For example workplace harrasment by women towards males like touching or groping being ignored because the victim is male but if it where to happen to a woman by a male the male would be fired

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    doing oppositely gendered activities.

    my girlfriend can change the oil in her car and lifts weights?

    cool. healthy.

    i can sew my own clothes and bake?

    Weird. Creepy.

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          Anyone who would think that would not be worth my time. I would never give them that power over me.

          • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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            You’d be surprised how hard it is to get on in life if you’re surrounded by people like this, you can’t just ignore half the people around you all the time, especially if you’re forced to interact with them.

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      I don’t think that’s exactly true. As a woman I’ve had situations where I was questioned even when I knew exactly what I was talking about just because it was a traditionally male activity.

      Yes, I know what type of battery I want for my car. Yes, I know it’s uncommon, I checked if you had it in your website before I came here. Yes, I know how to install it and I don’t want to pay you to do it. Shut up and take my money so I can leave.

      I have several stories like this. In home renovation stores men that work there are always super opinionated on the problem that I’m trying to solve. I’m just looking for the supplies I want, I didn’t ask for opinions.

      It doesn’t help that I’m small and look young, but still they should mind their own business.

      • Clent@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Are you sure those home renovation workers weren’t trying to make conversation, might even being bragging about their own project attempts and you being a women had nothing to do with how they interact with any other customer?

        • SwearingRobin@lemmy.world
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          I can never be sure, I’m not inside their heads, but I don’t remember ever seeing this behavior directed at my husband or dad when tagging along with them in similar situations.

      • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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        Probably mostly to do with being a woman, though even if a nerdy looking dude came in they’d probably get similar treatment. Partially just how they expect someone who “knows what they’re doing” to look like (mechanics knowledge = man in jeans)

        • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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          Also, it’s not just targeted at people perceived as “other” in many of these traditionally masculine realms.

          Often, it seems like so many of these men see patronizing and second guessing as the only ways to establish and defend their own credibility on their given subject. It’s not just the “oh it’s a woman/someone who doesn’t look the part…I bet they don’t know what they’re doing” factor, it’s also that they’re a product of the culture that tells them that the most important thing is that they’re perceived as more knowledgeable than anyone else, and that the only way to establish that is to have their own opinions and views on every subject in the field, and then aggressively defend and promote those views while dismissing, undermining, and discouraging any views that conflict with theirs…or the people who hold those views.

          And it’s not just big picture “world view” type stuff. It’s crap like, “which brand makes the best widget in your hobby?”. If they’re a “brand red” guy, they feel the need to not only let everyone know that they like brand red…they have to let everyone know that brand red is the best, and that it’s objective, and that if you prefer brand blue, you’re just a clueless newbie who hasn’t learned yet. If you like brand green, well you’ve just been taken in by their marketing. And if you’re one of those brand orange people, well you know what they say about those people…

      • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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        No, it is. I had women joke and say “what are you, gay?”, then laugh when they find out I can sew. Have stitched up many a stuffed animal. The guys ask me where did I learn that?

        “The army”

        Oh, that’s cool.

        • SwearingRobin@lemmy.world
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          I agree that men also get flack for doing activities associated with women, my answer to the original comment is disagreeing with the double standard part. I think it’s bad both ways and therefore not a double standard

    • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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      As a man, I have never gotten any shit for sewing. But I do give plenty of people shit for not sewing.

      Fix your clothes people, a needle and thread are not that freaking complicated. You don’t need to learn how to use it, just push the needle through the fabric, you’ll figure it out.

      Sure, with practice you can make it prettier, but whatever.

    • CaptSneeze@lemmy.world
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      i can sew my own clothes and bake?

      Weird. Creepy.

      Hard disagree. I wish I knew how (and had the time to) make my own clothes. And, who doesn’t love baked goods? These both sound awesome.

      • eyeon@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        even just knowing enough to not consider clothes ruined when a button pops out or a tear forms would be nice

      • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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        For sure, and I appreciate that.

        They’re great skills, and if you watch a couple YouTube videos on making your own clothes, you’ll be shocked at how simple it is and how little time it takes.

        I feel very comfortable sewing and baking, this is just the best answers I have for the question.

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        “Girly” things are ok as a career, but not a hobby.

        If you’re a professional Tailor, it’s a respectable job that people seek you out for, but if you just like to sew…

        Chefs are predominantly male, but if you’re a guy that just likes to cook, “what are you, a housewife?”

        • CaptSneeze@lemmy.world
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          I guess it’s cultural, or regional, or just who you spend time around. Among my male friends, most of whom are straight and married with children, I don’t think any of them would even blink an eye at either of these things.

          I do have colleagues from other cultures and US regions (US Italian, Central America, rust belt) who I’d bet would act the way you describe. I’m not jealous of that aspect of those cultures.

      • aaaaace@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 months ago

        You can find a used machine to practice with and start by fixing and altering.

        Local indy sewing shops that I’ve encountered have been happy to advise and some have open sewing days.

        I fix my outdoors gear and clothes routinely, often with hand-stitching, just takes practice.

        • CaptSneeze@lemmy.world
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          Thankfully, I’m not completely void of any sewing skill. I can hem pants, or repair some outdoor gear, as you mentioned. But, I don’t think I could make a complete shirt that didn’t look homemade.

          I have a massive wingspan:weight ratio, so I always have to choose between sleeves being long enough on a shirt that’s 4x too big, or sleeves that end 3 inches short on a shirt that mostly fits. If I could make my own shirts and hoodies from scratch, it would be great. I just have too many other hobbies, and not enough time to dedicate to learning a new one right now.

          • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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            4 months ago

            I have a massive wingspan:weight ratio, so I always have to choose between sleeves being long enough on a shirt that’s 4x too big, or sleeves that end 3 inches short on a shirt that mostly fits.

            So you look like you just sauntered out of Auschwitz?

            <rant>

            You’re the reason why most shirts don’t fit me. I hate “slim fit” shirts, and anything fashionable is so slim fit you would have trouble fitting it over a skeleton or a 1,000-year-old Sahara-desiccated corpse. Why is your kind so common that the marketplace gets flooded with clothing that can only fit a famine victim?

            And I’m not obese in the least. I just have a 50-inch chest with a 36-inch waist. I have pecs, not some wafer-thin slabs of barely-there muscle that would have trouble bench-pressing an onion scape.

            About the only thing that fits me are 2XL tops that are regular or relaxed fit. Even jackets have gotten into the “reverse-vanity-sizing” madness that has recently beset Canada, with many “size 50” suit jackets really being a size 46 or even a 44.

            </rant>

            .

      • unalivejoy@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        You gotta learn to sew when you’re constantly ripping your shirt with each flex.

    • tfw_no_toiletpaper@lemmy.world
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      OK there are some “feminine activities” where people would bat an eye but sewing and baking? Lmao I don’t think anyone would care.

      Except if you fuck up making cookies, like me last week 😭

      • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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        4 months ago

        haha, woo! those are some hockey pucks!

        i get eyes a-fluttering anytime either is brought up, but it’s good you have faith in your community.

    • JIMMERZ@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      Yeah, I was in Costco buying new cookie sheets and an old lady said it was so nice that I was helping out. Lady, they’re for me, I’m the baker here.

      • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        It took decades before Hasbro Easy Bake Ovens were marketed in the US in Yellow and Black rather than Mattel Barbie™️ Fuchsia Pink (💕) which is still the standard in US department stores. Curiously gender neutral colors started from demand in Sweden and expanded outward.

        In the nineties, Barbie was built like only a select few Playboy Bunnies (Jessica Rabbit’s dimensions are physiologically impossible. A robot, maybe) and Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader action figures were ripped like He-Man (or soon-to-be Governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger).

        Gender roles are (to me) extremely weird.

    • almar_quigley@lemmy.world
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      I sew and bake and no one ever says anything negative about it. It’s usually a topic of conversation. And back in the day when I had been called gay for enjoying baking by some insecure guy or weirdo girl I just laughed it off. Because it was usually after they finished eating a delicious treat I made and brought into the office or something.

  • SeattleRain@lemmy.world
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    Being held culpable for the brutality some powerful men wield against women because of the “patriarchy”. But also being at fault when women with power exploit or abuse men.

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      The problem is dominance hierarchy, which expresses itself as patriarchy most of the time.

      But not always, and places on this earth exist where a matriarchic hierarchy is similarly asserted.

      Obligatorily, no war but class war.

      • orrk@lemmy.world
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        I find it hilarious when people get upset about “no war but class war” as if the sexist and racist systems we experience aren’t just symptoms of a heavily stratified society

  • paddirn@lemmy.world
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    I work in a company that seems to have mostly women in management roles and the area I work in has mostly women in our area as well. The things I’ve heard women say about men though would get any guy shit-canned within a day if he were to say anything like that about women. Women can straight-up say things like, “I hate men” or “Men are such assholes” or “What is wrong with men?” or “Guys are so stupid!” or “My husband is such a fucking idiot” or saying blatantly sexual shit about men that they have crushes on or find attractive. It’s just a joke to them, like whatever. Meanwhile, if a guy were to say anything even remotely approaching to what I’ve heard in our office, they would be gone like nothing, there’s just no tolerance for that.

    And don’t get me wrong, I’m not offended by women saying sexist things like that or talking sexually about guys, I don’t give a shit, I’ve heard worse from other guys. That doesn’t bother me and I’m not looking to get anybody in trouble over it, I just want tolerance from both sides. What bothers me is that men aren’t afforded that same courtesy and aren’t allowed to talk the same way. Women can talk shit at work all they want about men because “Fuck the patriarchy, old white men are ruining everything, etc”, but whooo, if a guy says anything remotely out of line about women, they will be reported like that 🫰.

  • hesusingthespiritbomb@lemmy.world
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    So one thing I noticed is that women betraying their partner has become extremely normalized

    • Every “ethical non monogamous” relationship I’ve seen IRL is just a woman pressuring their long term monogamous partner into a situation where she has multiple partners and she’s struggling
    • “Monkey Branching”, where a woman starts dropping hints at one guy while still seeing another in hopes of making a seamless transition, is pretty accepted. Emotional affairs are only a thing for men apparently
    • While it’s always been acceptable to leave a guy if he can’t “provide” for you, it’s really fucking stupid in the context of modern feminism
    • Women who use OLD are often encouraged to have a “roster” of men, who they form a well beyond casual connection to.
    • There’s a large number of 30+ year old women breaking up with their long term partners to “find themselves”. I put that in quotations because this usually just involves a ton of casual sex. It’s basically the modern day equivalent of a guy leaving his wife for the secretary
    • There are a million different love triangles on TV. They are almost all two guys and a woman who is disrespectful of both. The guys get mad at each other and the women’s behavior is not portrayed as toxic.
    • Like 80 percent of holiday movies involve a woman leaving her fiance for a man she just met. This is always seen as romantic, instead of psychotic.

    In addition to all that, women are extremely reluctant to criticize other women. This stands even when another woman is behaving in an almost objectively toxic way. I moved post covid. The first year I witnessed a fuckton of toxic behavior, but when I tried to point it out I would get dirty glances from women. The second year there I ended up getting close to other women in those conversations who took it upon themselves to tell me in a smaller setting that they actually agreed with me, but they didn’t want to appear unsupportive.

    Whatever the intention there, the mentality enabled a subset of women to be shitty and probably convinced a lot of men that such behavior was something most women were okay with.

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      I almost never meet women like this so maybe it depends on your area. I’d love to be in a woman’s roster but they all want monogamous relationships.

      • hesusingthespiritbomb@lemmy.world
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        Trust me, you don’t. These women will often want the full emotional availability of a romantic partner from you, with a fraction of both the emotional and physical availability of a partner from them. They generally want a monogamous relationship, just from an emotionally unavailable guy who is very physically attractive. Above all else, they will not be honest about your “ranking”.

        Almost any woman who is halfway sane and willing to use online dating tends to get into a relationship in like three months tops. There’s also a decent number of women who are either not looking for a relationship, or would like a relationship but think the apps are super toxic.

        However around 10 to 15 percent of the women I meet are very much architects of their own misery. These women are extremely vocal, generally shitty to their potential partners, and can always find more partners due to the nature of OLD. The frustrating part is I haven’t met a single woman who calls out this behavior, and a significant amount that actually reassure these people.

        My GF insists that most women are just trying to be supportive, and that they don’t actually approve of the toxic behavior in question. My conversations with closer female friends backs this up. However in my eyes all this does is enable and normalize said behavior. It is also especially frustrating because I’m 100 percent expected to speak out if another guy does something remotely problematic.

        • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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          These women will often want the full emotional availability of a romantic partner from you, with a fraction of both the emotional and physical availability of a partner from them.

          That’s a whole separate issue from women having a roster of men.

          Idk about emotional availability. I just want a fuck buddy. If she can’t provide that, she’s gone.

          • hesusingthespiritbomb@lemmy.world
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            Okay so what do you suggest I do. Cut out every single female friend in my life? Convince my single male friends, as a man in a relationship, to boycott online dating apps?

            The only behavior uncommon enough to actually get away from are ethically non monogamous relationships and straight up cheating. That’s 100 percent a red line for me at this point. Everything else is so ubiquitous that I’m basically forced to put up with it if I want to be social.

            • kandoh@reddthat.com
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              You just have to worry about being happy in the relationship you’re actually in and not project these feelings of disrespectful non-monogamy on to others.

      • Gypsyhermit123@lemmy.ca
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        I’m had 2 women tell me they had this and saw one on OLD. Of them the 2 got so fed up of men and their bullshit. Started having activity buddies with benefits. One was my cousin so I knew the back story of her asshole husband. Other was a neighbour of a good friend.

        • hesusingthespiritbomb@lemmy.world
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          Oh this is another thing. I know some women who are perpetually single despite heavy usage of OLD. I used to have a lot of sympathy, but at this point I’ve met many women in relationships via OLD, and the entire process took them six weeks. The second category of women weren’t “higher value” or whatever, they just had more realistic expectations and were less shallow.

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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      4 months ago

      Hi, ethical non monogamous person here. My wife did not pressure me into this. The only other couple I know IRL that does this it was also the husband who prompted it.

    • TaterTurnipTulip@lemmy.world
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      It sounds like you haven’t seen any healthy ethnically non-monogamous relationships. That’s a shame. As a part of one, I’ve seen several others as well. It can work, if it’s done for the right reasons and if all partners respect each other.

      • hesusingthespiritbomb@lemmy.world
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        You know it’s funny. I hear a million different accounts of ethnically monogamous relationships that work, but only on the internet where it’s impossible to get the full context.

    • paddirn@lemmy.world
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      “women are extremely reluctant to criticize other women”

      You should listen to women talk more, they’re extremely enthusiastic to talk shit about each other.

      I actually do agree with some of your points though, but on that point, I’ve rarely seen a woman reluctant to talk trash about another woman when given a chance (maybe more in he said/she said situations is what you’re referring to).

      • hesusingthespiritbomb@lemmy.world
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        I’m 30 years old, and even when I was 15 I wasn’t really friends with the super mean girl gossip types. Throughout my life, I’ve been friends with women who largely identify as feminist and sort of reject those stereotypes.

        The problem is that post #metoo it became normalized to take the whole “support women” thing to such an extreme that it enabled toxic behavior. While there were women who tried to pull the whole “it’s sexist to criticize me for making poor life choices” crap, other women would get super offended for them attempting to use feminism in that way.

        It’s extremely frustrating that the 19 and 20 year old women I knew in college had better moral compasses than the 25 to 40 year old women I know now. That’s really not supposed to be how it works.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    Clothes in general, I could borrow my husband’s shirt and nobody would bat an eye but I’d he borrowed mine (he can’t because I’m smaller, but assuming we were the same size-ish) would look strange.

    I don’t think groping is gonna be ignored in any workplace, in any direction.

      • nomous@lemmy.world
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        Many (basically all) companies will completely ignore an issue until they’re absolutely forced to act on it, it’s pretty par for the course.

    • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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      I’ve read enough accounts from both men and women to know that sexual harassment is not taken seriously at many places.

  • Meltrax@lemmy.world
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    If you’re a dude and your older female boss forces you to have sex with her under threat of losing your job, everyone just says “that’s awesome what’s the problem?”.

    • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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      I had a professor do this to me. Was an adult going to night school, in my last year. She was about ten years older than me and we hit it off in a way I assumed was a professional student/teacher relationship. Had this with other professors as well.

      She told me to meet her at a hotel once, thought she was joking and when I didn’t show was furious. Told her it just seemed odd, and she told me she is getting another one this weekend and not to worry about it, but if I didn’t show there would be consequences.

      Through a lot of double speak she let me know if it didn’t happen, there would be no graduation for me. Not knowing what to do, bought a pack of condoms and showed up to the hotel. “No, we aren’t using those”. And that was several of my weekends until graduation. There was zero possibility of saying no, and no one to complain to. I can tell the story online and that’s about it.

      • timestatic@feddit.org
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        Wait what? You can’t be serious! You did this instead of reporting her to the school?

        • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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          Yes, I bitched on the internet. It was something that happened almost ten years ago, but it’s not like the school would have ever done anything. Let’s be honest about how this stuff plays out.

          • timestatic@feddit.org
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            I’d have went to the police if the school didn’t do shit or threaten with lawyers. I’d escalate all my options since this shit is not going down with me

  • mods_mum@lemmy.today
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    Dress code at work. I work in investment banking. On a hot summer day I have to wear smart shoes, black socks, long trousers, long sleeved shirt. Women can wear whatever. It’s fucking horrible

    • ezmac@lemmy.world
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      Go get the traveler suit from suit supply and some lightweight wool /cotton shirts, NOT the “performance” ones made of plastic. I live in the Deep South and I’m a consultant. This is so much better in the hot summer.

      • mods_mum@lemmy.today
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        It does not address the problem at all. Attire requirements in big office settings are typically anti-men.

        • ezmac@lemmy.world
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          Yea, of course changing the materials of your clothes doesn’t change society as a whole. My point is that I work in an industry with a similar issue and have found a way to be comfortable, using fabrics and construction styles that breathe properly and are built to be cooler, mimicking some of the lightweight stuff that the women wear.

          It IS helpful and this isn’t an anti-men thread, it’s an asklemmy about dealing with double standards. To be honest investment bankers work such long hours I’m surprised OP sees the daylight/unairconditioned spaces at any frequency to be able to complain about this

    • MrsDoyle@sh.itjust.works
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      It wasn’t always this way. When I first started working in the early 70s, women weren’t allowed to wear trousers at work. Or have bare legs, even in summer. Women called bullshit, and the rule was relaxed in most places to allow us to wear trouser suits. But as late as the mid-80s I was chastised for wearing trousers at work. I had to point out that the then prime minister, a woman, wore trousers at work!

      If you want the dress code to change, then lobby for it to change. I honestly feel sorry for men locked into their own notions of what they’re “allowed” to wear. I remember a friend whining enviously about how breezy my summer skirt looked. I suggested he wear a skirt himself. “I can’t! People would think I’m gay.” Sigh.

      Also - men used to make an effort! https://media.newyorker.com/photos/5ec9401b929e439dacc2a56a/master/w_1280%2Cc_limit/Piepenbring-Codpiece02.jpg https://www.thecultureconcept.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/404448.jpg

      • mods_mum@lemmy.today
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        4 months ago

        As someone born in 1980 in Poland I was oblivious to women struggles with attire in the not so distant past. Thank you for sharing your perspective. And I love your sense of humor, those baroque outfits are hilarious

  • Sarmyth@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    It’s fairly broadly believed that strong male influences benefit a child greatly, but males are looked at with huge skepticism if they attempt to enter most forms of childcare as a profession.

  • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    In favor of men: when we get angry, people listen. When women get angry, people stop listening.

    Against men: men being around children is seen as suspect. Women being around children is seen as healthy.

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Dude. I was at an MLB baseball game about a year ago. It was the 6th inning. I walked into the bathroom while play is still going on. I specifically picked that time because it was the other team at bat, and not their best hitters. My logic was “nobody will be in the bathroom, but nothing will happen in the game either! I’m so smart for going to pee now!”

      I walk into the bathroom. First thing I see is a row of about 20 urinals, and deadset in the middle is a 5 year old boy with his pants around his ankles. Bare ass on display. No parent in sight.

      I walked in, saw that, walked right back out. Like Aberaham Simpson when he walked into the strip club and saw Bart.

      I was like noooooooope. I am NOT going to be in that room when the dad comes in. Even if I’m 10 urinals away. I can wait to pee in the 7th inning, and totally abandon my amazing pee stratagy.

      Last thing I need is a protective parent walking in, and asking why I’m in the room with a bare assed 5 year old. Even if nothing happened. I’ll just wait an inning.

    • BruceTwarzen@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      I had a girlfriend once and i was absolutely mad at her for reasons i don’t remember. She said she would go home. I knew her for about 2 years and she herself said she never even heard me getting loud or angry with anyone. Anyway, after she left for 15 minutes she came back in and started arguing again. I asked her if she could please just leave. But she kept going. I really didn’t know what to do, because i didn’t just want to grab her and throw her out or anything, so i kept telling her to leave. I went to the toilet and hoped that she would be gone by the time i was done peeing. But she didn’t, she came into the bathroom to keep arguing. That’s where i totally flipped and grabbed her arm and threw her out and told her to go home.

      I can’t even imagine doing that to a woman. Like just refusing to leave after i yelled at her for 30 minutes and all she said was: just please leave. Following her into the bathroom to keep yelling at her. I would go straight to jail, while she didn’t even really understood that something went wrong.

      • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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        4 months ago

        This happens a lot more than society is willing to admit.

        Camera phones are changing this slowly similar with the police and karen issues.

        It is now subgenre on youtube. It was weird realizing that some women will just act that way because “wtf is u gonnd do about it, pussy, call the police? Try me!!!”

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    4 months ago

    I don’t know any specific cases, but one thing I’ve heard that police (at least in Brazil) will just laugh at and ignore, is when a man is the victim of an abusive partner.

    Of course, it’s nowhere as common as men being the violent/abusive partner, but it happens, yet “society” will effectively say “grow a pair”

    • Makhno@lemmy.world
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      Of course, it’s nowhere as common as men being the violent/abusive partner, but it happens, yet “society” will effectively say “grow a pair”

      It’s funny how when talking about male victimization, people always feel the need to throw in a disclaimer that men are still “worse”

      • lennybird@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Which, I mean, they are:

        Victim/Perpetrator adisaggregation reveals a large disparity in the shares of male and female victims of homicide committed by intimate partners or other family members: 36% male versus 64% female victims. Women also bear the greatest burden in terms of intimate partner violence.

        Source: United Nations Global Study on Homicide: Gender-related killing of women and girls

        Domestic violence is a serious and challenging public health problem. Approximately 1 in 3 women and 1 in 10 men 18 years of age or older experience domestic violence. Annually, domestic violence is responsible for over 1500 deaths in the United States

        According to the CDC, 1 in 4 women and 1 in 7 men will experience physical violence by their intimate partner at some point during their lifetimes. About 1 in 3 women and nearly 1 in 6 men experience some form of sexual violence during their lifetimes. Intimate partner violence, sexual violence, and stalking are high, with intimate partner violence occurring in over 10 million people each year.

        One in 6 women and 1 in 19 men have experienced stalking during their lifetimes. The majority are stalked by someone they know. An intimate partner stalks about 6 in 10 female victims and 4 in 10 male victims.

        At least 5 million acts of domestic violence occur annually to women aged 18 years and older, with over 3 million involving men. While most events are minor, for example grabbing, shoving, pushing, slapping, and hitting, serious and sometimes fatal injuries do occur. Approximately 1.5 million intimate partner female rapes and physical assaults are perpetrated annually, and approximately 800,000 male assaults occur. About 1 in 5 women have experienced completed or attempted rape at some point in their lives. About 1% to 2% of men have experienced completed or attempted rape.

        https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK499891/

        That’s not to downplay male victimization incidents, but let’s also not pretend the scale is the same.

  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    The shit older women said (and did) to me when I drove a cab in my twenties.

    Also, not wanting to fuck someone, even if they’re somewhat attractive.

  • MellowYellow13@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Basically everything women cry about men doing to them. If it is done to a man by women it is ignored or considered not real or never happened or okay and normalized as you put it.

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    This thread is scary, a lot of you are being upvoted but your statements are just jealousy and anger.

    Lots of projection going on here.

    Lots of yall mad at women engaging in the type of behavior us men have exhibited forever.

    • mods_mum@lemmy.today
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      4 months ago

      Can you please go back to twoX already? We escaped Reddit because we don’t like toxic communities. Either don’t bring this shit here or just go back to reddit

    • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      You sure? Because what I’m seeing is a lot of sexual abuse towards guys that’s not being taken seriously, or workplace social abuse towards guys that’s mostly ignored.

      • prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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        Yeah, I’m pretty sure.

        If you think I’m referring to the situations where men are referring to their abuse instead of the comments where people are just whining about women acting selfishly or shitty then that’s on you.

        In fact my statement was specifically NOT about that.

        https://lemmy.world/comment/11993090

        ^ women are now dating younger men, it isn’t fair.

        https://lemmy.world/comment/11985350

        ^ women being empowered to find a new partner, sometimes on a whim.

        https://lemmy.world/comment/11987028

        ^ women get away with everything and men nothing

        https://lemmy.world/comment/11982251

        ^ the patriarchy being wielded by women against men … seriously?

        https://sh.itjust.works/comment/13517729

        ^ opposite gendered things being not allowed for men … this one is so telling

        https://lemmy.zip/comment/12800294

        ^ anecdote of this guys shitty relationship.

        https://programming.dev/comment/11913607

        ^ this is just so shockingly blind and ignorant it’s hard to even refute. Women’s appearances have been basically the domain of us men for millennia or more.

        • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Yeah, so, you are talking about exactly the kind of comments I thought you were talking about.

          Way to go continuing to ignore legitimate issues, brushing them off as “jealous whining”.

        • nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          If you believe the patriarchy doesn’t harm men and can’t be enforced or upheld by any gender, you have an incomplete view of what patriarchy is.

        • Lightor@lemmy.world
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          You’re really representing a lot of these with bad faith. It seems like you came into this thread with a view and used anything said to justify that view.

          Your first call out about and ignores the entire point being made and the clear double standard being called out. You seem more willing to play the victim than have an honest conversation on equality.

          Imagine if men behaved this way about women discussing double standards, it wouldn’t make you feel good. So why do it to men?

  • TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Cut bits of a girl baby’s genitals: jail.

    Cut bits off a boy baby’s genitals: An occasion for a fucking party.

    • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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      My understanding is that infant labiaplasty and other female genital cosmetic surgeries are pretty common as well in western countries. Luckily there is a growing protest to these practices on ethical grounds, since they’re all medically unnecessary surgeries performed on babies that can’t consent to it.

      This journal publication seems to put it into perspective decently. It also points out some of the racist hypocrasy surrounding it, like how we classify these actions being done by non-western cultures as ‘mutilation’ which is unlawful, while classifying ones aligned with our own culture as ‘cosmetic’ and still allow them.

    • x4740N@lemm.eeOP
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      Also to add on to this

      Mothers showing pictures of their naked boys as babies, totally fine

      Father’s showing images of their naked daughters as babies, people go wtf

      I wish people didn’t show those images at all or even take them reguardless of gender