no country for old wainds
Active Member
- Nov 23, 2002
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First off, I'll offer my personal perspective on the *war between the sexes* - the oppression of women - "sexism". The fact that women are, or have been, looked upon by any man as inferior people is rather disturbing. After all folks, none of us would exist without them. Show them some bloody gratitude! I am entirely unsurprised, and unoffended, by the fact that women in this day and age are fending for equal opportunity at every turn - the right to do whatever men do. However, I could also, just as truthfully (and in my opinion justifiably) state my belief that generally speaking, women very often *belong* in traditional female roles.
In modern times, it is hard to imagine just how these two values could co-exist in congruence. After all, surely suggesting that a woman largely belongs, say, in the home is suggesting that they aren't fit to do anything other than stay at home, cook, clean - that they are in fact inferior in merit to those of the male sex. Clearly, I feel otherwise. In fact, I find such a viewpoint to be symptomatic of an irrational, self-destructive society.
Like it or not, we are all part of a natural ecosystem, and we are all subject to its rules. Again, like it or not, men and women are naturally different. Men have penises (or so I hear), women have vaginas. Men tend to be (BUT ARE NOT ALWAYS) physically stronger, men tend to be less (openly, at least) emotional (BUT ARE NOT AL... ah, you get it) than women, men tend to be less sensitive to beauty than women, and I could go on and on ad nauseum.
Nature builds us to be better at some things, practically speaking, than others. Where the sexes are concerned, there are traits which tend to be found commonly (or always) in one and rare (or never) in the other. Granted, this is sometimes a result of social conditioning, "gendering", but there are still plenty of practical "roles" which are prevalent throughout Nature for sexes. The woman carries the baby, that's an obvious and undisputable one. For another example, it is usually the sex that's larger or more well equipped physically in a particular species which hunts. In the human race, men are physically stronger - more "suited" to hunting. Does this imply superiority or inferiority? Only within that particular field, not as a whole. Should we be upset as a species because we can't breathe underwater like fish can - because we're suited to living above water? Of course not. But tell a woman that she is suited for raising a child (and you don't need me to tell you that women do, more often than not, have traits more suited for raising children than men do), and she'll cry indignantly that she's worth more than that, that she can do anything a man can do.
To discover the reason for this, we must look at Western society. Women were made to feel inferior and, some might say, oppressed for a long time. But now, the western world is currently becoming more and more individual-centric, in other words, the individual is of utmost importance, the individual should be given an opportunity to succeed above all else. This has come about because so-called oppressed parties (minorities and, of course, women) have struck back against their oppressors, grown in courage, and eventually, that oppression has been villainised on such a basic moral level that it nowadays makes most of the modern world shudder. Equality is glorified in its stead.
Fair enough, except here's where the problem lies: this equality is taken literally. The previously oppressed now seek to take the place of the oppressors, to literally become them or be on a par with them in every possible way, whether this means striving for their so-called *heights* or bringing them down to their own. Equality in merit, in function, in everything, what is being pursued is *true* equality. This principle isn't limited to the sexes, either. And yet true equality is impossible. Unattainable. You will never, ever find two absolutely identical people, let alone however many millions there are in our society. In fact, it shouldn't be pursued at all, the diversity in our world is beautiful, "true" equality would mean stamping it out.
Women being oppressed is horrible - I agree. Women being belittled, humiliated, made to look weak - ridiculous. But the method feminists are using to fight back is, ultimately, the wrong one for all concerned. Their message is "we can do anything a man can do". Their message should be "what we are best suited for is just as important as what men are best suited for". Women, however hard they try, will rarely make great men. Men will rarely make great women either. Men are suited to certain things more than women, and vice-versa. What feminists are currently doing isn't supporting the idea that women are as valuable as men, but that women are indistinguishable from men, and this ignores what seems to me the obvious reality of the situation.
As understandable a reaction as it may be, feminists are in fact playing to their so-called enemy's rhythm. The sole reason that raising children and most of the other traditional female jobs are frowned upon as *base* jobs is because they are traditionally female! There's actually nothing wrong with them, in fact, I don't think there's a more valuable task in all the world than raising the next generation of kids into our world in a healthy and secure home. To neglect this and instead pursue equality in traditionally male jobs is to acknowledge that the jobs more naturally suited to men are more important and favourable than the jobs more naturally suited to women.
My criticism isn't that women aren't all raising children, some of course are not suited to this in the slightest, there are always exceptions. What pains me is that women are trying so hard to succeed at whatever men succeed in that they've forgotten what they were originally fighting for. Instead of working out for themselves what they are best at and encouraging the world to embrace it, they neglect as inferior the jobs they're more often than not wholly suited towards in favour of goals they will often be unable to achieve. Many of those neglected jobs are so important, so vital to humanity thriving, that such neglect can be massively destructive, and all for no logical reason.
Thoughts on this?