It has been a really long time since I watched it. Many, many years -- I don't even know who Rollins is. I've learned a lot and thought a lot more deeply on feminism since then. So, while I can say that I used to like it, I honestly don't know what my opinion of it would be now that I'm more mature. I know they always had a very strong stance about victim-blaming, which was awesome. I know that Mariska Hargitay and Christopher Meloni have both actively supported women's rights and LGBTQ rights and I remember thinking that came through in the show.@thestrangequark, I'm curious, what do you think of SVU? Do you approve of how it's handled characters like Benson, Rollins, etc.?
I was curious about this as well. I know my wife likes Benson, quite a bit, and appreciates her role and chemistry with her fellow officers. Since she has past sexual abuse, I found her thoughts on Benson to be quite insightful. She has a great deal of respect of Mariska as well.@thestrangequark, I'm curious, what do you think of SVU? Do you approve of how it's handled characters like Benson, Rollins, etc.?
If a guy thinks getting sex is really difficult, I would go out on a limb and suggest that maybe it's that guy who is the problem, and not feminism or women or whatever external force you want to blame it on.
When repugnant shitweasels have trouble getting laid, that's not a problem, that's working as designed.
Often makes me think of how men react to unwanted sexual attention.
My guess is that a lot of men do not have the experiential reality to directly empathize. I bet if you asked a man about being catcalled or hit on constantly, many would say "Great! Bring it on! That would be awesome". And I further guess that the reason behind that is there is no fear involved, generally, with an aggressive woman hitting on a man. Even if he's not interested, there's no threat implied (or otherwise). As many of the women here have mentioned, we do not have the experience of being afraid in that context.
So, we are free to fantasize about how great it would be for women to love our bodies, whistle, buy us drinks, and persistently try to get us into bed. Oh, what a terrible problem that must be! To be wanted and admired for being attractive!
We have to transcend that specificity, and think about how we are vulnerable in other contexts.
In your backward imaginary world, maybe. But in the real world the message historically directed at women and girls is: you need a man to complete you. This is the message told by pretty much every romance, hell, every Disney Princess movie up until Frozen. For the vast majority of female characters finding a man has been at least a major, if not the main drive of the character. Look at The Little Mermaid, for example: a wonderful movie as far as music and entertainment value, but what is the actual message it's telling girls? You should change yourself as much as possible to get a man, even if it's horrifically physically painful and means losing the things that define you, and it doesn't matter at all if you even talk, you just have to be pretty enough to garner his physical affections. The important thing is: you need a man!Here we're getting into another general double-standard. When a woman can't find a mate, it seems like society tries to tell her, "Girl, you are a wonderful person and you don't need a relationship to feel good about yourself!"
No, we are only telling the men who think that a woman and sex is something they have a right to that they are creepy, repugnant weirdos. Because thinking you have a right to another human is creepy and repugnant.But when a man can't find a mate, the response is, "You can't find a girlfriend because you're a creepy, repugnant weirdo who doesn't deserve one!"
They do in the trialThey didn't say where he was going, only that the Enterprise was in pursuit. The whole reason they (the Enterprise) had to go to Rigel XII was because the pursuit into an asteroid field burned out their lithium crystals.
Mudd's Women said:KIRK: Destination and purpose of journey?
MUDD: Planet Ophiuchus 3. Wiving settlers.
KIRK: Come again, Mister Mudd. You do what?
MUDD: I recruit wives for settlers, a difficult but satisfying task.
Mudd elaborates:."Provide women to settlers" doesn't sound like prostitution, people trafficking or slavery to you?
Sounds like this was Mudd's first go around. Probably his latest scheme. And no doubt as doomed as the others.MUDD: You see, gentlemen, just as I told you. Three lovely ladies destined for frontier planets to be the companions of lonely men, to supply that warmth of a human touch that's so desperately needed. A wife, a home, a family. Gentlemen, I look upon this work as a sacred public trust. I've devoted me whole life to it.
COMPUTER: Incorrect.
MUDD: Well, I'm about to start devoting my entire life to it.
KIRK: Did these ladies come voluntarily?
MUDD: Well, of course! Now, for example, Ruthie here comes from a pelagic planet, sea ranchers. Magda there from the helium experimental station.
EVE: It's the same story for all of us, Captain. No men. Mine was a farm planet with automated machines for company and two brothers to cook for, mend their clothes, canal mud a foot thick on their boots every time they walked in.
MUDD: Fine, Evie. Fine.
EVE: It's not fine! We've got men willing to be our husbands waiting for us, and you're taking us in the opposite direction! Staring at us Iike we were Saturnius harem girls or something.
MUDD: That's enough, Evie.
'COMPUTER: Offense record. Smuggling. Sentence suspended. Transport of stolen goods. Purchase of space vessel with counterfeit currency. Sentences, psychiatric treatment, effectiveness disputed.
Seems that Harry is greedy ( what a surprise!) and decides they need to trade up.I don't hear that anywhere in the episode, though, and I just watched it. In fact, there's a scene where the women are yelling at Harry that they want husbands, and Harry promises that he will find them husbands. Also, if they're already being delivered to a destination, why would they so try to deceive the crew and gain their desire?
The ladies again, seem willing.MUDD: Oh, you beautiful galaxy! Oh, that heavenly universe! Well, girls, lithium miners. Don't you understand? Lonely, isolated, overworked, rich lithium miners! Girls, do you still want husbands, hmm? Evie, you won't be satisfied with a mere ship's captain. I'll get you a man who can buy you a whole planet. Maggie, you're going to be a countess. Ruth, I'll make you a duchess. And I, I'll be running this starship. Captain James Kirk, the next orders you're taking will be given by Harcourt Fenton Mudd!
This. Basically if you are hateful and deluded and sneeringly dismissive of women's experience and perspectives and persist in trying to portray yourself in ass-backwards fashion as the victim of a social order that privileges them instead of you, and you keep running into situations where people have to explain basics of the realities of gender relations to you and get increasingly creeped out by you the longer they hear you talk, AND you also happen to be lonely and lovelorn... well, chances are that last thing is directly related to those other things. Having massive flaws that you absolutely refuse to work on because you think you have some automatic right of access to other people's bodies is not exactly a ticket to happiness.No, we are only telling the men who think that a woman and sex is something they have a right to that they are creepy, repugnant weirdos. Because thinking you have a right to another human is creepy and repugnant.
No problem
The problem with the analogy is that the person getting run over doesn't go on to say, "This is a symptom of society's omnipresent disrespect for pedestrians. All reckless driving should be banned from popular media because it promotes 'car accident culture.' Unless the show goes to great pains to put it in the proper context, it's the default assumption that all reckless drivers mean harm to pedestrians."
I figure 17 but sure, isn't that the point? He grows up and manages to do many good things, he is a decent man, he saves the world and his friends on a number of occasions. He realises his inferiority problems hold him back and even calls off a marriage because he realises it's happening for the wrong reasons. He is a good guy, but that doesn't mean he was always right and his problems were the rest of the world's fault.You recall that he was 15 or 16 when that happened?
Children act childish, until they grow up.
What role did love play?
For most of human history, almost none at all. Marriage was considered too serious a matter to be based on such a fragile emotion. "If love could grow out of it, that was wonderful," said Stephanie Coontz, author ofMarriage, a History. "But that was gravy." In fact, love and marriage were once widely regarded as incompatible with one another. A Roman politician was expelled from the Senate in the 2nd century B.C. for kissing his wife in public — behavior the essayist Plutarch condemned as "disgraceful." In the 12th and 13th centuries, the European aristocracy viewed extramarital affairs as the highest form of romance, untainted by the gritty realities of daily life. And as late as the 18th century, the French philosopher Montesquieu wrote that any man who was in love with his wife was probably too dull to be loved by another woman.
When did romance enter the picture?
In the 17th and 18th centuries, when Enlightenment thinkers pioneered the idea that life was about the pursuit of happiness. They advocated marrying for love rather than wealth or status. This trend was augmented by the Industrial Revolution and the growth of the middle class in the 19th century, which enabled young men to select a spouse and pay for a wedding, regardless of parental approval. As people took more control of their love lives, they began to demand the right to end unhappy unions. Divorce became much more commonplace.
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