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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Reclaim the Night - no longer about ending violence against women but all "genders"?

35 replies

IwantToRetire · 24/11/2025 22:08

I was looking at this list of Reclaim the Night Marches https://www.womensgrid.org.uk/?tag=rtn and they no longer seem to be about challenging the dangers women face when out walking or traveling.

Even thought they are organised as part of the 16 Days of Action Against Violence Against Women campaign, it seems women aren't even allowed to have a campaign about women's rights.
https://www.womensgrid.org.uk/?p=28070

I am probably being a bit hard line, as many events are no longer organised by women's groups and activists but local authorities. And so not likely to be on the radical feminist end of the spectrum of what now passes for feminism!

I suppose it would be different if this process of assimilation meant that violence against women was no longer a problem!

Hmm
OP posts:
OpheliaWitchoftheWoods · 24/11/2025 22:18

Women not focusing on and serving men (in all their various groups and preferred labels) are bad and naughty. Wrong Kind of Feminist.

SwirlyGates · 24/11/2025 22:18

Women can't even have VAWG to ourselves, what are things coming to?

nauticant · 24/11/2025 22:20

People of all genders commit violence against people of all genders.

This is where our focus and all our efforts must be.

Grammarnut · 24/11/2025 23:27

nauticant · 24/11/2025 22:20

People of all genders commit violence against people of all genders.

This is where our focus and all our efforts must be.

That attitude isn't a lot of help in preventing VAWG.

moto748e · 24/11/2025 23:28

I suppose no-one should be surprised, really. Is nothing sacred? Of course not. Transgressing/impinging is all part of the fun.

BunfightBetty · 25/11/2025 00:03

SwirlyGates · 24/11/2025 22:18

Women can't even have VAWG to ourselves, what are things coming to?

I was going to say the same. We’re not allowed any recognition of our oppression now.

GotoAnotherSquare · 25/11/2025 00:05

I don't mind. I know men who have been assaulted at night. I think men are actually more likely to be assaulted than women.

FrippEnos · 25/11/2025 00:05

It follows the same pattern that gender ideology always has.

IwantToRetire · 25/11/2025 00:49

GotoAnotherSquare · 25/11/2025 00:05

I don't mind. I know men who have been assaulted at night. I think men are actually more likely to be assaulted than women.

Then men can organise their own day.

Why are men and gender identities insisting that they must be part of the one day in the year that is specifically about ending violence about women.

Talk about lack of respect for women's rights. And the need to recognise women as deserving of having rights.

What is the point of having a feminist forum if contributors dont value the need for women only organising.

At this rate it wont be long before the fifth column has turned FWR in to FGR.

Sad
OP posts:
socialdilemmawhattodo · 25/11/2025 01:06

IwantToRetire · 24/11/2025 22:08

I was looking at this list of Reclaim the Night Marches https://www.womensgrid.org.uk/?tag=rtn and they no longer seem to be about challenging the dangers women face when out walking or traveling.

Even thought they are organised as part of the 16 Days of Action Against Violence Against Women campaign, it seems women aren't even allowed to have a campaign about women's rights.
https://www.womensgrid.org.uk/?p=28070

I am probably being a bit hard line, as many events are no longer organised by women's groups and activists but local authorities. And so not likely to be on the radical feminist end of the spectrum of what now passes for feminism!

I suppose it would be different if this process of assimilation meant that violence against women was no longer a problem!

Hmm

So what have you done about it, actually? Now that you have noticed it. Written to anyone, requested information, started a petition? Or moaned on here.

whatawalley · 25/11/2025 05:37

Why not arrange 3 dates; violence against women, violence against men and violence against all genders (everyone else)?

Say you will sort the women's one and ask for volunteers to sort the other two out.

You have now accommodated everyone and it's up to them to put their money where their mouth is, if they really feel that it is important.

Namelessnelly · 25/11/2025 05:53

GotoAnotherSquare · 25/11/2025 00:05

I don't mind. I know men who have been assaulted at night. I think men are actually more likely to be assaulted than women.

By whom? Which sex commits most of this violence? So you’re saying women and girls done deserve to have their oppression recognised cos “men get assaulted too” so we must centre them in all things?

Swamphag · 25/11/2025 06:05

Can you imagine the outcry if women started inserting themselves into every trans / NB awareness / celebration / remembrance day? (I mean we'd all have to give up work and hobbies for starters, there's a lot of those days / weeks / months to cover. We might have to do it in shifts) Reading out the names of women who've died at the hands of men on TDR?
But anything for women is fair game for whataboutery and ✨ inclusion ✨We just can't have anything for ourselves can we? There's a special place in hell for the women who've welcomed this erasure.

helluvatime · 25/11/2025 06:13

GotoAnotherSquare · 25/11/2025 00:05

I don't mind. I know men who have been assaulted at night. I think men are actually more likely to be assaulted than women.

You might think that but I doubt it's true - at least not when it comes to serious sexual assault. In any case, reclaim the night wasn't just about assault, it was about how women are more likely to fear going out after dark than men. It had a clear mandate: reclaim the night for women to enjoy too. It's now just another "be nice to everyone " organization. Idiots.

WandaSiri · 25/11/2025 06:46

Many more men are assaulted than women but not for the same reasons or in the same ways and crucially not by women.
Which is why it is essential to name the problem - male violence against women and girls. Leaving the M off MVAWG is where it starts to go wrong.
Labelling it ambiguously "gender-based" violence as opposed to "sex-based" also obscures the problem.

And if local authorities are organising this, that also tends towards diffusing the focus because they will try to include everyone instead of focusing on women and girls. Even without factoring in gender woo, they have a poor understanding of their EA2010 duty to foster good relations between groups.

Nowadays the main purpose of many of these initiatives seems to be to force-team women + men who say they're women (and centre the men).

MarieDeGournay · 25/11/2025 10:39

The phrase used currently in Ireland is 'domestic and gender-based violence', as if it was something that men and women experience equally.

Any insistence on it being primarily an issue of male violence against women of the XX-chromosome-y sort is seen as discriminatory against men - 'men are victims too'

Even the Rape Crisis Centres here deal with men - this pre-dates the TWAW thing, it has been going on for decades. Men are raped too, and it would be discriminatory for RCCs not to be open to them - that's the logic.

I think a lot of the male clients of RCCs here are men who were sexually abused as children, rather than as adults, and they deserve all the care and support they need- but why not from men's crisis centres campaigned for and set up by and run by men?

There have been some high-profile cases here of women who have survived serious male violence speaking out very bravely and strongly in public.
I notice even they corrected themselves at times when they nearly said men attacking women and said 'people' being attacked instead, and being very careful to refer to violence against women and men.
So even brave women with first-hand experience of serious male violence against them feel the need to avoid naming it.

Recently I've noticed a slight shift back to talking about violence specifically against women. You can't be sure what they mean by the word 'women' any more, but maybe the tide is turning a bit...

Dominoodles · 25/11/2025 13:22

GotoAnotherSquare · 25/11/2025 00:05

I don't mind. I know men who have been assaulted at night. I think men are actually more likely to be assaulted than women.

The difference is that men are not attacked because they are men. Women are attacked because they are women. It's about misogyny.

SwirlyGates · 25/11/2025 13:35

Dominoodles · 25/11/2025 13:22

The difference is that men are not attacked because they are men. Women are attacked because they are women. It's about misogyny.

Well I'm not sure about that. Men attacking men is different from men attacking women, but I think that the men are indeed attacked because they are men, and are perhaps seen as a challenge or a threat - think drunken fights, men who think they're hard and go for that stranger who looked at them funny, men (and boys) who knife males in another gang, just because.

MarieDeGournay · 25/11/2025 13:36

Dominoodles · 25/11/2025 13:22

The difference is that men are not attacked because they are men. Women are attacked because they are women. It's about misogyny.

Well said - and also, women are not going around at night stalking men and then attacking or killing them because they are men. The issue is male violence, and the targeting of women because, as you say Dominoodles, they are women.

I'm all for men campaigning to stop male violence against each other, but I don't see much evidence of that happening..

moto748e · 25/11/2025 13:38

But aren't the waters being muddied here? Men may be more likely to be assaulted in general, but if we are talking about sexual assault of various types, women are by far the biggest victims.

RoyalCorgi · 25/11/2025 13:55

If men want to organise their own protests about male violence against men, then they're perfectly welcome to do so. Who's stopping them?

Reclaim the Night marches were intended for women to protest about male violence against women and girls, and should remain so.

strangeandfamiliar · 25/11/2025 14:29

The misinformation and dilution of the message about all forms of male violence is rife. I was once assured by my teenage son's girlfriend that domestic abuse is just as likely to be committed by women. A couple of hours working in my field would soon have relieved her of that notion.

AnneLovesGilbert · 25/11/2025 14:36

I might be wrong but I think they always including men. There was an outcry when it began about trans women not being included and they capitulated immediately.

MrsTerryPratchett · 25/11/2025 14:42

GotoAnotherSquare · 25/11/2025 00:05

I don't mind. I know men who have been assaulted at night. I think men are actually more likely to be assaulted than women.

This is like someone deciding they don't want Christmas presents so they drop everyone in the family's presents off with someone else.

YOU might not mind but I mind and it's not your gift to give away.

Reclaim the night isn't just about VAWG, it's about... reclaiming the night. I was repeatedly told growing up that going out, dressed a certain way, having fun, drinking all caused rape and VAWG. Not rapists. They were almost never mentioned. Just being careful, get a cab, get walked home, dress like this, don't get too pissed. The message of women reclaiming freedom is important.

If men want to talk about violence, and they should, they can.

Howseitgoin · 25/11/2025 14:48

IwantToRetire · 24/11/2025 22:08

I was looking at this list of Reclaim the Night Marches https://www.womensgrid.org.uk/?tag=rtn and they no longer seem to be about challenging the dangers women face when out walking or traveling.

Even thought they are organised as part of the 16 Days of Action Against Violence Against Women campaign, it seems women aren't even allowed to have a campaign about women's rights.
https://www.womensgrid.org.uk/?p=28070

I am probably being a bit hard line, as many events are no longer organised by women's groups and activists but local authorities. And so not likely to be on the radical feminist end of the spectrum of what now passes for feminism!

I suppose it would be different if this process of assimilation meant that violence against women was no longer a problem!

Hmm

"The involvement of men is seen by many as crucial for the success of the movement. It reinforces the message that violence against women is not just a "women's issue" but a societal one that requires everyone's participation to change."

I suppose more people realising they have a stake in an issue brings more commitment to it like other causes for example climate change being everyone’s problem.