Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6729

Macbeth wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

Jay wrote:


What makes the two separable in your eyes? Libertarianism isn't some set of ideals completely divorced from everything else. There is a lot of overlap.

Are you against the destruction of Jim Crow laws too?
The thing that separates them is : one deals with LAW and one deals with CULTURE. Libertarianism and equity feminism isn't about culture, it's about law. A Jim crow law violates the "legal and civil equality" idea in equity feminism and in the larger libertarianism framework.

You're OP was about a cultural trend or view. It falls into the gender feminism which is the preach professorially QQ feminism.
And you're trying your damnest to make it fit in with your world view. Which it won't.
macbeth is schooling you here on something you clearly know little to nothing about. he obviously took a class that you didn't. like i did, too! (and im not even american!)
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5518|foggy bottom
inb4 someone says something gay about bringing popcorn
Tu Stultus Es
11 Bravo
Banned
+965|5496|Cleveland, Ohio

Uzique wrote:

all the pubs around here stop serving at 1am
wat
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5617|London, England

Macbeth wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

Jay wrote:


What makes the two separable in your eyes? Libertarianism isn't some set of ideals completely divorced from everything else. There is a lot of overlap.

Are you against the destruction of Jim Crow laws too?
The thing that separates them is : one deals with LAW and one deals with CULTURE. Libertarianism and equity feminism isn't about culture, it's about law. A Jim crow law violates the "legal and civil equality" idea in equity feminism and in the larger libertarianism framework.

You're OP was about a cultural trend or view. It falls into the gender feminism which is the preach professorially QQ feminism.
And you're trying your damnest to make it fit in with your world view. Which it won't.
So as a libertarian I shouldn't fight against what I view as culturally restrictive thought? I should just let it go because it doesn't directly impact my life? That's absurd. Everyone is free to express their opinion, even if my opinion is to tell someone else that they are wrong for behaving a certain way. I would be violating my world view if I then went and tried to do more than voice that opinion by enacting laws to enforce it etc.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6729

11 Bravo wrote:

Uzique wrote:

all the pubs around here stop serving at 1am
wat
it's a monday and i live in a quiet golf-belt. and venues need a special license to serve past that time (which none have here because it's a middle-class suburb)
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
11 Bravo
Banned
+965|5496|Cleveland, Ohio

Uzique wrote:

11 Bravo wrote:

Uzique wrote:

all the pubs around here stop serving at 1am
wat
it's a monday and i live in a quiet golf-belt. and venues need a special license to serve past that time (which none have here because it's a middle-class suburb)
ah.  no wonder where i damn country got that goofy shit from
Stingray24
Proud member of the vast right-wing conspiracy
+1,060|6704|The Land of Scott Walker

Jay wrote:

Stingray24 wrote:

Jay wrote:

Barefoot and pregnant amirite?
Totally missed my point there, Jay.  Feminism has not fostered increased respect for anything regarding men.

As to your question, sure, if she wants to be.  If not, then have a career.  7 yrs ago my wife quit her job at the biochemistry department of our local university to stay home with our children.  Is she happier?  Guess you'd have to ask her to know for sure.  She's her own boss throughout the day and gets to set her own schedule as she pleases.  Sounds better than the deal I have at work tbh.
Have you studied anything related to feminism or do you think of it simply as angry man-hating-women who burn their bras? It's about women's empowerment and the fact that they should be treated as equals. Nothing wrong with that.

In this regard, the article is entirely correct. Kids were previously left to women to raise while the men went off to work. Some men actually want to spend time with their kids so this dynamic was just as detrimental to what they wanted as it was to the women forced into the role. The societal dynamic was pigeonholing people into predefined roles based on their sex. Surely you can see how that lack of freedom is a bad thing, no?
They are equals and are treated as such.  At least that's the case for my wife who has more freedom than I do, as I described in my post above.    It's incredibly insulting to characterize a women who chooses to stay home as oppressed by her decision.  If it is truly her choice that is valued, then either option should be equally valid, yes?  My wife quit a good paying job because she wanted to be with our children rather than having the babysitter raise them.

Jay wrote:

Jaekus wrote:

It seems like in the 50s the gender stereotypes were so entrenched in society that to be different as a couple would be frowned upon by your friends and neighbours. I guess the social pressures of conformity had to have its bubble burst eventually, hence the social revolution of the 60s.
Yep. And the social conservatives in this nation would love nothing more than to turn back the clock to that very same repressed time. They've built up a mythology in which the strong (white) male goes off to work with his lunch pail in the morning, works in his office or factory job, and returns home to have dinner on the table followed by TV time in the family room before bed. The woman stays home to take care of the house. The kids are well adjusted and work hard in school (and of course, stay away from drugs and alcohol).

If you've ever seen the movie Pleasantville it's a good representation of what these types of people believe we should be trying to return to. Nevermind that the system broke for a good reason: it wasn't sustainable, people aren't robots.
And what if we choose that life and are both happy with what you describe above?  Is that ok?  Actually ours has a slight adjustment where I take care as much of the house as she does.

Last edited by Stingray24 (2011-05-09 17:37:33)

Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6729
i left my friends to go get stoned so i could slip home and wait for my gf to get back from the library. but she's ugly, i don't even have any friends (those guys earlier were posers) and i'm miserable so i guess shit really sucks for me right now... now that galt puts it that way. fuck i've been living a lie! maybe if i make some threads pretending to know shit about political science i'll gain some self-esteem again
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
Macbeth
Banned
+2,444|5844

Jay wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

The thing that separates them is : one deals with LAW and one deals with CULTURE. Libertarianism and equity feminism isn't about culture, it's about law. A Jim crow law violates the "legal and civil equality" idea in equity feminism and in the larger libertarianism framework.

You're OP was about a cultural trend or view. It falls into the gender feminism which is the preach professorially QQ feminism.
And you're trying your damnest to make it fit in with your world view. Which it won't.
So as a libertarian I shouldn't fight against what I view as culturally restrictive thought? I should just let it go because it doesn't directly impact my life? That's absurd. Everyone is free to express their opinion, even if my opinion is to tell someone else that they are wrong for behaving a certain way. I would be violating my world view if I then went and tried to do more than voice that opinion by enacting laws to enforce it etc.
"as a libertarian" If you're referring to yourself as a libertarian and not "someone with some libertarian views" you are already somewhere far from what libertarianism is and means. If you were a libertarian then yes you shouldn't care about what happens within your soceity as long as laws aren't broken. You know allow people the freedom to live and decide their lives.

Basically you are being a moral jihadist in response to moral crusaders with this "women had it rough back then" thing.

Last edited by Macbeth (2011-05-09 17:42:03)

Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5617|London, England

Stingray24 wrote:

They are equals and are treated as such.  At least that's the case for my wife who has more freedom than I do, as I described in my post above.    It's incredibly insulting to characterize a women who chooses to stay home as oppressed by her decision.  If it is truly her choice that is valued, then either option should be equally valid, yes?  My wife quit a good paying job because she wanted to be with our children rather than having the babysitter raise them.
Well, if it was her choice who I am to judge? Did she make that choice because she wanted to make it or was their societal coercion? If the former, more power to her, if the latter, then that's the whole point of this thread.

Personally, I wouldn't be able to handle a stay at home wife situation. I tend to share 11 Bravo's prejudices in regards to women getting over on men in todays society when they choose to stay home. Peggy Bundy is forever etched in my brain on the subject. It works for you though, so good on ya.

Stingray24 wrote:

And what if we choose that life and are both happy with what you describe above?  Is that ok?  Actually ours has a slight adjustment where I take care as much of the house as she does.
If you end up taking as much care of the house as she does, then what's the point of your setup? Sounds like she's getting off easy.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Macbeth
Banned
+2,444|5844

Uzique wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

The thing that separates them is : one deals with LAW and one deals with CULTURE. Libertarianism and equity feminism isn't about culture, it's about law. A Jim crow law violates the "legal and civil equality" idea in equity feminism and in the larger libertarianism framework.

You're OP was about a cultural trend or view. It falls into the gender feminism which is the preach professorially QQ feminism.
And you're trying your damnest to make it fit in with your world view. Which it won't.
macbeth is schooling you here on something you clearly know little to nothing about. he obviously took a class that you didn't. like i did, too! (and im not even american!)
I haven't been in school since '10. I took a year off and transferred. I'm going back to a Division 1(or teir 1, or whatever you call those top 100 schools) school in September which is cool but a part of me wants actually dreads going back and finishing. I dunno lol

Last edited by Macbeth (2011-05-09 17:46:26)

Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5617|London, England

Macbeth wrote:

Jay wrote:

Macbeth wrote:


And you're trying your damnest to make it fit in with your world view. Which it won't.
So as a libertarian I shouldn't fight against what I view as culturally restrictive thought? I should just let it go because it doesn't directly impact my life? That's absurd. Everyone is free to express their opinion, even if my opinion is to tell someone else that they are wrong for behaving a certain way. I would be violating my world view if I then went and tried to do more than voice that opinion by enacting laws to enforce it etc.
"as a libertarian" If you're referring to yourself as a libertarian and not "someone with some libertarian views" you are already somewhere far from what libertarianism is and means. If you were a libertarian then yes you shouldn't care about what happens within your soceity as long as laws aren't broken. You know allow people the freedom to live and decide their lives.

Basically you are being a moral jihadist in response to moral crusaders with this "women had it rough back then" thing.
No, I'm not Macbeth. I'm not stone. No one is stone. No one except a dude living in a shack in the middle of Montana could ever live up to your ideal of a guy that completely minds his own business and puts forth no opinions. By your line of reasoning, if I see a murder committed I shouldn't go to the cops because it didn't directly impact me and I should stay out of it.

Libertarianism is not the personal isolationism you wish it to be. What you're describing is simple misanthropy coupled with severe introversion.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Macbeth
Banned
+2,444|5844

Jay wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

Jay wrote:

So as a libertarian I shouldn't fight against what I view as culturally restrictive thought? I should just let it go because it doesn't directly impact my life? That's absurd. Everyone is free to express their opinion, even if my opinion is to tell someone else that they are wrong for behaving a certain way. I would be violating my world view if I then went and tried to do more than voice that opinion by enacting laws to enforce it etc.
"as a libertarian" If you're referring to yourself as a libertarian and not "someone with some libertarian views" you are already somewhere far from what libertarianism is and means. If you were a libertarian then yes you shouldn't care about what happens within your soceity as long as laws aren't broken. You know allow people the freedom to live and decide their lives.

Basically you are being a moral jihadist in response to moral crusaders with this "women had it rough back then" thing.
No, I'm not Macbeth. I'm not stone. No one is stone. No one except a dude living in a shack in the middle of Montana could ever live up to your ideal of a guy that completely minds his own business and puts forth no opinions. By your line of reasoning, if I see a murder committed I shouldn't go to the cops because it didn't directly impact me and I should stay out of it.

Libertarianism is not the personal isolationism you wish it to be. What you're describing is simple misanthropy coupled with severe introversion.
Not really my ideal. I really don't have ideals of people but whatever.
A murderer broke the law and violated a persons freedom. So you should report it since you know freedom is important and all.

I never said it was personal isolation, I said it's about letting people decide their own lives and determine their own path.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5617|London, England

Macbeth wrote:

Jay wrote:

Macbeth wrote:


"as a libertarian" If you're referring to yourself as a libertarian and not "someone with some libertarian views" you are already somewhere far from what libertarianism is and means. If you were a libertarian then yes you shouldn't care about what happens within your soceity as long as laws aren't broken. You know allow people the freedom to live and decide their lives.

Basically you are being a moral jihadist in response to moral crusaders with this "women had it rough back then" thing.
No, I'm not Macbeth. I'm not stone. No one is stone. No one except a dude living in a shack in the middle of Montana could ever live up to your ideal of a guy that completely minds his own business and puts forth no opinions. By your line of reasoning, if I see a murder committed I shouldn't go to the cops because it didn't directly impact me and I should stay out of it.

Libertarianism is not the personal isolationism you wish it to be. What you're describing is simple misanthropy coupled with severe introversion.
Not really my ideal. I really don't have ideals of people but whatever.
A murderer broke the law and violated a persons freedom. So you should report it since you know freedom is important and all.

I never said it was personal isolation, I said it's about letting people decide their own lives and determine their own path.
What you are describing is indeed personal isolation. If no one is ever allowed to put forth advice without being prompted first what else would you call it?

No, as long as life, liberty and property are preserved, you should be able to do whatever you want. If that means being a preachy asshole then so be it. After all, who am I to tell him to stop
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
cpt.fass1
The Cap'n Can Make it Hap'n
+329|6955|NJ
Genders aren't created Equal at all. The woman gets paid less because "Guess what?" she could get pregnant and be out of work for a month or two. Also working with allot of women, they get paid less cause they deserve less. Rampant Alcoholics and drug abuse? are you kidding me, I'm pretty sure those statistics are higher now then they ever were in the 50's.

Also if they want to be treated equals lets do away with alimony, stop giving dead beat moms children because they're the woman and start treating them as equals. Oh yeah we can't because of sexual harassment or they might be in a bad mood.

You can't have all the perks of the moment with none of the negatives.
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|6975
wtf does all this have to do with feminism?
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
Jenspm
penis
+1,716|6991|St. Andrews / Oslo

How people can argue that "home-wives have such a good life, they can like, go to the mall and drink coffee and stuff while I have to work" is beyond me.

and cpt.fass.. "Also working with allot of women, they get paid less cause they deserve less." Yeah, and there are many men who deserve to earn less than their female colleagues as well. Point? I'm certain there are still glass ceilings in society when it comes to women in top jobs, and they need to be broken before you can call the feminist movement 'successful'.
https://static.bf2s.com/files/user/26774/flickricon.png https://twitter.com/phoenix/favicon.ico
Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6729
you guys talk about the 'feminist movement' as if it has ever been a cohesive, unified ideal. truth is, it never has.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
Macbeth
Banned
+2,444|5844

cpt.fass1 wrote:

Genders aren't created Equal at all. The woman gets paid less because "Guess what?" she could get pregnant and be out of work for a month or two. Also working with allot of women, they get paid less cause they deserve less. Rampant Alcoholics and drug abuse? are you kidding me, I'm pretty sure those statistics are higher now then they ever were in the 50's.

Also if they want to be treated equals lets do away with alimony, stop giving dead beat moms children because they're the woman and start treating them as equals. Oh yeah we can't because of sexual harassment or they might be in a bad mood.

You can't have all the perks of the moment with none of the negatives.
Funny thing, if you're a man in the U.S. you're statistically more likely to be unemployed right now.
For the first time, American women have passed men in gaining advanced college degrees as well as bachelor's degrees, part of a trend that is helping redefine who goes off to work and who stays home with the kids.

When it comes to finishing college, roughly 20.1 million women have bachelor's degrees, compared to nearly 18.7 million men — a gap of more than 1.4 million that has remained steady in recent years. Women first passed men in bachelor's degrees in 1996.

Unemployment for men currently stands at 9.3 percent compared to 8.3 percent for women, who now make up half of the U.S. work force. The number of stay-at-home moms, meanwhile, dropped last year for a fourth year in a row to 5 million, or roughly one in four married-couple households. That's down from nearly half of such households in 1969.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110427/ap_ … ated_women

Really read some stuff by Christina Hoff Sommers. She's an equity feminist who is highly critical of modern feminism. She concludes that the modern feminist movement is about gaining preferential treatment since women have already achieved legal and civil equality.
Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6729
i'm a devout masculinist
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
ghettoperson
Member
+1,943|6908

Uzique wrote:

eleven bravo wrote:

I never took any feminist studies either but as a poli sci major, feminist studies and how they relate to IR and comparative politics and history and whatever is mentioned along with everything else
i have a friend that graduated from my uni in english lit last year and went to cambridge to do gender studies

she can argue anyone under a fucking table

feminism is a bottomless pit of bullshittery and boredom
Yup. I've done one module on it, and I can safely say it's incredibly boring.
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|6975

ghettoperson wrote:

Uzique wrote:

eleven bravo wrote:

I never took any feminist studies either but as a poli sci major, feminist studies and how they relate to IR and comparative politics and history and whatever is mentioned along with everything else
i have a friend that graduated from my uni in english lit last year and went to cambridge to do gender studies

she can argue anyone under a fucking table

feminism is a bottomless pit of bullshittery and boredom
Yup. I've done one module on it, and I can safely say it's incredibly boring.
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5617|London, England

Macbeth wrote:

cpt.fass1 wrote:

Genders aren't created Equal at all. The woman gets paid less because "Guess what?" she could get pregnant and be out of work for a month or two. Also working with allot of women, they get paid less cause they deserve less. Rampant Alcoholics and drug abuse? are you kidding me, I'm pretty sure those statistics are higher now then they ever were in the 50's.

Also if they want to be treated equals lets do away with alimony, stop giving dead beat moms children because they're the woman and start treating them as equals. Oh yeah we can't because of sexual harassment or they might be in a bad mood.

You can't have all the perks of the moment with none of the negatives.
Funny thing, if you're a man in the U.S. you're statistically more likely to be unemployed right now.
For the first time, American women have passed men in gaining advanced college degrees as well as bachelor's degrees, part of a trend that is helping redefine who goes off to work and who stays home with the kids.

When it comes to finishing college, roughly 20.1 million women have bachelor's degrees, compared to nearly 18.7 million men — a gap of more than 1.4 million that has remained steady in recent years. Women first passed men in bachelor's degrees in 1996.

Unemployment for men currently stands at 9.3 percent compared to 8.3 percent for women, who now make up half of the U.S. work force. The number of stay-at-home moms, meanwhile, dropped last year for a fourth year in a row to 5 million, or roughly one in four married-couple households. That's down from nearly half of such households in 1969.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110427/ap_ … ated_women

Really read some stuff by Christina Hoff Sommers. She's an equity feminist who is highly critical of modern feminism. She concludes that the modern feminist movement is about gaining preferential treatment since women have already achieved legal and civil equality.
As an aside, you know I wasn't supporting modern feminism, right? I think the pendulum has actually swung too far in their favor. They get listed as a minority for christs sakes. When coming out of divorce proceedings and the man is just as likely to end up with custody and the woman is just as likely to pay alimony, then I'll call it equal. Right now? No.

And as for men having a higher unemployment rate right now, the construction industry is dominated by men and a good chunk of that industry is still out of work.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
13rin
Member
+977|6738

Jenspm wrote:

How people can argue that "home-wives have such a good life, they can like, go to the mall and drink coffee and stuff while I have to work" is beyond me.
Shocker... Mom stayed home while Pops worked.  She kept the house up and he showed her how to invest.  Mom's now a multi-millionaire into herself.  Happy Housewife?  I dunno if she was happy all the time, but seeing as she just paid to renovate her entire home including a nice addition... Gotta say it worked for her.  Everyone else?  Who knows.

eleven bravo wrote:

for example, feminism had multiple categories
It does, but you still have to fit within the predefined acceptable category of it.  Palin does, but ask a hard core feminist if Palin is one of them.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/10/ … 8240.shtml

This was interesting, kinda went against the op.  Personally, I could care less if women work.  Missus works and that's fine by me.  If she didn't want to work, that'd be fine by me too.  Yet I wonder how many men could get away with being 'Mr. Mom'....
I stood in line for four hours. They better give me a Wal-Mart gift card, or something.  - Rodney Booker, Job Fair attendee.

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