Felasco wrote:Yeah, so since the human race is doomed anyway,
I didn't say the human race is doomed.
I did.
I said we are doomed unless we find a way to control violent men.
Which "we" has to find a way? Who has the power to make decisions about society?
I said a true Feminism would address itself to that problem,
I don't see how feminism can address itself to any problem of society from a subservient place in that society. The control of violent men - or male violence, or militarism or gun-infatuation, or predation , or any of the consequences of these human traits - is not an overnight fix. Societies change slowly, by degrees, one change precipitating the next.
Seems to me that giving the silent half of the population a voice and allowing the less aggressive type of human being to help form social policy, might be a step toward the necessary changes.
because without a solution to that problem all other gains will be lost. The time is now, because violent men could destroy everything and everybody by this time tomorrow.
I think it will anyway. I think all the gains of the last 5000 years will be lost in the next 50. Civilization didn't change the basic nature of man, but it did teach him many alternative ways to think, behave and organize their activities. Many of them really very bad. Maybe civilization was a mistake, because it didn't solve the control problem, in spite of all those efforts.
I agree completely with all the goals of Feminism, but I am accusing traditional Feminist philosophy as lacking in vision. The revolutionary times we live in are far more revolutionary than issues like equal pay for equal work, men doing housework, and other small potatoes things like that.
What should they be doing?
What are the chances of Feminism succeeding where Christianity, the Enlightenment and Democracy failed?
As it stands we have demonstrated no ability to control violent men, and so the solution may have to involve eliminating the male gender from the face of the Earth, or at least confining it to a small highly controlled population. Something like having 1 per cent fewer men every year for 100 years.
Should have started a lot sooner, then. Not sure how women could have affected this change - especially without reproductive choice. Ever read Sheri Tepper's novel
Gate to Women's Country? http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1043 ... _s_Country
It's interesting to note that men might welcome such a plan, as it would put them in an increasingly better position in regards to finding mates, the only thing that men really care about.
I sincerely doubt that. Why do male-dominated societies value male offspring over female? I suspect the dominant males crave victory over male rivals more than the actual mating opportunity. (Besides, aggressive societies need lots of fresh troops.)
European powers constantly warred with each other for endless centuries, a condition that seemed to be eternal and unchangeable. The technology used in WWII shifted that consciousness, as it began to sink in that continuing in that direction would mean the inevitable end of all Europe. Revolutions in technology led to revolutions in age old patterns of thought. The previously unthinkable became the accepted group consensus, because survival required it.
Ye-e-es... And also, women had to do many of the previously masculine jobs and proved adept, and gained recognition, confidence, ambition, and a plurality (always, in periods when the attrition of males by armed conflict is faster than the attrition of females by childbirth), which gave them new economic and political power. European governments suddenly had to pay attention to the women's vote on social issues, came gradually to include female representatives in their parliaments and eventually a few powerful ministers and prime ministers. Thatcher aside, they mostly had a positive effect.
It's not enough, but it improved the lives of quite a few people along the way. It can't prevent catastrophe, but that doesn't mean it shouldn't have been attempted.