A quick note to say that this is a misleading cliché. Psychological studies and ordinary experience suggest rather that many women are attracted to men with qualities that "bastards" often happen to have, but which many non-bastards also have: confidence, independence, a lack of neediness, emotional unavailability, and so on. — jamalrob
Exactly, so men looking to attract a particular type of woman are going to attempt to display confidence (including sexual confidence) in order to make themselves seem attractive. — Pseudonym
"Is it better to ask for permission first or ask for forgiveness later?" — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The difference between the two is non-verbal MY hand moving yours — ArguingWAristotleTiff
But permission for what? All forms of physical contact, anything which could possibly be construed as a sexual advance? That's the question that no-one seems to want to answer. I can't think anyone other than a sociopath would deliberately want to make someone else really uncomfortable, and I can guarantee you that sociopaths are not going to be following the MeToo debate and seriously considering changing their behaviour as a result, they're going to completely ignore it as they have completely ignored social convention in all other fields. Someone like Harvey Weinstein is not listening, So to whom are we addressing these concerns? The people who are listening are ordinary men who have, at least, a moderate amount of concern for the welfare of their fellow humans, and much of what has been said has thrown them into a moral quagmire. — Pseudonym
So how did you get hold of my hand without asking me first? Are hands excepted from this no touching rule? If so, why not backs, knees and arms (all of which have been cited by highly publicised MeToo accusations). If you have a reason for allowing hands but dismissing backs, knees and arms, how are you arriving at that reason and justifying it's imposition on all other humans on pain of public humiliation? — Pseudonym
I have no problem with us , as a culture, having a discussion about what we find to be acceptable, and trying to find solutions which minimise the harm done to people who feel uncomfortable whilst still allowing those who do not the freedom to express themselves. The problem with MeToo is that this is not a conversation. It is a particular group, largely of one gender, at one particular moment in time suggesting that some behaviours not only are universally unwanted, but always have been and men should have known better. — Pseudonym
Hopefully we can learn together, that way men know the boundaries and women know how to speak up to make it clear and give consent. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
How did my hands get ahold of yours without asking you first?
Gosh, I wish I could say that I have encountered that but I haven't. I have always been the one sliding the hands of males back to neutral zones such as the shoulder, the cheek, the hips, the waist or the knee. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
When wealthy people disempower the lower class, it isn't through psychological means--they have created a tangible system where it is harder for lower class people to gain wealth. The prevention is due to the wealthy physically having power over the unwealthy. In the case of women being unable to deny unwanted sexual advances, we're talking about something psychological. So are you saying that men are psychologically stronger than women, and this is what allows them to have this power over them?
My whole point is really just this: how is this supposed system actually enforced? — JustSomeGuy
education, networks, purported 'manners', wider knowledge of the world. — mcdoodle
when incomes remain unequal, and labour remains unequal, and there is still a backlog of problems to be remedied: the incidence of domestic violence, for example. — mcdoodle
I've lived 69 years now, and many women I've known have told me how deeply things like this have affected them. For others, it's been a pinprick they've brushed off. I'd be amazed if anyone doesn't know instances of male misbehaviour towards women that the men got away with. — mcdoodle
I, myself, before I was 25 years old, had been a victim of female misbehavior... — JustSomeGuy
I'm deeply disappointed by the tone and content on Streetlight's part (often a careful thinker). — Roke
guy running her to the side of the road with his car while she was riding a bike and then masturbating in front of her — praxis
Freaky, and probably not the sort of thing any dude needs to worry about. — praxis
More generally, I don't accept that studies have established women fall for bastards — Benkei
a guy at a park who was staring me down — Marchesk
particularly at parks — Marchesk
The worst story I can remember my wife telling was of a guy running her to the side of the road with his car while she was riding a bike and then masturbating in front of her. Freaky, and probably not the sort of thing any dude needs to worry about. — praxis
Is it not the case that men are usually expected by women to be the initiator of romantic activity, of sexual activity, and so on? Women can and do also initiate amorous, romantic sexual activity, but it seems like men are expected to prosecute the case, so to speak. Clearly, the beginning of an assault could be similar to the beginning of an exceedingly pleasant interlude. — Bitter Crank
But you cannot expect to have men make the first move to initiate sexual encounters, with the requirement that it's only the men you want to have sexual encounters with. People don't know what you want until you make it explicit. Men cannot read minds, and body language is not even close to sufficient since it can be so easily misinterpreted. — JustSomeGuy
I love women, I absolutely respect women, and I consider myself a true feminist in the sense I that I believe in equality between genders. Sexism is stupid and ignorant, but that doesn't mean there aren't general differences between sexes. One difference I have personally observed to be true is that women are more irrational, and there is a biological basis for this involving hormones. — JustSomeGuy
Females are not worse off than men in society, and this movement completely ignores all of the things men deal with.
Women do not have more problems; they have different problems, but there is still plenty of overlap.
Men experience sexual assault all the time, as well. — JustSomeGuy
You don't have to read minds. You can always talk to your prospective sexual partner. If you aren't a creep out to justify his creepiness, that is. — Akanthinos
*Doubt about creepiness intensifies* — Akanthinos
*Doubt about creepiness settles into sad, resignated certainty* — Akanthinos
If you aren't a creep out to justify his creepiness, that is. — Akanthinos
Are you a woman? I cannot see a man saying something like this because it's just plain inaccurate. It shows a complete lack of experience in regards to interacting with potential romantic or sexual female partners. In other words: that's just not how things work. — JustSomeGuy
You only display your own inadequacies. — Akanthinos
Engaging women you are interested in verbally and leading to your attraction for them as a subject shows confidence and extroversion. — Akanthinos
So you're saying you tell women "I am attracted to you" and then ask women if you can touch their leg or their hand? You ask women if you can kiss them?
How romantic. — JustSomeGuy
'd also like to point out that you are displaying another negative characteristic that is generally more prominent in men. I'll call it "macho-ness", for lack of a better term. You are implying, with everything you have said to me so far, that you are "more of a man" than I am; that I am "inadequate" in comparison to you. — JustSomeGuy
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