Is it sort of like what One Brow and aintnuthin/hopper used to do when they had their long-winded multi-page discussions?
Is it sort of like what One Brow and aintnuthin/hopper used to do when they had their long-winded multi-page discussions?
Listen, I have little objection to what was said in this thread but your blanket statement pages ago in post #70 (which is why I first posted here) is one of them and quite frankly, hilariously ironic coming from you, Judge, Jury and Executioner.
Much of what you've said here is true but it would be nice for OneBrow the Omniscient to admit he misspoke, did the same, and hasn't a clue about how the far majority of women in this world feel.
I'm not holding my breath, though.
You mean, my statements based on believing what people say, rather than yours explaining why they don't mean it or are wrong?
I'm not qualified to be the spokesman for any woman.
To say that many women feel the pressure of infantilization, you only need to actually accept what these women say and the evidence they present. To say the pressure is not present, you need to deny that these women are accurately reporting their treatment by society and claim they don't really understand the evidence. When the latter argument is undertaken by men (very rarely do women make it), it is (by some) referred to as "mansplaining".
Post #75:
Post #104
Can you hold your breath into a past time?
Can SOMEBODY please explain to me what exactly this is?
Or I WILL have a temper tantrum.
Just like a two-year old...
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The sexualization of girls and the infantilization of adult women are two sides of the same coin. They both tell us that we should find youth, inexperience, and naivete sexy in women, but not in men. This reinforces a power and status difference between men and women, where vulnerability, weakness, and dependency and their opposites are gendered traits: desirable in one sex but not the other.
Infantilization is defined as the portrayal of grown women acting and looking childish through attire, demeanor, possessions, and/or posture.
If you’ve never heard of the “infantilization” of women, allow me to introduce you; it is an incredible phenomenon by which our society systemically equates femininity with things like vulnerability, submission, uncertainty, and childhood. To be womanly today is to be, in many senses, infantile.
You see it in notions like hairiness is unfeminine, school-girl fantasies, mansplaining, dumbing down according to gender, etc.
1- It was not a simple direct question, it was a pompous manipulative question with a clear "right" and "wrong" answer, which I why I responded in kind.
2 - I very obviously doctored your first and second quotes. If you can't see it it's probably because society wouldn't let you see it, but don't blame me, blame society.
3- There you go with your 99.9% intellectual dishonesty again. If my upbringing was the same as everyone else it wouldn't matter and you wouldn't have brought it up.
4- The difference seems to be that "society" is the main focus of who you are and seems to be the main focal point and most important factor in all you do or say. For me my experiences have a part of my life, but I choose what to take from those experiences and I am who I am because of what I choose to be. I don't blame "society" for who I am and I try actually listen to understand a person when I communicate with them instead of taking what they say, and understanding their words based on what "society" generally means by similar statements. If I'm talking to a person I would rather understand them and what they mean and not what 90 out of 110 people probably mean when they say something similar. I would rather have a conversation with a person than with the ghost of 100 people that try to interpret what that person is saying for me.
Wow. I didn't think you could be any more arrogantly ignorant than you were but I stand corrected. No need for me to say anything more.
Round and round the mulberry bush...
When you ask me what look to me like pompous, manipulative questions, I show you enough respect to answer them, because I don't know you and might be mistaken.
There are people who have me on ignore, some have even publicly declared it to be so. When you misquote me with what is supposedly a humorous reinterpretation, they have no original available by default.
I didn't bring up your upbringing. I asked, rhetorically, how you could have a conversation that did not involve your upbringing, a point which stands regardless of your upbringing.
Unless that person is me. Then, you seem to have no issue with ignoring what I am actually saying, and re-interpreting it to fit into some predefined categories, none of which match. When you're dealing with me, you feel free to respond to caricature, assumptions, and misunderstandings, without a single care to check on the accuracy of your interpretations, or what I might "objectively" mean.
If one has most of their conversations with people of essentially similar backgrounds and points of view, it can be difficult to tell when one is relying on that common background to correctly interpret a specific idea. So, it's easy enough to think that one is good at understanding an objective idea when most people are sharing one's subjective interpretations. However, that's fooling oneself.
Shelob tbh
I hate spiders.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgExTrqH0n8
post #82?
That seems to be my comment on the "fogwall of suck" post. And yes, I think it does apply here.
Also wonderfully ironic that Mickey Mouse is the author's chosen metaphor for the infantilization of women she describes. Mickey Mouse itself (himself?) is a metaphor for simple-mindedness - or stupidity, if you will. Last I checked (ok, not really, but ykwim) Mickey Mouse was/is a male character. Ironic for her to use the example of the infantilization of a male cartoon character and attach it to female human people.
The whole idea that only females are infantilized (is that a word?) is ludicrous. I postulate that it happens to males as well. Really, if you want to analyze things, Mickey Mouse and most other cartoon characters are infantilizations of men. Well, except perhaps for Popeye. But then again, the poor fellow was stuck with a name like Popeye.
What about all the stereotypes of men who can't "cut the apron strings"? Men who have absolutely no survival skills so they need a woman to mange their life for them?
The jargon swings both ways.
I think one major point of the "helpless man" portrayal is to make a woman think he needs her to "take care" of him...
In other words to make him seem more attractive to her.
Anyhow, I wonder what will show up if I google "cartoonification of men" - perhaps nothing! Sounds to me like a fantastic topic for a PhD thesis! I know we've got some academic types around here, maybe I could persuade one of them to take up the cause.