klind65
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 162
- Location
- New York City
I was talking with a friend yesterday who reminded me of another aspect to all of this which illustrates and explains the confusion and resentment some men feel in the wake of women's pursuit of "equality". She pointed out that, although the majority of women simply wanted equal opportunity to education and employment in lines of work for which they were well-suited, some "fringe" or "radical elements" interpreted equality LITERALLY to mean the sexes were the same physically, which we know can never be the case. When women insisted they be let into professions for which they were not suited, society as a whole suffered. To illustrate: Women wanted to be firemen OK, "firewomen" - better yet, " firefighters"- just as men were. Well, the requirements of the entrance test (i.e. the maximum amount of weight one can carry?) proved too much for them. So, instead of wisely realizing this was a task better left to men, they demanded the standards be lowered to accomodate them! Now, I don't know about you, but if I am to be rescued from a burning building, I sure as heck want someone strong enough to carry me.Senator Jack said:Leaving the gravid, elderly, and those of broken limbs out of this:
Women, on the whole, made a choice about forty years ago that they wanted to be (and rightfully) considered as strong as men and this means both physically and emotionally. Men might not have liked it, but they accepted it (eventually) and now this is the world we live in. Don't think men aren't confused by it, because we certainly are as the natural order of male-female relationships that has been the same for some million years has now been turned upside down over night, so we're still unsure of what, exactly, women want. Do you want to be thought frail? Well, some of you do, but 95% don't and are quite vocal about it (even getting nasty when a door is held and a seat is offered), and so I have to defer to the majority. This is out of respect. It's what women wanted. Sure, I know there is still that 5% that wants to be thought frail, but I risk offending a good 95% by a pompous chauvinistic act of chivalry.
Certainly, I would not relinquish my seat to an able-bodied man my age and younger (and unless he's got a cane, even elderly men really don't want your seat because the worst thing you could suggest to a man is that he's had his time) and if women are equal, then I have to expect they want the same treatment. Or perhaps they don't. Maybe if we could put the genie back in the bottle and get back to the way things were, everyone would be happy again.
Regards,
Jack
This illustrates the "suspension of disbelief" required by a society to, on the one hand, pretend to ignore the physical differential and then go to such ridiculous extremes to satisfy this misinterpretation of the much beleagured , "equality" on behalf of women who can't accept that they can never be the same as men.
'Tis true that sometimes to restore to balance a system or ideology which has been out of balance, it is necessary to go too far in the opposite direction for a while. As regards this issue, I hope it will soon be time to return from the extreme black and white view and resume a more realistic view for the good of society as a whole.