being killed by men is apparently exactly the same thing, and we’re sexist for even noticing it. How dare we make them aware of an uncomfortable truth that they were successfully ignoring?

        As always, noticing bigotry is the real bigotry.

        • Seasoned_Greetings@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          It’s not a hard concept to grasp. Thank you for saying it, and don’t pay the salty dudes here any mind. I readily tell the ones that argue on behalf of their egos to just talk to any woman they know about this, and I always get some half-cocked “well they’re bigots too” line.

          Like yeah sure, every woman is explicitly taught by other women not to put themselves in a potentially compromising position with a man because all women are secretly bigots.

          The male ego is such a fragile thing.

          • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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            8 months ago

            Thanks for saying that. The sheer volume of unadulterated bullshit can be a little bit gaslighting sometimes.

            • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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              8 months ago

              I wanna add that it’s a delight to see someone competently explaining something that needs to be more widely understood.

              This is what social media should be for. The ever advancing push towards consensus and common understanding.

      • quindraco@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        Bear in mind Lemmy is an overall very leftist platform. Claiming an outside observer can tell a man from a woman is going to attract downvotes, let alone going on to list alleged specific differences.

        Note to readers, because I am used to Lemmy: Anyone assuming I agree or disagree with any given take on gender differences can fuck off. My actual post conveys no opinion on them.

        • Seasoned_Greetings@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          You’re completely correct. Normally, I’m on the side of not assuming people’s gender and I’m of the mind that you shouldn’t judge a book by it’s cover.

          But, because of the safety and personal ramifications crossing the wrong person can have, I think it’s important that we acknowledge a woman’s right to seek safety in a situation she perceives might possibly go south for her. That includes the prerogative of not putting herself in a situation that she perceives as risky to begin with.

          Maybe that concept would be better accepted if it were expanded to “Anyone should have the right to avoid danger they think they might be in”

      • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        Woah now, you better not be insinuating that men and women are anything but exactly equal in their temperament.

        I’ve honestly been taught that blanket statements about sex/gender are usually not fine. So this sort of shit feels wrong in that sense and of course hurtful when you’re at the receiving end of a negative blanket statement. I’m sure many can agree with that sentiment in general terms, whether it’s based on skin colour, sex/gender, sexual orientation or whatever.

        Apparently watching out for your own safety as a woman by treating men differently is sexist and completely unacceptable.

        I mean treating all men different is sexist and prejudiced. There’s really no way around that. Whether this sort of blanket prejudice is justified in this case, could be. But also that’s not a great look, to justify statistics or stereotype based prejudice.

        • Seasoned_Greetings@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          1 in 3 women experience sexual assault of some kind in their lifetimes. 99% of the perpetrators are men.

          It’s not unreasonable for a woman to avoid putting herself in a situation that a potential predator can take advantage of or retaliate against her for. Talk to a woman you know about this. I’m tired of having this conversation with men who don’t understand and just get offended.

          So this sort of shit feels wrong in that sense and of course hurtful when you’re at the receiving end of a negative blanket statement

          You have been on the receiving end your entire life if you are a man, and 9 times out of 10, you have not noticed because it does not affect you. It’s not about you, especially if you aren’t a predator.

          • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            I’m tired of having this conversation with men who don’t understand and just get offended.

            Easy solution would be to talk about it in a manner that doesn’t need a clarification that’s you don’t think all men are like that. That’s really the issue with the way this is discussed.

            Nobody is denying the situation here, but rather taking offence to being labeled because of their gender.

            You have been on the receiving end your entire life if you are a man, and 9 times out of 10, you have not noticed because it does not affect you.

            I’m sorry but receiving end of what?

            • Seasoned_Greetings@lemm.ee
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              8 months ago

              Easy solution would be to talk about it in a manner that doesn’t need a clarification that’s you don’t think all men are like that. That’s really the issue with the way this is discussed.

              Believe me, that’s not the solution you think it is.

              Nobody is denying the situation here, but rather taking offence to being labeled because of their gender.

              Unfortunately, people who take offense will find ways to deny the situation. The fact is, if you’re walking down the street and a woman 100 ft out moves to the other side before crossing you, she understands that there is a slight chance you might be a danger to her.

              That’s discrimination that you can neither control nor fight against as a man. It also doesn’t affect you if you weren’t planning on assaulting that woman. But just the fact that it is done rustles so many jimmies because the knee jerk reaction men have is “well I wasn’t going to assault anyone so that’s messed up”. But that line of thinking is a way of framing the situation to make it about you. It’s not about you.

              What I’m saying is, women don’t think all men are like that. That would be completely ridiculous. But statistically, enough of them are to warrant not being immediately trusting of strangers that can biologically overpower them in every situation.

              I’m sorry but receiving end of what?

              Bro. I quoted you. The receiving end of “a negative blanket” against men

              • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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                8 months ago

                Believe me, that’s not the solution you think it is.

                How come?

                That’s discrimination that you can neither control nor fight against as a man. It also doesn’t affect you if you weren’t planning on assaulting that woman. But just the fact that it is done rustles so many jimmies because the knee jerk reaction men have is “well I wasn’t going to assault anyone so that’s messed up”. But that line of thinking is a way of framing the situation to make it about you. It’s not about you.

                I’m not talking about someone switching to another side of the street because of my gender or skin colour or any other reason one might discriminate, but rather the discussion that talks about a group as thing singular thing and makes it seem like it was all of of them. Not to mention going after people who obviously take offense to being labeled in such a way. I find it fucked up and I don’t see any reason to do that.

                Bro. I quoted you. The receiving end of “a negative blanket” against men

                It wasn’t clear what you meant. Hence the need for clarification. But I got what you meant now.

                • Seasoned_Greetings@lemm.ee
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                  8 months ago

                  How come?

                  I directly answered that in the same comment. Unfortunately, people who are offended will find a reason to take exception of the situation. There’s no amount of drawing examples that will satisfy the type who only sees that they personally are being attacked and not that it’s more about mitigating risk.

                  I try to illustrate the reasoning every time. As I have with the following example I made to you. The usual reaction is “well actually the woman in question is still a bigot for avoiding me on the street because she doesn’t know me”, or a similar sentiment in which the offended person runs head first into the point and still misses it.

                  I’m not talking about someone switching to another side of the street because of my gender or skin colour or any other reason one might discriminate, but rather the discussion that talks about a group as thing singular thing and makes it seem like it was all of of them. Not to mention going after people who obviously take offense to being labeled in such a way. I find it fucked up and I don’t see any reason to do that.

                  Well first, I’d like to congratulate you on being the only person I’ve encountered so far who’s interested in the discussion and not the reaction.

                  But also, I’d like to say that anyone who hears the reasoning “women have to be cautious around men because some men are capable of violence” and jumps immediately to “women think all men including me are violent and that’s wrong” is sorely missing the point.

                  No one is going after men who take offense at that line of logic so much as those men who are loudly voicing their misunderstanding of a concept which goes on around them all of the time that they have only just noticed. It seems that your concept of “going after those men” is just people who understand the situation trying over and over to explain it.

                  As someone interested in the discussion side of this issue and not the actual conflict, which you seem to understand, please tell me how you would handle someone strongly asserting to you that women are bigots because they avoid men or treat them differently when they don’t know how they’re going to react.

                  I’m interested to hear how you might improve an exchange with someone who doesn’t allow the reasoning that women should be allowed to cross the street 100 ft before crossing you in the interest of their safety.

    • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I’ll back you up.

      Guys, we have to suck it up. I’ve talked with my wife about this very thing, a lot. She’s really helped me process a lot of relationship trauma in my deep past, including bad/weird breakups.

      Men, by and large, have the ability to utilize violence in ways that women simply do not*. Especially towards women. This shapes a lot of inequity and abuse in society writ large, no matter where you are. Forget the law, forget about the rest doing the right thing, forget all your bias, and forget any logical fallacies you are clinging to right now. Just look at the stats above.

      One in four. 25%. If you were doing anything in your day-to-day life that came with a risk of bodily or psychological harm a quarter of the time, every time, you’d probably just stop. Or, as OP is pointing out, screw social pretense and improvise a solution with a better shot at safety.

      To flip that around, consider all the women you know and then think about how 25% of them have been abused in some way.

      Women learn from their peers or otherwise adapt to be non-confrontational, passive, indirect, avoidant, or just plain not present. Sometimes that lesson is learned proactively, sometimes first-hand. Why? Because 25%, that’s why.

      (* As someone who has been abused by women, yes, there are outliers. But since we’re talking statistics, that’s another discussion.)

    • asteriskeverything@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I was just ranting to my husband about how I got tired of being polite to men* in my personal life who don’t take “no” for an answer the first time, I WILL be a “bitch” to co workers, in laws, friends etc that pull this shit. I am exhausted after years of finding 17 different ways to politely say no to a stranger who wants something from me on any given day. I am absolutely fucking done wasting time pussyfooting my words, with the men I am safe with (for whatever reason) and uh often men I am not safe with but I have been VERY lucky to have positive outcomes there. Pure luck

      * I just don’t currently have women like this in my life. I have though
    • ComfortableRaspberry@feddit.de
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      8 months ago

      Some countries in Europe started to look more into this topic since the number of femicides is growing and becoming more newsworthy it seems.

      A lot of people are biased since sexism is deeply rooted in our society and many don’t realize what’s happening around them if they are not directly affected.

      Just this week I had to discuss with a rather aggressive delivery person who berated me (unprovoked and for a made up reason) until my partner came from another room. As soon as he had to discuss his issue with another man he started to believe the facts and stopped. Actually kinda glad this happened since my partner is also very biased regarding “everyday sexism” since it doesn’t affect him and this was the first time he was able to see it first hand.

      • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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        8 months ago

        I didn’t want to relay this while the thread was still so hot, but I’m a large scary-guy-shaped person - I really doubt any of the guys in this thread would say any of this to my face - and I didn’t understand this until my sister asked me to tell our dad something she needed him to hear because “he’ll listen to you because you’re a man”. I said I didn’t think he was that sort of person, and she just said, “No, it’s normal for people not to listen to women.” So I told him the thing and he listened to me where he hadn’t listened to her.

        I was pretty shook by that, so I asked my partner if that was normal and she said “Oh, yeah,” without having to think twice about it.

        That’s where my journey started. After you start seeing it, you can’t stop.

        I also started noticing at a certain point how often women would randomly apologise for existing near me in public. Like they are clearly afraid of me. It doesn’t feel nice, but it’s never once occurred to me to yell “not all men!” or “I’m one of the good ones!” at their retreating backs.

        I’ve discovered - through being NB - that I can completely reverse this by even slightly feminising my appearance. I actually get random women smiling at me in public, not politely, but openly and genuinely. It makes me think of what a trans man said about how lonely it is to be a man, how he misses the camraderie of women looking out for each other. From my perspective when I’m fully man-coded I agree, men absolutely do not openly smile at me. That’s too gay, or something.

        I’m not worried that any bad actors will abuse this info to get women to let their guard down though, because a consequence of this is getting an absolutely appalling amount of disgust and hate from random dudes, but I consider the trade absolutely worth it when I have the energy for it.

        • ComfortableRaspberry@feddit.de
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          8 months ago

          Thanks for sharing your story. One of my guy friends is the Hagrid Type. Big, hairy, loud. But he also tries to break through his appearance. And I think that’s the whole point:

          Instead of telling “not all men” it’s better (but also more difficult) to show us. Be nice. Hold other men accountable. Things can be changed but first we have to face reality.

          It also saddens me to hear about the manly loneliness that’s caused by the same internalized sexism. I’m glad to hear you found a way out of this, that still lets you be you!

        • prole@sh.itjust.works
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          8 months ago

          Who are you referring to when you say “these”? Because it seems like you’re making judgement calls about people based entirely on whether or not they questioned your blanket generalization about literally half the population of the planet.

          • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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            8 months ago

            your blanket generalization about literally half the population of the planet

            I want you to look at my comment and tell me - quote the quote please - where I said that all men are violent.

            EDIT: Or whatever you think the blanket statement was.

            • prole@sh.itjust.works
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              8 months ago

              Nah, I think I’d rather not engage. You know what I was referring to, I literally said it in my initial response.

              Have a nice day.

              • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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                8 months ago

                Oh really lol? So you made this accusation but as soon as I ask you to explain specifics you back out?

                I mean, I know what I said, and I wasn’t generalising about all men. You said, “these”. Give me the quote, explain what you’re talking about, unless you re-read it and you know you it actually doesn’t say what you’re trying to make it say. I’m happy to explain, but I do want you to explain what you’re talking about. I said a lot, so you need to meet me halfway. It’s not a big ask.

                • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                  8 months ago

                  but as soon as I ask you to explain specifics you back out?

                  No, as soon as you take a glance at a white ball and ask for elaborate proof that it isn’t black.

                • prole@sh.itjust.works
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                  8 months ago

                  So you made this accusation but as soon as I ask you to explain specifics you back out?

                  Seems that way doesn’t it?

                  I didn’t even read the rest of this comment, btw.

    • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      But if you’re saying, “NOt All mEn” in the face of this reality then let’s be real, you don’t actually give a shit about this. You just feel personally attacked and you want to deflect. Men getting mad because their fragile egos are bruised. Maybe some of them would turn violent if a woman said it to their faces. As they say, a hit dog will bark.

      “If you are bothered by blanket statements and sexism towards you, it’s just because your ego is bruised and you might actually be the violent person I’ve painted you as.”

      Incredible logic.

      • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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        8 months ago

        No. The point is we can’t ask vulnerable people to throw caution to the wind when around those who have the ability to harm them.

        Part of being one of the good ones, is not taking it personally when someone who doesn’t know you are safe, takes steps to try and make sure you won’t harm them. Because they can’t know for sure that you wouldn’t.

        • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          This is almost word for word what racists argue. You even used the term “one of the good ones”, holy hell. How do you not see how fucked up this is?

          Part of being one of the good ones, is not taking it personally when someone who doesn’t know you are safe, takes steps to try and make sure you won’t harm them. Because they can’t know for sure that you wouldn’t.

          It’s hard to not take it personally when a group you’re member of is being made negative blanket statements about and when those who think it’s hurtful speak up, they’re mocked. And then there’s the belittling language about how if you are “one of the good ones” you should just take it and “make sure you won’t harm them”.

          It’s one thing to say that yes, women are more cautious around men and there’s some reason for it. But it’s the blanket statements, "“NOt All mEn” and “just ignore it” shit that bothers me. That’s not fine imo.

          • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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            8 months ago

            So what exactly is the change you want?

            If you’re not asking vulnerable people to throw caution to the wind, be specific about what should be different.

            I know it feels like absolute shit to have the worst assumptions made about you because of your gender, race or whatever else, but aside from treating everyone fairly whenever no risk is involved, we can’t ask people to assume the best about others when deciding anything, if doing so puts them at the mercy of a stranger in any way.

            Hell. I’m a tall man, and I would have reservations if a girl wants to have a first date at her place, alone. Odds are, 99.99%, it’ll be fine, might get laid, woo. But what if it isn’t fine?

            We’re not discussing the kind of discrimination where you instantly and completely dismiss someone as a human being, but the kind where you are careful about what kind of human being they might be.

            The first kind robs people of life opportunities, the second only ever hurts our feelings.

            • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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              8 months ago

              I’d prefer to see the discussion happening from the position that some men are violent, which causes women to be cautious. There should be a common understanding in both that men can be violent towards women in high rates, but also that it’s not a reason to label the whole group or speak implying such.

              Now we’ve had both a very clear blanket statement about women and people mocking those who take offense to that and talking about “the good ones”. That’s not a discussion that is going the right way. That’s the sorta shit that causes more discrimination and bad sentiments.

              I’m not saying women can’t (or aren’t allowed to be) be prejudiced, I know it’s a reaction. It’s the discourse that makes it out to be all men that goes overboard and is just the same as what racists do. It’s one thing to cross to the other side of the street when you saw someone you are worried about coming, okay you probably do fear something so individually whatever, fine, but if you go online and justify it with “well those people statisticially…” you’re just spreading really discriminatory shit and of course people are going to pipe up.

              We’re not discussing the kind of discrimination where you instantly and completely dismiss someone as a human being, but the kind where you are careful about what kind of human being they might be.

              I know, but it’s not like racism is just thinking someone is a human. I’d say most racism isn’t like that, but small things.

              • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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                8 months ago

                I can somewhat agree with that.

                But no one here is suggesting any of this is grounds for completely disregarding a person or a demographic of people.

                I would turn down that first at-home date, but that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t make a counter-suggestion. And even then I would risk offending her by revealing my unwillingness to immediately trust her.

                And if she does take offence, that isn’t exactly telling of her having a healthy understanding of how the situation might look to me. Even as I turn her down, it’s not like I’ve already decided she’s a crazy person.

                The people getting mocked are ones who feel they’ve been wronged by this kind of caution, for example by getting an overly careful and roundabout “no”, taking offence because someone would assume the worst about them. That they wouldn’t have taken a straight answer well.

                In reality, it was going to be a “no” either way, and she was perfectly within her right to do it carefully with a complete stranger.

                Throwing around the stats and explanations is to help us understand. The point is that the numbers are such that vulnerable people do not even have the option of being fair, because if they are, inevitably, they will run into at least one nutcase which will then proceed to explode in their face.

                Unfortunately, the real solution here is actually to take it on the chin, because most of the time, it really isn’t personal, or even consequential.

                In any situation where two or more people interact, a more vulnerable party has every right to take whatever precaution they feel is needed to be safe, until they know for sure that doing so isn’t needed.

                When this is the case, there is nothing to take offence from. It’s not about you.

                But it can still hurt, and when you then see stats and stories about violent men thrown around it feels like people are telling you that “they were right about you” and that you should feel hurt.

                But that’s not the point. The point is that there are good reasons to be careful. And when someone does so around you, unless there are additional circumstances to consider, there’s nothing there that’s a personal slight upon your character, gender, or anything else.

                • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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                  8 months ago

                  I think in this specific case and unfortunately in these sort of discussion, the people being mocked seem to be those who take offense to the discourse that paints men in generic terms as violent or take it personally (which while not meant as such, can obviously feel like it to some).

                  Unfortunately, the real solution here is actually to take it on the chin, because most of the time, it really isn’t personal, or even consequential.

                  I think the real solution would be to for the discourse to be such that it doesn’t make it seem like it’s all men. Of course if it seems like all men are being blamed, people will complain. It’s not a huge switch in the rhetoric either to make it clear that’s not what is being said imo. But here it felt like they doubled down on it instead.

    • gmtom@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Genuinely not trying to be that guy, but it seems like you’re saying that because it happens to men less often than to women, we can just ignore when it happens to men. Which im sure isnt what you’re trying to say, but its the insinuation you present whenever you bring up stats like these.

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          Because your using these stats to dismiss people saying men face domestic abuse too? I get you’re doing it because those people arent arguing in good faith, but its still ultimately you insinuating "men dont face DA as much of women, so they dont matter.

              • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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                your using these stats to dismiss people saying men face domestic abuse too

                Nobody brought it up. I wasn’t dismissing anything like that.

                "men dont face DA as much of women, so they dont matter.

                I didn’t say that, nor did I insinuate it. You haven’t made your case, you’ve just said I said something I clearly didn’t say. I don’t know what else to um… say.

                • gmtom@lemmy.world
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                  So if nobody brought this up, why did you write that edit and bring up these statistics?

                  I didn’t say that, nor did I insinuate it.

                  You did though.

                  this is just rates of violence, of any kind. It says nothing at all about the consequences of that violence. I’ll bet if you looked into that it’s worse for women too. If you’re wondering why so many categories don’t have rates of violence against men, it’s because they have a “high relative standard error”, which is statistics speak for “the rate is so low we can’t properly measure it”.

                  And you also pull the claim of “women get harsher sentences when they commit DA” out of your arse too.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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      8 months ago

      “n in m women said that they …” and “p in q men said that they …” would be more correct.

      You are comparing apples to oranges. If women and men were treated the same by the society and thus would report actual events with the same probability, then you could compare these.

      How many men would admit they experienced emotional abuse were that the case? A rhetorical question. Like a half of them or more wouldn’t.

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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          I don’t see my argument to be limited to emotional abuse in any way, and an example doesn’t have to cover all cases.

          TLDR, you don’t look smart.

          • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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            So to be clear: you think that domestic violence against men could be similar to domestic violence against women, for instance? Are you actually saying that?

            There’s a reason you singled out emotional abuse, because if you mentioned any of the other kinds, it would be pretty obvious how silly your argument was, wouldn’t it?

            • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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              So to be clear: you think that domestic violence against men could be similar to domestic violence against women, for instance? Are you actually saying that?

              It is from factual statistics. Yes, I’m actually saying that.

              There’s a reason you singled out emotional abuse, because if you mentioned any of the other kinds, it would be pretty obvious how silly your argument was, wouldn’t it?

              Factual statistics say otherwise, that my argument isn’t silly.

              I thought perpetuating gender role stereotypes and even prioritizing them over data was something a slrpnk.net user would be unlikely to do?..

              Also I’m following the example of that other person and disengaging.

                • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                  8 months ago

                  This is so dumb that I’ll return to comment.

                  which are… nowhere to be seen.

                  The pic you posted says the same thing as I say about factual statistics. You’ll have to argue with yourself.

                  Also the first page in Google:

                  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7658679/

                  https://ncadv.org/STATISTICS

                  and Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_violence_against_men with this - “The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported that 97.2% of men do not report domestic violence to the police, compared to 82.1% of women.[6]”,

                  that would make a woman 6.3929 likelier to report than a man. So you actually have to normalize reported domestic violence by that, say, if there are 6 times more cases reported to police against women, then in reality it’s about the same.

                  Also every fucking police service publishes some stats.

    • JoShmoe
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      8 months ago

      I believe this is directly related to many women being more empathetic. Many guys are not violent.

      • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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        This is a repackaging of “not all men”.

        The problem with “not all men” is that there is an obvious follow up question: “which men?”

        If you can’t answer that fast enough to determine if you’re dealing with a violent man, then “not all men” is meaningless to a woman who is trying to not get killed.

        Also, you’re basically saying women don’t think about this. I wonder what kind of answers you’d get if you actually asked any of them about this.

        • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          This is the sort of logic I’ve seen people use to justify racism. “Not all of them of course but enough, I’m just being careful”.

          • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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            8 months ago

            Tell me, do you know how likely women are to be killed by men vs the other way around?

            • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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              Do you not know how often racists use crime stats to bolster their arguments too?

              Men more often kill women is no grounds to make blanket arguments about men in general, same way as some minorities being overly represented in rape statistics is no grounds to make blanket statements about those minorities.

              You can say it’s just you “being careful” and whatnot, but you should realize that you’re using word for word the same arguments racists use to justify their racism. Both represent an actual threat to women for sure but it’s no justification for labeling them all, that’s the point.

              • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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                8 months ago

                What are women doing with this information?

                What are racists doing with their - actually twisted made up bullshit if you look into it - information?

                • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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                  What are women doing with this information?

                  A woman might in both cases be vary of the specific groups here, at the mildest level. Discrimination can range from very minor to very hostile behaviour. Basically your imagination is the limit for what someone might do about these prejudiced feelings.

                  actually twisted made up bullshit if you look into it

                  Statistics Finland, Finnish Government, the police and several university studies have made deep dives into this. But if you can show them wrong then by all means, go ahead. But I can provide you the sources for these claims, if you really want to go there.

              • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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                So, absolutely no interest in the subject matter then. I’ve been trying to figure you out and I think I’ve got it:

                You’re using racism as a tool to deflect any talk of sexism, and to imply that saying men are far more likely to kill women is sexist against men, even though it is 100% true. And even then you’re talking about racism using anti-black racist talking points, which is extremely telling.

                You’re staying in the realm of innuendo though. You’re not really saying anything. I bet if you actually stood up and said what you mean it would be horrific and you’d get banned, which is why you’re not doing it.

        • ddkman@lemm.ee
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          Can I use this fantastic opinion to back racism as well, or is is exclusively reserved for sexism? Thanks!

          • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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            8 months ago

            Let’s apply this logic to racism!

            Black men usually get the talk at a very young age that they need to be super careful in every interaction with police or else they might be killed.

            Now, not all cops are trying to kill black men in traffic stops. But if you don’t know which cops will kill you on the flimsiest pretext, then this isn’t terribly useful to a black man trying not to get killed.

            Tell me, is it “racist” of these black men to be concerned about being killed by cops?

            • ArmokGoB@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              Cops aren’t a race. Actually basing this on racism would go something like this:

              “Of the 9,468 murder arrests in the US in 2017, 53.5% were black and 20.8% Hispanic.” Is it racist for cops to be more quick to use deadly force against black people and Hispanic people because they are arrested for violent crime more often than people of other races?

              The answer is yes, this is in fact racist.

              Footnote: The quoted statistic is the result of systemic racism and various societal issues in the US, and I suggest people read about why there is this discrepancy.

              • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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                It’s not a perfect comparison, but the point is that these are people who are simply being extremely polite to avoid the potential threat of violence, and the other party is the one who has an undue likelihood of perpetrating that violence.

                In both cases, the violence is the bigotry, not the worry about who might inflict that violence.

                Some - wrong - people might say that black men worrying about being killed by a cop is racism because they are acting on information about their race. These are presumably the same people saying women are sexist for worrying about male violence. As always, noticing bigotry is in fact not the real bigotry.

                • ArmokGoB@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  Let’s go back to the original example: a woman dating.

                  Assume the woman is a lesbian. Would it be racist for her to apply the behavior in the post when she dated women of color, if her opinion was based on the statistic quoted in my last post?

                  My answer would be the same: it would be racist.

      • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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        That’s not really the point.

        If a good man has a woman turn violent on him, odds are he has a physical advantage and will be able to deal with it. It shouldn’t have to happen that way but he can probably keep himself safe.

        Flip that around, and as a woman, even if 99.99% of men will take it completely calmly, the small chance that you’re dealing with that 0.01% who will flip out and try to hurt you the second things don’t go his way, is fucking terrifying.

        Especially if you’re smaller than average and dealing with someone bigger than average, the smart thing is to not just risk it. No, it doesn’t feel good when a girl assumes the worst about me, but I get it, so I don’t take it personally.

        I can know I would never turn my strength and size to hurting to someone, she cannot.

          • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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            The exact same considerations apply. If you’re in a situation where others could physically overpower you, you tend to try avoid doing anything that gives anyone reason to do so if that occurring is even the tiniest possibility.

            When it comes to ones own bodily safety, other considerations become secondary, whether that’s fair or not.

            It’s not matter of “all of them are like that” but of playing it safe.

            • feedum_sneedson@lemmy.world
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              Like attacking a man easily twice your size? Somebody should have told them! They could have ended up getting hurt.

              • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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                What?

                I’m saying you’re the one who was in danger and therefore had the exact same concerns, and thereby you enforced my point that prioritising your own safety in this way isn’t about gender.

                Anyone can be at a physical disadvantage, and therefore have to rely on caution. And anyone can turn out to be a crazy person.

                • feedum_sneedson@lemmy.world
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                  My point is - you’d think attacking a guy twice one’s size might present a risk to one’s safety, but that didn’t seem to stop them. Like, one punch from me might easily have killed them, so it’s puzzling. In a way I think they knew they were protected by their size, because I just wouldn’t dare touch them. Even when being attacked with a blunt object!

                  “And therefore, it’s women that are privileged”. No, I’m really not trying to make that point, but it would be funny if I was.

  • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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    In my experience HR speak comes from one of two places: either she’s actively controlling her emotions, or she’s scared of you. Usually the former, but I’ve seen the latter in friends. “Dude is mentally unstable, armed, and bad at boundaries, time to word an email like HR explaining very clearly what you’re allowed to do and not”

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        I hadn’t heard but I desperately wish I lived in a world where incidents like this were surprising

        My tone was largely to avoid getting into an argument with the men who’ve received that tone. I’m entirely certain that if the man I’m referring to saw my comment he’d both get offended and assume he’s in the former (if he’s stopped blaming her friends for turning her against him)

        • UsernameIsTooLon@lemmy.world
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          As a male, it’s somewhat our jobs to teach the next generation that this behavior is not okay.

          Not saying you have to be super active about it, but it’s no wonder some women are afraid of men. They’re much stronger and sometimes just straight up unhinged from generations of telling other men to stfu, man up, and go to war to fight for your country for no reason.

          It’ll take a few more generations, but I really do hope we can break this cycle of abuse. It does kind of help that women have become smarter with their rights and they’re not going to reproduce with these types of men, but clearly the issue is still relevant because rejection could lead to death.

          • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Dude, I’m a woman. And yeah random men are routinely terrifying out of nowhere. The only reason I don’t do the HR speak thing is because a) I don’t date men by nature of being a married lesbian and b) if I don’t feel safe calling you out on your bullshit I avoid you before I have to call you out on your bullshit. My time and safety are too valuable.

            • UsernameIsTooLon@lemmy.world
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              Exactly this. As a dude, I sometimes feel like I have to be the one to stand up and say something because I have more authority in THEIR minds. I swear some guys just hear women speaking as white noise.

          • Shou@lemmy.world
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            It’s not generational trauma, as much as it is an attempt to feel powerful. It’s common for male macaques, chimpanzees, gorilla’s to assert dominance through violence. Especially when they don’t get their way. Females developed behaviors to avoid/combat male aggression. Such as simply letting a male mount them to avoid getting bitten more. It’s not forced copulation if you cooperate! That’s how chimps do. Who incidentally have the highest rates of violence against females of any primate. Which is impressive considering how violent they already are.

            And humans are no different.

            Women developed multiple behaviours that lower male aggression specifically. Crying and smiling both lower male aggression. Hence why women smile more and especially when nervous. Or cry more easily in stressful situations. Every girl I grew up with, was always cautious about rejecting a boy’s advances to avoid getting them angry. And so are the women, for good reason.

            Men don’t just have a greater capacity for violence. They are more violent.

            • UsernameIsTooLon@lemmy.world
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              Correct. That’s the nature of it, now add generational trauma on top and you get our current society. Testosterone is a hell of a drug.

  • LANIK2000@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    In my experience they just stop talking to you, as if hoping you’ll stop existing or something. I’m the one doing the “best wishes” shit, just to get some closure for my self.

    • nifty@lemmy.world
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      I think it’s important to remember that everyone has different levels of emotional intelligence, and people like me who are mildly autistic are slow at learning appropriate responses. But more importantly, if someone treats you less than you’d like, it’s not a reflection of you.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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      In my experience they just stop talking to you, as if hoping you’ll stop existing or something. I’m the one doing the “best wishes” shit, just to get some closure for my self.

      While I just remind that I exist from time to time until too lazy, by sending links to some articles or something via DMs once in a few weeks or so. This is a bit similar to stalking, so don’t do that.

      BTW, one reason I love the idea of emancipation of women is that not behaving like that isn’t some male psychology natural trait. Men just learn it, and women don’t learn it because of being treated differently.

      • Liz@midwest.social
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        Your first paragraph is a bit confusing. It’s technically a fragment (replacing “while” with “meanwhile” would fix this), there’s too many implied words, and the ordering of ideas is a bit jarring. As a result, it took me a few tries to figure out you were referencing your own behavior with the second sentence. I’m saying all this because I think it’s the reason people down voted your comment.

        Try this:

        While Meanwhile, I just occasionally remind them that I exist from time to time [ ] until I’m too lazy, by sending links to some articles or something via DMs once in a every few weeks or so until I’m too lazy. This is a bit similar to stalking, so don’t do that.

        Without editing markup:

        Meanwhile, I just occasionally remind them that I exist by sending links to some articles or something once every few weeks or so until I’m too lazy. This is a bit similar to stalking, so don’t do that.

        I hope this wasn’t too annoying, but difficult writing can turn allies into frustrated enemies. I can go into detail about each change, if you want.

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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          8 months ago

          Thx, it’s not annoying, my writing is sometimes like this even in my first language.

          I can go into detail about each change, if you want.

          We-ell, my sister regularly does that on every kind of mistake highlighted, so - not necessary, but thanks again, ha-ha.

          • Liz@midwest.social
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            8 months ago

            Hah, no worries! I didn’t wanna be mean about it, but it seemed like that’s why you were getting flack.

  • gmtom@lemmy.world
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    Completely tangential, but why are the ‘s’ at the end of words starting to get cut out “She start talking ot you like she work for HR” should be “she starts talking to you like she works for HR”

    its not like it saves you time, and it just sounds awkward and clunky to say.

      • remer@lemmy.world
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        Yup. Sounding educated and well spoken will get you mercilessly bullied in a lot of placing in the US. Here in Florida we call it “crabs in a bucket” because if one starts climbing up the others will pull it back down.

        • AtmaJnana@lemmy.world
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          Much of Appalachia is the same. If you don’t talk like a redneck, you get picked on. The smart kids with social savvy will learn to code switch.

          • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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            So we’re still looking to survive bullies rather than holding them responsible for bad behaviour I see. That’s toxic.

            • AtmaJnana@lemmy.world
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              Nah, fuck off with your strawman. I was just describing the reality, not suggesting that it is any kind of solution. Holding them accountable would be great, but kids often don’t have that option.

              • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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                No you are not offering a solution, you’re just doubling down on making more problems. And then calling it ‘that’s life’. You are toxic.

        • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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          That’s an explanation about the behavior to bully and harass. not an excuse.

    • PorkRoll@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      It’s African American Vernacular English. Calling it “uneducated and improper” can and will be perceived as racist as it’s a legitimate dialect of the English language.

      • quindraco@lemm.ee
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        “African American Vernacular English” sounds like an awfully racist term for it.

        • lady_maria@lemmy.world
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          …why? The term AAVE has been widely used for a while, including by Black Americans.

          • gmtom@lemmy.world
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            Because most people that use it aren’t African and many aren’t American.

    • HopFlop@discuss.tchncs.de
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      They just use the infinitive, like for example in “I swear she be doing that” (instead of “I swear she is doing that”). Thats just a dialect some people have.

    • ieatpwns@lemmy.world
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      If you still got the point of the post does the language matter if it doesn’t sound exactly the way you speak?

    • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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      Yes it is a tangent and it wasn’t appropriate to derail.

      It’s really not as kind as a person thinks they are being when no one asked them to correct their grammar. It doesn’t show respect to the topic or the person speaking. Something about not letting perfection prevent progress. And honestly it wasn’t hard to understand what the OP was saying so even going the ‘hard to understand’ excuse wouldn’t fit for a grammar troll to stretch their legs out on here.

      • gmtom@lemmy.world
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        Does it not get exhausting to constantly get butthurt over the most trivial bullshit you read online?

  • VinnyDaCat@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    I’ve played this game before, although not entirely as formal. It’s basically when you don’t want to ghost each other, and you’re both being or attempting to be polite about it so that you can keep them as a possibility for later.

    I’m not saying to be uncivil, but that’s usually what’s going on, and it’s really obvious when you don’t have any long term commitments between each other that won’t need to be resolved in the future.