Incorrect (accord is
That is patently false. You think we're like that, go to Afghanistan and live among the Talibun. You'll see what misogyny is really all about.
"Taliban"."
Incorrect (according to me). And I'm what I am. The
minutest of samples.
B4 we go all out, examining, ridiculing, describing political theory (of which we know nothing): let's say it is what it is.
None of them. Who said any of them weren't? That's not the point though. The point is that the profoundly unbalanced ratio of male to female officers in the Cardassian Guard is a strong indicator that Cardassian culture is patriarchal.
If you really want to go there.
Is Bajoran culture not? Think Kira Nerys...(or Ro Laren from TNG). Beautiful characters. My favourites. (Even more than 7/9 or Raffi).
Both Laren and Nerys had difficult "father figure" relationships. Because of their history. Both, in some ways, betrayed their commanding officers and went over to the other side. Except Nerys is the very picture of resistance.
Now here's Dukat. A complex Cardassian character. He needs Nerys to rescue his inter-species daughter. She's rescued. He woos Nerys because he knows she needs a mother figure. Then suddenly the daughter is killed. He's distraught over her death, something his patriarchal confidence could never have imagined. He goes crazy. He recovers, but is now a different man. He makes peace with his daughter's killer, Damar, who himself changes and supports the Federation eventually, because he cannot see his people subjugated by the Dominion. Damar too, dies.
Ergo, the Bajoran resistance against the Cardassians and the Cardassian resistance against the Dominion, are. of. the. same. piece.
Quantities of misogyny or patriarchy do not matter, if
qualitatively they are the same.
And resistance always exists. Nerys is the rule, not the exception.
You would not have said what you did, unless resistance were possible. So patriarchy is never complete. Like capitalism, socialism, or whichever -ism.