Quote from TriPack:
This is all a strawman argument. You so far have said nothing that relates to my initial argument.
Argument? I read a statement, not an argument. A statement that may have been sexist in nature.
"Women should not use men's bathrooms." Is that statement also sexist, because my conclusion was arrived at via gender? I reject your conclusion above as being absurd.
And I reject your rejection.
The statement may be sexist, yes. It would depend on context.
If you said, "Women should not use men's bathrooms....because women are stupid, or because women stink, or because they can't pee standing up, etc. the statement would be sexist.
The statement lacks explanation, and therefore could be sexist depending on the context.
It is too bad that your conclusion above bears no resemblence to the dictionary definitions you provided before. You keep arguing equality when that isn't the criteria of sexism. It is denegration of women, belief they are not as capable/skilled/intellegent (etc.) as men or preventing them from having the same rights as men.
What one man thinks is flattery a woman may think of denigration and demeaning. Who should decide what is equality for women, or who should decide what is denigration for women, men----or women?
My statement makes no such assumption about capacity even though you try to make that conclusion. Women furthermore are not prevented from joining the military, so their rights have not been limited.
The statement out of context makes no assumption other than your desire not to have women be drafted by the military. It begs the question as to why, in the same way if someone says they don't want Hispanics to be drafted by the military.
If you gave an explanation as to why you don't want women drafted, that will provide your thinking behind the statement. So, to know if the statement was truly sexist, we have to know context. Based on everything you have said thus far, I don't see that it was not necessarily sexist in nature.
That is your interpretation. Disapproval and not wanting are not equivalent. I don't want a cookie. This doesn't mean I disapprove of cookies. I don't want to play baseball. This doesn't mean I disapprove of baseball.
Equivocation and poor argumentation skills. Disapproval of what someone else should do, or have done to them speaks of disapproval of actions toward others. You can speak about yourself and you desires without exercise of power over the situation of others, but when you speak about what you want for or don't want to see for others there is a major difference. When you say you don't want such and such for someone else, in effect you are saying do not approve of such and such happening. The happening does not meet with your approval. Whether or not your approval is a factor in the process being complete is not the point, but the intent is a factor. Someone can have sexist thoughts, never act on them, never have the power to act on them, yet they are sexist none the less.
I'm glad you agree that my reason is not sexist. I've already stated my reason for this so this continuing argument is moot.
I didn't agree that your reason behind the statement was or was not sexist. What I said was a conditional statement, and if ______, then _________ statement.
Is the following explanation possibly sexist:
I frankly can't see how a desire to protect women is sexist. It is the opposite of sexism - a desire to treat women as superior. I value a woman more by not forcing her into a situation where she may lose her life or be injured, than a person who wishes her to be forced into such a situation in the name of "equal rights". I would much prefer that women, in this case, have superior rights than men. So call me sexist all you want but if you do, you don't understand what it means.
Your desire to protect women is because you think they are superior? Superior beings don't need your protection. You position could well be on the basis of condescension. Many women are fighting for the equality to be treated equally with men irrespective of sexual identity or gender. You may want women to have superior rights, but they are fighting for equal rights, not to be treated like a china doll.
Does a desire to not force women to join the military during draft time imply that women are in some way less capable than men, that they are less intelligent, less skillful? No it does not. Does it limit their rights? No it does not.
I disagree that it limits their rights. It limits their rights of their citizenship and to be treated exactly the same as men as it comes to service to this country. Self respect of women is not gained by coddling of men.
Maybe you should stop making strawman arguments.
Maybe you should prove that they are. Just because you claim it to be so, doesn't make it so.
By your own admission you are a sexist. By treating a woman as an object you denigrate them. Treating women as objects rather than as individuals qualifies as "negative" characterization. This is the definition that applies to your sexist statement above.
My condition of being sexist or not has nothing to do with your sexism. Classic Hannityism. This is like saying Bush is not guilty because Clinton is also guilty.
Poor argumentation on your part.
Typical of someone who cannot defend themselves, to attack the person who is pointing out their flaw.
I never said I was or wasn't sexist, and it is not relevant in any way to your denial that you are sexist.
According to Roguetrader, giving a woman superior rights is sexist. Taking her superior rights away from her is equality and non-sexist, and turning a woman into a sex-object is non-sexist. You are a sexist hypocrite.
More Hannityism and distraction from your own sexism. Many people fall for this trick, but it this isn't about me, it is about you and your sexism.
And still no answer to the following:
There was no mention of race in the constitution either, but it took a constitutional amendment to give the power of law behind the end denying people of color to vote. It is the power of law that forces people to behave differently, even if they don't want to. Without law, there is no power to enforce the law and protect the rights of those who are in need of protection.
It took an amendment to give women the right to vote, although that was not specifically outlined that women couldn't vote, but men simply did not allow them to.
Many argue that women no longer need an equal rights amendment, but I disagree. Making equal rights for women law gives them the power and legal recourse in that their rights are violated in the future. We may have changed our opinions toward women due to the women's liberation movement, but without law to enforce the policy, opinion could swing to the other side and women would no longer have the legal protection the equal rights amendment would afford.
And no answer for this either:
Women are not being treated as equals to men when it comes to the draft. Why not? Equality is equality, right? Equality extends to risk as well as opportunity.
And to end, the current policy is exactly what my statement says: women are not drafted. If this policy is truly sexist, if it puts women on an unequal footing then why are none of the Presidential candidates making an issue of this?
How many presidential candidates are women? How many are talking about the draft at all? The draft is a non issue at present, but that may change. In either case, it doesn't not absolve you of sexist thinking.
Why are people not protesting the policy? Why are men not up in arms against this discriminatory policy? The simple answer is that the lack of disapproval by both men and women for a public policy like this indicates that neither men nor women find it offensive. If it is not offensive then surely it can't be sexist either. Now where is your evidence that men and women find the current military draft policy offensive?
There is no draft right now, do you understand that? If there were a draft, and women weren't being drafted (a draft which ended before the women's rights movement gained strength and support) you have no idea if women would have a problem with that or not. You can only guess.
And as a final note, will you be crusading for such noble causes as those listed below if the ERA ever passes?
I have no need to crusade for causes, noble or not, if the law exists to provide legal protection for women. If a woman raises and issue as a violation of the equal rights amendment, the court will decide, not me.
The point is that women will then have a legal process in which to fight for their equal rights. Now they lack such legal protection.
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