annabenedetti
like marbles on glass
you thought i was calling him out for using the word?
nah
i had another reason for my post
Sure you did.
you thought i was calling him out for using the word?
nah
i had another reason for my post
it wasn't for you :idunno:
That was a nice bit of obsessive trolling on your part, leaving out of course that while recognizing the likely root of his posts I used them to address the larger issue.town, to cruci:
:think:
No, but I take it your block quote is you trying to appear to rebut through distortions on the whole what you're incapable of meeting in the particular.-You're trying to say that they were oppressed and couldn't do anything
Only if by "a lot" you were to mean what was there to be done and by "all" you mean what anyone should have before the law. Of course, you don't mean that, lacking an evidenced, functional grasp of the subject and driven as you are by a blinding, hostile bias (or the other thing, you know, that Sod is rushing to his abacus to tally)., and also that they did a lot and deserve it all.
In exactly the sense that illustrating how movements require both the conviction and effort of the oppressed and the enlightened assistance of a growing number within the power structure. The same being true for India, as I noted, and the same being true for the Civil Rights Movement.-You're trying to conflate women's status with slavery.
We've walked that lane. I've answered you on it. If you like I can link you to that rebuttal. But you'll probably just forget it again.-You're trying to act as though more than 10% of women at any given time in American history were ever supporters of it.
Nothing of the sort.All of those things are nonsense and they contradict each other altogether.
Rather, I routinely note history, its course and constitution, to rebut the ignorant presumption of people like you.You simply revise history to justify the unjustifiable
Not even close to accurate, which either you know or should (see: Suffrage Movement).- women were given those rights out of men's compassion for them despite that they did not warrant them.
I only reproduced that to demonstrate another bit of your methodology: flawed premise to flawed conclusion, to distorting inquiry.It's as simple as that, and what they got in return is a bunch of misery and malcontents who, a century later, are adversarial to men.
And you defend that, why?
Well, you got the contraction right, so it wasn't a total loss.Because you're a damn idiot,
I've never tried any such thing, though the reason you raise it is the same reason some raise intelligence in rebutting a claim that made no particular assertion related, you understand on some level that your position is worse than untrue and uncharitable and it surfaces in your attempt. It's your moral center that's crumbling, here on the point of women, there on the identity of the unborn, and in a pervasive inability to see beyond the thinner distinctions of race and encompass the broader, more meaningful and shared humanity.that's why, looking to use it to make yourself look holy.
fraud
... Sod is rushing to his abacus to tally...
Didn't say that it was. I noted the distortion in your tally, the absence of context and the obsession you have with me--all in evidence within the post.it wasn't for you either
It really shows. In your habits, your immediate claims, and even in your signature.not interested in your dreck town :idunno:
It really shows. In your habits and even in your signature. Shoo.
In exactly the sense that illustrating how movements require both the conviction and effort of the oppressed and the enlightened assistance of a growing number within the power structure. The same being true for India, as I noted, and the same being true for the Civil Rights Movement.
Not even close to accurate, which either you know or should (see: Suffrage Movement).
The fact that only 5% of those on the street are women and yet only 2% of shelters are exclusively for men is part of the insanity of your obsession with feminist nonsense.
You're a moron, quite simply
You're saying we should have shot them? Or that violence is the litmus for legitimacy? Or is this just you shooting from the lip again?How much blood was shed for women's rights?
A number of women were jailed for protesting. I don't know that anyone kept a tally on the other bit.How many people were jailed or kicked out of their homes?
But really, why would anyone do that? Compare a movement born in violence to oppose and overthrow a government with a peaceful movement to attain simple human dignity and right?Compared to revolutionary movements, women's rights was more of a pageant.
A goofy question meant to reduce a movement to the capitulation of the power structure. Like saying the British should be thanked for "giving" India to its people because the Indian population didn't cast the vote.Who decided on women's rights
Gibberish.Unlike race and culture differences, men simply signed a social divorce settlement, and then they wanted alimony
But I'm not the one making numbers up and I'm not the one who insecure about his masculinity.
According tot he Housing and Urban Development 2015 Annual Homeless
Assessment Report Women over the age of 21 account for 28% of all homeless individuals. An additional 11% of all homeless individuals are women and girls under the age of 21. Women make up the fastest growing segment of the homeless population. 68% of homeless women over the age of 21 and homeless women with dependent children are homeless because of domestic violence.
You're saying we should have shot them? Or that violence is the litmus for legitimacy? Or is this just you shooting from the lip again?
It was far rougher in Europe than here, but then Europe set the stage for us, as with slavery.
A number of women were jailed for protesting.
Lastly, it's telling that you'll routinely lay the charge of brain washing at the feet of anyone who doesn't advance your laughably insufficient posit with regard to women, then parade the fact that some women were opposed to the possession of legal equality without a sniff in that direction.
Well, no. I've noted the movement and the alteration of law. You appear to be searching for a litmus to allow you another opportunity to dismiss and belittle.You're trying to make it appear to be exponentially more than what it really was.
A number of problems beginning with the first point. Who says it was better before women could vote and stand as equals before the law? By what possible litmus that is gender specific? Tell you what was so mesmerizing about what?The status was better for women then than it is now- and they have it made now- so you tell me what was so mesmerizing about it.
Forced? I suppose that laws seem an act of force to a criminal.I know you like the idea of forced equality
No, it literally wasn't for that. lain:It wasn't for sitting at the front of a bus
Rather, if anyone is in reasonable distress I'll respond reasonably. The last part was problematic. It depends on the disagreement. If, by way of example, you disagree that women are entitled to equal protections under the law I'd be inclined to suggest the distinct possibility.So long as there is one woman in distress, you'll send the interest of men down the shaft and call everyone who disagrees a misogynist.
Feminism is a wide tent. Wide enough that conservatives like Sarah Palin can walk beneath it. And you approaching anyone with the phrase "moral fraud" is nearly as funny as it is ironic (see: his position on the unborn, his encouragement of people who might literally run over a BLM protester, etc.Feminism is cancer, and you all being nothing more than moral frauds.
It really comes through in your repeated posts and threads about or to me...your signature line, etc.again, not interested in engaging with you town :idunno: