Page 2 of 2 [ 24 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2

Lost_dragon
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 6 May 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,942
Location: England

09 Nov 2024, 4:41 pm

babybird wrote:
Yeah that's scandalous I didn't know about that


2014.

Quote:
Still, Volkova insists that she's "not against gays." It's just that she wants her son "to be a real man, not a (slur)." Also, she has "many gay friends,"
and she believes that "being gay is still better than murderers, thieves, or drug addicts. If you choose out of all this, being gay is better than the rest."

Yes, everyone is entitled to her own beliefs. It just feels a tad hypocritical that someone who built her career on pretending to be gay (and still professing to be bisexual) would offer such an outright condemnation of homosexuality. And, to say that it's different for women to "choose" to be gay than for men to be.


Gotta love the "I'm not homophobic, I have gay friends!" and "...It's better than murder I guess!"

:lol: :roll:

Source: https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/2014/0 ... va-gay-son


_________________
Support human artists! Do not let the craft die.

25. Near the spectrum but not on it.


Lost_dragon
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 6 May 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,942
Location: England

09 Nov 2024, 6:06 pm

As for the actual subject of this thread... *sigh* have people invented the political lesbianism movement again?

*Looks back at the Ancient Greeks and Romans with their stories of Artemis / Diana, a goddess who would grant immortality to maidens for the price of forgoing relations with men and joining the goddess on the hunt for wild beasts*

*Remembers the story of how a lone male hunter was once allowed to join the hunters, only to betray the goddess and be promptly turned into a deer and hunted down*

...Yeah. I wouldn't worry too much about this 4B thing. It does seem to be a repackaged version of the political lesbianism movement, which was short lived and not very popular. Which is not to be confused with actually being a lesbian or bisexual. Sexuality is not a choice.
---

"Your body, my choice" as it's being used in the modern day is vile and I can understand why people are reacting negatively. I think turning your back on men who think such things makes a lot of sense. If you do not wish to be the deer, support women's rights.

Reminds me a lot of those feminist posters with a dog biting back and sticking it to the establishment.


_________________
Support human artists! Do not let the craft die.

25. Near the spectrum but not on it.


Harmonie
Deinonychus
Deinonychus

User avatar

Joined: 14 Jan 2024
Age: 35
Gender: Female
Posts: 346
Location: New England

09 Nov 2024, 8:10 pm

Oh boy... Guess I'll just keep doing what I have been doing for years... :lol: :(


_________________
Diagnosed with ADHD, Strongly Suspecting I'm also Autistic


blueroses
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 10 Feb 2007
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,178
Location: United States

09 Nov 2024, 8:24 pm

Lost_dragon wrote:
As for the actual subject of this thread... *sigh* have people invented the political lesbianism movement again?


Nope. I mean, abstaining from dating, sex with men, marriage and having children doesn't necessarily mean you're having sex with women. Celibacy is a thing.

Lost_dragon wrote:
"Your body, my choice" as it's being used in the modern day is vile and I can understand why people are reacting negatively. I think turning your back on men who think such things makes a lot of sense. If you do not wish to be the deer, support women's rights.


That phrase, though, is part of a much larger and more troubling picture in the United States. I'm not sure people abroad fully understand unless they follow American politics closely. First, a man with a history of everything from making public statements objectifying his own daughter to having been found in a court of law to have raped a woman and to be liable for sexual abuse was just elected president. I can't begin to explain how it feels to those of us who are SA survivors to be looking at those in our lives who knew this and voted for him anyway.

His VP elect has also made derogatory statements about women who don't bear children and said people who aren't parents don't have as much of a stake in the future of our county and should not leading it. Various other Republicans made similar criticisms of VP Harris, who is a stepmother but apparently did not "count" as a parent because she had not actually physically given birth to the children, as if that somehow made her less qualified for the job she was running for. Then, there is Elon Musk with his odd preoccupation with procreation. Beyond already having 11 children that he knows of and frequently talking about the need for other people to have kids, Elon has reportedly gone as far as to have offered his own sperm to friends and acquaintances, FFS.

The campaign as a whole made an effort to appeal to young male 'bro' voters, which involved a lot of macho rhetoric and the message that society has gone too far in terms of gender equality, so a correction is now needed. We're now bracing for that correction to start happening across multiple areas, but especially when it comes to healthcare and reproductive rights, given all the bizarre rhetoric suggesting women's primary value is to bear children. Anecdotally, I tried to schedule an appointment with my OBGYN for an annual physical this week. It's a large practice with around 40 doctors and they typically have plenty of appointments available, but when I checked with them two days after the election, they were booked solid into next year. I think it's probably not a coincidence, but rather because women are scared and trying to get birth control prescriptions filled before the inauguration. (Beyond abortion bans, which have been more widely talked about, birth control is something some of the Republican hardliners have talked about putting further restrictions on).

I have only just heard of the 4B movement, but honestly it doesn't strike me as being as extreme as it is being portrayed on social media, given the situation here. Nor, do I appreciate the people I have seen belittling and making fun of these women online. I mean, in a context where you aren't respected, have fewer choices and freedoms in life, feel increasingly less safe and where you may not have access to the healthcare needed to keep you alive in event of a miscarriage or pregnancy complications, is opting out of society's expectation to make your body available to men/society an overreaction? Sounds reasonable to me.



Lost_dragon
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 6 May 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,942
Location: England

10 Nov 2024, 6:14 am

blueroses wrote:
Nope. I mean, abstaining from dating, sex with men, marriage and having children doesn't necessarily mean you're having sex with women. Celibacy is a thing.


That's true. Political celibacy is more accurate. Thank you for correcting me, that was a foolish oversight on my end.

blueroses wrote:
That phrase, though, is part of a much larger and more troubling picture in the United States. I'm not sure people abroad fully understand unless they follow American politics closely.


I'll admit to my ignorance on issues in the United States. I have been meaning to catch up on the news.

blueroses wrote:
First, a man with a history of everything from making public statements objectifying his own daughter to having been found in a court of law to have raped a woman and to be liable for sexual abuse was just elected president. I can't begin to explain how it feels to those of us who are SA survivors to be looking at those in our lives who knew this and voted for him anyway.


Definitely scummy. I've heard about his biased courts. The fact he has any sort of power after his crimes is disturbing. Baffles me that people could support him. I'm sorry our American members are going through this.

blueroses wrote:
His VP elect has also made derogatory statements about women who don't bear children and said people who aren't parents don't have as much of a stake in the future of our county and should not leading it. Various other Republicans made similar criticisms of VP Harris, who is a stepmother but apparently did not "count" as a parent because she had not actually physically given birth to the children, as if that somehow made her less qualified for the job she was running for.


I didn't know about this part. Damn. What a crappy thing to say to someone. Add his VP elect and others on to the list of scummy people.

blueroses wrote:
Then, there is Elon Musk with his odd preoccupation with procreation. Beyond already having 11 children that he knows of and frequently talking about the need for other people to have kids, Elon has reportedly gone as far as to have offered his own sperm to friends and acquaintances, FFS.


Yup. That seems incredibly in character of him. If you looked up overly self-important, Elon would be a great example of such a man.

blueroses wrote:
The campaign as a whole made an effort to appeal to young male 'bro' voters, which involved a lot of macho rhetoric and the message that society has gone too far in terms of gender equality, so a correction is now needed.


Figures. I'd be interested to see such campaign material out of curiosity. I'd imagine it was similar to PragerU's content. I've seen their adverts and nonsensical graphs. If you told me it was satire I could've been tricked into believing it to be. They're certainly a concerning bunch from what I've seen.


blueroses wrote:
We're now bracing for that correction to start happening across multiple areas, but especially when it comes to healthcare and reproductive rights, given all the bizarre rhetoric suggesting women's primary value is to bear children. Anecdotally, I tried to schedule an appointment with my OBGYN for an annual physical this week. It's a large practice with around 40 doctors and they typically have plenty of appointments available, but when I checked with them two days after the election, they were booked solid into next year. I think it's probably not a coincidence, but rather because women are scared and trying to get birth control prescriptions filled before the inauguration. (Beyond abortion bans, which have been more widely talked about, birth control is something some of the Republican hardliners have talked about putting further restrictions on).

I have only just heard of the 4B movement, but honestly it doesn't strike me as being as extreme as it is being portrayed on social media, given the situation here. Nor, do I appreciate the people I have seen belittling and making fun of these women online. I mean, in a context where you aren't respected, have fewer choices and freedoms in life, feel increasingly less safe and where you may not have access to the healthcare needed to keep you alive in event of a miscarriage or pregnancy complications, is opting out of society's expectation to make your body available to men/society an overreaction? Sounds reasonable to me.


Well said. It's a disturbing state of affairs. I hope there's pushback and societal change. Women deserve better.


_________________
Support human artists! Do not let the craft die.

25. Near the spectrum but not on it.


auntblabby
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Feb 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 114,555
Location: the island of defective toy santas

13 Nov 2024, 9:17 pm

frankly, i don't get how any reasonable person can blame the 4b-ers? :scratch:



BillyTree
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Oct 2023
Age: 57
Gender: Male
Posts: 743

14 Nov 2024, 10:17 am

^Didn't know anyone did that! What are they blaming the 4b-ers for doing?


_________________
English is not my first language.


lostonearth35
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 5 Jan 2010
Age: 50
Gender: Female
Posts: 12,645
Location: Lost on Earth, waddya think?

16 Nov 2024, 4:53 pm

I'm telling you right now, I'm so incredibly sick of this Trump Vance Tyson Tate manosphere BS. They won't be happy until they send all us women back to the middle ages. :x