Nasat, like Sci, I value your contributions to this BBS quite a bit and think you're a generally intelligent clever person.
So please understand that I speak with respect when I say you are completely wrong about what feminism means and Sci is completely right. There is no "disagreement" here. Despite the best efforts of sexists the world over to turn it into a dirty word, feminism means precisely what Sci says: belief in women's equality with men and a desire to not downplay or trivialize the contributions of women to society.
This. Absolutely this.
While it's long-established that this is a point I contest, I believe I should clarify some measure of my position. I won't post beyond this, because I've derailed quite enough, but I'll address this here in order that I may be understood. In particular because the Trek BBS lit forum and all the people and writers who post here have indeed treated me with the utmost respect.
If words and phrases are to be addressed and understood on the basis of their claimed dictionary meanings alone, devoid of context, implications and the wider discourse in which they appear - a rather unconvincing approach to communication and language, in my opinion - then feminism is definitely included, as there is a clear definition stated in the dictionaries. The fact that the definition in question is in no way capable of actually defining or containing what feminism in practice
is, and indeed is disputed by various feminist initiatives, behaviours, and assertions - shows precisely how important it is to understand a phrase or a word by what it implies, what it is commonly used to signify, the behaviour of those who claim it and wield it, the assumptions and assertions it denotes or connotes and the ideological positions that are intimately associated with it -
not what it is said to represent at face value. This is a particularly true when people affiliating with a word relate to it as tribal identifier. Pointing to the definition is worthless when it's disputed as to whether the definition is correct, and it is
most definitely disputed. Most especially since feminist behaviour regularly conflicts with their stated definition, and examination of the social phenomenon that is feminism will reveal the fundamental weaknesses of the definition used. Retreating to the motte does not mean one can deny the bailey.
Suffice it to say, that despite the efforts of ideologues, tribalists, hypocrites and sexists the world over, many of us will not accept or validate an ideology that rests upon, exploits, and promotes problematic and bigoted assumptions; that has near-consistently lied and pursued institutional and societal influence through unscrupulous means; that has warped research and social aid programs in pursuit of an ideological agenda; that rests upon traditional and likely largely innate approaches to perception of the sexes and of wider social dynamics; that promotes a false account of history in accordance with predetermined ideological assumptions; that vilifies dissent both among its own and among the outgroup; that seeks to monopolize discussions; that has engaged in threat narratives and fear mongering on a grand and destructive scale; that milks and augments existing problematic assumptions and social pathologies that remain unquestioned because they are useful to it; that is inconsistent and changeable as a matter of course; and which wraps itself in progressive rhetoric while resisting and overturning many attempts to promote change.
I knew a man once - a teacher - who I recall fondly. He was wonderfully intelligent and insightful, witty, principled, but it all went completely out of the window with feminism, or indeed anything related to one of the human sexes. Complete indoctrination and zealotry. Cultural conditioning augmenting instinctual social and sexual impulses; it was clear that human behaviour distorts greatly to accommodate certain instinctual needs. The sheer power of the conviction is hardly surprising, though, when you consider the textbooks of sociology, etc., that we had available. The chapter on gender - which was nothing but feminist perspectives - was quite simply forceful propaganda, and
completely different in tone and approach from anything else in the book. Same in Literature, Psychology, etc. It would have been almost laughable were it not clear that the reason it was pushed so hard and so uncompromisingly was that if you actually interrogated it, the feminist approach didn't hold water, and that it had a hook into people's psyches all too easily. The more I investigated, the more the entire ideology fell apart when put to scrutiny, just as one who actually reads a holy text and looks at the history of the religion comes to see that the evidence is against it and that without faith or blanket rejection of heresy it falls apart. Feminism's self-description and entire platform hold no water; both are simply tools that enable and "justify" a typically tribalist social manoeuver, one that dovetails near-perfectly with cultural and likely biological imperatives.
The teacher and I had a productive, respectful, mutually fond relationship - I owe him a lot - but his perspective was well and truly bolted down to feminist ideology, a massive blind spot in an otherwise insightful man. It was even clear at times that he
knew he was at odds with his own values, but simply couldn't bring himself to acknowledge it. He had to talk the party line as a matter of psychological stability.
Now, don't imagine that I disagree with any and all points that individual feminists or schools of feminism make - you will find me having what may seem a surprising amount of sympathy for one who paints himself a committed opponent; be it for academic feminists of varied stripes or the many "But the Bible says!"/"Jesus Loves You" feminists-on-the-street. But the organic societal power, the phenomenon of feminism - which all of them bolster and believe in even as they misunderstand its nature - is something I cannot abide. Do not believe that because I follow the golden rule I justify the existence of the church as an institution, when the church has always been something ugly - though clothing itself in piousness.
Nor do I believe that people are defined by their group affiliations or belief structures, though
they tend to disagree, making such things a matter of their identity. It is but one facet, and they can change. Not that ideologues of any description ever want to.
The consequences for wider society and the betterment of the population are dire, though. When the tool is not appropriate, one has not correctly diagnosed the problem, and using that tool will ultimately harm more than it heals, or impede rather than enable - and when one incorporates the tool into a larger approach to life, one risks an awful lot falling apart or going down with it when it crashes. When important matters of social cohesion are approached with the wrong assumptions in place - particularly when one is using a tool as labelled but it has been labelled
wrong - then we're in trouble.
The implication that people who oppose and challenge feminism are automatically a) sexist and b) ignorant is simply not true, any more than those who oppose the church and its institutionalized structures are amoral servants of Satan. If one insists that all those people, with their varied paths through life and their distinct experience (which often involves immersion within feminism) can be dismissed as easily as is tried here - "sexists try to make it a dirty word" - then one will alienate those they might wish to court and one will stagnate through inability to take alternate positions. Indeed, one haemorrhages allies by pushing an ideology that is at odds with its supposed purpose - internally inconsistent - and at odds with the overall flavour of their politics. If one relates to those who oppose an active ideology - an organic social force - through the prism of their own perspective, complete with in-built assumptions reinforced by self-serving ideologues, then they will see only illegitimacy.
Those who oppose and dispute the phenomenon known as "feminism" are a very varied bunch; much more varied than those cloistered under its umbrella. It would be a mistake to assume that a number of them don't have valid reason to oppose as they do, or that they "don't understand" feminism - particularly when many
are former feminists.
We don't live in a world of static definitions. We live in a world of active social and political forces. You can support and defend feminism as much as you wish, and promote it as a good and noble thing, but many more will attack it and, yes, consider it a dirty word - because of feminists, and the nature of feminism as a phenomenon, not because of sexism. Though you'll get those too.
Intolerant ideologies always work the same way when it comes to their defenders. Remember too what happened to Cardassia during the Dominion War. Garak worked it out quicker than the rest.