The unfortunate thing here is that our society has come to the point where something that ugly can fit right in.
When rape stops becoming such a widespread phenomenon with most men getting away with it, I'll consider stopping the use of the word "rape culture".
I don't care if it makes some men feel uncomfortable. That's the point. Rape culture, for the most part, is a male problem so guys need to deal with it.
I'm not entirely sure what you mean by agency in this context. It sounds like some kind of insider language. Are you suggesting a conspiracy? And the equating of sex and violence is another Right-Wing meme.
Stop misrepresenting what I said. I never equated sex and violence. You only read what you want to read because it fits your narrative.
Let me explain it (again) then: Objectification means turning a woman into a sex object. Objects, by definition, don't have agency (=the ability to act for themselves). So through objectification women are being denied agency. They're not the subject of sexuality. They're only there to please others.
By presenting women in a way that implies that their only raison d'être is to please others without taking their agency into account, media is presenting them like objects.
And again: The problem isn't occasional objectification. Like I said taking agency seriously means accepting that objectifying yourself can even be part of female desire. That's not the problem. And presenting women in a sexualized way also isn't a problem as long as agency and female desire matters, and not just the male gaze.
The problem is that objectification is casual and omnipresent, in every aspect of life.
Stop calling everything that doesn't fit your simplistic "it's sex-related so it must be good!"-narrative "right-wing". That's insulting. You should know better than to mansplain this stuff.
A mature approach to positive change is the opposite of a lack of nuance.
By which you're calling feminists immature. You should really look at addressing the arrogance in that statement. I think I have done a pretty good job detailing where your views lack nuance. You have not addressed that at all.
I absolutely do promote a positive attitude toward, because there is so much sex negativism-- that's the reason threads like this are started. Sex is lowbrow, pandering, adolescent wish fulfillment, inappropriate, and so on.
I never said anything that disagrees with this. Sex is good.
And a nuanced view of that includes recognizing the harmful effect sexual objectification and a big part of the portrayal of women in media have.
We're mostly in agreement, except I oppose the religious concept of objectification. Where we disagree is that censorship in the arts or manipulation of the media is in any way beneficial to women (or anyone).
I love how easy it is for a man to say that. When your gender is constantly objectified and half the population is constantly seen as objects and stripped of their agency... you come along to tell us "that's not harmful".
I suppose it's male privilege to not realize how much this hurts us women.
A huge amount of progress has been made toward equality over the past half century, but you are absolutely right that we're not at the end of the road. And that this century has seen some backsliding.
No kidding. (Harvard Business Review: Are U.S. Millennial Men just as sexist as their dads?)
I would suggest that the extremism and divisiveness of Millennial-era Feminism
Yeah, stop right there. That is nonsense. Millennial-Era feminism for the most part is inclusive and intersectional. You are defining "Millennial-Era feminism" by looking at an insanely low number of extremists that aren't relevant to mainstream feminism.
We do not hate men. In fact many of modern feminists are men.
What you and many guys seem to see as extremism is the fact that we just won't stop demanding equality. It's like guys sit back and go: "Man, we've really made so much progress already. Won't they ever stop?"
No, we won't. The status quo is still shit.
(and this is true of the nuLeft in general) are more responsible for the current atmosphere of alienation than are beauty and sexuality in the arts, and that a more positive approach would be more constructive, as it was back in the days of Women's Lib and the Sexual Revolution.
Sounds like: "Why aren't feminists always sweet and agreeable? I don't like it when they're angry!"

You don't get to tone-police oppressed groups.
Knowing your past behavior on this subject and the way you always claim to be the only enlightened person on Earth and the perfect non-sexist dude, I suppose you will just dig your heels in. But I really wish you'd take a moment to reconsider your own views for a minute or two. You might end up learning something new.
Last edited: