Something's been bothering me lately. It's something I only peripherally noticed at first, but lately it's been more and more in-my-face. The Christina Aguilera/national anthem thread really clinched it for me, I think.
"Pop tramp," "pop tart," etc. As if a woman should be defined primarily by the fact that she is a woman, and being a woman is a bad thing, particularly if she appears to be the least bit in control of her sexuality. What is this, the 1950s?
Elsewhere, you have women getting called "bitches" or "cunts," which is just so casually done around here few people even bat an eye, and it amazes me. A woman can't just do something bad, no, she's a bitch if she does something bad--it becomes her whole identity. You sum up her entire being in one hateful word, inextricably bound up in her gender as if being born female is an insult in and of itself. Do people even pay attention to how they talk and how their words are perceived?
On the flip side of it, you get comments like "I'd hit it," avatars with bouncing tits, threads about whether or not a given female celebrity is hot. You get the guys who kiss ass and suck up to female posters, oblivious to the fact that it's not attractive or friendly, it's creepy. (This is something I've had to face on my own forums, I just notice it happens here, too.)
I guess this came out as more of a rant than I intended, it all just makes me kind of ashamed to be a male posting around here. The behavior towards women here is often so very inappropriate yet simultaneously so entrenched it's as if nothing can be done about it. This isn't something I expect the admins and mods to fix--it's so ingrained I don't think any level of moderator intervention is going to correct it. But I want to offer this thread as an opportunity to reflect. Think about the things you've said here and if they're really appropriate and what kind of light they shed on your character. If you don't think you're "that guy," take a closer look and make damn sure.
Pre-empting some likely tangents: women do sometimes abet this type of behavior, and engage in it toward men, but it doesn't seem to be nearly as prevalent as what I described above. I am not against discussing all of those angles but I would really like to see discussion of the main point, too.
"Pop tramp," "pop tart," etc. As if a woman should be defined primarily by the fact that she is a woman, and being a woman is a bad thing, particularly if she appears to be the least bit in control of her sexuality. What is this, the 1950s?
Elsewhere, you have women getting called "bitches" or "cunts," which is just so casually done around here few people even bat an eye, and it amazes me. A woman can't just do something bad, no, she's a bitch if she does something bad--it becomes her whole identity. You sum up her entire being in one hateful word, inextricably bound up in her gender as if being born female is an insult in and of itself. Do people even pay attention to how they talk and how their words are perceived?
On the flip side of it, you get comments like "I'd hit it," avatars with bouncing tits, threads about whether or not a given female celebrity is hot. You get the guys who kiss ass and suck up to female posters, oblivious to the fact that it's not attractive or friendly, it's creepy. (This is something I've had to face on my own forums, I just notice it happens here, too.)
I guess this came out as more of a rant than I intended, it all just makes me kind of ashamed to be a male posting around here. The behavior towards women here is often so very inappropriate yet simultaneously so entrenched it's as if nothing can be done about it. This isn't something I expect the admins and mods to fix--it's so ingrained I don't think any level of moderator intervention is going to correct it. But I want to offer this thread as an opportunity to reflect. Think about the things you've said here and if they're really appropriate and what kind of light they shed on your character. If you don't think you're "that guy," take a closer look and make damn sure.
Pre-empting some likely tangents: women do sometimes abet this type of behavior, and engage in it toward men, but it doesn't seem to be nearly as prevalent as what I described above. I am not against discussing all of those angles but I would really like to see discussion of the main point, too.