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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Should women be allowed to have boundaries?

231 replies

TalkingtoLangClegintheDark · 25/10/2020 18:13

Anyone else seeing a pattern of behaviour by some biologically male posters (some of whom identify as trans, some of whom don’t) on this board? It’s got me thinking about the issue of observing women’s social boundaries.

I wonder if any of the women who frequent FWR are given to going onto a board primarily aimed at/used by members of a group they are not a part of and trying to impose their views on the regular users there, trying to make them conform to what they think they should be doing and thinking?

So, for example, do we go on boards dedicated to issues of, say men’s health and steer the discussion to our gynae issues, or womansplain to the men about prostrate cancer? Do we go on boards for gay men and berate them for their sexual orientation? Or try to take over TRA boards, derailing every thread we can for the purposes of our own agenda?

This may be a shot in the dark, but my guess is the vast majority of FWR users don’t do this. Maybe even not any of us. I know I’ve certainly never spent so much as 10 minutes doing that. And the idea of spending hours, days, weeks or even months doing that is not one that has ever seemed attractive to me.

And yet... some people who are biologically male seem to be magnetically drawn to FWR for the sole purpose of berating female people, disagreeing with us, telling us either that feminism itself is wrong, or that we’re doing feminism wrong; how we’re not good feminists, not even good human beings; how they know better than us what feminism is, what being a woman is; what a woman is in the first place; and how we’re all just rotten to the core, really, because we don’t behave as they think we should.

It just seems to me to be a particularly male pattern form of behaviour. And one we see a lot of on here. And it got me thinking about the whole power dynamic that this reflects.

It reminds me of going to pubs when I was younger, before I was invisible, and the reality of not being able to sit alone with a book or talk in peace and quiet with one or two friends without some man coming over and trying to invade my/our space, engage us in conversation, take our attention away from ourselves/each other and refocus it all towards HIM.

The way some men just won’t take no for an answer when you try to tell them, politely, that you’re happy without their company thank you, and sometimes (often?) turn outright nasty and resort to verbal abuse and maybe even physical threats. (And as we know, at the very extreme end of the scale, there are men who take women’s lives because they had the temerity to say no to them.)

How many middle aged women approach groups of young men in a pub or a park, or anywhere, and try to force them to engage in conversation with them? It’s not a thing, I don’t think? And yet that type of middle aged man when I was a 20-something could absolutely be counted on to try to insert himself into your evening or your quiet lunchtime moment, and I know many, many other women have had the same experience, and it still goes on now.

Of course a pub is a public place. It’s in the name. And so is an internet forum. Open and accessible to all. No one is breaking the law by trying to talk to people who aren’t interested in talking to them, if that’s as far as it goes. But there are social mores, there are accepted conventions in civilised society (or there are supposed to be), that say it’s rude and boorish to force yourself on someone who plainly doesn’t want your company, on a group of people you have no connection to, that it’s not a way that anyone with any sensitivity to or respect for their fellow human beings behaves.

Women in these scenarios tend to want spaces of our own where we can just be ourselves, free of the demands to centre men in our interactions. We have traditionally been excluded from much of the “public square”, so that access to our little corner of public space is thirsted after in a way that biologically male people perhaps won’t appreciate, having never been denied it in the same way. And we are protective of it. We want boundaries.

We don’t want to impose ourselves on others, we just want our slice of the pie. We merely want the right to talk about our own experiences and formulate our own opinions without constantly having to centre those who don’t share our experience. The second sex for so long, we are still trying to shake off the shackles of being made lesser, and find our own voices - our own entitlement to say what we think, what we know - our entitlement to take up space.

Whereas the biologically male people in these scenarios, heirs to virtually the whole of the traditional public square as they are, want the whole pie. They seem to feel that their rights are bring curtailed if they have to cede even an inch of the public space they feel is theirs by rights. They seem to feel they’re absolutely entitled to impose themselves on women, wherever and whenever they want to. They have no respect for any boundaries that we might try to erect. They have no respect for us. I suppose they don’t really see us as full human beings in our own right.

They seem to be determined to invade, insert, penetrate the small spaces that women have tried to create for ourselves. It seems to be all about seeing our boundaries as an affront to their rights to behave as male people have always traditionally behaved: as the lords of the manor, the default humans, the ones around whom the world turns.

(Tiresomely necessary disclaimer: NAMALT, of course. There are some perfectly pleasant male people who pop up on FWR to engage in good faith, who make reasonable observations, who treat women with respect and are met with civility in return; they don’t try to dominate or overwhelm the conversation with their own view, and they listen to other people even when those other people are female. Just as in the pub it is perfectly possible to have a pleasant exchange with a random man who is not trying to force his company on you but just treating you like a fellow human being, and only taking it further if and when there’s clearly a reciprocal interest.)

It all comes down to power and control, doesn’t it? That intent to dominate, control, take over, impose, subjugate. Instead of a wish to communicate with and reach other human beings, it’s the urge to bend others to your will, a fundamentally dehumanising perspective. I don’t think that women tend to do this to men in the way that (some) men do to women; apart from the fact we don’t want to, I don’t think we can. And that’s irrevocably tied up with the enormous power imbalance that still exists between biologically male people and biologically female people.

We don’t insert ourselves into the discussions that biologically male people, whether they identify as trans or not, have about their own lives and experiences, on boards that are aimed at/designed for them. We don’t want to force them to do anything; we don’t want to force our opinions down their throats and make them agree with us. We just want to be free to talk amongst ourselves.

Unlike those male people who do want to force us to engage with them.

We just want boundaries; they don’t want us to have boundaries.

We would like them to stop them doing something to us; they would like to keep doing the thing we don’t want them to do to us, regardless of the fact we don’t want them to do it.

It’s a free country, and a free internet: anyone is indeed entitled to post on any public forum. But it’s very interesting to observe how this dynamic works, and the complete lack of symmetry there is.

This is not a conflict of rights. This is traditional male domination of females. This is a feminist issue.

I don’t know what the answer is. Like I say, we can’t prevent anyone from accessing a public space. We can try to ignore, but that only goes so far when someone is determined and persistent, as that particular type of biologically male person tends to be. We can obviously form private groups and forums and take the chat away from here but then the public aspect is lost, the right to the public square has been given up, so that’s not a real solution.

But we can name this behaviour for what is is, we can say very clearly that we see it and we know that it has a truly repugnant level of misogyny at its core. And that as feminists we recognise this as part of the oppression we, as the second sex, still face on a daily basis.

So what do you think? Should women be allowed to have boundaries? Would it be possible to discuss this, here on the FWR board that you might reasonably suppose was for feminists to discuss feminism, without one of those biologically male individuals popping along to give us the benefit of that person’s wisdom on this thread as so many others?

OP posts:
testing987654321 · 25/10/2020 19:10

The trans widows thread does need more protection. It would be a shame if it was lost from here.

jj1968 · 25/10/2020 19:12

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

NewlyGranny · 25/10/2020 19:12

The comment about boundaries being permissible (🙄) until they harm someone else is actually quite scary. The whole TRA movement is based on the conviction that women's boundaries are harming - killing - transwomen, so if we can only have boundaries that suit other people, sorry, they're gone!

Remember, not being keen for a transwoman to clean up the medals and prize money in women's sport or be accepted unquestioned into women's hospital wards, refuges and prison wings is 'literal violence' and tantamount to denying their existence.

However we define our boundaries it can never be, 'As long as it doesn't harm you guys, or make you feel it might in some way.'

That's a white flag, not a boundary.

TweeBree · 25/10/2020 19:13

Good post. It's become very noticeable and I wish MNHQ would moderate a bit more. They are trolls, here to purposely disrupt.

I think it's best not to engage with them at all, but then I suppose newer feminists just joining us could be confused by the mixed messages.

persistentwoman · 25/10/2020 19:13

I'm not actually in favour of banning these posters - or even reporting them as I believe that's what some people want. "Look, those exclusionary women being mean again"
It's just a tiresome example of how women are treated - even on a feminist board where we could legitimately expect to converse with other women. Yet MRAs decide to rock up and lecture women.
Very glad you started this thread OP - it's healthy to air these issues and allow women to say how we feel. .

Agrona · 25/10/2020 19:15

One of the signs is when a poster constantly attempts to make the whole thread about that poster.

One of the glaring examples of this is when women share events which affected them badly and the other poster completely ignores that post and continues to talk about their ‘issues’. The lack of empathy is astonishing.

TalkingtoLangClegintheDark · 25/10/2020 19:15

@testing987654321

I really really don't like blocking or shutting down discussion at all, it goes completely against my nature. But, I do wonder, if it would be useful if we could have a "not in good faith" report button.

And if someone repeatedly gets reported for derailing threads they could be given a strike?

And if they really want to just express opinions they could still do it?

The problem is that "not in good faith" is obvious when someone never responds directly to questions or if they do immediately deflects to another issue. It's a pattern of behaviour, most individual posts probably look fine.

Yes, I think there’s something in that, testing. It’s not “in the spirit”, for someone who plainly isn’t a feminist, isn’t interested in learning about feminism, is an anti-feminist even, to post at such length on here and derail so many discussions. Maybe we could suggest that to MNHQ.
OP posts:
TalkingtoLangClegintheDark · 25/10/2020 19:18

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

DrDavidBanner · 25/10/2020 19:19

They are trolls, here to purposely disrupt

I think it's best not to engage with them at all

I agree completely

TalkingtoLangClegintheDark · 25/10/2020 19:19

@NewlyGranny

The comment about boundaries being permissible (🙄) until they harm someone else is actually quite scary. The whole TRA movement is based on the conviction that women's boundaries are harming - killing - transwomen, so if we can only have boundaries that suit other people, sorry, they're gone!

Remember, not being keen for a transwoman to clean up the medals and prize money in women's sport or be accepted unquestioned into women's hospital wards, refuges and prison wings is 'literal violence' and tantamount to denying their existence.

However we define our boundaries it can never be, 'As long as it doesn't harm you guys, or make you feel it might in some way.'

That's a white flag, not a boundary.

Well said.
OP posts:
NewlyGranny · 25/10/2020 19:21

DiscordandRhyme, I was paraphrasing, not quoting, but you get the gist, I'm sure.

Our big danger as women is appeasement. We're socialised to be nice, kind, quiet and never make a fuss.

While we're busy not rocking the boat, the anchor and the engine are being stolen and the bung pulled.

TalkingtoLangClegintheDark · 25/10/2020 19:21

@TinselAngel

I have definitely noticed an increase to the type of behaviour that you describe Talking, over the last few months. It seemed to coincide with the fall of r/gendercritical.

I don't know whether part of the point of the exercise for those posters who act as you describe, is to create a more hostile environment for trans widows or whether it is just a fortunate side effect for them.

Because how can we think and speak freely in a place where our perpetrators are galloping around in their size nines and being given free rein in the name of hearing both side of the debate? Possible mixed metaphor there).

Just to be clear, I'm not referring to our threads but to FWR in general.

Partly in response to this I am in the process of setting up a private support space for trans widows, but whilst doing that I feel it is a shame if trans widows are chased off this space.

Public discussion here has resulted in highly influential consciousness raising. It's easy to see why some people would want to shut that down or move it elsewhere.

I think a private space for trans widows is very much needed but I really hope the public space stays too as it’s absolutely vital. Flowers
OP posts:
testing987654321 · 25/10/2020 19:25

The other option would be to have an "ignore poster" button. That would help me, I bite far too often and just waste a whole load of time.

TinselAngel · 25/10/2020 19:32

@testing987654321

The trans widows thread does need more protection. It would be a shame if it was lost from here.
I've no complaints about how the trans widows threads are protected, MN are very good about that. However trans widows shouldn't feel confined to that one safe space because of the rest of FWR feeling rammed with perpetrators. Trans widows have valuable insight to offer across the board.

Our greatest issue on the thread TBH is new posters clearly posting utter bollocks and LARPing as trans widows, and we have to try and get rid of them whilst not breaking rules about troll hunting.

MaudTheInvincible · 25/10/2020 19:33

Amused by the notion that darvo and deflection could be construed as 'debate' Halloween Grin

Melroses · 25/10/2020 19:34

The public space has been invaluable for those of us not personally familiar with the dynamics of a relationship with a partner who decides to transition. It has certainly opened my eyes and joined a few dots.

FleetsumNLangCleg · 25/10/2020 19:34

Public discussion here has resulted in highly influential consciousness raising. It's easy to see why some people would want to shut that down or move it elsewhere.

Especially on the trans widow threads, where that thing which shall not be named looms large. "Shut it down! Shut it down!" they cry.

It is very frustrating when some posters arrive, then stay, to describe in many ways how wrong we are over and over and over. Would I ever go to a discussion group to do this? Never. Never in life. But I am a woman.

The sickening aspect of this behaviour is how much they seem to enjoy doing it. Devote hours and days doing it. Devoted to our education or destruction? I can guess.

YankeeDad · 25/10/2020 19:34

@NewlyGranny

The comment about boundaries being permissible (🙄) until they harm someone else is actually quite scary. The whole TRA movement is based on the conviction that women's boundaries are harming - killing - transwomen, so if we can only have boundaries that suit other people, sorry, they're gone!

Remember, not being keen for a transwoman to clean up the medals and prize money in women's sport or be accepted unquestioned into women's hospital wards, refuges and prison wings is 'literal violence' and tantamount to denying their existence.

However we define our boundaries it can never be, 'As long as it doesn't harm you guys, or make you feel it might in some way.'

That's a white flag, not a boundary.

I’m a man, so apologies for the intrusion.

Having read a number of threads on these topics, I agree with the OP, and also with NewlyGranny.

The specious and incoherent arguments made by individuals on other side of the debate have only served to strengthen my agreement.

That has in turn spurred me to take a number of supportive actions, which I will not reveal publicly, but which are substantive in nature.

You are not wasting your time by posting, and thank you for helping me to learn and for provoking me to act.

BigFatLiar · 25/10/2020 19:39

Everyone should be able to set their boundaries and have them respected.

Women need their own space.
Men should also have access to their own space.
Problem is these days people are reluctant to accept women are biologically defined not legally, same with men.

testing987654321 · 25/10/2020 19:47

Is there anything we can do to help tinsel?

TinselAngel · 25/10/2020 19:52

@testing987654321

Is there anything we can do to help tinsel?
Not unless you can give me the power to bam hammer posters based on a hunch! Grin
FleetsumNLangCleg · 25/10/2020 19:56

I’m a man, so apologies for the intrusion.

No apologies required, respectful discussion is welcome. For indeed, NAMALT!

testing987654321 · 25/10/2020 19:57

Grin that would be interesting, I bet your spidey senses are pretty good. Mumsnet should employ you!

TinselAngel · 25/10/2020 20:00

@testing987654321

Grin that would be interesting, I bet your spidey senses are pretty good. Mumsnet should employ you!
I'm open to offers!
PlanDeRaccordement · 25/10/2020 20:02

Well, I’m not convinced I’ve seen that on FWR. But then I’ve been accused of being a biological man many times because of my gender nonconforming views. How do you know these people are actually men?