elohiym
Well-known member
Have you ever noticed that when people talk about "male rights", it almost exclusively involves women in some way?
That is what you would expect when discussing gender-specific rights in a society. For example, a female infant is protected against circumcision in the U.S. but a male child is not.
You never hear anyone complain about how men are looked down upon for taking what's seen as "women's" work, like nursing or teaching.
Are they looked down upon?
This is in contrast to the issues that feminists tend to raise, which involve things like sexual violence from men, but also things like wage equality, access to health care, lack of political empowerment, and stigmatization of women's bodies.
...almost exclusively involves men in some way. Not really a contrast, right?
It's not that men's rights are an inherently absurd concept.
It's not an absurd concept at all.
In fact, feminism properly understood should entail a concern for the rights of men just as it does for women. But the focus and history of the movement is such that it's easy to get the impression that it's mostly a reaction to resist the advancement of equality for women.
Is that what you discern from the examples of male rights issues given on this thread so far? I don't want to resist the advancement women gained by female circumcision being illegal in the U.S. but want the same right for male infants to not be infringed.
Not to say there isn't some institutional unfairness against men in some of these contexts, but it's a little hard to respond positively when I'm not sure that they have the same commitment to equality.
Think about what you are saying there. You see inequality but will not respond positively because you're not sure about what's in the hearts of tens of millions of men?