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Feminism: Sex & gender discussions

Feminists - how do you feel about being friends with misogynists / anti-feminists?

48 replies

magicmallow · 09/08/2020 11:42

A close friends absolutely hates feminism and rants on about it being cultural marxism, denying inequality exists between the sexes, a lot of other what I consider scary views, and generally denying or disagreeing with my experience as a woman (despite being a man).

As he's an old friend that has only fairly recently expressed these opinions I'm struggling a bit. I don't want to live in an echo chamber but also I do find some of his opinions actually scarily misogynist so am wondering if I can put this to one side and maintain a friendship when he clearly has so much of a problem with women (even if he does not recognise this).

I'm really struggling with it!

OP posts:
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noblegiraffe · 09/08/2020 11:48

What does he say when you say ‘Blimey John, what website have you been on to come up with this stuff?’

People don’t come up with bullshit like this by themselves so maybe if you know where it’s coming from you can decide how to tackle? (Which may well be ‘John, you appear to hate women these days so I’m going to disappear as I don’t deserve to be your punching bag’)

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MilkTwoSugarsThanks · 09/08/2020 11:53

I think it depends on the level of misogyny. For some people, calling your partner a fucking cow in the middle of an argument makes that person a raving misogynist who should be dumped immediately. I personally would have no issue being friends with someone who did that. Someone who thinks women should stay at home like a 50s' housewife, not so much.

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MilkTwoSugarsThanks · 09/08/2020 11:55

Pressed post by mistake!

For some reason I would have no problem being friends with a woman who had views like your friend as her experiences are as valid as mine, but I'd struggle with being friends with a man.

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Scout2016 · 09/08/2020 11:56

I would drop a friend like that to be honest. Is he taking it as a personal attack on him, as a man, and getting irrationally defensive? I don't expect all my friends to agree with me on everything but there are some things that are deal breakers. Willful misogyny and anti-feminist rhetoric are deal breakers. I would also struggle not to see it as indicative of a lack of respect for me.
I will be honest though, I haven't asked some of my friends their thoughts on the GR act because I'm worried they might have views I can't stomach.

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Coyoacan · 09/08/2020 11:57

I always wonder at this accusation of cultural marxism that is flung around. Have people actually read any cultural marxism?

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SetYourselfOnFire · 09/08/2020 14:17

Nah, it'll be based on a youtube video about the Frankfurt School. It's all hopelessly out of date and been replaced by Critical Theory decades ago anyway. They never talk about specific feminists anymore either. So lazy. When I was a young, they at least used to quote mine Dworkin.

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PumbaasCucumbas · 09/08/2020 14:24

Is there a back story to his views (issues with previous partner, access to children, problem at work etc?)

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Goosefoot · 09/08/2020 14:34

If this was sudden I'd think something had brought it on.

But I would also say that lots of otherwise positive movements, including feminism, have been influenced in recent years by id politics, which is what I'd name what he is calling cultural marxism. I also don't consider that to be a positive thing.

I would have a lot more concern for how someone treats actual individuals. I've worked in a male dominated area where the men were generally very far from woke - lots of manly men, some with very traditional ideas about women. In the concrete they were as likely to be good people who treated women well as any other sort of man, and usually they just took people as they came. In fact, although it seems surprising, they often seemed less likely to hang weird bullshit on me as a woman - if I seemed like an odd women to them, they weren't put out by it.

I would also say - lots of nice enough people are not systematic clear thinkers about ideas like cultural marxism, or philosophical questions, or anything like that. People come up with some pretty odd ideas sometimes because of this. I don't think it reflects on them much as people, really.

So - apart from the rhetoric, what's this person like? How does he treat others?

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Dervel · 09/08/2020 14:44

Yeah I think I’ve been the guy in that equation before to some degree. Not to the point that I fear cultural Marxists around every corner, but I had certainly been critical of the left, and that didn’t go down well in certain sections of my friendship groups.

However I would never dream of approaching anything close to an anti-feminist position as I think feminism itself has produced incredibly valuable things both in terms of ideas and thinkers.

There is one particular ex female friend who essentially had me ejected from a friendship group and endeavoured to destroy my reputation in terms of others, as I had heard back from one other friend that I had apparently become a die hard Daily Mail reader.

The final issue between us was I had questioned her Lib fem trans inclusionary position, and she is the one of us with the science background and biological sciences at that, so I would usually defer to her but in this instance I did not and I paid for my dissent.

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NearlyGranny · 09/08/2020 14:56

I'd be asking, "What brought this on, John? Is everything alright at home? All this hate is really just not like you. Can I help at all? If you need to talk, I'm always here for you."

He's probably found a slew of nasty MRA or InCel sites and been dragged into a dark place. He needs to spend more time in the sunshine interacting with real friends who are women, I reckon.

If it continues, you might have to lessen or even stop contact to protect yourself, but do tell him why, calmly and clearly. As in, perhaps,

"John, I'm finding your attitudes and conversation a bit much lately. If we met now, I wouldn't make friends with you. You seem to have grown quite extreme and unpleasant in your views and as a woman I just can't respect myself if I smile and suck it all up from you. I don't want to argue and debate this stuff over and over again either. It makes me too sad and weary. I need friends who respect and value me and so do you, so until you get this out of your system and remember who I actually am, I think it's best we spend a lot less time together.

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DidoLamenting · 09/08/2020 15:10

I've worked in a male dominated area where the men were generally very far from woke - lots of manly men, some with very traditional ideas about women. In the concrete they were as likely to be good people who treated women well as any other sort of man, and usually they just took people as they came

My experience as well. I'm thinking of one group of conservative and Conservative men but who in reality were much nicer tolerant and fair than the likes of OJ.

I'm not sure the man being described here is in that league however.

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Lettera · 09/08/2020 19:59

To answer your initial question OP - I'm not friends with any misogynists or anti-feminists and couldn't be.

With regard to this man, I'd tell him I found his views abhorrent and sadly they had killed the friendship.

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BlingLoving · 09/08/2020 20:08

For me, it depends on how blatant it is, and how willing he is to listen.

eg, I've had male friends who blithely say things without even realising the deep seated misogyny. When I challenge them or point out the issues, they may or may not agree, but they'll listen. And I feel like that's a step in the right direction an easy example: man says there's no inequality in the workplace and women aren't discriminated against etc. I point out that there are still more men called John as CEO in FTSE 250 or whatever, than there are women. I ask them to consider if this is just coincidence? Often, they still don't think it's about inequality/discrimination, but the first step is getting them to realise that there is a problem here.

HOw they respond is key.

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AvocadoBathroom · 09/08/2020 22:13

I tend to always call it out. If someone continues that level of sexism (I had a work colleague like this) I'll report them of its a professional relationship. On Facebook when High Hefner died there were a few of my make friends saying stuff like "he lived in heaven on earth" to which I would post stories about how he treated the women and also his connections with Bill Cosby etc. I always call it out. Generally men don't like it at first but then start to listen. I would drop anyone who carried on with it. The worse friend I have is a Green Party candidate who is constantly referring to TERFS and pro porn. I don't know what to do about that person.

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lady69 · 09/08/2020 22:13

Tell him you are a feminist and look him in the eyes as you do it.

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AvocadoBathroom · 09/08/2020 22:13

My spelling above is atrocious because I am tired!

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DioneTheDiabolist · 09/08/2020 22:22

I have an uncle like this. He hasn't made misogynist/racist/sectarian statements around me for years as I repeatedly took the piss out of him and laughed at him when he pulled that bullshit around me.

It only took me to do this 3 or 4 times before he knew to stop when I gave him "the look".Grin

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Thelnebriati · 09/08/2020 22:41

Tell him you aren't interested in those views, and ask him to stop. That allows him to keep his views and sets a reasonable boundary.
If he can't respect you have different views, the friendship is finished.

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TehBewilderness · 09/08/2020 22:52

It is very risky to continue a friendship with a man who expresses hatred toward women.

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SonEtLumiere · 09/08/2020 22:59

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

AntiSocialInjusticePacifist · 10/08/2020 00:19

@BlingLoving

"man says there's no inequality in the workplace and women aren't discriminated against etc. I point out that there are still more men called John as CEO in FTSE 250 or whatever, than there are women. I ask them to consider if this is just coincidence? Often, they still don't think it's about inequality/discrimination, but the first step is getting them to realise that there is a problem here."

You have a logical fallacy there, and that maybe why you are failing to get your point across. You have made an assumption that because there are more CEO's called John than there are women there must be therefore discrimination. You may be right about the discrimination, but that statement on it's own doesn't establish that in any way. It's circular reasoning unfortunately and needs more.

Maybe there is discrimination, and maybe there is enough of it that that accounts for the discrepancy. However there are other reasons that could account for it, like for example the male greater variance hypothesis. Maybe women make different life choices, and fewer women for whatever reason do not pursue life trajectories that would land them in a CEO's chair. Maybe little girls are socialised differently to little boys, and the problem lies much further upstream in women's lives. Perhaps it's a combination of ALL those factors, plus more that haven't occurred to me.

Now I know it might be tempting to read all that and see that as my inferring that discrimination doesn't exist, or that I'm minimising it far from it. I entirely accept sexist and bigoted people exist and I'm not opposed to the idea that some of those individuals may gatekeep women out of positions of power in corporate structures I am sure it happens. However I make no statement or claim that is or is not the primary cause of the disparities you bring up.

The reason I bring it up, is that it's incredibly important that you diagnose the correct cause of a problem, otherwise you end up spending energy trying to solve the wrong problem, and sometimes the cure is worse than the disease. If it turned out that women's choices was the biggest factor, enforcing choices on women would be too much of an infringement on their individual liberties, as you would have to make one hell of a dictatorial intervention to correct for that.

I'll end on a positive note though, fortune 500 companies that have a higher representation of women on the boards of directors tend to outperform those that don't, and if you find there are financial incentives over the time the market will correct for that by itself: www.thebalance.com/do-companies-with-female-executives-perform-better-4586443
Companies that don't have a more diverse board will be replaced with those that do in these circumstances, and inevitably you'll start to see more female CEOs as part of that equation.

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Wanderingstars4238 · 10/08/2020 00:55

It comes down to what you're willing to put up with. Personally I can deal with some benevolent sexism in men (Friends only).

I can't stand a blatant misogynist, like those men who carry a grudge against women. Or who thinks it's ok to harm women because of all the harm women do to men, or any of that angry attitude.
Disrespect of women is also unbearable, like thinking men are smarter, superior, etc.

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FrogspawnSmoothie · 10/08/2020 01:24

Over 90% of women don't want to identify as feminists, despite 75% being for equality. So I don't think you can avoid all anti feminists. But then I'd argue that not supporting feminism doesn't = misogyny as many people seem to support equality but find feminism divisive.

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FrogspawnSmoothie · 10/08/2020 01:31

Maybe there is discrimination, and maybe there is enough of it that that accounts for the discrepancy. However there are other reasons that could account for it, like for example the male greater variance hypothesis. Maybe women make different life choices, and fewer women for whatever reason do not pursue life trajectories that would land them in a CEO's chair. Maybe little girls are socialised differently to little boys, and the problem lies much further upstream in women's lives. Perhaps it's a combination of ALL those factors, plus more that haven't occurred to me.

I often reflect that a big factor is likely the fact that these men worked their way up to CEO over a couple of decades, starting out in more sexist times. I think it'll take time for women to gain that advantage as most recent graduates won't step straight into CEO roles. The biggest factor for me is perhaps that is motherhood. How do we stop this damaging a woman's career?

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AntiSocialInjusticePacifist · 10/08/2020 01:59

@FrogspawnSmoothie I agree it's a big issue. The trouble is the best time to have children (purely biologically speaking) coincides entirely with the prime career building years. I think CEO's generally get to where they are by pursuing career to the exclusion of all else. Say if you take a couple who both have identical aptitudes, and they split childcare entirely down the middle, and take identical career hits to enable this they will likely be out competed by a colleague who might even have less raw talent than either of them, but pursues their career path aggressively with a lot of time invested and as talented as they might be they likely won't have as much experience (which does count for a lot) , and won't have been able to commit as much time to networking (also important).

The sad fact is that a man in his 20s is at liberty to entirely dedicate all his time and energy to career building, and to defer having children until after he has reached the top of the pyramid. Although he still takes some risks re: his fertility it's nowhere near as hard as biology is on women, if he defers until his 40s or even 50s. I think the only way, but please chime in if you can square the circle any other way is a woman has to try to pair off with a man who has much lower career goals relative to her and is happy to shoulder the primary caregiver role. Problem is women are far more likely to date across and up in terms of economic/social class and education level. Whereas more men, especially our CEO's are more happy to date down across these metrics.

However I am uncomfortable in making proscriptions for people's romantic/ family aspirations. It may be all the crap we fill children's heads with is a big cause there, which as bad as it may sound we might be able to correct for.

One area I often find myself in 100% alignment with feminists is, is that we rarely and most certainly not enough recognise and praise women's achievements across the entire spectrum of human endeavours, be they artistic, political, scientific, engineering, sporting, or you name it. I think an incredibly strong case can be made that given how much women have contributed across all disciplines DESPITE historical barriers and restrictions makes me wonder how much further along as a species we might be right now had they not been. It makes me quite excited and hopeful of the future if we find the right ways to crack it going foward.

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