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[–]circlingmyownvoid2 3 insightful - 6 fun3 insightful - 5 fun4 insightful - 6 fun -  (24 children)

See, the thing with that version is that it’s not anything like what females experience, and it feels very condescending to be told that a filtered and selected version of what we endure is in any way the same thing.

I don’t think I’ve ever said they were. What we experience is different from male socialization but I don’t think I’ve ever said it’s exactly the same as natal women.

I think you are not characterizing it correctly. It’s not objectifying. Like I happen to enjoy soap opera style melodramas because it has as positive association with watching One life to live with my mom. That’s considered feminine but hardly objectifying. The same can be said for women more generally. It’s not aping women. It’s someone hearing from society that women wear makeup to look pretty, and then learning that social desire to look pretty and developing an interest in makeup. It’s not mimicking or aping women, but rather absorbing the messaging society has to and about them formatively. You are mischaracterizing our evolved personalities and interests as an act of mimicry when in fact it’s just us expressing our own desires, shaped as they are by social experience.

[–]HouseplantWomen who disagree with QT are a different sex[S] 12 insightful - 1 fun12 insightful - 0 fun13 insightful - 1 fun -  (2 children)

It is objectifying though. Like..I’m a woman telling you that a male observing and then mimicking a woman is objectifying. She has become an object to study, a collection of mannerisms to be assimilated. At no point in this is she an active or willing participant, she’s not even aware she is being used as a case study.

You can say it’s not objectifying but idk how telling women we are wrong about things done to us makes that correct.

Assigning entertainment and objects female or male isn’t the objectifying part. That’s just plain old sexism.

Here’s the thing, you claim it’s a desire to be pretty because you are told women are pretty. Girls are afraid not to be pretty because we are told our worth is our beauty. Femininity has nothing to do with women’s desires. It is forced on women and created by male desire, and then other males adopt it because they desired what women were indoctrinated with. Then we are told that this desire makes them women.

Even you have to see how that’s a bit fucked up. It is the adoption of something forced on us and then treated as a defining feature of womanhood.

[–]circlingmyownvoid2 4 insightful - 7 fun4 insightful - 6 fun5 insightful - 7 fun -  (1 child)

It is objectifying though. Like..I’m a woman telling you that a male observing and then mimicking a woman is objectifying.

And I’m saying “mimicking” is mischaracterization. It’s no more mimicking than a child learning to talk from hearing their parents. It’s just learning.

Here’s the thing, you claim it’s a desire to be pretty because you are told women are pretty. Girls are afraid not to be pretty because we are told our worth is our beauty. Femininity has nothing to do with women’s desires. It is forced on women and created by male desire, and then other males adopt it because they desired what women were indoctrinated with. Then we are told that this desire makes them women.

We’re both shaped by socialization, sure and one I’ve already said isn’t the same one. And it’s as much about disassociating with male expected traits. I.e we are told men aren’t pretty women are so someone who wants to be seen as or feel more like a woman will naturally develop an urge to be seen as pretty. Because it is a trait associated with the desired outcome and therefore becomes desireable. Society shapes us all, we all react differently

[–]HouseplantWomen who disagree with QT are a different sex[S] 10 insightful - 1 fun10 insightful - 0 fun11 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

WHat do you think mimicking means? Children do learn to talk via mimicking, just so you know. It’s male socialised perspective on what female socialisation appears to be from afar. It understands nothing about what females endure from our socialisation and only affects surface level observations.

How does that dissociate from male socialisation when the child is still seeped in it, regardless of the kids preferences? How much of socialisation do you think is conscious and knowable to a child?

Imo you give the child adult like perceptive abilities in a retrospective narrative because children are simply not developed enough to recognise that nice sweet mommy buying him shorts and not skirts is also socialising him as male.

You do not get to tell women that have been objectified by males that observing women like a herd of goats and adopting mannerisms seen is anything but objectification. You do not experience it, you do not tell women when we experience it and don’t. You have no right to tell women that we are wrong about how we are treated by men.

[–]MarkTwainiac 9 insightful - 1 fun9 insightful - 0 fun10 insightful - 1 fun -  (20 children)

Like I happen to enjoy soap opera style melodramas because it has as positive association with watching One life to live with my mom. That’s considered feminine but hardly objectifying. The same can be said for women more generally. It’s not aping women. It’s someone hearing from society that women wear makeup to look pretty, and then learning that social desire to look pretty and developing an interest in makeup.

Defining women as those who watch "soap opera style melodramas" and "wear makeup to look pretty" might not be objectifying in every aspect of the dictionary definition, but it's still an insulting characterization that reduces us to superficial, sexist, wholly inaccurate stereotypes that are deeply misogynistic and dehumanizing.

Your claim that watching & enjoying soap opera style melodramas "is considered feminine" by society in general is laughable. The reality is that you personally consider it feminine. Maybe this isn't the case with you, but IME individuals who blithely assume their own personal views must be universal views held by everyone else are displaying arrogant, self-centered tendencies that often come from distinctly male socialization. And/or from a parochialism stemming from personality problems like narcissism & solipsism, which also are traits fostered by male socialization.

Also, the rest of the world isn't fixated on coding everything human do as either "feminine" or "masculine" the way genderists are. The ridiculously sexist "logic" of gender ideology often leads to odd conclusions. For example, according to your view that watching soap opera style melodramas "is considered feminine" means that the acerbic Greg House of the TV series House, an unsociable character meant to be the bad boy big man of diagnostic medicine as well as a Lothario and dickhead, was "feminine" because watching soap operas on TV was one of his favorite pastimes.

[–]circlingmyownvoid2 3 insightful - 5 fun3 insightful - 4 fun4 insightful - 5 fun -  (19 children)

Defining women as those who watch "soap opera style melodramas" and "wear makeup to look pretty" might not be objectifying in every aspect of the dictionary definition, but it's still an insulting characterization that reduces us to superficial, sexist, wholly inaccurate stereotypes that are deeply misogynistic and dehumanizing.

I don’t think it’s conscious, it’s absorbing societal messaging.

Your claim that watching & enjoying soap opera style melodramas "is considered feminine" by society in general is laughable. The reality is that you personally consider it feminine. Maybe this isn't the case with you, but IME individuals who blithely assume their own personal views must be universal views held by everyone else are displaying arrogant, self-centered tendencies that often come from distinctly male socialization. And/or from a parochialism stemming from personality problems like narcissism & solipsism, which also are traits fostered by male socialization.

This is a stretch. The genre literally was made for women because it was targeted to housewives. I’m not saying all women like soaps, but they are absolutely made to target women.

Also, the rest of the world isn't fixated on coding everything human do as either "feminine" or "masculine" the way genderists are.

Have you ever been around a male child in school of any sort? You can get bullied as a girl or a faggot for months for wearing a pink shirt. You vastly underestimate how hard gendered norms are attached and enforced if you think most people don’t code things as masculine or feminine.

Also, the rest of the world isn't fixated on coding everything human do as either "feminine" or "masculine" the way genderists are. The ridiculously sexist "logic" of gender ideology often leads to odd conclusions. For example, according to your view that watching soap opera style melodramas "is considered feminine" means that the acerbic Greg House of the TV series House, an unsociable character meant to be the bad boy big man of diagnostic medicine as well as a Lothario and dickhead, was "feminine" because watching soap operas on TV was one of his favorite pastimes.

It’s a feminine coded activity. The inclusion of that trait for house was as a joke. Same as when John Spartan knitting in demolition man was. It is a joke for contrast based on the very fact they are activities society takes as feminine

[–]MarkTwainiac 10 insightful - 2 fun10 insightful - 1 fun11 insightful - 2 fun -  (15 children)

The genre literally was made for women because it was targeted to housewives.

I agree with you that the genre - or at least the daytime TV soap genre - was indeed targeted to housewives & made for women. Moreover, the daytime soap genre was made for American women pushed out of the workplace & relegated to being housewives after WW2 by men running TV production companies & networks. These men were part of a larger campaign sponsored by the US government & establishment to get women reconciled to being pushed out of the paid workforce & stuck at home. In the case of daytime soaps specifically, the men who made them & targeted them at women were also working at the behest of male-run corporations who sponsored such shows or otherwise paid for them by buying advertising time. Many of the corporations that funded this genre of TV entertainment manufactured soap, laundry & dish detergents & household cleaning products; hence, the nickname "soap operas."

I’m not saying all women like soaps, but they are absolutely made to target women.

But in your previous you said that watching & liking soap opera style melodramas "is considered feminine" & you implied this is because of something you deem is innate in female people. Now you are saying something totally different. Also, at the end of this most recent post, you revert to you original claim that watching soap operas "is considered feminine" when you assert that

It’s a feminine coded activity. [One of many] activities society takes as feminine

So which is it?

Interestingly, in the passage of mine you chose to quote, you only address one of the two main points I made & ignore the other. My other point was about your tendency to take your own personal beliefs about what is "feminine" and project them onto all of human society in the effort to make it seem that your own idiosyncratic views are universal views held by pretty much everyone on earth. I suggested that this tendency smacks of male socialization, & of narcissism & solipsism, though I did say that "maybe this isn't the case with you." But how about you address this other point?

You seem to have given a great deal of thought to how your own views of what's "feminine" & "masculine" developed & why you idealize the former & abhor the latter. But you don't seem to have given much thought to the possibility that your own views & feelings are just that - your own. Rather, you seem insistent on believing your own views & experience apply to everyone else too, as if there is one "human experience" overall & your own experience represents it. Seriously, what is that all about?

Have you ever been around a male child in school of any sort? You can get bullied as a girl or a faggot for months for wearing a pink shirt. You vastly underestimate how hard gendered norms are attached and enforced if you think most people don’t code things as masculine or feminine.

You are attributing the bullying you got to "gendered norms," not to the homophobia, misogyny, male supremacy & authoritarian impulse toward social convention that underlie "gendered norms" & gave rise to them in the first place. I am sorry you were bullied & called homophobic slurs. My hunch is that most of the people who did this bullying were males, so this was mainly male-on-male homophobic bullying. But you weren't bullied "as a girl" like you say. You were bullied as a boy by other boys who were as misogynistic as they were homophobic. If they called you a girl, it was because in their eyes, that was the ultimate put-down, the worst insult they could come up with. They did not actually see you "as a girl."

As for your query, "Have you ever been around a male child of any sort?" & then your description of the bullying you got in school: In this remark & many others on these threads over many months, you give the impression that you think you & other males like you are the only ones who ever got bullied in school. Which illustrates my earlier point that IMO you appear to have a self-centered POV that is clear evidence of male socialization, solipsism & narcissism.

For the record, girls get constantly bullied by boys in school. And girls get routinely sexually molested by boys in school too. This happens whether we are "gender conforming" or non-conforming. Boys & men do this to us because we are female, not because we are - or are not - "feminine."

I was a girl child who was frequently sexually harassed & groped by boys in throughout my schooling. This started in first grade when boys nicknamed me "skinhead" after a hairdresser went overboard in giving me the pixie cut lots of little girls my age customarily wore, & when two boys shoved me into a coat closet, pushed me onto the floor & punched me as they pulled up the skirt of my school uniform & pulled down my underpants.

In lower & middle school, I & other girls I went to school with were verbally abused & physically abused by boys pretty much every day. Boys would routinely insult us for running & throwing "like a girl," for being "stupid/dumb like a girl," for being "gross like girls" & "spastic/slow/klutzy like girls." Boys would push us, pull our hair, trip us, aim spitballs at us, grab our books & lunches & toss them to one another, & as we got older they would routinely gang up to corner & grope us to see if we were developing breasts yet or wearing bras. Starting in 6th grade (US school), girls who had long hair & had the bad luck to sit in front of certain especially malevolent boys in the school I attended often had the ends of their hair singed or burnt off by the boys' Bic lighters too. Once we got to age 10-11 and started sprouting breasts & menstruating, boys' sexual harassment & body shaming of us girls ramped up even worse.

Later in my schooling, I was one of a small number of women in the first class of female students admitted as undergraduates to a prestigious US university that had been all-male for hundreds of years until then. Whilst the majority of male students, professors & administrators were decent to us, a significant number were not. As a result, I & the other women in my class were bullied on a regular basis by male students & some professors & administrators just for being there. We were called all sorts of awful names too disgusting to repeat. A number of male students threatened us with rape & other forms of physical assault as well. I got death threats, & once during first year some male students doused my dorm room door with lighter fluid & set it on fire.

I've taught classes for young children in school & in summer programs. I am the mother of grown sons. As a mum, I have hosted many birthday parties, groups sleepovers, camping trips & house parties for large groups of young males. I know full well how sexist, misogynistic & homophobic males can be, particularly school-age ones. Based on this, I disagree with you that the root cause of male bullying of girls & women, & of boys perceived to be homosexual, or to have homosexual leanings, is "gendered norms." I think the root cause is sex.

BTW, when I was at uni in the 70s, the only students who watched daytime soap operas were men who belonged to fraternities. Maybe this was because frat houses were the only places on campus that had TVs. Or maybe frat guys enjoyed soaps especially in the company of other guys.

When prime time TV soap operas came on the scene in the late 1970s with shows like Dallas, Dynasty, Knots Landing & Falcon Crest, they were avidly watched by both sexes. In the US alone, 83 million people tuned in to the "who shot JR?" episode of Dallas the night it first aired. Do you really think that all or the majority of the audience was women? And that all the males who watched were of the opinion that they were engaging in "a feminine coded activity" & thus should be dubbed "feminine" as a result?

As for your claim that Greg House's soap-opera watching "was a joke" like John Spartan knitting, maybe so. But the joke was on genderists like you who believe every human being lives our lives, and insist we must live our lives, by hewing to the strict, rigid and regressive sexist stereotypes you are so fixated on. When in point of fact, there have always been lots of men who do things genderists today personally think are "feminine coded" such as yarn arts, textile crafts & all the rest of the activities that you say "society takes as feminine" & which genderists nowadays erroneously claim have always been regarded as such in all time periods and across all cultures.

In Western culture specifically, membership in knitting guilds from circa 1200-1700 were for males only. Yes, during this time, the Virgin Mary was frequently depicted as knitting in paintings & drawings. But that didn't change the fact that only males could be trained as master knitters, & only males were allowed to learn/know the secrets of knitting as a high art. Over time, simple knitting of items like socks & caps was done outside the guild system by males & females alike. Only much later, after industrialization, did hobby knitting become a parlor craft partaken of largely by women like Britain's Queen Victoria.

Just do an image search of "men knitting" & "men knitting military" & you'll find many paintings & photos showing men from past eras knitting. In the 20th century, US soldiers recovering from war injuries commonly knit, as did soldiers during downtime. My father, a US Navy bomber & recon pilot in the Pacific during WW2, & the rest of his squadron & many other flight crews on the same air base used to knit to pass the time & help quell the anxiety between missions. My ex-father-in-law did much the same during his service, only his outfit got more into needlepoint than knitting (& after the war my ex FIL took up hooking rugs).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_knitting#/media/File:Shepherd_Sitting_Up.jpg

https://www.dharmatrading.com/home/did-you-know-about-men-and-knitting.html

[–]circlingmyownvoid2 5 insightful - 5 fun5 insightful - 4 fun6 insightful - 5 fun -  (6 children)

As for your claim that Greg House's soap-opera watching "was a joke" like John Spartan knitting, maybe so. But the joke was on genderists like you who believe every human being lives our lives, and insist we must live our lives, by hewing to the strict, rigid and regressive sexist stereotypes you are so fixated on.

I’ve literally never said that. In fact I’ve openly championed gender nonconformity and said being trans is primarilly about the body. You have absolutely no conception of my beliefs and are constantly making wildly erroneous assumptions about them.

[–]MarkTwainiac 7 insightful - 1 fun7 insightful - 0 fun8 insightful - 1 fun -  (5 children)

I’ve openly championed gender nonconformity and said being trans is primarilly about the body. You have absolutely no conception of my beliefs and are constantly making wildly erroneous assumptions about them.

Sorry, then. But if you are not a genderist, why do you make such sweeping statements as soap operas are "considered & coded feminine" and "women wear makeup to look pretty" & insist that all of society holds the same view? What are these views other than sexist, regressive sex stereotypes about the sex which is opposite to yours?

Why such sexist, muddled tosh as your claim that

we are told men aren’t pretty women are so someone who wants to be seen as or feel more like a woman will naturally develop an urge to be seen as pretty.

????

Also, please explain here or on another thread of what you mean

being trans is primarilly about the body.

Coz I genuinely am interested & you are correct in saying I "have absolutely no conception" what you mean.

[–]circlingmyownvoid2 3 insightful - 5 fun3 insightful - 4 fun4 insightful - 5 fun -  (4 children)

why do you make such sweeping statements as soap operas are "considered & coded feminine" and "women wear makeup to look pretty" & insist that all of society holds the same view?

That’s the base level societal view pressed out. Not an ideal I’m pitching or a universal. That’s the way people are generally coached.

To me body dysphoria is requisite to being trans and the reason that trans women need to be separated from transvestities. The trappings are incidental. It’s about the body dysphoria.

[–]MarkTwainiac 7 insightful - 1 fun7 insightful - 0 fun8 insightful - 1 fun -  (3 children)

Please start a thread explaining what you mean by "body dysphoria" here. What aspects of their own bodies are these persons uneasy about & dissatisfied with? Given the low rates of genital surgeries amongst trans-identified males, & the way some wax poetic about the wonders & charms of the "feminine penis," it seems the dysphoria often does not affect the male genitalia. Which strikes many of us outsiders as telling.

Does adopting an opposite-sex identity & altering a male body to look more like a female body whilst keeping the male genitals actually ameliorate the dysphoria? Does having genital surgery ameliorate it?

BTW, most female people have "body dysphoria" too, it just never got such a fancy label. And it's only been in the present century that it's become popular to think that the best way to deal with girls' & women's body dysphoria is for females to alter their female bodies so they superficially look more like male bodies.

[–]circlingmyownvoid2 2 insightful - 5 fun2 insightful - 4 fun3 insightful - 5 fun -  (2 children)

Gender dysphoria focused on masculine traits. It presents differently for different people. For instance many are bothered by their facial features, body ir facial hair, genitals, narrow hips, thick waits, lack of breasts. Different people experience different aspects. Also I suspect part of that low rate is cost. Some women are okay with their genitals and I don’t want to attack them but that’s well outside my own experience.

Does adopting an opposite-sex identity & altering a male body to look more like a female body whilst keeping the male genitals actually ameliorate the dysphoria?

Depends on the dysphoria. For me no but for some trans women maybe?

Does having genital surgery ameliorate it?

Again differs from person to person. It was extremely helpful to me.

[–]MarkTwainiac 7 insightful - 1 fun7 insightful - 0 fun8 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

Thanks for answering.

I suspect part of that low rate is cost.

Probably is, or historically was. But not anymore in the US because since 2014, genital surgeries for "transition" have been covered by private health insurance as well as by many state Medicaid programs & Medicare. Also, there are many wealthy & very well-off trans-identified males who have had all kinds of costly surgeries to every part of their bodies yet they've decided not to have surgeries on their genitals.

Overall, rates of "gender affirming" surgeries for males who identify as trans have been going up, but most of these surgeries have not involved the genitals. Nowadays, choice seems to be a bigger factor than cost in explaining why 90-95% of trans-identified males in the US keep their genitals even as many elect to have procedures like FFS, tracheal shaves, electrolysis of facial & body hair, sacs of silicone gel or saline implanted into their chests, BBLs, hip augmentation, dental contouring, hair transplants and so on.

[–]circlingmyownvoid2 3 insightful - 6 fun3 insightful - 5 fun4 insightful - 6 fun -  (7 children)

But in your previous you said that watching & liking soap opera style melodramas "is considered feminine"

Because it is

you implied this is because of something you deem is innate in female people.

I absolutely did not. I expressly said bot all women like soaps and never came close to implying it was innate. The whole conversation is about how interests are shaped by social influence. Nothing innate about it.

Interestingly, in the passage of mine you chose to quote, you only address one of the two main points I made & ignore the other. My other point was about your tendency to take your own personal beliefs about what is "feminine" and project them onto all of human society in the effort to make it seem that your own idiosyncratic views are universal views held by pretty much everyone on earth. I suggested that this tendency smacks of male socialization, & of narcissism & solipsism, though I did say that "maybe this isn't the case with you." But how about you address this other point?

There’s not a point there. Society genders stuff. Me pointing that out isn’t narcissism or “male entitlement” no Matter how much you imply it then wink at the camera.

You are attributing the bullying you got to "gendered norms," not with to the homophobia, misogyny, male supremacy & authoritarian impulse toward social convention that underlie "gendered norms" & gave rise to them in the first place.

They aren’t exclusive

I am sorry you were bullied & called homophobic slurs. My hunch is that most of the people who did this bullying were males, so this was mainly male-on-male homophobic bullying.

But you weren't bullied "as a girl" like you say. You were bullied as a boy by other boys who were as misogynistic as they were homophobic. If they called you a girl, it was because in their eyes, that was the ultimate put-down, the worst insult they could come up with. They did not actually see you "as a girl."

I mean they literally called me a girl. They feminized my name and called me that for years. But yes that was mysogynistic use of the feminine as an insult.

As for your query, "Have you ever been around a male child of any sort?" & then your description of the bullying you got in school: In this remark & many others on these threads over many months, you give the impression that you think you & other males like you are the only ones who ever got bullied in school.

I don’t imply that at all. We were bullied for specific traits which reinforce gender roles. That’s my point. Poor kids and poc kids, and smart kids all got bullied too but that’s not relevant because it wasn’t reinforcing the relevant behaviors to this discussion.

IMO you appear to have a self-centered POV that is clear evidence of male socialization, solipsism & narcissism.

Use male socialization as a card all you want but please stop accusing me of fictional mental illnesses to attempt to tear me down. It’s deeply ableist. I have several mental illnesses narcissism and solipsism aren’t among them. Stop.

For the record, girls get constantly bullied by boys in school. And girls get routinely sexually molested by boys in school too. This happens whether we are "gender conforming" or non-conforming. Boys & men do this to us because we are female, not because we are - or are not - "feminine."

I agree that happens though bullying girls to be more feminine is certainly a thing that happens. Why deny that?

I was a girl child who was frequently sexually harassed & groped by boys in throughout my schooling. This started in first grade when boys nicknamed me "skinhead" after a hairdresser went overboard in giving me the pixie cut lots of little girls my age customarily wore, & when two boys shoved me into a coat closet, pushed me onto the floor & punched me as they pulled up the skirt of my school uniform & pulled down my underpants. In lower & middle school, I & other girls I went to school with were verbally abused & physically abused by boys pretty much every day. Boys would routinely insult us for running & throwing "like a girl," for being "stupid/dumb like a girl," for being "gross like girls" & "spastic/slow/klutzy like girls." Boys would push us, pull our hair, trip us, aim spitballs at us, grab our books & lunches & toss them to one another, & as we got older they would routinely gang up to corner & grope us to see if we were developing breasts yet or wearing bras. Starting in 6th grade (US school), girls who had long hair & had the bad luck to sit in front of certain especially malevolent boys in the school I attended often had the ends of their hair singed or burnt off by the boys' Bic lighters too. Once we got to age 10-11 and started sprouting breasts & menstruating, boys' sexual harassment & body shaming of us girls ramped up even worse. Later in my schooling, I was one of a small number of women in the first class of female students admitted as undergraduates to a prestigious US university that had been all-male for hundreds of years until then. Whilst the majority of male students, professors & administrators were decent to us, a significant number were not. As a result, I & the other women in my class were bullied on a regular basis by male students & some professors & administrators just for being there. We were called all sorts of awful names too disgusting to repeat. A number of male students threatened us with rape & other forms of physical assault as well. I got death threats, & once during first year some male students doused my dorm room door with lighter fluid & set it on fire.

I’m sorry all that happened but I never said or implied it didn’t. Bully to reinforce gendered norms is just one facet. People get bullied for many reasons and it’s shameful it wasn’t more properly dealt with.

I've taught classes for young children in school & in summer programs. I am the mother of grown sons. As a mum, I have hosted many birthday parties, groups sleepovers, camping trips & house parties for large groups of young males. I know full well how sexist, misogynistic & homophobic males can be, particularly school-age ones. Based on this, I disagree with you that the root cause of male bullying of girls & women, & of boys perceived to be homosexual, or to have homosexual leanings, is "gendered norms." I think the root cause is sex.

It’s a cause of one kind of bullying not the root cause of all bullying. That being said it’s pretty wild to assert that bullying by boys of girls and other boys is somehow the result of sex.

I’m out of time to respond to the rest, I will try to pick up later.

[–]MarkTwainiac 7 insightful - 1 fun7 insightful - 0 fun8 insightful - 1 fun -  (6 children)

I absolutely did not. I expressly said bot all women like soaps and never came close to implying it was innate. The whole conversation is about how interests are shaped by social influence. Nothing innate about it.

I apologize for misreading. The mistake is all mine. Sorry.

I mean they literally called me a girl. They feminized my name and called me that for years. But yes that was mysogynistic use of the feminine as an insult.

Again, I am sorry this happened to you. I was not contesting that it happened to you or that it was awful for you. I was contesting the idea that because they called you a girl they actually saw you "as a girl" & you were being bullied "as a girl."

Please try to consider for a moment how different it was for you to be called a girl when being bullied by boys than it is for girls to be bullied by boys for actually being girls. You could take solace in the fact that you were not, in fact, a girl. But such solace was & is not available to any girls. Even though you were picked on by other boys, you as a much-maligned male still ranked, & today rank, higher in the social hierarchy & in the eyes of the males who bullied you than any girl.

Use male socialization as a card all you want but please stop accusing me of fictional mental illnesses to attempt to tear me down. It’s deeply ableist. I have several mental illnesses narcissism and solipsism aren’t among them. Stop.

I am not "accusing (you) of fictional mental illnesses to attempt to tear (you) down." Narcissism is a personality trait, not necessarily a mental illness. Solipsism is a POV which says that the self is the only frame of reference. Sorry, maybe I've missed some of your posts, but on this thread & others, I've never seen you cite any sources for your views other than your own narrow personal experience.

For example, on another thread not long ago, I responded to your repeated assertion that all trans-identified males have "shitty lives" & are doomed to never being loved & to being constantly mistreated & marginalized by society by naming a bunch of happy, successful, highly acclaimed trans-identified males whose own apparently fulfilled & privileged lives stand in sharp contrast to what you insist must be true for all trans-identified males because that's how you say it is for you. You wrote off all the examples I cited by tersely retorting "You have no concept of life for the average trans women", then continued in the thread simply repeating your self-pitying claims & accusing other posters of insulting you. Further down the thread you said, again citing no evidence, that anyone trans who appears to be happy & loved is just pretending because "no one can be happy or normal being an out trans person. It’s a shit life."

https://saidit.net/s/GCdebatesQT/comments/837q/both_in_light_of_recent_events_in_what_context_is/u2va

As to your claim that it's "deeply ableist" of me to point out how exceedingly self-referential your posts make you appear: I have a hunch that nearly everyone on this sub has direct experience with mental illness of one kind or another, as I certainly do. And some of us have physical disabilities as well. So trying to shut me or other posters up by throwing out accusations of "deeply ableist" won't work.

The fact that you seem to think you alone have the right to call others "ableist" only underscores my point that you come across as unable to see beyond your own self. I have known a lot of people with a variety of mental illnesses, & most of them/us even when most ill are still capable of grasping the fact that other people have constructed their self-images in different ways & that their/our individual experience does not necessarily represent all human experience. Narcissism & solipsism might accompany some mental illnesses, but they are not synonyms for nor necessarily hallmarks of mental illness. I apologize if I gave a different impression.

In your previous post instead of directly engaging with & attempting to refute my points, you insinuated that I can't possibly have any idea what I am speaking of because I must not have any experience of ever being around a male child in school of any sort. Specifically, you condescendingly said

Have you ever been around a male child in school of any sort?

Which was clearly an attempt to make it appear that my points can't be "valid" coz I have no "lived experience" of male children in school contexts. I find it telling that you consider it perfectly OK for you to say such a condescending & "invalidating" thing to me - & to say all the other insulting things you've said here about women generally that are meant to reduce us to sexist stereotypes & "deny our existence" as separate to you & the cartoonish ideas you have about all the billions of us in your head - but when I say something to you that you find galling, you take it as your right to go straight to the bigoteering & to command me: "Stop."

It’s a cause of one kind of bullying not the root cause of all bullying. That being said it’s pretty wild to assert that bullying by boys of girls and other boys is somehow the result of sex.

I never said that sex is "the root cause of all bullying." We haven't been talking about all kinds of bullying here. The only kinds of school bullying we've been discussing in this convo about "gender norms" vs. sex as a motive for bullying are a) male bullying of males whom the bullies suspect might be homosexual or bi, and b) male bullying of females. Let's not bring other kinds of school bullying into it.

I did indeed say that boys' bullying of girls is the result of sex. Not "somehow the result of sex," but the result of sex directly. If you can show that this is not the case, please provide some evidence.

But I did not say that boys' bullying of other boys is "the result of sex." I said specifically that boys' bullying "of boys perceived to be homosexual, or to have homosexual leanings," is the result of sex.

My view is that the animus that some people have towards those they perceive as or suspect to be homosexual is based on their revulsion towards the idea of persons of the same sex engaging in explicit sex acts with one another, & squeamishness about certain sex acts in particular especially when done male-on-male. One reason I believe this is because many boys & men who are bi or gay, & many girls & women who are lesbian or bi, still have been subjected to extreme homophobia even when the males are in no way "effeminate" & the females are in no way "masculine." After all, the majority of gay men & MSM are not "effeminate" - they're ordinary men in presentation like Glenn Greenwald or Anderson Cooper, or they're ultra masculine. Yet such guys still often get shamed, derided, treated like pariahs & are discriminated against once homophobes find out they are gay or MSM.

Also, the fact is that growing up, pretty much all boys get slurred as "gay," "fxggot" & the like no matter what their "gender expression" or sexual orientation is or will turn out to be. Males who bully employ homophobic slurs against everyone they bully, & will do so for any reason under the sun. I know many guys who were bog standard guys in "presentation," mannerisms & behaviors growing up, yet in school they were frequently called "gay" & "fxggot" & worse by mean boys of their age & older for such arbitrary reasons as liking a particular kind of pop drink, wearing socks that exposed their ankles, playing musical instruments other than the drums, being into chess, wearing sweatpants or other drawstring trousers, rollerblading rather than skateboarding, & because their families drove energy efficient small cars, hybrids or electric vehicles rather than gas-guzzling behemoths like Ford Expeditions, Hummers or trucks.

Unfortunately, for some school boys & certain grown men who bully others, "fxggot" is an all-purpose slur that they use indiscriminately against everyone for no apparent reason other than their own internal animus & lack of originality. Some bullies even use the "fxggot" slur against girls.

[–]Juniperius 9 insightful - 1 fun9 insightful - 0 fun10 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

My view is that the animus that some people have towards those they perceive as or suspect to be homosexual is based on their revulsion towards the idea of persons of the same sex engaging in explicit sex acts with one another, & squeamishness about certain sex acts in particular especially when done male-on-male.

I think there's a second reason as well for men/boys to try to bully each other into masculinity. Traits considered masculine are mostly those associated with controlling other, "lower" classes of people. Men know that they are an oppressing class, and that they require all hands on board, so to speak, to quash uprisings. If too many men refuse to be dominators, then patriarchy will cease to exist, and men will lose out on the emotional, sexual, and domestic labor that they are accustomed to extract from women. I'm always a little ambivalent about the "patriarchy hurts men too, because man box" narrative for this reason. Yes, men are forced by other men to live up to masculinity, but it is a discipline that most of them take on willingly themselves and enforce on each other precisely because of the benefits it brings them.

[–]MarkTwainiac 7 insightful - 1 fun7 insightful - 0 fun8 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Interesting point. But I don't agree that

Traits considered masculine are mostly those associated with controlling other, "lower" classes of people.

But the, you & I probably define "traits considered masculine" differently because they change from culture to culture, era to era, & even situationally within the same culture & era.

I also see homophobic bullying of boys as separate to bullying or inculcating boy into masculinity. Of course they can go hand in hand, but I don't think all men, boys & women who inculcate boys into masculinity - through bullying or other methods - are inherently homophobic; only some are. Telling a boy to "man up," "take it like a man," "put your big boy pants on" or "boys don't cry" is different IMO to calling a boy a "sissy," a "fxggot," "a pussy" & "a girl."

If too many men refuse to be dominators, then patriarchy will cease to exist, and men will lose out on the emotional, sexual, and domestic labor that they are accustomed to extract from women. I'm always a little ambivalent about the "patriarchy hurts men too, because man box" narrative for this reason. Yes, men are forced

I don't think all or most men need to be "dominators" for patriarchy to continue to exist. Female socialization, which is typically primarily inculcated & enforced on girls by their mothers & other female carers & influences, does the trick of subordinating girls & women without making it necessary in many cases for a man to play the role of dominator. Coz of female socialization, many women automatically take it for granted that boys & men are to be given precedence in heterosexual relationships; that they will rule the roost at home, at work, in politics & public life, in media, culture, science & most "important" fields; & that male needs, desires & priorities always come first in the domestic sphere & the world beyond the home. Men don't necessarily need "to extract" emotional, sexual & domestic labor from women, coz many women offer up all this labor without it being demanded or even asked of them.

Due to online porn; the increasingly coarse, sexually degrading (to women) nature of all popular culture; the fear of being bullied, shamed & ostracized on social media; the corruption of feminism to mean gung-ho support of porn, prostitution, surrogacy, & violence against women so long as men find it sexually arousing; the normalization of "kink & of men degrading, abusing & injuring women during sex; the prioritization of trans-identified males in so-called feminism, women's sectors & Western society at large; the erasure of women as a sex class & political class; the shaming of women for speaking about our bodies except in the way gender ideologues say is allowed; the fact that the internet, social media, Hollywood, entertainment & news media are all controlled by men, and so on... girls are increasingly being socialized not just as lambs being led to the slaughter, but as lambs voluntarily lining up for the slaughter & leaping at the chance for it.

[–]circlingmyownvoid2 2 insightful - 5 fun2 insightful - 4 fun3 insightful - 5 fun -  (3 children)

Again, I am sorry this happened to you. I was not contesting that it happened to you or that it was awful for you. I was contesting the idea that because they called you a girl they actually saw you "as a girl" & you were being bullied "as a girl."

I said “as a girl” not “like a girl”. As in me “being a girl” was the manner of the bullying not that I was bullied in the same way as girls.

Please try to consider for a moment how different it was for you to be called a girl when being bullied by boys than it is for girls to be bullied by boys for actually being girls. You could take solace in the fact that you were not, in fact, a girl.

That wasn’t solace. I wanted to be a girl. It hurt more because I wasn’t.

Even though you were picked on by other boys, you as a much-maligned male still ranked, & today rank, higher in the social hierarchy & in the eyes of the males who bullied you than any girl.

This is just wrong. Men hate trans women more than natal women. Near universally.

, I responded to your repeated assertion that all trans-identified males have "shitty lives" & are doomed to never being loved & to being constantly mistreated & marginalized by society

You left out where I said “non passing”

to your claim that it's "deeply ableist" of me to point out how exceedingly self-referential your posts make you appear: I have a hunch that nearly everyone on this sub has direct experience with mental illness of one kind or another, as I certainly do. And some of us have physical disabilities as well. So trying to shut me or other posters up by throwing out accusations of "deeply ableist" won't work.

You are literally accusing me of having mental illnesses I do not to try to weaken my position. In what way is that not extremely ableist?

Narcissism & solipsism might accompany some mental illnesses, but they are not synonyms for nor necessarily hallmarks of mental illness. I apologize if I gave a different impression.

Narcissism is just directly a mental illness and solipsism is a common presentation of schizophrenia not just a philosophical position.

Which was clearly an attempt to make it appear that my points can't be "valid" coz I have no "lived experience" of male children in school contexts. I find it telling that you consider it perfectly OK for you to say such a condescending & "invalidating" thing to me - & to say all the other insulting things you've said here about women generally that are meant to reduce us to sexist stereotypes & "deny our existence" as separate to you & the cartoonish ideas you have about all the billions of us in your head - but when I say something to you that you find galling, you take it as your right to go straight to the bigoteering & to command me: "Stop."

Well I haven’t accused you of a mental illness you don’t have so…

never said that sex is "the root cause of all bullying." We haven't been talking about all kinds of bullying here. The only kinds of school bullying we've been discussing in this convo about "gender norms" vs. sex as a motive for bullying are a) male bullying of males whom the bullies suspect might be homosexual or bi, and b) male bullying of females. Let's not bring other kinds of school bullying into it

If it affects both sexes it isn’t rooted in sex. It is nonsensical to assert that the same behavior directed at both sexes is the result of sex.

[–]MarkTwainiac 8 insightful - 1 fun8 insightful - 0 fun9 insightful - 1 fun -  (2 children)

It is nonsensical to assert that the same behavior directed at both sexes is the result of sex.

But it's not the same behavior. At all. The bullying from males you received for being a male who was perceived to be deficient coz of assumed or suspected male homosexuality is very different to the bullying from males that girls & women get for being regarded as deficient in humanity. Other males treated you as a boy who was lesser & likened you to a girl. But girls & women are treated as animals or worse. Many males considered us to be, & tell us we are, nothing but breeding stock, fuck holes & "cum buckets."

It's terrible what happened to you. But what happened to you is not the same as what happens to girls & women.

[–]Penultimate_Penance 8 insightful - 1 fun8 insightful - 0 fun9 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

Just adding to your point. The type of bullying circling received at the hands of boys is male socialization. Males who don't fit male sexist stereotypes well enough will often get bullied for it.

[–]MarkTwainiac 7 insightful - 1 fun7 insightful - 0 fun8 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Yes, I am so sick of trans-identified males saying that they experienced & experience the same bullying & misogyny that girls & women get. Even many "GC" trans-identified males who are otherwise reasonable & who acknowledge that their sex is different to our sex still constantly insist that their experience is just like ours, or more similar to our experience than it is different. IMO, this reflects a type of myopia, self-centeredness & arrogance that is very reflective of male socialization.

[–]MarkTwainiac 6 insightful - 1 fun6 insightful - 0 fun7 insightful - 1 fun -  (2 children)

Have you ever been around a male child in school of any sort? You can get bullied as a girl or a faggot for months for wearing a pink shirt.

Again, I am sorry this happened to you. But I am also curious about where & when it happened. (Sorry, maybe you have revealed it elsewhere, but I have no idea how old you are, though I understand you are from the USA.) When I was growing up in USA in the 1960s, my father & his friends used to wear bright pink corduroy golf pants, pink button-down shirts, pink polo shirts, pale pink & bright pink blazers, bright pink linen shorts, pink neckties & bowties in solids, checks, plaids & flowered patterns. My brother & ex-husband have always worn a lot of pink shirts, ties, shorts & so on. No one AFAIK has ever ridiculed them for it.

Going back to the 1950s & 60s, celebrities considered very masculine like Elvis Presley, Pat Boone, Bing Crosby, Andy Williams & Mick Jagger wore pink. No one thought anything of it. When I was a girl, I don't recall my sisters, me or any other girls being decked out in pink like little girls often are today. My most memorable dresses from childhood were a blue flowered one, various plaids or white ones worn for events like first communion, confirmation & various religious processionals. We wore blue & gray or green & gray plaid uniforms to school with navy blue or green wool blazers, & brown or green scouts uniforms. All the girls' PE uniforms were blue. All my & my sisters' & friends coats growing up were navy blue, light blue, brown or various watch plaids.

In my experience, hardly anyone took the stereotypes about pink being only for girls, & girls having an affinity for pink, seriously until the present century. When my own kids were born in the early 90s, the pink-blue toy stuff was just starting to be pushed by places like Toys'R'Us, but basically most of the parents I know ignored it. The toy strollers my sons had for their dolls & stuffed animals were pink; no one minded. They sometimes wore pink T shirts; no one cared.

BTW, the 1986 movie with Molly Ringwald, Pretty In Pink got its title from the 1981 song of the same name by the Psychedelic Furs from 1981. At the time, the pink in the Furs song was widely believed to a reference not to the color of clothing but to the color of naked (white people's) flesh, & particularly a woman's clitoris, inner labia and vaginal opening. Back then, mainstream "girly magazines" like Penthouse & Hustler were just starting to run color photo spreads of naked women that would "show pink," to use the expression used at the time. This was a big deal because historically mainstream porn magazines didn't show women's genital area at all; such mags were all about "T & A." When they started to show the pubic region it was a big deal, but the genitals were hidden coz women back then customarily kept their pubic hair. The only periodicals that showed female genitals previously were "hard core" porn rags, or Al Goldstein's "Screw," a publication on newsprint that only showed photos in black & white, hence "no pink."

[–]circlingmyownvoid2 2 insightful - 6 fun2 insightful - 5 fun3 insightful - 6 fun -  (1 child)

I started school in the late 80’s and lived in a small rural town in a very red state.

[–]MarkTwainiac 5 insightful - 1 fun5 insightful - 0 fun6 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Thanks for the info. It helps to know how old a person is & what milieu he or she grew up in to get a sense of "where they are coming from" so to speak. And I think that when each of us takes the time to locate ourselves in history & geographically, it helps to stop us from making sweeping generalizations about all of "society" & "everyone" coz it reminds us that each one of us is a product of a particular era in history & a particular cultural milieu.