Brian Peacock wrote:Forty Two wrote:Brian Peacock wrote:JimC wrote:The basis of Forty Two's angst about this issue is that he seems to believe that, because of feminist politics, in the US today a female only class (of yoga or any other voluntary activity) would be regarded as perfectly acceptable, but a male only class would not. I doubt this is true, but if it was, it would be a form of sexual discrimination against men.
If that is his view, and I'm not sure that it is, then it's clearly bunkum - a form of special pleading. It would mean that, for example, classes which taught women how to examine their breasts for lumps,
Since men and women both get breast cancer, it is discriminatory to exclude men from an examination class that is open to the public for a fee.
Well, this was only an example. Nonetheless, while men's physiology is different to women's you're happy for men to attend the classes for women, and vice-versa, and nobody has any grounds to object. E.G...
I'd have no issue, if the sexes were treated the same in this regard, without the constant bellyaching by "feminists" that male only things are sexist and misogynistic.
Brian Peacock wrote:
Forty Two wrote:Brian Peacock wrote:
or a classes which taught men how to examine their balls for lumps,
Anyone with balls can examine their balls. Anyone without balls would be admitted to the class and not be physically able to participate. Men are physically able to examine their breast for lumps.
Brian Peacock wrote:
would fall foul of his definition of discrimination while, presumably, the women-only class would be considered perfectly acceptable (socially or culturally, thanks to feminism) and the men-only class would be considered unacceptable (socially or culturally, thanks to feminism).
Indeed - feminism and other social justice types do support and advance that kind of rationale.
Citation required re feminism necessarily entailing that view, plus some qualification re what 'social justice types' encompasses.
"necessarily" entailing? I can't say feminism logically NECESSITATES that view -- it's simply a very common feminist view --
http://www.theguardian.com/news/2015/ap ... dmit-women
Article describes the effort to get women into the club as "painful," and the complain that a club with lots of QC's and judges in it that doesn't admit women just ought not be....
Brian Peacock wrote:
Forty Two wrote:Brian Peacock wrote:
Services or products aimed towards a target gender are not necessarily discriminatory, but if and where they are or might be the charge should be justified rather than simply asserted.
The reality is that the justification "feel uncomfortable" is the one that is generally used to support women only things - women feel uncomfortable if the work out with men, ride the train with men, etc.
Nice attempt to shift the burden there, but the justification I was referring to was for your charge that any single-sex event is necessarily a discrimination. What you have provided here is just another in a long line of assertions that it is.
Because if it's single-sex, then it excludes a sex because of sex. That's by definition "discrimination based on sex." If you're asking whether it's "bad" or not, well, that's a judgment call. But, if I say you can't walk through my front door unless you're a woman, then that's discrimination based on sex. I am making a distinction and it's based on sex. Sex discrimination. Women can walk through, men can't.
So, if a gym is men only, then it's discriminating against women. If a gym is women only, it's discrimination against men. It doesn't make it "not discrimination" if there are both women only and men only gyms. It makes it separate but equal, but it's still discrimination. Like if men and women had separate water fountains.
Brian Peacock wrote:
Forty Two wrote: ... if men claim to "feel uncomfortable" around women, that's never been taken seriously. Shit, nobody takes the objection seriously that men don't want females walking into the men's room when they're standing at the urinal with their dicks out. That's phobia against trans and/or male identifying female body persons, if you were to say they shouldn't use the men's room. Feel uncomfortable? Tough shit.
'Anecdote' is not the plural of 'data', as they say - so let's get back to the issue eh? Single-sex events.
It's an example. is there a circumstance where a man "feeling uncomfortable" is given credence or weight at all? Where? What issue?
Brian Peacock wrote:
Do you think that any single-sex event is necessarily a discrimination?
By definition, yes. I don't think it's necessarily bad, of course. But, it is discrimination. The fact that a golf club does not accept women as members is discrimination, for example. The fact that a book club does not accept men is also discrimination. Both based on sex.
Brian Peacock wrote:
Additionally, do you think that, for example, gender segregated educational establishments are a discrimination, that is; should boys be allowed to attend girls schools and vice-versa?
Yes, it is discrimination. What else is it? You think a school can say "no girls allowed" and it's not discriminating based on sex?
I can see you concluding that it's not bad or evil or undesirable. But, how can you possibly say it's not discrimination? What definition of discrimination are you using?
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar