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| #Post#: 13115-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 27, 2022, 9:25 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| As I have always maintained, Western civilization is more, not | |
| less, sexist than those which it colonized: | |
| https://theconversation.com/how-colonialism-is-a-major-cause-of-domestic-abuse-… | |
| [quote]Postcolonial scholars have been telling us as much for | |
| decades. From widespread poverty to racial discrimination and | |
| gender inequalities, colonisation put in place systems and | |
| structures that are often at the root of heightened violence | |
| against women. | |
| Colonial policies | |
| Many colonial systems of governance were based on �racialising� | |
| the local population: categorising and marginalising groups of | |
| people according to race or ethnicity. For example, the | |
| divisions between Hindus and Muslims in pre-partition India and | |
| the racial hierarchy instituted in apartheid South Africa. These | |
| divisions have provided the fodder for many of the world�s | |
| contemporary armed conflicts. Scholars talk about colonial | |
| durabilities to describe the way in which colonial histories | |
| continue to actively shape the world today. | |
| ... | |
| Many colonial systems of governance also established regulations | |
| and legal frameworks that were particularly damaging for women. | |
| Despite the fact that both men and women were in positions of | |
| leadership in pre-colonial Nigeria, British colonial officials | |
| refused to negotiate with female chiefs. They also put in place | |
| a system of land ownership that explicitly excluded women. | |
| The legacy of these policies is that women are still far less | |
| likely to own land than men in Nigeria. A recent study of | |
| national data has shown that women who do not own land are more | |
| likely to report domestic violence than those that do. This is | |
| because land ownership gives women income and power within a | |
| relationship. It also gives them options when they need | |
| somewhere to go. Women who have power and alternatives are | |
| simply less likely to put up with violence and more likely to | |
| leave.[/quote] | |
| https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/whp-origins/era-7-the-great-convergence-… | |
| [quote]Women suffered more under colonial rule than men. In | |
| addition, early histories of the time ignore women's struggles | |
| for independence. Women don't appear much in the official | |
| records of that time because they were forbidden to participate | |
| in government or business. In some cases, colonial rulers forced | |
| women to live as Europeans thought they should, as mothers, | |
| wives and home keepers. But before European occupation those | |
| same women may have held positions of power in their community. | |
| Colonial rulers and warrant chiefs in Nigeria | |
| Colonial rulers generally only accepted males in roles of | |
| authority. For example, before colonial times, communities in | |
| Southeastern Nigeria were run by groups of men and women rather | |
| than single leaders. But colonial occupiers would only work with | |
| male "chiefs." Since there weren't any, the British chose random | |
| men to be leaders and called these men "warrant chiefs." These | |
| warrant chiefs―supported by colonial rulers―acted as | |
| judges and had a lot of power. This included power often over | |
| women who had previously been a part of political rule. Women | |
| also struggled to make money under colonial rule. In many West | |
| African societies before colonialism, women farmed and | |
| participated in local business. Most able-bodied women were | |
| either farmers or merchants. In southern Nigeria, for example, | |
| all members of a family farmed the family land. | |
| Women helped produce important crops like palm oil in Igbo | |
| societies, and cocoa in the Yoruba societies. However, British | |
| colonialists brought the concept of individual land ownership to | |
| Nigeria and only allowed men to be landowners, so women found it | |
| difficult to make money from these important cash crops. In some | |
| areas however, like among the Igbo, women tried to hold on to | |
| their historic role as cultivators and market sellers. | |
| Women participate in anti-colonial actions | |
| Igbo women's knowledge of farming and business helped them | |
| resist unfair British laws. In 1929, the British began unfairly | |
| taxing women in southeastern Nigeria. These women protested at | |
| warrant chief's offices and attacked colonial buildings to | |
| demand an end to unfair taxes and the warrant chief system. The | |
| women used protest methods that were historically used by Igbo | |
| women to express their disapproval of men who abused their | |
| power. The women danced, sang songs about their poor treatment, | |
| and destroyed courthouses. This protest was known as the Aba | |
| Women's Rebellion and lasted two months. The protest ended on | |
| December 17th, 1929. During the protest, the British military | |
| fired into crowds of protestors and killed 55 women. | |
| ... | |
| European colonizers forced women out of jobs, took property from | |
| them, and removed them from government roles. Many things made | |
| it difficult for women to be a part of fighting colonialism. | |
| They were forced to be dependent on men, had less rights than | |
| men, could not own land and could not even earn money.[/quote] | |
| [img] | |
| https://incels.is/attachments/1699743609253-jpeg.952947/[/img] | |
| See also: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/ancient-world/shock-the-first-crusade-and-the… | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/issues/social-decolonization/msg4458/#msg4458 | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/colonial-era/re-genghis-khan/msg4142/#msg4142 | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/human-evolution/aryan-fingers/msg659/#msg659 | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/human-evolution/re-sexual-dimorphism-preferen… | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/issues/dress-decolonization/msg5632/#msg5632 | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/issues/dress-decolonization/msg5678/#msg5678 | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/issues/dress-decolonization/msg7414/#msg7414 | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/issues/dress-decolonization/msg7599/#msg7599 | |
| #Post#: 13442-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: May 19, 2022, 3:46 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Offshooting from: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/issues/legal-decolonization/msg13434/#msg13434 | |
| [quote]Law enforcement in ancient China was carried out by | |
| "prefects" for thousands of years since it developed in both the | |
| Chu and Jin kingdoms of the Spring and Autumn period. In Jin, | |
| dozens of prefects were spread across the state, each having | |
| limited authority and employment period. They were appointed by | |
| local magistrates, who reported to higher authorities such as | |
| governors, who in turn were appointed by the emperor, and they | |
| oversaw the civil administration of their "prefecture", or | |
| jurisdiction. Under each prefect were "subprefects" who helped | |
| collectively with law enforcement in the area. Some prefects | |
| were responsible for handling investigations, much like modern | |
| police detectives. Prefects could also be women.[13][/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_criminal_justice#Ancient_China | |
| [quote]An example of a female prefect would be Lady Qu[4] of | |
| Wuding (serving 1531 � c. 1557).[/quote] | |
| Comparing with Western countries: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_law_enforcement | |
| [quote]The first female police officers in Australia were | |
| appointed in New South Wales in July 1915[/quote] | |
| [quote]Women have played an important role in enforcement since | |
| the early 1990s in Austria.[/quote] | |
| [quote]On September 16, 1974, thirty-two women are sworn in with | |
| the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as their first female | |
| officers.[/quote] | |
| [quote]In Germany, women were employed in the police force from | |
| 1903[/quote] | |
| [quote]in 1923, Meta Kehrer became the first woman Inspector of | |
| the Dutch police force[/quote] | |
| [quote]the New Zealand Police did not admit women as police | |
| officers until 1941.[/quote] | |
| [quote]Poland ... Finally, on February 26, 1925, the | |
| Commander-in-Chief of the State Police signed a decree allowing | |
| women to work in the State Police.[/quote] | |
| [quote]In 1908, the first three women, Agda Hallin, Maria | |
| Andersson and Erica Str�m, were employed in the Swedish Police | |
| Authority in Stockholm[/quote] | |
| [quote]United Kingdom ... The first woman to be appointed a | |
| police officer with full powers of arrest was Edith Smith | |
| (1876�1923), who was sworn in to Grantham Borough Police in | |
| August 1915.[/quote] | |
| [quote]The first policewomen in the United States included Marie | |
| Owens, who joined the Chicago Police department in 1891; Lola | |
| Baldwin, who was sworn in by the city of Portland in 1908; Fanny | |
| Bixby, also sworn into office in 1908 by the city of Long Beach, | |
| California; and Alice Stebbins Wells, who was initiated into the | |
| Los Angeles Police Department in 1910.[24][/quote] | |
| #Post#: 14607-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 9, 2022, 11:50 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://i.redd.it/04lfvsrv5c991.jpg | |
| [img] | |
| https://s.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/bsIG53MmBfr1z3Hgv5Q4hw--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRl… | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scold's_bridle | |
| [quote]First recorded in Scotland in 1567, the branks were also | |
| used in England and its colonies. | |
| ... | |
| Escrava Anastacia ("Anastacia the female slave") is a Brazilian | |
| folk saint said to have died from wearing a punitive iron | |
| muzzle. | |
| [/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escrava_Anastacia | |
| [quote] She is often purported to have possessed tremendous | |
| healing powers and to have performed other miracles. Eventually, | |
| she is punished by her owners by being forced to wear a | |
| muzzle-like facemask, which prevents her from speaking, and a | |
| heavy iron collar. The reasons given for this punishment vary: | |
| some stories report her aiding in the escape of other slaves, | |
| others claim she resisted rape by her master, and yet another | |
| places the blame on a mistress jealous of Anastacia's beauty. | |
| After a prolonged period of suffering, all the while performing | |
| more miracles of healing and peace, Anastacia dies of tetanus | |
| from the collar.[/quote] | |
| But we are supposed to believe Western civilization is less | |
| sexist than non-Western civilizations..... | |
| #Post#: 15004-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: August 4, 2022, 10:30 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Nothing has changed, by the way: | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNEkQgTAE3M | |
| #Post#: 15120-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: August 13, 2022, 12:47 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| All the following are exclusively Western behaviours: | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/women-sharing-gentlemanly-behaviors-actually-18… | |
| [quote]Women Are Revealing The "White Knight" Behaviors Men Do | |
| That Are Actually Pretty Disrespectful | |
| ... | |
| some "good deeds" don't come off as "kind" or "polite" at all. | |
| Instead, they can feel condescending, creepy, infantilizing, or | |
| worse: all of the above. | |
| ... | |
| 1."Offering to help you and not backing off, regardless of what | |
| you say. My cousin is very beautiful and often has men offering | |
| help left and right in an effort to get in her good graces � | |
| except they keep offering when she says no. And they keep | |
| offering. And they keep pushing. It's basically a thinly veiled | |
| 'let me get close to you,' and they won't take no for an answer. | |
| It's extremely disrespectful." | |
| �u/peachandpeony | |
| 2."When people try to put words in my mouth, like, 'what I think | |
| she meant was...' No, no, no. I said what I said, all questions | |
| can be directed to me." | |
| �u/CatrionaShadowleaf | |
| 3."When someone interrupts or stops telling a story to apologize | |
| for the profanities being used in front of me." | |
| �u/smellycatsmelllycat | |
| "Or you're in a group conversation with some men and one of them | |
| swears, so another man cuts him off and scolds him because I'm | |
| there. What is this, the 1850s? I promise I won't faint." | |
| �u/crazynekosama | |
| 4."People insisting on carrying things for me. I worked in a | |
| warehouse for years and can�t count how many times I got told | |
| that the lifting should be left for the �men.� I was usually the | |
| only employee on shift, and if I left all the lifting for the | |
| men, then I just wouldn�t be employed." | |
| �u/Ill_Task_257 | |
| 5."Any time a man is speaking for or 'defending' a woman and he | |
| gets extremely possessive, and you can tell that he�s more | |
| offended because she�s HIS, and it�s therefore disrespectful to | |
| HIM, than he is concerned about her feelings. 'That�s MY WIFE,' | |
| 'don�t talk about MY wife that way...'" | |
| �u/lizard_ladder | |
| 6."When they try to mansplain to me about how to do my job." | |
| �u/Bebe_Bleau | |
| 7."Speaking on my behalf because I didn't answer right away. | |
| Like, I don't care if you've known me my whole life, you don't, | |
| under any circumstances, speak for me. I have a voice." | |
| �u/SlimJimLahey | |
| 8."Insisting on walking me to my car. No one has insisted on | |
| this with good intentions, so stop pretending you are protecting | |
| me." | |
| �u/weewee52 | |
| 9."Kissing my hand when first meeting me. Please, no." | |
| �u/Holybull79 | |
| 10."Babying pregnant women because they 'need protection,' | |
| including from themselves. When I was pregnant, one of my | |
| coworkers told on me to my husband (we work at the same company) | |
| because he thought the box I was carrying was too heavy for a | |
| pregnant woman to be carrying." | |
| �u/fireflygalaxies | |
| 11."Men I don't know calling me 'honey,' 'sweetheart,' or any | |
| variation of that. It happens less now that I'm older, thank | |
| god." | |
| �u/emshlaf | |
| 12."Walking you home after a first date, especially when you | |
| don't know them well. Like, okay, maybe there's good intent, but | |
| statistically, the guy I just started dating is more of a risk | |
| than the possibility of some random stranger-danger attack on a | |
| busy, well-lit city street. Until I know a guy better, I | |
| emphatically don't want to give them my address. I once told a | |
| guy all that out of sheer exasperation when he wouldn't accept | |
| my 'no, thank you'. He was...not happy." | |
| �u/sharksnack3264 | |
| 13."Taking tools away from me while I'm using them because they | |
| are 'thinking of my safety.' Like, no, it's not safe to try and | |
| take my axe out of my hands mid-swing." | |
| �u/notanotherkrazychik | |
| 14."Those cringe-y 'POV' TikToks where a guy acts out an | |
| imaginary scenario where he saves a girl from being | |
| harassed/assaulted. They just love imagining that a woman is | |
| being hurt, just so they can be a hero. And there's always epic, | |
| movie-type music playing in the background." | |
| �u/No_Natural2495 | |
| 15."If I'm holding a door already for everyone to get in, and a | |
| man has to make it awkward by trying to be gentlemanly and hold | |
| the door for me. You're causing a traffic jam, then making it | |
| awkward holding the door also, so now I gotta do a weird shimmy | |
| under your arm, or go around you somehow to go inside. I hate | |
| it." | |
| �u/TenaciousToffee | |
| 16.And finally, "Men I don�t know being 'gentlemanly' and | |
| letting me walk up the stairs in front of them when I�m wearing | |
| a short skirt or shorts. This usually happens with repairmen in | |
| my house." | |
| �u/Late_Significance519[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 15286-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: August 23, 2022, 7:11 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Our enemies writing a pro-patriarchy article that inadvertently | |
| reveals both Western civilization's greater patriarchy than | |
| non-Western civilizations, and Western civilization's | |
| (inaccurate) bigoted presumption that non-Western civilizations | |
| are just as patriarchal: | |
| https://www.eurocanadians.ca/2022/08/the-tragedy-of-modern-love.html | |
| [quote]There is no female equivalent to the heroic stories of | |
| men killing dragons to save female virgins. Female fragility | |
| inspires male sacrifice while male fragility inspires female | |
| abandonment. The list goes on and on and on. It�s not just that | |
| women don�t prove love through sacrifice (in relation to adult | |
| men), it�s that they won�t even pretend to express such passions | |
| in their art, films, and literature as a matter of superficial | |
| virtue signaling.[/quote] | |
| Our enemies obviously do not watch Sailor Moon. But rather than | |
| use this or numerous other easy Counterculture-era | |
| counterexamples, I feel it would be even more convincing to | |
| prove our enemies wrong using an ancient counterexample: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legend_of_the_White_Snake | |
| [quote]the white and green snakes transform themselves into two | |
| young women called Bai Suzhen (白素貞) and | |
| Xiaoqing (小青), respectively. They meet Xu Xian at | |
| the Broken Bridge in Hangzhou. Xu Xian lends them his umbrella | |
| because it is raining. Xu Xian and Bai Suzhen gradually fall in | |
| love and are eventually married. They move to Zhenjiang, where | |
| they open a medicine shop. | |
| In the meantime, the terrapin spirit has accumulated enough | |
| powers to take on human form, so he transforms into a Buddhist | |
| monk called Fahai (法海). Still angry with Bai | |
| Suzhen, Fahai plots to break up her relationship with Xu Xian. | |
| He approaches Xu Xian and tells him that during the Duanwu | |
| Festival his wife should drink realgar wine, an alcoholic drink | |
| commonly consumed during that festival. Bai Suzhen | |
| unsuspectingly drinks the wine and reveals her true form as a | |
| large white snake. Xu Xian dies of shock after seeing that his | |
| wife is not human. Bai Suzhen and Xiaoqing travel to Mount Emei, | |
| where they brave danger to steal a magical herb that restores Xu | |
| Xian to life. | |
| After coming back to life, Xu Xian still maintains his love for | |
| Bai Suzhen despite knowing her true nature. Fahai tries to | |
| separate them again by capturing Xu Xian and imprisoning him at | |
| the Jinshan Temple. Bai Suzhen and Xiaoqing fight with Fahai to | |
| rescue Xu Xian.[/quote] | |
| In other words, of course stories of women rescuing men exist in | |
| literature, just not in traditional Western literature. | |
| Better still, Legend of the White Snake even covers the | |
| inferiority of natalism: | |
| [quote]However, her powers are limited because she is already | |
| pregnant with Xu Xian's child, so she fails to save her | |
| husband.[/quote] | |
| The true hero of the story is the one who did not reproduce: | |
| [quote]At the same time, Xiaoqing, who had spent the intervening | |
| years refining her powers, goes to the Jinshan Temple to | |
| confront Fahai and defeats him.[/quote] | |
| But I digress. | |
| You can read the whole enemy article if you want to laugh at our | |
| enemies' inferiority. Their main point is: | |
| [quote]This is why women need to be taught to submit to male | |
| authority.[/quote] | |
| This is why Western civilization needs to be killed. | |
| #Post#: 15290-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: guest78 Date: August 24, 2022, 3:17 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote]1."Offering to help you and not backing off, regardless | |
| of what you say. My cousin is very beautiful and often has men | |
| offering help left and right in an effort to get in her good | |
| graces � except they keep offering when she says no. And they | |
| keep offering. And they keep pushing. It's basically a thinly | |
| veiled 'let me get close to you,' and they won't take no for an | |
| answer. It's extremely disrespectful."[/quote] | |
| Although not sexism, people in general thinking their helping a | |
| person by doing something that person has never asked them to | |
| do, or never having even asked for help in the first place, is | |
| extremely disrespectful also! This scenario seems to be | |
| particularly western behavior as well. As pointed out on the | |
| main site, if someone has not asked for help and someone else | |
| attempts to help them, the person believing that they are | |
| helping are in fact telling the other person that they are not | |
| confident in their ability to perform the task they are | |
| attempting. | |
| Don't try and help people who haven't explicitly asked for help, | |
| it's extremely disrespectful! | |
| #Post#: 15360-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: August 27, 2022, 4:38 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Gender segregation is sports is Western, because it is | |
| Westerners who are most obsessed with sexual dimorphism: | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/christian-school-won-t-play-120000084.html | |
| [quote]The Lions football team of Valley Christian Academy � a | |
| small private school in the Central Coast city of Santa Maria � | |
| is once again refusing to play against girls. | |
| That�s in spite of the fact that it�s becoming more common for | |
| girls to plays football, especially in California. | |
| And it�s in spite of the fact that VCA already is facing one | |
| lawsuit because it refused to play against Cuyama High�s | |
| football team last year. That squad included a female wide | |
| receiver whose mother filed the suit. | |
| Now VCA, which is affiliated with First Baptist Church, could be | |
| on the receiving end of even more backlash for forfeiting an | |
| upcoming game against Coast Union High, a public high school in | |
| Cambria where two girls are on the football team. | |
| The reason for the boycott? | |
| The school administration says playing football with girls | |
| conflicts with the �guiding principles of the Bible regarding | |
| the care of a woman,� according a legal document filed in the | |
| Cuyama case. | |
| ... | |
| �We are not raising our daughters to be �fighters� the same way | |
| we are with our sons,� Nancy Wilson wrote in an article | |
| published on the Christian website Reformed Perspective. �The | |
| goal we have in mind in raising sons is to inculcate | |
| masculinity. And we want our daughters to embrace a godly | |
| femininity, not a worldly feminism.� | |
| But as far as the U.S. government is concerned, girls have the | |
| right to play whatever sport they choose, no matter what the | |
| Bible says. | |
| ... | |
| Ironically, Valley Christian scrimmaged against Cuyama High last | |
| year, which apparently went smoothly until the female player | |
| took off her helmet at the end of the game. | |
| �Upon seeing her gender, the observers, coaches and | |
| administrators of Valley Christian glared at (the player) while | |
| shaking their heads in disbelief,� according to a court filing. | |
| A few days later, Cuyama High�s superintendent received a letter | |
| stating that the female player � whose identity has not been | |
| disclosed � would no longer be welcome to play football at the | |
| Valley Christian campus. | |
| The player was left �humiliated, embarrassed and shocked by the | |
| public display of unwelcomed reactions,� according to the case | |
| file. | |
| Of course she was. One minute, she�s treated as an equal on the | |
| playing field. The next, she�s treated like a pariah who should | |
| trade her helmet and pads for a spoon and apron?[/quote] | |
| Contrast with: | |
| https://bleacherreport.com/articles/228587-history-of-football-cuju | |
| [quote]it seems the first games in which the main technique | |
| involved kicking a ball originated in China. The game of Cuju | |
| was also played in Korea, Japan and Vietnam and dated back to | |
| the fourth century BC. | |
| ... | |
| Female clubs also developed where women could play up against | |
| each other and men. Often the women were more skillful at the | |
| game than the men and it is said that one time a 17-year-old | |
| girl beat a full team of soldiers on her own.[/quote] | |
| Back to first link; the solution is Cancel Culture: | |
| [quote]Fortunately, there�s a simple solution that can be | |
| reached outside of the courtroom. | |
| Either the Valley Christian Academy Lions agree to play � | |
| whether or not girls are on the opposing team � or they withdraw | |
| from the league. | |
| If they won�t withdraw, CIF can show them the door.[/quote] | |
| (Additionally, note that if gender segregation in sports had not | |
| been instituted in the first place, the present-day controversy | |
| over which team transgender athletes should be playing in | |
| wouldn't even exist because there wouldn't be separate teams to | |
| begin with!) | |
| Related: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-false-left/true-left-breakthroug… | |
| #Post#: 16311-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 6, 2022, 7:59 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Purely for entertainment: | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EnI5S6WNQsM | |
| This happened only because gendered toilets exist in the first | |
| place. And yes, gendered toilets are Western: | |
| https://time.com/4337761/history-sex-segregated-bathrooms/ | |
| [quote]Why Do We Have Men's and Women's Bathrooms Anyway? | |
| Though the first sex-segregated toilets were established in | |
| Paris in the 1700s, regulations requiring that American men and | |
| women use separate restrooms got their start in the late 1800s. | |
| The first regulation requiring separate toilet facilities for | |
| men and women was passed in 1887, when Massachusetts required | |
| the establishment of separate privies in businesses. �Wherever | |
| male and female persons are employed in the same factory or | |
| workshop, a significant number of separate and distinct | |
| water-closets, earth-closets, or privies shall be provided for | |
| the use of each sex and should be plainly designated,� the law | |
| reads. In the next line, mixed use of such facilities is | |
| prohibited. Over the course of the next three decades, nearly | |
| every state passed its own version of that law.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 17109-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Colonialism and sexism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 19, 2022, 3:24 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARfoh0hmWv8 | |
| Again, Western civilization is the most patriarchist | |
| civilization. The above phenomenon and the uniquely Western | |
| legal prohibition of polygamy are in fact two manifestations of | |
| the same ultra-patriarchist attitude: both are based on the | |
| notion that every man (no matter how awful a person he is) is | |
| entitled to keep a woman. (Not coincidentally, it was Western | |
| men who came up with the notion of an "incel" based on the same | |
| sense of entitlement being unmet.) This attitude is thoroughly | |
| alien to non-Western civilizations, whose men have no such | |
| equivalent patriarchist rapport with other men in evenly | |
| distributing women. | |
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