Bear in mind that some of my response is colored by my experiences with anti-feminists here and the fact that you're quoting similar sources and using similar arguments, though you may be coming to slightly different conclusions.
The arguments here follow a patern like this:
1) Feminist points out how bad things are for women.
2) Anti-feminist points out that things aren't great for men.
3) Anti-feminist uses the feminist's failure to point this out say feminist is biased against men and
clearly not actually looking for equality after all.
4) Anti-feminist then uses this to excuse doing nothing about how bad things are for women.
Your post (in my reading) hit (2) and (3) and I assumed (4). From the sounds of your post since, you seem to still be hitting (2) and (3) but not (4), which is better, but I think (3) is still garbage.
Feminist naturally implies that they are focused on addressing the ways in which society hurts women - this doesn't mean that they don't care about the ways society hurts men, too. It simply means that isn't their focus. Some of them may lack sympathy for the ways men like me suffer (more on that later), but that doesn't mean they're denying that it happens.
Even if this is true, (it conflicts a bit with other sources I've seen, though those again conflict with others. Sorry, trying to keep and open mind here) my point and issue is that feminists may care for the 300K women, but don't seem even able to acknowledge that the 15K yearly male victims even exist. Why is this, and why can't both be dealt with? Claiming to stand for equality and only dealing with, let alone only acknowledging the female victims is dishonest, in my view.
Well, there are a couple reasons for this. The biggest is that when you talk about ending rape, you don't do it by talking about the victims. You do it by talking about the rapists. And the rapists? They're all men
1. Rape is a problem because men commit rape, and it will continue to be a problem until men stop committing rape. This applies whether the victims are male or female.
So I guess it depends on how you read it when feminist talk about all the female victims of rape and don't mention the 4-5% of victims that are male. In general, when the victim statistics are brought up, the purpose is to highlight that this is a BIG ISSUE and needs to be addressed. For that purpose, the statistics for women are much more horrifying and much more effective.
1Not quite, they're 99% male.
False rape accusations happen. When they do, the vast majority of reported cases don't hold any penalty at all for the accuser, who is almost always a woman accusing a man. For the man though, the accusation itself is often very damaging, it can easily create life-long social stigma. He's been accused, so many will believe there is something to it, even if he was proven innocent.
I suspect this is cultural (iirc you're from northern europe?) because it's a very different situation here in the US
1. Women who come forward as victims can expect to be called liars and sluts and treated like utter garbage, especially if their accusation doesn't lead to an arrest or conviction. This also helps keep the number of false accusations down - why would a woman put herself through the shitstorm that comes with a rape accusation if it wasn't true? Many of them aren't willing to deal with it even if it is.
1The exception to this is child molestation. If an adult (male or female) is accused of raping a child, their life is instantly destroyed, even if it turns out not to be true. We really fucking hate child molesters. Ordinary rapists, on the other hand, we're not quite as bothered by.
My issue with all this is the usual. There are issues affecting both genders, but the undisputed biggest movement for "equality" that has the best PR department and the best pull on governments - Feminism - don't seem to give a shit about half of the issues - namely those that effect men. Your own points here in your reply seem to me to hold much the same viewpoints.
That last line actually made me laugh - which is tough when talking about this subject. It seems like we are reading in each other's words things we're used to seeing that aren't necessarily there (see what I wrote above). I do care about issues that effect men - they impact me quite directly. That feminists aren't worried about them isn't all that shocking - they are focused on issues that effect women.
To make another doctor analogy, saying an oncologist doesn't care about heart disease because he chose to focus his efforts elsewhere doesn't make much sense. No one can do everything - people choose to focus on certain things. Feminists have chosen to focus on women's issues.
Why shouldn't feminists worry about issues that impact men? Because in general, men created these systems. If men are suffering, they are suffering under burdens they created for themselves. If women are suffering, they are suffering under burdens men created for them. This may lead to reduced sympathy for the men.
I don't care about them being on the same level or not. I modified that quote made by a feminist to highlight issues that face women, to create a near identical one that face men. The point was that pre-set social expectations affects men to, ergo it's a problem for both genders. I don't care who has it worse, I care that we agree with both issues and deal with both. Because overwhelmingly caring for the issue facing women and ignoring the men, or the other way around, is meaningless if your trying to gain equality. Feminism don't seem to do that, least not to me. but I do. Thus the whole point of this tread on Backstage about raising the issue and starting off this debate on equality.
Thank you for participating, by the way.
Here we're going to have to disagree. I don't think we have to focus on one issue to the exclusion of the other. But if equality is the goal, then you get there by taking the situation which is worse and focusing on improving it. If things are worse for women than they are for men, then you work on improving things for women.
Now, I'm not suggesting that we
should ignore men's issues. I think we should address them as well, especially since many of the issues which effect men end up having a negative impact on women as well. What I'm saying is that you
can ignore men's issues in favor of women's while still making a credible claim to the goal of equality.
If you're after utopia, you have to fix both. If you're after equality, you just have to fix the women's situation until it only sucks as much as the men's, and no worse.
Emergency room analogy stuff:
[spoiler]
Imagine two people in the emergency room. One of them has a migraine and is in tremendous pain. The other has a gunshot wound. The doctors are focusing on the one with the gunshot wound, because that's the worse injury.
In my opinion, the anti-feminist movements are like the guy with the migraine claiming that the guy with the gunshot is exaggerating. That the guy with the gunshot is somehow denying the existance of the other guy's pain. That the fact that they are both in pain means that there condition is equal and that the gunshot doesn't deserve special attention.
Nice analogy. Problem with the analogy is that who is the gun-shot victim and who is the migraine sufferer depends on what particular issue we speak of. In some case it's the woman who has been shot and an insensitive man bitches that he's not treated in her stead, in some cases the roles are reversed. Either way, they both have issues and both suffer from problems that should and can be dealt with. Why does it have to be one over the other? In the case of your example, why can't the one with the gun-shot wound be taken to the operating table while the migraine victim get's the needed treatment at the same time?
But the truth is, neither of these injuries negates the other. The fact that one guy has a gunshot wound and is dying doesn't minimize the pain experienced by the guy with the migraine. But neither does the pain of the man with the migraine make gunshot wound less serious. They're both bad, but one is much worse.
Society sends both genders a lot of fucked up messages about who and how we should be, but anyone trying to make it seem like the fucked up messages society sends me as a man are as bad as the fucked up messages society sends my wife as a woman is full of shit.
You are completely right, one issue is worse than the other. And yet, both are still issues. Can we please agree to deal with both and stop acting like it's all or nothing, only one of them get's treated ever? Because in that case the gun-shot always get's treatment no matter what, on the grounds that it's more serious an issue, but this still won't help the person with the migraine at all.
As for your opinion on who has it worse off between you and your wife, I won't be able to comment on your two specifically, I don't know either of you But I would think a more fair and just society don't just tell your wife how her issue can be resolved and fixed, it would tell you how you can fix yours too. At least I'd hope so...
[/spoiler]
You and I are saying the same thing. I'm not saying that the guy with the migraine doesn't get treated, I said repeatedly that the presence of a worse injury doesn't invalidate his lesser one at all.
They are, however, treated by different doctors. I don't have a problem with feminists focusing on the bigger injury.
I have a problem with people saying that feminist arguments are somehow invalid or that feminists aren't truly interested in equality because they are focusing primarily on women's issues. They aren't generally denying that men's issues exist (though they do get offended if you try to say they are just as bad, because they aren't), that simply isn't what they are focusing their efforts on correcting.
If someone wishes to focus on the way society makes life suck for men, there's no problem with that, and I would fully support it. A movement that worked in parallel to feminism to correct the ways our culture hurts men would be awesome. Demanding that feminists be the ones to do this is silly.