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Thoughts on Feminism

Migrated topic.
Nathanial.Dread said:
The same culture (which is perpetuated by both men and women, it's true) that tacitly condones rape/harassment, blames survivors, and trivializes the reality of sexual assault is the SAME culture that stratifies society by gender, giving men, throughout history, the overwhelming power and authority, while putting women is subservient places is key.

...

That's why we call it feminism. Because it is a movement diametrically opposed to those cultural institutions that marginalize femininity.

Here's a (paraphrased) quote that I love, that I think some of you all should take some time to digest:

"Feminism doesn't teach women to hate men. Feminism teaches women to stop prioritizing the feelings and needs of men over their own. It's men who seem to think that's hatred."

Blessings
~ND

I can certainly agree with eveything you're saying; I can honestly say you've helped to make me undertsand the right perspective to have on this topic. I would however like to emphasize the point that we both seem to agree with here, that it is both men and woman that have put men in the dominant position, and that to fix the problems that arise from this, feminists must target both men and women.
 
hug46 said:
Especially if you started saying things like "i agree with equal rights for women but this equality doesn't include the right to be an asshole like some men are" -that in itself is sexist.

If you cared to actually go to the effort of quoting me properly (which you did not; I said "shouldn't", not "doesn't"), it would be clear I was bemoaning the fact the certain high profile feminist use equal rights as a pretext for taking advantage of the possibility of now being assholes, when they shouldn't in fact be doing this because of the obvious harm this would do to feminism. Please don't make me out to be some kind of anti-feminist asshole. All you now about me is through words I'm hurriedly typing on my iPhone, a lot of what I'm saying is easily misinterpretable.
 
Psybin said:
PH0Man said:
Psybin said:
PH0Man said:
Rape culture refers to the culture/system that exists wherein women aren't taken seriously due to normalization of sexual assault and victim-blaming ("boys will be boys", "she shouldn't have been drinking", "she was asking for it" )

Why then is somehow directly the fault of exclusively men? Why can it not be said the society as a whole needs to change it's views of rape, take the issue more seriously?

I think you are assuming a lot of things about a lot of people. You may have met some third wave feminists that hate men and blame them for all their problems, but by lumping all third wave feminists in with them you're writing off millions of people with legitimate experiences and opinions. What if we judge all cops by those who kill unarmed blacks, or all Muslims by the .01% of Muslims worldwide involved in terrorist activities? Does that put it into perspective?

PH0Man said:
Both men and women are raped, by both men a women. It is not a female vs. male issue, it is a struggle of the individual within a heartless society, a struggle that society as a whole, not just men, needs to address.

While it is true that both men and women are raped, men only make up 15% of rape victims according to the 2012 FBI crime report. It isn't a male vs. female issue, but females are statistically affected by rape 6x more than men making them the primary victim of sexual assault. You say that society as a whole needs to address it (which is true) but then proceed to write off the very people attempting to do just that by simplifying their message into something which is easy to attack but bares little relevance or resemblance to the actual goals and message of the feminist movement.

I think it's become very fashionable to bash feminists based on caricatures of them and their views rather than listening to what a group of people have to say about the struggles, harassment, humiliation, and violence that they face on a regular basis.

Victims of Sexual Violence: Statistics | RAINN

Here too I can agree with you: my experience with third wave feminists is quite limited, though of the ones I have met, they all seemed to have something against men (not just me). I didn't mean to write off the people attempting to address the very real issues that exist today, I was mearly trying to point out that many of the ones I know go about it in a less than efficient and all too hate filled manner.
 
blue lunar night is the truth teller. 3rd wavers ARE misandrists/anti-humanists. They've got no one less themselves and ambivalent gamma orbiters. Thankfully their political clout is starting to slide as they become appropriately marginalized joining yet another "victim class" in the grotesquely macabre, coalition of the fringe. Is it any wonder young men are MGTOW/herbivore?

Peace
 
Legarto Rey said:
blue lunar night is the truth teller. 3rd wavers ARE misandrists/anti-humanists. They've got no one less themselves and ambivalent gamma orbiters. Thankfully their political clout is starting to slide as they become appropriately marginalized joining yet another "victim class" in the grotesquely macabre, coalition of the fringe. Is it any wonder young men are MGTOW/herbivore?

Peace
I followed (but vehemently disagree with) all that right up to 'herbivore.' Is this an attack on vegetarianism?

Blessings
~ND
 
Nathanial.Dread said:
I followed (but vehemently disagree with) all that right up to 'herbivore.' Is this an attack on vegetarianism?
Blessings
~ND

I think it was a reference to this

I would love to hear more about why you disagree with these views?
 
PH0Man said:
Nathanial.Dread said:
I followed (but vehemently disagree with) all that right up to 'herbivore.' Is this an attack on vegetarianism?
Blessings
~ND

I think it was a reference to this

I would love to hear more about why you disagree with these views?
Let's start with the completely inappropriate lumping of an entire group into one category. I'm sure you'd object if someone said "all psychedelic users are junkies" or "all men are rapists," and by the same token, I object to calling all 3rd Wave feminists as misandrists.

The entire idea of classifying people as alpha, beta, and gamma, is messed up for a number of reasons (the fact that it is completely inaccurate is just the start).

Furthermore, I see no reason to believe that feminist ideology is starting to loose importance in any way, shape, or form.

And lastly, I think that calling those groups associated with feminism 'grotesque' and 'macabre,' is completely inappropriate. Those people (which I count myself among) are those who are marginalized, abused, and murdered by society at large.

Blessings
~ND
 
Is Feminism a subset of biology? Autosomes & Allosomes look like this:

X_Y_chromosome.jpg

chromosome-2_slide-05051b12834ec0e9e37beba0b96589903e2290c1-s900-c85.jpg
 
PH0Man said:
I can see men have more green Y paint...this seems significant
Also significant: Women are objects. And so are men. If you see them as clusters of squishy protein balls. :twisted:
 
Some interesting thoughts of feminism and biology - published in Nature (a very prestigious scientific journal for those who don't know).


As a clinical geneticist, Paul James is accustomed to discussing some of the most delicate issues with his patients. But in early 2010, he found himself having a particularly awkward conversation about sex.

A 46-year-old pregnant woman had visited his clinic at the Royal Melbourne Hospital in Australia to hear the results of an amniocentesis test to screen her baby's chromosomes for abnormalities. The baby was fine — but follow-up tests had revealed something astonishing about the mother. Her body was built of cells from two individuals, probably from twin embryos that had merged in her own mother's womb. And there was more. One set of cells carried two X chromosomes, the complement that typically makes a person female; the other had an X and a Y. Halfway through her fifth decade and pregnant with her third child, the woman learned for the first time that a large part of her body was chromosomally male1. “That's kind of science-fiction material for someone who just came in for an amniocentesis,” says James.

Sex can be much more complicated than it at first seems. According to the simple scenario, the presence or absence of a Y chromosome is what counts: with it, you are male, and without it, you are female. But doctors have long known that some people straddle the boundary — their sex chromosomes say one thing, but their gonads (ovaries or testes) or sexual anatomy say another. Parents of children with these kinds of conditions — known as intersex conditions, or differences or disorders of sex development (DSDs) — often face difficult decisions about whether to bring up their child as a boy or a girl. Some researchers now say that as many as 1 person in 100 has some form of DSD2.

When genetics is taken into consideration, the boundary between the sexes becomes even blurrier. Scientists have identified many of the genes involved in the main forms of DSD, and have uncovered variations in these genes that have subtle effects on a person's anatomical or physiological sex. What's more, new technologies in DNA sequencing and cell biology are revealing that almost everyone is, to varying degrees, a patchwork of genetically distinct cells, some with a sex that might not match that of the rest of their body. Some studies even suggest that the sex of each cell drives its behaviour, through a complicated network of molecular interactions. “I think there's much greater diversity within male or female, and there is certainly an area of overlap where some people can't easily define themselves within the binary structure,” says John Achermann, who studies sex development and endocrinology at University College London's Institute of Child Health.

These discoveries do not sit well in a world in which sex is still defined in binary terms. Few legal systems allow for any ambiguity in biological sex, and a person's legal rights and social status can be heavily influenced by whether their birth certificate says male or female.

“The main problem with a strong dichotomy is that there are intermediate cases that push the limits and ask us to figure out exactly where the dividing line is between males and females,” says Arthur Arnold at the University of California, Los Angeles, who studies biological sex differences. “And that's often a very difficult problem, because sex can be defined a number of ways.”
The start of sex

That the two sexes are physically different is obvious, but at the start of life, it is not. Five weeks into development, a human embryo has the potential to form both male and female anatomy. Next to the developing kidneys, two bulges known as the gonadal ridges emerge alongside two pairs of ducts, one of which can form the uterus and Fallopian tubes, and the other the male internal genital plumbing: the epididymes, vas deferentia and seminal vesicles. At six weeks, the gonad switches on the developmental pathway to become an ovary or a testis. If a testis develops, it secretes testosterone, which supports the development of the male ducts. It also makes other hormones that force the presumptive uterus and Fallopian tubes to shrink away. If the gonad becomes an ovary, it makes oestrogen, and the lack of testosterone causes the male plumbing to wither. The sex hormones also dictate the development of the external genitalia, and they come into play once more at puberty, triggering the development of secondary sexual characteristics such as breasts or facial hair.

Changes to any of these processes can have dramatic effects on an individual's sex. Gene mutations affecting gonad development can result in a person with XY chromosomes developing typically female characteristics, whereas alterations in hormone signalling can cause XX individuals to develop along male lines.

For many years, scientists believed that female development was the default programme, and that male development was actively switched on by the presence of a particular gene on the Y chromosome. In 1990, researchers made headlines when they uncovered the identity of this gene3, 4, which they called SRY. Just by itself, this gene can switch the gonad from ovarian to testicular development. For example, XX individuals who carry a fragment of the Y chromosome that contains SRY develop as males.

By the turn of the millennium, however, the idea of femaleness being a passive default option had been toppled by the discovery of genes that actively promote ovarian development and suppress the testicular programme — such as one called WNT4. XY individuals with extra copies of this gene can develop atypical genitals and gonads, and a rudimentary uterus and Fallopian tubes5. In 2011, researchers showed6 that if another key ovarian gene, RSPO1, is not working normally, it causes XX people to develop an ovotestis — a gonad with areas of both ovarian and testicular development.

These discoveries have pointed to a complex process of sex determination, in which the identity of the gonad emerges from a contest between two opposing networks of gene activity. Changes in the activity or amounts of molecules (such as WNT4) in the networks can tip the balance towards or away from the sex seemingly spelled out by the chromosomes. “It has been, in a sense, a philosophical change in our way of looking at sex; that it's a balance,” says Eric Vilain, a clinician and the director of the Center for Gender-Based Biology at the University of California, Los Angeles. “It's more of a systems-biology view of the world of sex.”

According to some scientists, that balance can shift long after development is over. Studies in mice suggest that the gonad teeters between being male and female throughout life, its identity requiring constant maintenance. In 2009, researchers reported7 deactivating an ovarian gene called Foxl2 in adult female mice; they found that the granulosa cells that support the development of eggs transformed into Sertoli cells, which support sperm development. Two years later, a separate team showed8 the opposite: that inactivating a gene called Dmrt1 could turn adult testicular cells into ovarian ones. “That was the big shock, the fact that it was going on post-natally,” says Vincent Harley, a geneticist who studies gonad development at the MIMR-PHI Institute for Medical Research in Melbourne.

The gonad is not the only source of diversity in sex. A number of DSDs are caused by changes in the machinery that responds to hormonal signals from the gonads and other glands. Complete androgen insensitivity syndrome, or CAIS, for example, arises when a person's cells are deaf to male sex hormones, usually because the receptors that respond to the hormones are not working. People with CAIS have Y chromosomes and internal testes, but their external genitalia are female, and they develop as females at puberty.

Conditions such as these meet the medical definition of DSDs, in which an individual's anatomical sex seems to be at odds with their chromosomal or gonadal sex. But they are rare — affecting about 1 in 4,500 people9. Some researchers now say that the definition should be widened to include subtle variations of anatomy such as mild hypospadias, in which a man's urethral opening is on the underside of his penis rather than at the tip. The most inclusive definitions point to the figure of 1 in 100 people having some form of DSD, says Vilain.

But beyond this, there could be even more variation. Since the 1990s, researchers have identified more than 25 genes involved in DSDs, and next-generation DNA sequencing in the past few years has uncovered a wide range of variations in these genes that have mild effects on individuals, rather than causing DSDs. “Biologically, it's a spectrum,” says Vilain.

A DSD called congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH), for example, causes the body to produce excessive amounts of male sex hormones; XX individuals with this condition are born with ambiguous genitalia (an enlarged clitoris and fused labia that resemble a scrotum). It is usually caused by a severe deficiency in an enzyme called 21-hydroxylase. But women carrying mutations that result in a milder deficiency develop a 'non-classical' form of CAH, which affects about 1 in 1,000 individuals; they may have male-like facial and body hair, irregular periods or fertility problems — or they might have no obvious symptoms at all. Another gene, NR5A1, is currently fascinating researchers because variations in it cause a wide range of effects10, from underdeveloped gonads to mild hypospadias in men, and premature menopause in women.

Many people never discover their condition unless they seek help for infertility, or discover it through some other brush with medicine. Last year, for example, surgeons reported that they had been operating on a hernia in a man, when they discovered that he had a womb11. The man was 70, and had fathered four children.
Cellular sex

Studies of DSDs have shown that sex is no simple dichotomy. But things become even more complex when scientists zoom in to look at individual cells. The common assumption that every cell contains the same set of genes is untrue. Some people have mosaicism: they develop from a single fertilized egg but become a patchwork of cells with different genetic make-ups. This can happen when sex chromosomes are doled out unevenly between dividing cells during early embryonic development. For example, an embryo that starts off as XY can lose a Y chromosome from a subset of its cells. If most cells end up as XY, the result is a physically typical male, but if most cells are X, the result is a female with a condition called Turner's syndrome, which tends to result in restricted height and underdeveloped ovaries. This kind of mosaicism is rare, affecting about 1 in 15,000 people.

The effects of sex-chromosome mosaicism range from the prosaic to the extraordinary. A few cases have been documented in which a mosaic XXY embryo became a mix of two cell types — some with two X chromosomes and some with two Xs and a Y — and then split early in development12. This results in 'identical' twins of different sexes.

There is a second way in which a person can end up with cells of different chromosomal sexes. James's patient was a chimaera: a person who develops from a mixture of two fertilized eggs, usually owing to a merger between embryonic twins in the womb. This kind of chimaerism resulting in a DSD is extremely rare, representing about 1% of all DSD cases.

“Surgeons discovered that the man had a womb. He was 70.”

Another form of chimaerism, however, is now known to be widespread. Termed microchimaerism, it happens when stem cells from a fetus cross the placenta into the mother's body, and vice versa. It was first identified in the early 1970s — but the big surprise came more than two decades later, when researchers discovered how long these crossover cells survive, even though they are foreign tissue that the body should, in theory, reject. A study in 1996 recorded women with fetal cells in their blood as many as 27 years after giving birth13; another found that maternal cells remain in children up to adulthood14. This type of work has further blurred the sex divide, because it means that men often carry cells from their mothers, and women who have been pregnant with a male fetus can carry a smattering of its discarded cells.

Microchimaeric cells have been found in many tissues. In 2012, for example, immunologist Lee Nelson and her team at the University of Washington in Seattle found XY cells in post-mortem samples of women's brains15. The oldest woman carrying male DNA was 94 years old. Other studies have shown that these immigrant cells are not idle; they integrate into their new environment and acquire specialized functions, including (in mice at least) forming neurons in the brain16. But what is not known is how a peppering of male cells in a female, or vice versa, affects the health or characteristics of a tissue — for example, whether it makes the tissue more susceptible to diseases more common in the opposite sex. “I think that's a great question,” says Nelson, “and it is essentially entirely unaddressed.” In terms of human behaviour, the consensus is that a few male microchimaeric cells in the brain seem unlikely to have a major effect on a woman.

Scientists are now finding that XX and XY cells behave in different ways, and that this can be independent of the action of sex hormones. “To tell you the truth, it's actually kind of surprising how big an effect of sex chromosomes we've been able to see,” says Arnold. He and his colleagues have shown17 that the dose of X chromosomes in a mouse's body can affect its metabolism, and studies in a lab dish suggest18 that XX and XY cells behave differently on a molecular level, for example with different metabolic responses to stress. The next challenge, says Arnold, is to uncover the mechanisms. His team is studying the handful of X-chromosome genes now known to be more active in females than in males. “I actually think that there are more sex differences than we know of,” says Arnold.
Beyond the binary

Biologists may have been building a more nuanced view of sex, but society has yet to catch up. True, more than half a century of activism from members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community has softened social attitudes to sexual orientation and gender. Many societies are now comfortable with men and women crossing conventional societal boundaries in their choice of appearance, career and sexual partner. But when it comes to sex, there is still intense social pressure to conform to the binary model.

This pressure has meant that people born with clear DSDs often undergo surgery to 'normalize' their genitals. Such surgery is controversial because it is usually performed on babies, who are too young to consent, and risks assigning a sex at odds with the child's ultimate gender identity — their sense of their own gender. Intersex advocacy groups have therefore argued that doctors and parents should at least wait until a child is old enough to communicate their gender identity, which typically manifests around the age of three, or old enough to decide whether they want surgery at all.

This issue was brought into focus by a lawsuit filed in South Carolina in May 2013 by the adoptive parents of a child known as MC, who was born with ovotesticular DSD, a condition that produces ambiguous genitalia and gonads with both ovarian and testicular tissue. When MC was 16 months old, doctors performed surgery to assign the child as female — but MC, who is now eight years old, went on to develop a male gender identity. Because he was in state care at the time of his treatment, the lawsuit alleged not only that the surgery constituted medical malpractice, but also that the state denied him his constitutional right to bodily integrity and his right to reproduce. Last month, a court decision prevented the federal case from going to trial, but a state case is ongoing.

“This is potentially a critically important decision for children born with intersex traits,” says Julie Greenberg, a specialist in legal issues relating to gender and sex at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego, California. The suit will hopefully encourage doctors in the United States to refrain from performing operations on infants with DSDs when there are questions about their medical necessity, she says. It could raise awareness about “the emotional and physical struggles intersex people are forced to endure because doctors wanted to 'help' us fit in,” says Georgiann Davis, a sociologist who studies issues surrounding intersex traits and gender at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who was born with CAIS.

Doctors and scientists are sympathetic to these concerns, but the MC case also makes some uneasy — because they know how much is still to be learned about the biology of sex19. They think that changing medical practice by legal ruling is not ideal, and would like to see more data collected on outcomes such as quality of life and sexual function to help decide the best course of action for people with DSDs — something that researchers are starting to do.

Diagnoses of DSDs once relied on hormone tests, anatomical inspections and imaging, followed by painstaking tests of one gene at a time. Now, advances in genetic techniques mean that teams can analyse multiple genes at once, aiming straight for a genetic diagnosis and making the process less stressful for families. Vilain, for example, is using whole-exome sequencing — which sequences the protein-coding regions of a person's entire genome — on XY people with DSDs. Last year, his team showed20 that exome sequencing could offer a probable diagnosis in 35% of the study participants whose genetic cause had been unknown.

Vilain, Harley and Achermann say that doctors are taking an increasingly circumspect attitude to genital surgery. Children with DSDs are treated by multidisciplinary teams that aim to tailor management and support to each individual and their family, but this usually involves raising a child as male or female even if no surgery is done. Scientists and advocacy groups mostly agree on this, says Vilain: “It might be difficult for children to be raised in a gender that just does not exist out there.” In most countries, it is legally impossible to be anything but male or female.

Yet if biologists continue to show that sex is a spectrum, then society and state will have to grapple with the consequences, and work out where and how to draw the line. Many transgender and intersex activists dream of a world where a person's sex or gender is irrelevant. Although some governments are moving in this direction, Greenberg is pessimistic about the prospects of realizing this dream — in the United States, at least. “I think to get rid of gender markers altogether or to allow a third, indeterminate marker, is going to be difficult.”

So if the law requires that a person is male or female, should that sex be assigned by anatomy, hormones, cells or chromosomes, and what should be done if they clash? “My feeling is that since there is not one biological parameter that takes over every other parameter, at the end of the day, gender identity seems to be the most reasonable parameter,” says Vilain. In other words, if you want to know whether someone is male or female, it may be best just to ask.

Blessings
~ND
 
Nathanial.Dread said:
Some interesting thoughts of feminism and biology - published in Nature (a very prestigious scientific journal for those who don't know).

Maybe we should define sex quaternary, not binary. Like: A, U, G, C. But then surprise: another mutation that doesn't fit the AUGC-scheme. We might also see G-ism supremacists. :thumb_dow

243px-Aminoacids_table.svg.png

240px-Yin_yang.svg.png
 
Ufostrahlen said:
Nathanial.Dread said:
Some interesting thoughts of feminism and biology - published in Nature (a very prestigious scientific journal for those who don't know).

Maybe we should define sex quaternary, not binary. Like: A, U, G, C. But then surprise: another mutation that doesn't fit the AUGC-scheme. :thumb_dow
Maybe it's all a gradient in an absurdly high number of dimensions and any attempt to divide it into ordinal sections is a intrinsically flawed endeavor.

Blessings
~ND
 
Nathanial.Dread said:
Maybe it's all a gradient in an absurdly high number of dimensions and any attempt to divide it into ordinal sections is a intrinsically flawed endeavor.
Doesn't it matter anyways and being nice to each other is more important than -isms?
 
A 46-year-old pregnant woman had visited his clinic at the Royal Melbourne Hospital in Australia to hear the results of an amniocentesis test to screen her baby's chromosomes for abnormalities. The baby was fine.

Now THAT's amazing. Never knew women around that age would/could still bear healthy/viable children...
 
Ufostrahlen said:
Nathanial.Dread said:
Maybe it's all a gradient in an absurdly high number of dimensions and any attempt to divide it into ordinal sections is a intrinsically flawed endeavor.
Doesn't it matter anyways and being nice to each other is more important than -isms?
Why can't it be both? We can both accurately describes the complexity of sexual dimorphism AND be nice to each other.

So often when people say "let's avoid all these labels and just be kind to each-other," it sounds like they're really saying "let's stop talking about things that make me uncomfortable."

Blessings
~ND
 
Nathanial.Dread said:
So often when people say "let's avoid all these labels and just be kind to each-other," it sounds like they're really saying "let's stop talking about things that make me uncomfortable."

Blessings
~ND
Nah, we can talk about it. Let's make up 65.536 sexes or more (we want to be precise and inclusive, don't we?) and memorize them. Full memorization & recitation of those grants you a professorship in gender studies.
 
Ufostrahlen said:
Nathanial.Dread said:
So often when people say "let's avoid all these labels and just be kind to each-other," it sounds like they're really saying "let's stop talking about things that make me uncomfortable."

Blessings
~ND
Nah, we can talk about it. Let's make up 65.536 sexes or more (we want to be precise and inclusive, don't we?) and memorize them. Full memorization & recitation of those grants you a professorship in gender studies.

Many of the third wave would get VERY annoyed with your sense of humour :p

Get into an argument with one of them and they'll have you labelled as problematic in 3 minutes. After 6 minutes, you'll probably be subject to a crescendo of insults, and if you dare surpass 10 minutes one of you will be in tears.
 
PH0Man said:
Get into an argument with one of them and they'll have you labelled as problematic in 3 minutes. After 6 minutes, you'll probably be subject to a crescendo of insults, and if you dare surpass 10 minutes one of you will be in tears.
Really? Why should I be in tears if I speak from the heart? Maybe at a point I just walk away and sort my priorities. I can live with labels.
 
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