[ POLL ] Traditional Masculinity.
aspiesavant wrote:
Minder wrote:
The thing is, if androgyny is allowed, I'm not sure why you'd need strict gender roles.
I believe gender roles are very valuable and useful, but it they should be treated more like guidelines. Even in traditional societies and dictatorships, we see women who step outside the boundaries of the traditional female gender roles, without mainstream society questioning the validity of gender roles.
Just think of figures like Joan of Arc, Hildegard van Bingen, Marie Curie, Leni Riefenstahl or the Onna-bugeisha (female samurai). All of these played a role way beyond the role expected of women at their time, yet they did so with grace and were given the freedom to do so.
I strongly object to the American tendency to make every political issue a dichotomy, where there are only two options.
Legalizing all abortion or legalizing no abortions are not the only two options.
Legalizing all drugs or legalizing no drugs are not the only two options.
Legalizing all guns or legalizing no guns are not the only two options.
A lot of issues allow for nuanced responses, for shades of gray between the black & white. And the issue of gender roles is no different.
Ultra-strict gender roles without any exceptions or no gender roles at all are not the only two options.
Minder wrote:
It seems more to me that most of us would be some degree of androgynous anyway, so why even bother with the categories?
Because for most people, you will get better results when you teach girls the skills associated with womanhood, in a way that is adapted to the a average female mind, and when you teach boys the skills associated with manhood in a way that is adapted to the a average male mind.
When members of both sexes are given equal opportunity, you'll find that men continue to be over-represented in professions like engineering or computer science and women continued to be over-represented in professions like nursing and teaching. That is because men are typically more interested in things and ideas, whereas women are typically more interested in people. Hence, they choose a different career path.
We also see that boys and girls (again, on average) have different ways of learning things. And with most teachers being women & classes being gender mixed, we see that boys are increasingly failing classes, because female teachers have a tendency to teach boys and girls alike in a way that is more suitable for girls.
Gender roles and some degree of gender segregation have existed for millennia in pretty much every culture, for reasons like the ones described above. But those same traditional cultures often allowed an "escape" for people who did not fit into the gender role assigned to their sex... with the aforementioned Onna-bugeisha being a notable example.
I believe it was a huge mistake to move away from gender roles and gender segregation, pushed by demagogues based on ideologically driven pseudoscience. And I believe it is very important to return to such traditional approaches if we want to restore the damage that has been done since.
Minder wrote:
The proposed categorization seems unnecessarily complicated.
The proposed categorization? You mean the simple binary distinction between the typically female and typically male, that is made in pretty much every culture throughout history?
It sure sounds a lot less complicated to me than modern notions that gender and sex are two distinct concepts and that gender is a social construct but that it is still a reasonable idea to change your (biological) sex if there is a mismatch your gender and your sex... and that there are really a few dozen genders. It hurts my head when I try to wrap my head around such strange, internally inconsistent notions.
I will say I find it curious that you use Leni Reifenstahl as an example. Her cinematographic talent was exceptional, but she used it in service of an awful regime.
Regardless, I still don't see the point of gender roles if androgyny is already there. I don't think most people precisely fit a mold in terms of masculinity or femininity. I'm not really that traditionally masculine in most senses, so I'd rather not deal with more social pressure to be more masculine by virtue of my biological sex. I guess I'm androgynous... but so are most of the people I've met if we're going by strict gender roles.
Even as guidelines... why? Just teach virtue as virtue, and cultivate that virtue in those who display it. Maybe more men that women fit the traditional masculine characteristics, and that's fine, but why define it as masculine when there are still a fair number of women who fit (ditto vice versa)? It still strikes me as needlessly procrustean.
Minder wrote:
I will say I find it curious that you use Leni Reifenstahl as an example. Her cinematographic talent was exceptional, but she used it in service of an awful regime.
You really shouldn't find it curious that a nazi propaganda filmmaker was used as an example of an admirable woman. It fits well with the ideology being expressed, looking at his comment history.
Fnord wrote:
The term "Toxic Masculinity" serves to outline aspects of traditional masculinity that are socially destructive, such as:
• Avarice / Greed
• Bullying / Intimidation
• Homophobia
• Misogyny
• Violent Domination
• Avarice / Greed
• Bullying / Intimidation
• Homophobia
• Misogyny
• Violent Domination
That has nothing to do with masculinity.
Women are just as likely to exhibit these traits. Especially greed and bullying are traits I've witnessed in women at least as much as in men.
Men are just as likely to not exhibit these traits.
None of these traits were considered admirable traits in traditional notions of masculinity.
This is why the concept of "toxic masculinity" is blatant sexism. You're associating negative traits with masculinity that have nothing whatsoever to do with either biological concepts of masculinity nor traditional cultural notions of masculinity.
Minder wrote:
I will say I find it curious that you use Leni Reifenstahl as an example. Her cinematographic talent was exceptional, but she used it in service of an awful regime.
Leni Riefenstahl's example demonstrates that even Fascist dictatorships allow for exceptional women to stray from the path of traditional gender norms, while still promoting traditional gender norms for the rest of us.
So why is it so impossible for us to apply the same principle? Why does it always have to be "abolish gender roles" or "gender roles for all"?
Minder wrote:
Regardless, I still don't see the point of gender roles if androgyny is already there.
Among Aspies, androgyny may be common. Among the general population, it's still anything buy the norm.
The average boy is still boyish in every way. The average girl is still girlish in every way. And for such individuals, it's beneficial to learn skills traditionally associated with their gender, so they're best equipped to do jobs traditionally associated with their gender.
In fact, I believe we should get much better results in education and job assignment if we looked not just as gender but also at personality / neurotype. If we include personality / neurotype into the equation as well, the number of exceptions to the rule should significantly reduce.
It is impossible to give every individual an education and a job that is completely suited to them as individuals. There's simply not infrastructure for that, it would cost too much, etc. But giving everyone the same education and job conditions is not working either. Gender & personality / neurotype are two important criteria that cause people to feel differently, think differently, behave differently, etc. But they are still sufficiently generic to allow our education system & jobs to be adapted to those criteria.
If we take both gender and eg. MBTI personality types into consideration, we'd have 32 different methods of education and types of jobs to consider... which is a lot but still manageable. And we probably don't need fully separate paths for every single of those 32 profiles, as there are great overlaps.
Alternatively to the MBTI, we could look at traits of ADHD, Bi-Polar disorder, Schizotypal disorder or ASD to further divide people into categories. I don't think "diagnoses" are a suitable way to categorize people in this context, for many reasons... from prejudice towards people with a "diagnosis", to the ASD spectrum being much too large to be meaningful in this context.
Either way, there may be still better alternatives to categorize people than gender roles, neurotype or the MBTI. Of gender roles we know they do happen to work, as they have a proven track record going back thousands of years. And 2 categories will always be easier to manage than 32.
Minder wrote:
I don't think most people precisely fit a mold in terms of masculinity or femininity.
Most Aspies? Probably not. Female Aspies tend to lean towards masculinity / androgyny. And among male Aspies, you tend to see both über-geeks & über-queers.
Aspies are not the norms, though. We're a small sub-group of society, at the outliers of what qualifies as "normal" behavior.
Most Neurotypical people exhibit far less traits of androgyny than what we see in especially female Aspies.
Minder wrote:
I'm not really that traditionally masculine in most senses
Define "traditionally male".
When most people think of "traditionally male", they think of jocks... of soldiers... of testosterone-fueled, broad-shouldered individuals who get a kick out of ending up in a bar fight.
This is the modern, subverted variation of the "warrior" archetype... which is but one type of traditional masculinity. And yes, such men often do engage in toxic behavior (like bar fights), but not due to their masculinity being toxic... but rather due to the lack of healthy outlets for what is normal behavior to them. Warriors need to fight, just like geeks need to learn.
Geeks are also a modern variant of traditional masculinity. They just represent a different archetype : the priest / intellectual.
The same applies to artistic types. The poet or artist is a third archetype.
You'll find that the traditional masculine ideal in many cultures is a man who combines traits of all three archetypes in one person, in a balanced way... the so-called warrior-priest-poet. Shaolin monks & knights orders like the Templars are examples of orders that try / tried that cultivated this ideal for all of its members.
To quote Baudelaire :
Charles Baudelaire wrote:
There exist but three respectable beings: the priest, the warrior, the poet. To know, to kill, and to create. Other men are serfs or slaves, created for the stable, that is, to exercise what are called professions.
And to quote George Carlin :
George Carlin wrote:
They don't want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don't want well informed, well educated people capable of critical thinking. They're not interested in that. That doesn't help them. That's against their interests. That's right. You know something? They don't want people who are smart enough to sit around the kitchen table and figure out how badly they're getting f***ed by a system that threw them over board 30 f***ing years ago.
Combine the ideas expressed in both quotes, and you know why traditional masculinity is under attack.
Minder wrote:
I guess I'm androgynous... but so are most of the people I've met if we're going by strict gender roles.
Strict gender roles as defined by whom?
Due to the disappearance of tradition in so many areas, most people are clueless with respect to what traditional gender roles really encompassed & why they're important.
Minder wrote:
why define it as masculine when there are still a fair number of women who fit (ditto vice versa)?
You might want to ask that to people who traits like call "greed" or "bullying" examples of "toxic masculinity"... because those really have nothing to do with gender whatsoever.
An interest in things over people is a male trait, though... just like an interesting in people over things is a female trait... and one of the main reasons why women will always remain underrepresented in some professions and men in others.
Just because we see a similar preference of things over people among female Aspies, that doesn't make this any less a male trait. It only means that female Aspies have more androgynous brains.
aspiesavant wrote:
Fnord wrote:
The term "Toxic Masculinity" serves to outline aspects of traditional masculinity that are socially destructive, such as:
• Avarice / Greed
• Bullying / Intimidation
• Homophobia
• Misogyny
• Violent Domination
• Avarice / Greed
• Bullying / Intimidation
• Homophobia
• Misogyny
• Violent Domination
That has nothing to do with masculinity...
Furthermore, Real Men™ ...
... are big, brave, and strong.
... are cold, unemotional and utterly lacking in feelings.
... are the complete opposites of women in every way.
... are impressed by a woman's appearance only.
... are intimidated only by successful women.
... are obsessed with sex, status, and violence.
... are obsessed with the size of their penises.
... are obsessed with the size of women's breasts.
... define themselves by their occupations and how much they earn.
... do not care about other people's feelings, opinions, or thoughts.
... do not express affection or grief.
... do not like the arts (unless there are naked women involved).
... do not like to clean, communicate, read or shop.
... fear commitment to a relationship.
... pay no attention to constructive criticism.
Fnord wrote:
Not REAL masculinity, perhaps, but to the swaggering, arrogant, in-your-face men who believe that "might makes right" and "only the strong shall rule" these are EXACTLY the traits that any Real Man™ should follow.
I don't know who you are referring to, but it sure has nothing to do with traditional notions of masculinity.
Fnord wrote:
Furthermore, Real Men™ ...
... are big, brave, and strong.
... are big, brave, and strong.
This only applies to warriors.
Fnord wrote:
... are cold, unemotional and utterly lacking in feelings.
Not really, no.
Traditionally, men merely are expected to have emotions, but also to be able to control them.
Traditionally, not being able to control your emotions is considered indicative of immaturity and/or poor intelligence.
I don't see how expecting people to grow up is a bad thing.
Fnord wrote:
... are the complete opposites of women in every way.
Nonsense.
Fnord wrote:
... are impressed by a woman's appearance only.
Nonsense.
Fnord wrote:
... are intimidated only by successful women.
More nonsense.
Fnord wrote:
... are obsessed with sex, status, and violence.
Ditto.
Where do you get all these ridiculous notions of masculinity from?
Fnord wrote:
... are obsessed with the size of their penises.
Nonsense.
Fnord wrote:
... are obsessed with the size of women's breasts.
Ditto.
Fnord wrote:
... define themselves by their occupations and how much they earn.
Ditto.
Fnord wrote:
... do not care about other people's feelings, opinions, or thoughts.
Men and women tend to have a different way of comforting people.
Women tend to provide emotional support. Men tend to provide practical help.
There is nothing unmanly about trying to help at all. Nor is it unmanly to offer emotional support.
Fnord wrote:
... do not express affection or grief.
As I said, men merely are expected to have emotions, but also to be able to control them.
And that's a good thing.
Fnord wrote:
... do not like the arts (unless there are naked women involved).
Traditional history is full of masculine artists and masculine benefactor of the arts.
And, in fact, as I mentioned before... the artist is one of the three traditional male archetypes.
Being a artist is not just very masculine, but one of the three masculine virtues.
So you could not be more wrong here.
Fnord wrote:
... do not like to clean, communicate, read or shop.
Many men don't in fact like to clean and only like to shop for items that involves their hobbies. It's not like it is somehow unmanly if you do happen to like cleaning or shopping for other things, though. It's just something most men don't like.
But read?
Or communicate?
Seriously?!
Fnord wrote:
... fear commitment to a relationship.
Actually, traditional manhood involved marriage with one wife only, and singular dedication to that wife for life.
Fnord wrote:
... pay no attention to constructive criticism.
Nonsense again...
Basically, the only thing you're sorta kinda partially right about, is men being expected to control their emotions... to act like responsible adults, rather than like spoiled crybabies... and it boggles my mind that anyone can think of that as a bad thing.
Pretty much every other thing you mention is utter and complete hogwash and has nothing whatsoever to do with traditional notions of masculinity.
It seems like your notion of traditional masculinity is based on nothing but sexist stereotypes that have no basis in reality.
aspiesavant wrote:
Minder wrote:
I will say I find it curious that you use Leni Reifenstahl as an example. Her cinematographic talent was exceptional, but she used it in service of an awful regime.
Leni Riefenstahl's example demonstrates that even Fascist dictatorships allow for exceptional women to stray from the path of traditional gender norms, while still promoting traditional gender norms for the rest of us.
I would say that fascism's preference for traditional gender roles is another strike against the idea of promoting strict gender roles.
aspiesavant wrote:
So why is it so impossible for us to apply the same principle? Why does it always have to be "abolish gender roles" or "gender roles for all"?
Minder wrote:
Regardless, I still don't see the point of gender roles if androgyny is already there.
Among Aspies, androgyny may be common. Among the general population, it's still anything buy the norm.
The average boy is still boyish in every way. The average girl is still girlish in every way. And for such individuals, it's beneficial to learn skills traditionally associated with their gender, so they're best equipped to do jobs traditionally associated with their gender.
In fact, I believe we should get much better results in education and job assignment if we looked not just as gender but also at personality / neurotype. If we include personality / neurotype into the equation as well, the number of exceptions to the rule should significantly reduce.
It is impossible to give every individual an education and a job that is completely suited to them as individuals. There's simply not infrastructure for that, it would cost too much, etc. But giving everyone the same education and job conditions is not working either. Gender & personality / neurotype are two important criteria that cause people to feel differently, think differently, behave differently, etc. But they are still sufficiently generic to allow our education system & jobs to be adapted to those criteria.
If we take both gender and eg. MBTI personality types into consideration, we'd have 32 different methods of education and types of jobs to consider... which is a lot but still manageable. And we probably don't need fully separate paths for every single of those 32 profiles, as there are great overlaps.
Alternatively to the MBTI, we could look at traits of ADHD, Bi-Polar disorder, Schizotypal disorder or ASD to further divide people into categories. I don't think "diagnoses" are a suitable way to categorize people in this context, for many reasons... from prejudice towards people with a "diagnosis", to the ASD spectrum being much too large to be meaningful in this context.
Either way, there may be still better alternatives to categorize people than gender roles, neurotype or the MBTI. Of gender roles we know they do happen to work, as they have a proven track record going back thousands of years. And 2 categories will always be easier to manage than 32.
I'm neurotypical to the best of my knowledge (I've never been tested). I came onto WP to ask some questions, and have lurked on and off since my arrival. IRL, I have a few friends on the spectrum, though most are neurotypical. They generally do not perfectly fit into preconceived gender roles.
I wouldn't trust any system to say I'm a particular personality based on my performance in a test (and I am suspicious of the MBTI). People are too complex to be so easily reduced, and I'm suspicious of those that try to fit others into molds.
aspiesavant wrote:
Minder wrote:
I don't think most people precisely fit a mold in terms of masculinity or femininity.
Most Aspies? Probably not. Female Aspies tend to lean towards masculinity / androgyny. And among male Aspies, you tend to see both über-geeks & über-queers.
Aspies are not the norms, though. We're a small sub-group of society, at the outliers of what qualifies as "normal" behavior.
Most Neurotypical people exhibit far less traits of androgyny than what we see in especially female Aspies.
Minder wrote:
I'm not really that traditionally masculine in most senses
Define "traditionally male".
When most people think of "traditionally male", they think of jocks... of soldiers... of testosterone-fueled, broad-shouldered individuals who get a kick out of ending up in a bar fight.
This is the modern, subverted variation of the "warrior" archetype... which is but one type of traditional masculinity. And yes, such men often do engage in toxic behavior (like bar fights), but not due to their masculinity being toxic... but rather due to the lack of healthy outlets for what is normal behavior to them. Warriors need to fight, just like geeks need to learn.
Geeks are also a modern variant of traditional masculinity. They just represent a different archetype : the priest / intellectual.
The same applies to artistic types. The poet or artist is a third archetype.
You'll find that the traditional masculine ideal in many cultures is a man who combines traits of all three archetypes in one person, in a balanced way... the so-called warrior-priest-poet. Shaolin monks & knights orders like the Templars are examples of orders that try / tried that cultivated this ideal for all of its members.
To quote Baudelaire :
Charles Baudelaire wrote:
There exist but three respectable beings: the priest, the warrior, the poet. To know, to kill, and to create. Other men are serfs or slaves, created for the stable, that is, to exercise what are called professions.
And to quote George Carlin :
George Carlin wrote:
They don't want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don't want well informed, well educated people capable of critical thinking. They're not interested in that. That doesn't help them. That's against their interests. That's right. You know something? They don't want people who are smart enough to sit around the kitchen table and figure out how badly they're getting f***ed by a system that threw them over board 30 f***ing years ago.
Combine the ideas expressed in both quotes, and you know why traditional masculinity is under attack.
This just sounds like more categories. I'd presumably be the "intellectual", but what about folks who don't fit into any of those three? Where do businesspeople fit in? They're important. Baudelaire's sneering at "serfs" just comes off self-serving pseudo-intellectualism. Where would he be without those serfs doing dreary, boring work growing food? Baudelaire was a good poet (I like some of the Decadents), but I don't consider him a particularly deep thinker.
It sounds like you're suggesting some kind of caste system with strikes me as needlessly rigid.
I don't even disagree with you about men and women being different. Hormones do influence brain shape. But the actual expression is highly variable (variable to the point that I wouldn't consider biological sex to be all that good a predictor of behavior, and act accordingly). So just let people do what comes naturally to them.
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aspiesavant wrote:
nephets wrote:
The usual feminist technique here is of course to label violence and misogyny as traditional male culture, which it most certainly is not. Far from it.
Here's an excerpt from my article The decline of Western Civilisation… and why Marxists did not lose but win the Cold War :
aspiesavant wrote:
When we look at human civilization throughout history and across the globe, most humans have been born in some kind of caste system. The most notable features of a caste system are endogamy (marriage only within the same group) and the hereditary transmission of occupation, social status and political influence.
In its early stages, a caste system typically has only three castes. The first caste is a priest caste. They are believed to have exclusive access to sacred knowledge and define the social norms and rules for all members of a community. The second caste is a warrior caste. They are trained from an early age onward in various military skills and have the exclusive duty to protect the community from any threat. The third caste is a caste of commoners, which consists of pretty much everyone else.
At later stages, specialization leads to the develop of sub-castes that sometimes become a caste of their own. Bureaucrats, artisans, merchants and pariahs typically don’t fit well into one of the three main castes and in some cultures become a caste of its own.
In its early stages, a caste system typically has only three castes. The first caste is a priest caste. They are believed to have exclusive access to sacred knowledge and define the social norms and rules for all members of a community. The second caste is a warrior caste. They are trained from an early age onward in various military skills and have the exclusive duty to protect the community from any threat. The third caste is a caste of commoners, which consists of pretty much everyone else.
At later stages, specialization leads to the develop of sub-castes that sometimes become a caste of their own. Bureaucrats, artisans, merchants and pariahs typically don’t fit well into one of the three main castes and in some cultures become a caste of its own.
Violence is an intrinsic aspect of the traditions of the warrior caste, as this caste was meant to defend the nation from enemies. They were trained as soldiers from a very young age onward, and this is not possible without teaching them the art of war. Violence has never been part of the upbringing of priests (intellectuals), bureaucrats, artisans, merchants & other non-warrior castes, though.
And while Abrahamic tradition did introduce a rather misogynistic attitude towards women into Europe, this misogyny is completely alien to pre-Christian European tradition and never really got much of a hold of the European mind. Especially compared with the way Muslim or Haredi men treat their women, Europeans have already kept their women in very high regard and treated them with the utmost respect... even in more savage times.
As a sidenote, it's very ironic that the very Feminists who complain the loudest about non-existent misogyny in traditional Western culture are also shouting the loudest to let Muslims into our countries, with many of them coming from countries where women are not allowed to drive or are otherwise treated like children. And the increase of men coming from actually misogynistic cultures has directly resulted in the rise of rapes in various European cities.
I guess Feminists don't actually care about women?
nephets wrote:
Traditional male culture stressed what would be called 'chivalry', though of course this is now viewed as patronizing to women.
"Chivalry" actually required men to treat women with a lot of respect. Treating a women without respect was considered dishonorable. And nothing was worse for a nobleman than to be considered without honor by his peers.
"Chivalry" didn't just apply to male attitudes towards women, however, but also towards other men or to society as a whole. "Chivalry", as we know it in the west is a traditional code of conduct that can be traced back to the European warrior caste of the high middle ages. And the point of this code of conduct was to serve as a guideline for what behavior, among knights, was to consider "honorable", "moral", "just", etc.
Note that "chivalry", as a concept, transcends Western civilization and similar codes of conduct can be found throughout all cultures. Taking for example Japan's Bushidō (literaly : "the way of warrior"). It's codes of conduct are strikingly similar to that of medieval knights.
While "chivalry" was originally conceived by warriors, for warrior, many of its codes of conduct can be applied and have been applied throughout history by other castes as well, however usually to a lesser degree, as each caste tended to develop its own social norms, its own conventions, etc. based on their own standards as a caste.
nephets wrote:
Males traditionally were required to be kind, considerate, good providers for the family and morally strong. They would also be expected to have nothing to do with the behaviours the left would like to label as male. There's little wrong with that.
As Molyneux pointed out in his rebuttal of the "article" mention in the OP, much of the actually toxic behaviour the left would like to label as "traditional" male behavior is actually pathological behavior that stems from a troubled youth, often exhibited by men who grew up without a father, a male teacher or other healthy male role model. Basically, it's behavior caused by a LACK of healthy masculinity in one's life, rather than an abundance of so-called "toxic masculinity.
And when I speak of "healthy masculinity", I'm not refering to what Feminists refer to as "healthy masculinity"... which is really just female behavior they want to impose on men. When I speak of "health masculinity", I'm refering to traditional codes of conduct, like "chivalry" / Bushidō.
There was only two Muslim countries where women not allowed to drive.
And one of them is the wealthiest and rarely any immigrants come from them.
For the record, Muslim countries have the highest %s of Female STEM graduates and Engineers. Look it up if you don’t believe me.
karathraceandherspecialdestiny wrote:
Apparently you can promote nazi-style eugenics and still hang around this forum. Amazing.
I think he just likes to disagree with me — having no opinions of his own, he sees what I post, and then posts the opposite ... with a little eugenics/master-race blather thrown in.
Fnord wrote:
karathraceandherspecialdestiny wrote:
Apparently you can promote nazi-style eugenics and still hang around this forum. Amazing.
I think he just likes to disagree with me — having no opinions of his own, he sees what I post, and then posts the opposite ... with a little eugenics/master-race blather thrown in.The guys who promote those ideas really do believe them. They have to, psychologically speaking. It's what they prop themselves up with, otherwise they would collapse into depression and self-loathing which is where they were when whoever taught them these things found them. Organized white racists/neo-Nazis behave much like ISIS does in the way they recruit and who they target for recruitment. They know that young men who for whatever reason (bad home life, poverty, lack of education, etc.) feel powerless and like they have no value are the perfect receptacles for their propaganda, the recruiters know those vulnerable men are the most likely to grab on to an ideology like white supremacy because it resolves those feelings of powerlessness and worthlessness and gives them superiority in their place. They can replace depression with rage, and the rage makes them feel powerful and invincible. That feeling is addictive.
So yeah, unless they're a psychopathic recruiter themselves, those who spout these white-supremacist ideologies probably do really believe those things deep down, because they have to or their rage will collapse back into self-loathing and they fear and dread those feelings more than anything else.
EDIT: Remember the movie American History X? It did a pretty good job of illustrating how that process of recruitment works, and who is vulnerable to it and why.
Fnord wrote:
"Nonsense" == "Something that a toxic male will not admit to"
Your notion of traditional masculinity seems to be based on the behavior of Al Bundy or 20-year-old frat boys... that of very unintelligent, very uncultivated and/or very immature men.
That's simply wrong. Such behavior is, in fact, the very opposite of behavior that is considered virtuous in traditional notions of masculinity.
karathraceandherspecialdestiny wrote:
Apparently you can promote nazi-style eugenics and still hang around this forum. Amazing.
Everything you don't like seems to be "nazi-style" in your opinion...
Minder wrote:
I would say that fascism's preference for traditional gender roles is another strike against the idea of promoting strict gender roles.
Hitler was a vegetarian. I guess that means vegetarianism is evil?
Hitler was a painter. I guess that means painting is evil?
The Nazis were the first to start an anti-smoking campaign. I guess that means we should all start smoking?
Minder wrote:
I have a few friends on the spectrum, though most are neurotypical. They generally do not perfectly fit into preconceived gender roles.
What preconceived gender roles are you talking about?
Minder wrote:
I wouldn't trust any system to say I'm a particular personality based on my performance in a test (and I am suspicious of the MBTI). People are too complex to be so easily reduced, and I'm suspicious of those that try to fit others into molds.
I suppose not everyone fits perfectly into one particular MBTI profile.
In my case, the fit is perfect, though. When I'm reading about INTPs, it's like I'm reading about myself. Even when reading about ASD, the fit is not nearly as perfect.
Minder wrote:
This just sounds like more categories. I'd presumably be the "intellectual", but what about folks who don't fit into any of those three? Where do businesspeople fit in?
Those three categories are basically the three masculine ideals of the aristocracy... people who historically didn't need to work and had lots of time to improve themselves towards on or more of these ideals.
I suppose all men have at least something of a warrior, an intellectual or an artist / builder in them... including business people... albeit to a lesser degree. They just don't have nearly as much time to cultivate those traits because... you know... they have mouths to feed and money to make to achieve that.
Minder wrote:
It sounds like you're suggesting some kind of caste system with strikes me as needlessly rigid.
My ideal system would be a scientific, meritocratic caste system based on talent, personality and/or other proven individual characteristics, rather than ancestry.
IMO, such a system would provide the best balance between freedom & efficiency.
It would also be the fairest approach for social inequality.
Minder wrote:
I don't even disagree with you about men and women being different. Hormones do influence brain shape. But the actual expression is highly variable (variable to the point that I wouldn't consider biological sex to be all that good a predictor of behavior, and act accordingly).
Gender, race, personality / neurotype & other characteristics all play essential roles in determining what makes us individuals, along with life experience. Each of these tell us but a part of the story... but when you combine them all, you get a pretty complete picture.
The_Face_of_Boo wrote:
For the record, Muslim countries have the highest %s of Female STEM graduates and Engineers. Look it up if you don’t believe me.
I do believe you.
Interestingly, there is an inverse relationship between gender equality and women choosing a career in traditionally male stem fields. The less gender equality there is, the more likely a woman is to choose a field like engineering... possibly to compensate for the lack of gender equality.
Look it up if you don’t believe me.
Fnord wrote:
I think he just likes to disagree with me — having no opinions of his own, he sees what I post, and then posts the opposite ...
Ever single opinion I express on this forum is an opinion I've developed on my own based on two decades of research into multiple disciplines since I was a teenager
You may think I'm just trolling, but I'm not. That's merely your own prejudice speaking.
karathraceandherspecialdestiny wrote:
The guys who promote those ideas really do believe them. They have to, psychologically speaking. It's what they prop themselves up with, otherwise they would collapse into depression and self-loathing which is where they were when whoever taught them these things found them. [bla bla bla bla]
Your prejudice clearly shows here. Where do you get all this nonsense from?
Is it so hard to believe that I came to my current position using the scientific method only?
aspiesavant wrote:
Is it so hard to believe that I came to my current position using the scientific method only?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrenology
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_racism
http://www.pbs.org/race/000_About/002_0 ... -02-01.htm
https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sci ... sm-history
https://www.huffingtonpost.ca/entry/rac ... 5305251917
Yes--so science, much method.
I don't know about everyone else, but I'm very impressed with your sciencing. You are obviously the best sciencer around. Good show!
karathraceandherspecialdestiny wrote:
Yes--so science, much method.
It's common knowledge that the humanities have been taken over by neo-Marxist propagandists.
It's commonly known that many "studies" published since WW2 on matters like race are barely more than Marxist demagoguery and have as much to do with science as Creationism or Flat-Earthism.
Either way, this doesn't change the fact that 90% of experts still acknowledge a genetic component to international IQ gaps. Also from Wikipedia :
Wikipedia wrote:
In 2016, Rindermann, Becker & Coyle (2016) attempted to replicate the findings of Snyderman & Rothman (1987) by surveying 71 psychology experts on the causes of international differences in cognitive test scores. They found that the experts surveyed ranked education as the most important factor of these differences, with genetics in second place (accounting in average for 15% of the gap, with high variability in estimates among experts) and health, wealth, geography, climate, and politics as the next most important factors. About 90% of experts in the survey believed there was a genetic component to international IQ gaps.
For some actual science on racial differences in cognitive ability, see eg. this 60 page 2005 article by Rushton & Jenson, which summarizes 30 years of actual scientific research into this matter.
But I bet you don't care about the actual science. You'll just call it "racist" and ignore it... because that's what you've done with every argument that contradicts your prejudices to far.
aspiesavant wrote:
karathraceandherspecialdestiny wrote:
Yes--so science, much method.
It's common knowledge that the humanities have been taken over by neo-Marxist propagandists.
It's commonly known that many "studies" published since WW2 on matters like race are barely more than Marxist demagoguery and have as much to do with science as Creationism or Flat-Earthism.
Either way, this doesn't change the fact that 90% of experts still acknowledge a genetic component to international IQ gaps. Also from Wikipedia :
Wikipedia wrote:
In 2016, Rindermann, Becker & Coyle (2016) attempted to replicate the findings of Snyderman & Rothman (1987) by surveying 71 psychology experts on the causes of international differences in cognitive test scores. They found that the experts surveyed ranked education as the most important factor of these differences, with genetics in second place (accounting in average for 15% of the gap, with high variability in estimates among experts) and health, wealth, geography, climate, and politics as the next most important factors. About 90% of experts in the survey believed there was a genetic component to international IQ gaps.
For some actual science on racial differences in cognitive ability, see eg. this 60 page 2005 article by Rushton & Jenson, which summarizes 30 years of actual scientific research into this matter.
But I bet you don't care about the actual science. You'll just call it "racist" and ignore it... because that's what you've done with every argument that contradicts your prejudices to far.
You still think IQ is a valid measure of intelligence. That's so adorable!
You are an endless font of entertainment, it's really wonderful. Go ahead, tell me more about "international IQ gaps", please do. I'm really enjoying this. You guys make me giggle with your earnestness.
Tell me more about "neo-Marxist propagandists/cultural Marxism"--I love the dogwhistle buzzwords you guys always fall back on. You're like impressionable teenagers with your slang that makes you feel like you're part of the in group, it's so cute!
I think I get almost as much entertainment value out of you guys as Harris does.
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