Apustajan apustaja
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Thanks. Though I have been thinking recently about Artemis / Diana, Athena / Minerva, as they were the goddesses of the hunt and of strategy. Athena specifically was also a goddess of war, as was the roman goddess Bellona.Pretty neat info. I assumed because the shield protects and the sword attacks was my logic.
Pretty sure in the hunting aspect a goddess meant to feed (provide a bountiful hunt) to her children (worshippers). Not exactly sure but that’s a good start to understanding what people were thinking.Thanks. Though I have been thinking recently about Artemis / Diana, Athena / Minerva, as they were the goddesses of the hunt and of strategy. Athena specifically was also a goddess of war, as was the roman goddess Bellona.
Of course the Greeks didn't think too well of Ares. The bloodlust and destruction associated with him made him a deity that saw little worship, whereas the Roman counterpart Mars was quite revered and more thought of him of a symbol of armed peace. Mars also started as a god of agriculture and only later became associated with war.
I think it's interesting to think about how these female deities were so associated with hunting and combat. Perhaps it was their version of Girls und Panzer, as the idea of the amazons was.
I think equality is a separate issue. Plus, virtually all feminists are not advocating for some sort of oppressive matriarchy anyway.I wonder if the people whining about feminism not being about equality even care about equality themselves or is it just a convenient weapon
Do condoms never break in your world or something?There's no such thing as an unintended pregnancy outside of rape
You kind of ignored the second half of his (admittedly somewhat silly) hypothetical. The hypothetical was about extremely late term abortions. Granted, I don’t know if he was asking in good faith, but I interpreted his question as asking if you would agree with some restrictions (i.e. the viability requirement from the now defunct Roe v. Wade ruling), or if you are an absolutist on abortion being allowed at any point in the pregnancy.I think there’s something controlling and perverse about making a woman carry a pregnancy she’s certain she doesn’t want, and that it positions unintended pregnancy as a woman’s punishment for having sex. That punitive and controlling vibe is more obvious if these men also oppose access to BC and LARC (long acting reversible contraception.) Men who want to restrict access to both BC and terminations are straight up gunning for some Handmaids Tale style paternalistic theocracy
you could have just linked kindrad.orgWhat is feminism?
Feminism is a social movement that promotes the liberation of women from our current patriarchal system. Feminists campaign for the full enfranchisement of women’s rights.
you do realize that there’s no such thing as a big F feminism, it’s not some monolithic organization. Sure you can argue that the most vocal and influential (i.e. the most well funded and connected) feminists said that, But that’s not exactly a condemnation of the core concept of feminism, just the most popular interpretation of it.Leaders endorsed by Feminism
Good faith question here, what is your interpretation of what those things look like when fully realized? Do you think most other women would share that opinion?It’s about WOMENS rights and Freedoms and liberation.
true.I disagree, having an angry peanut gallery of pissed-off men making rape jokes and publicly doubting whether women should be allowed to vote/are responsible for all of society's problems has a cooling effect on feminist discussion. Women will tend to circle up and point the spears out when we feel surrounded by men who would like to see all of our rights terminated.
this.Well, it's becoming clear to me that there are differences between the sexes, but I think we can acknowledge those differences and still work toward a fair and just society.
Maybe I just missed it, but I don't support elective late-term abortion. Early term elective is fine, and I thought 24 weeks was a suitable cutoff. Nearly all elective abortions are carried out around 6-8 weeks, or at least they are in Mass and NYC. It is bizarre for someone to get more than halfway through a pregnancy and then suddenly have a change of heart.You kind of ignored the second half of his (admittedly somewhat silly) hypothetical. The hypothetical was about extremely late term abortions. Granted, I don’t know if he was asking in good faith, but I interpreted his question as asking if you would agree with some restrictions (i.e. the viability requirement from the now defunct Roe v. Wade ruling), or if you are an absolutist on abortion being allowed at any point in the pregnancy.
He never gets laid, so all of this is a hypothetical to him.Do condoms never break in your world or something?
there were lots of war goddesses, too, and they often intersected with other areas, such as fertilityGoddesses are cool and I look up to them.
It's not just Greek/Roman Goddesses that are fighters either, Goddess Bastet in Egypt is also a fighter.
Sorry I like stuff like this, I have nothing else to add to the thread, carry on.
Well now that it’s quieted down, maybe it can actually get back on track.This thread has been derailed so many times it might as well be a junkyard.
Let's add something more controversial then.Women deserve to have equal rights and equal opportunities that men have. Wow what a brazen and bold start.
getting most women to agree to something is difficult just like its difficult to get most men to do so; we are not a hivemind and we're all very different (but simmilar, too...).Do you think most other women would share that opinion?
Are condoms the only way to prevent pregnancy in your world or something?Do condoms never break in your world or something?
They didn't teach this in preschool?Well, it's becoming clear to me that there are differences between the sexes, but I think we can acknowledge those differences and still work toward a fair and just society.
Maybe it’s just me but I don’t often think in terms of theory, and actually affecting change requires some degree of consensus and compromise. The question I posed was largely rhetorical and meant to spur thought.getting most women to agree to something is difficult just like its difficult to get most men to do so; we are not a hivemind and we're all very different (but simmilar, too...).
Plus right now branches of feminism are so divided grouping them together isn't really worth it; furthermore feminism in general is trendy (though I think its popularity is on the decline) so there's a lot of women (and men, too...) that follow and repeat things blindly without ever reflecting on it much or forming their own opinions.
What do the feminists of the farms think about motherhood? I have read some articles that discuss the idea that contemporary mainstream feminism doesn’t pay enough attention to supporting women who are mothers. https://modernagejournal.com/feminism-goes-home/235838/
I also want to share a comment on ovarit I found thought provoking
“… if we think of equality as sort sort of same-ness, which is what many minds often default to, women always lose because we end up on men's playing field, with men's rules and men's values.
The key challenge of feminism, I think, is to develop the concept of equality as a type of 'parity in the context of difference.' What does "different but equal" actually look like? What does it mean to refuse to play on the male field with male rules and male values?
Separatism is not the answer. It's either impossible (women birth males) or a ghetto.
So is it actually possible to build--with men--a world in which women have nothing to fear from men, in which women can magnify all their talents and dreams as men so, where women have as much say in how the world is run as men do, where women's voices are as listened to as male voices?…”
are there any that they don't?Women deserve to have equal rights and equal opportunities that men have. Wow what a brazen and bold start.
What do the feminists of the farms think about motherhood? I have read some articles that discuss the idea that contemporary mainstream feminism doesn’t pay enough attention to supporting women who are mothers. https://modernagejournal.com/feminism-goes-home/235838/
I also want to share a comment on ovarit I found thought provoking
“… if we think of equality as sort sort of same-ness, which is what many minds often default to, women always lose because we end up on men's playing field, with men's rules and men's values.
The key challenge of feminism, I think, is to develop the concept of equality as a type of 'parity in the context of difference.' What does "different but equal" actually look like? What does it mean to refuse to play on the male field with male rules and male values?
Separatism is not the answer. It's either impossible (women birth males) or a ghetto.
So is it actually possible to build--with men--a world in which women have nothing to fear from men, in which women can magnify all their talents and dreams as men so, where women have as much say in how the world is run as men do, where women's voices are as listened to as male voices?…”
I think what that poster on ovarit was talking about re: separatism “not being the answer” was likely referring to those who suggest separatism as the first and/or only solution. I agree that separation should be an option for women who want it. The problem is that I would think that the vast majority of women don’t want it, and that her remarks on it being “impossible or a ghetto” are in respect to its global application. It is a fair point to ask what would happen to male children and their mothers in a hypothetical global separatist society, as well well as what the culture of such a hypothetical society should be like, if one is advocating for a universal separation. Just as how, although I understand the value of #killallmen or proposals to kill off some percentage of the male population as a means to vent frustration, I think that such positions should not be taken lightly, and should be given the gravity and careful consideration that one would give such a thing had they the ability to implement it.I disagree that separatism isn't the answer, or at least part of the answer. I think a lot of straight feminists like to shit on separatism because otherwise they have to acknowledge that they are staying with subpar men or situations they're not happy with just to have a man, and that they're not as free from conventional desires and standards of success as they like to think. If you've ever seen a separatism slapfight on tumblr you'll know that first out the gate is accusations of predatory lesbianism or bitterness / crab bucket, because you can't possibly genuinely want to live away from men, even when we're all ostensibly #killallmen or whatever. It's been talked about in I think the femoid thread, most of the time the #killallmen stuff is coming from women with partners, or who are only temporarily single and still looking, not those who have checked out of dating and no longer care.