As described here

  • What about men? They also get harassed!
    I'm very aware guys also get harassed by both men and women, but this thread is about girls. Feel free to create another thread for that issue, and I will support it

I created this to share that could happen to us too, much more less frequent in my case, but still need to be said.

No details, just as tittle says.

Could you share any experience?

Some giveaways.

Added one free entry for everybody u4F94
BzbvLtRR

Bionic Commando | lv1 | october 22nd

I'll close this,

Forum Is becoming an unpleasant experience for forum readers
Community is not self aware to grow up and discuss issues in civilized manners
I know there are good people out there, but they are a few, they're becoming extinct
I came here the year I almost killed myself, world is chaotic, and on SG forum I found some peace, reading people from around all the fucking world, being a bit more 'mature' from other sites, my thoughts are for this community, we are going deep down into a toxic hole
*Don't worry i will not suicide (yet joke) Decided it last year, world is chaotic and confusing wish I could have a fucking manual for it, and people is a big mystery for me, I had been reading a lot about psychology, sociology, group dynamic, anthropology, and I'm a fucking IT guy, seems our brain, and our society is not evolved enough, me as child believed the contrary.

Edit> moved from offtopic to general, added thread purpose, deleted silly joke about my home country
Edit: added GA LV0+

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6 years ago*

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Deleted

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6 years ago
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I'm not a robot, but hey there. :)

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Very insightful

6 years ago
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Thank you for your giveaways, MeeMesmo! :-)

No, lucky for them.

6 years ago
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As a man who's been sexually assaulted by other men in public, I want to support this thread.

6 years ago
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gay man are bad, women are bad, women in group are evil, drunken girls in group are the worst

Edit: for the language gap, I'm not referring to a whole groups, I'm saying only for those who harassed me, from bad to worst. Apologies if I can't phrase it clear on English.

6 years ago*
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There are rotten eggs among both sexes. I'd say intoxicated males in groups are the worst since they are (in my experience) much more prone to become physically violent than women.
I'm kinda sure the men who sexually assaulted me weren't gay, but they were probably somewhat drunk.

6 years ago
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I think (drunk) women are quicker to physical violence, but (drunk) men heavily escalate physical violence when it starts - particularly when it's between men. In my opinion, I really don't think it's smart to become intoxicated to that degree, and I don't see the point. It's ugly, you become dumb and unable to reason.

6 years ago
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in short - people are horrible

6 years ago
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That's a statement I can get behind.

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Not all™

6 years ago
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Spoilers : Deep down inside all of us, we're all secretly skeletons.

All of us!
(happy halloween?)

6 years ago
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(happy halloween?)

It's a bit weird but I hadn't noticed any celebrations yet. It's mostly a retailer holiday around here though, if that makes any sense

6 years ago
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I wouldn't be so quick to generalize about gay men, or men in general, or women in general.

Alcohol can bring out the worst in people, but I wouldn't let some drunks color your perception of a whole group.

6 years ago
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Yes you are lost on some of the few episodes of my life about harassment.

6 years ago
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I'm sorry that you've had terrible experiences, I really am.

On the flip side, I can tell you that all the gay men I know are really nice guys and would never harass anyone. Likewise, most of the women I know are really nice and would never harass anyone.

I'm sorry that you appear to have encountered the worst of those groups, but those are not representative of the groups at large, and letting them sour your opinion of these groups would also be terrible.

6 years ago
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gay man are bad, women are bad

I don't want to get tooooo close but I'd say that's a bit tooo much of generalization lol

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Nope. Just abusers.

The thread has barely gone up and an open (if brief) blame game just got dropped by the OP of all people. If it was supposed to be humorous you need to seriously consider how it reads, and make the joke more obvious. This is why we can't have nice things. I'm serious. Every time the subject of mens issues come up, it is nearly always associated with the judgemental trollish stuff, and that link just got to be a little more solidified. :/

My radar is broken. I'm having a hard time figuring out if you intended this thread to be serious or not. There were giveaways and an initial tone of sincerity but then this almost straight away, and a follow-up with "Yes you are lost on some of the few episodes of my life about harassment", which really makes it look like you weren't joking with your open judgement. You can't have it both ways. You can either lash out and revel in your catharsis at the expense of others, or you can try to have open and honest conversation and try to broker some form of little progress. The two do not mix.

6 years ago*
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I find it a bit humorous that you take offense at him pointing out who the offenders have been but you have no problem with the thread where OP makes an effort to inform everyone that we shouldn't talk about male victims

6 years ago
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Everyone is free to talk about who abused them, but the moment you openly claim an entire gender or sexuality as 'bad' is where you fly way over the line. I don't see what is so hard to understand about that.

You're really stretching it. Where is this supposed thread where the OP says we shouldn't talk about male victims? Link it to me, if you think I have no problem with it. :V

6 years ago
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I guess it depends on how you want to read things. I see it as listing of the worst offenders, not a statement about which groups of people are inherently bad people.

It's in the FAQ. I don't think it's possible to link to a specific point in a post but I'm reasonably sure you can find it.

Edit: oh lol, I read your answer again and realize you don't even know what thread I'm talking about. Check the FAQ

6 years ago*
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(edit : Sorry for the long post after my edit. I don't mean to be so blunt with you but it's a pretty serious subject)

The post in this thread is not a matter of reading comprehension. They literally say "this group is bad, this other group is also bad". That's not leaving a great deal of wiggle room to work with here Spiff. :P

I totally get how people can have misgivings if they keep having clashes of people from certain groups, but no entire gender, race or sexuality operates on a hivemind basis. It's their right to be on-guard around said people and I don't begrudge them for obeying the natural instincts that bad apples of instilled in them, but when you openly denounce entire groups, that's when it starts to be a different story. I mean, christ, if I held every group accountable for the sins of the rotten individuals I encountered, I'd look pretty much like my avatar right now, knife in hand, constantly repeating "TIME TO DIE", heh. We all have the perfect right to hold our abusers accountable for what they did, but to project their behaviour upon every innocent member of each biogroup they belong to is where you venture into prejudice territory.
We have every right to be angry at our abusers, but we have to be careful that our emotions do not fester. Not only can it turn into prejudice, but it can cause us to actually repeat the abuses we have suffered. I know that is easier said than done, and we all slip up from time to time (we're all only human, right?) but we need to hold ourselves accountable for it. This thread is a great opportunity but it has almost instantly been sullied by the attitudes that were quickly posted into it. :/

And yes, that thread. I did read the FAQ when I first entered that thread, and I just reviewed it now.
At no point does it say that we shouldn't talk about male victims. At no point does the OP tell someone in the reply chains that we shouldn't talk about male victims. Making the focus of a thread be on women doesn't mean that male victims are excluded from the discussion. There were a good number of replies from men discussing the subject and at no point did the OP try to shut them down. Just because men aren't the focus doesn't mean they're being silenced or outcast. They even suggest that if someone feels the need for a male-centric thread, they should open one and the OP would fully support it.

So, would you mind elaborating on why you feel the OP of the women-centric thread doesn't want male victims to have a voice? Because it seems like you've taken a creative interpretation of the disclaimers literally made to underline that it isn't an "us vs them" thing. I'm left wondering if there is a language barrier here again, but your english is good so I assumed you were a primary speaker?

6 years ago*
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No worries about the length of your post or my ability to understand written English. I'm not a native speaker but I feel I'm fluent enough to handle discussions like this at least :)

It seems like the reading comprehension matter got cleared up. Felt pretty obvious to me but I guess it's a matter of perspective. It's kind of funny/sad how quick we are are jumping to conclusions, especially in topics like this. People, not virtue signaling hard enough, are getting branded as bad actors by some because of the vocabulary they use or other nonsense and the dialogue suffers. I guess it only shows that people are heavily emotionally invested in the topic but I'm still surprised at getting more blacklisted than when eg. saying controversial things like that we should use captchas for entering giveaways :P

I never said we were told to not talk about male victims anywhere, just that OP makes it a point to tell us that we shouldn't in her thread and this, at least to me, feels unnecessarily divisive in a thread meant to raise awareness of abuse.

6 years ago*
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When you look at the disclaimers, they were put there to pre-empt the usual knee-jerk responses. When it comes to discussing these things, there is a certain crowd that will regurgitate the same old things that don't hold up to scrutiny. Mully was happy to let people discuss the male side of the catcalling thing, but the opening post was there as a counter to the dumb stuff.

The mens side wasn't restricted, just that they weren't interested in grappling with that side of it. It wasn't a general purpose abuse thread, but rather for a specific subject (and the subject appears to have a majority focus towards women). Had her language not been so otherwise neutral, or had she attempted to actually stifle any non-women discussion about it, I would agree with you... but she hasn't. It was just shortcutting around the usual myopic kneejerk reactions and nothing more.

...though in hindsight I suspect this might be a language issue again. The nuance of specific words could easily be lost in translation. Any impatience in the disclaimers was directed at the kinds of people who make ignorant jabs, not at those wanting to discuss other aspects of the issue, if that makes sense?

Haha, man one of these days someone needs to invent a reliable translation program so we can get over the language issue. xD

6 years ago
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The mens side wasn't restricted, just that they weren't interested in grappling with that side of it

Like I said, it was made perfectly clear that the thread is not the place to discuss male victims, for some reason.

...but this thread is about girls. Feel free to create another thread for that issue, and I will support it.

Like it's an entirely other issue if the victim is male. Might be a language problem but I'm doubtful.

  • But some women like to be catcalled!
    Yes, there's also men that like to get hit in the face with a hammer. So using the same logic, I should go out and hit all men with a hammer in hopes they enjoy it?

This neither a language problem nor something you'd write if you want to encourage discussion. Also, since you expressed a distaste for denouncing entire groups earlier, note who is the perpetrator and who is the victim with this narrative.

I have serious doubts that anyone writing in that thread likes to harass women but even disagreeing on the tone seem to be taken as proof of just that, or worse.

6 years ago
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Again, that is only directed at people who use kneejerk apologetics to perpetually gloss over the subject. There is only so much exposure a person can have to dishonest rhetoric before they lose patience. I'm convinced this is a language issue because the implication of the language directs the disclaimer stuff only at those who disregard people effected by the issue at hand by using nebulous and unrealistic claims.

No it wasn't a poker-faced disclaimer, but lets say every time the subject of domestic violence against men is raised, a ton of women glossed over it by saying "But some men like it rough", and that pattern held for years, surely then you can appreciate using an exaggerated example to show the big hole in logic during a disclaimer, right? That wouldn't be denouncing women, it would be pre-empting intellectual copouts. Sometimes the holes in logic are so obvious that those who subscribe to the thinking may actually need an overblown example to grasp how ground-level the logical flaw is.

And yes, I do have a distaste for denouncing entire groups, but Mully was not denouncing men, she was anticipating the ongoing pattern of flippant, myopic responses. Responses that did in fact crop up despite the disclaimers, and at a glance, they appear to be from men. So at this point we find ourselves, it becomes more about pedantry and derailment, Spiff00. Men were fully able to discuss matters within the thread and weren't suppressed or met even with disapproval, they simply weren't the focus. Did Mully create a flawless disclaimer? No. But there is no need to be immaculate when the message was easily received by pretty much everyone with english as a primary language. It served its purpose. If you really want to pursue this further you may as well start railing on the idea that she presumed the aggressor would be the opposite sex, or a stranger instead of a coworker. As a straight male (and as someone who has faced and been witness to a variety of abuse, though thankfully nothing that was especially severe), I didn't find her language objectionable, and I'm usually quite critical of passive sexism/racism, because it usually finds its way onto my social media timeline by otherwise well-meaning people. It's an awful trend and I fucking hate it, but I really honestly don't see it in the opening post of that thread.

I have to ask, what exactly are you trying to get out of this? You seem to be quite fixated on proving something, which at a guess seems to be revealing I'm predisposed to protecting women at expense of men? Hence why I'm trying to err on the side of caution and figure this is a matter of the subtleties of language, given your previous willingness to assume innocence on someone literally posting a one-line list of which denominations are 'bad'. It's coming across as pretty disingenuous right now. :P

Unless there is more to add to this, I believe we're at an impasse.

6 years ago*
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It's coming across as pretty disingenuous right now. :P

I could say the same thing about your position but that would be kind of pointless

I believe we're at an impasse

We might

6 years ago
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you should stop overthinking things. it makes you look like you have a hidden agenda on all discussions.

Like it's an entirely other issue if the victim is male. Might be a language problem but I'm doubtful.

the whole faq was an 8-ball prediction of the same dumb arguments i get all the time. i'm tired of repeating myself. just like "Black lives matter! NO! ALL LIVES MATTER!" idiotic argument. i wanted people to focus on the issue i posted.

This neither a language problem nor something you'd write if you want to encourage discussion. Also, since you expressed a distaste for denouncing entire groups earlier, note who is the perpetrator and who is the victim with this narrative.

the title was awareness thread, not "do you think there's some kind of imaginary street harassment women experience in public and do they enjoy or dislike it?"
i wasn't asking for discussion, i was making people aware that it's bad and it's very real. the issue is here, much like racism or homophobia.
there's nothing to argue about except why people do it, why they promote that behavior, and make fun of everything that happens to victims.

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you should stop overthinking things. it makes you look like you have a hidden agenda on all discussions.

Like I've said elsewhere, I prefer overthinking to underthinking and the latter is a more prevalent problem in discussions. The amount of thought I put in on a subject won't change anyone's predisposition to assume hidden agendas.

i wasn't asking for discussion

Well, ok then. This is actually pretty obvious now that you're pointing it out. This is my bad for assuming that people want to have a discussion on created topics.

6 years ago
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Thanks, for this seems I wasn't clear enough the harassement groups/individuals listed, I dealed with. was not clear enough

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Ah, so it was actually a phrasing issue then?

Your english in the opening post was good enough that I didn't consider it was a language barrier again. It's strange how that keeps being the thing causing problems. :s

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Yup, seems is my bad as a kind misconception on language gap or something like that. other people believe it too, that I was openly point finger EVERYBODY on those groups. So is my bad at writing it. My apologies.

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It's okay. I jumped the gun a little and should have paused for thought when the message seemed so blatantly mistaken.
Sometimes its hard to tell the difference in a text-only medium. ^^

6 years ago
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the thread where OP makes an effort to inform everyone that we shouldn't talk about male victims

please quote that from my thread?

6 years ago
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It's in my reply to Uroboros here

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I think she meant a quote of her, the OP. Not one of your own comment.

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I'm harassed by these threads!

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I'm harassed by you being harassed, STOP OPPRESSING ME!

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Thank you for making your own thread.

Some real fucked up shit happens to boys and men because of the way they're socialized. I remember being a young girl in middle school (so ages 10-13) and watching my male friends change. Not because they were growing up, but because older boys and men in their families were 'turning them into men' by encouraging them to be more violent, pressuring them into initiating sex with girls far before they were ready. It was constant and to them, I'm sure, it felt unescapable. That was 'normal'.

It changed them and hurt them and my heart hurt for the friendly, happy, gentle boys who had been my friends.

Terry Crews recently wrote a twitter thread about being sexually assaulted and how much it effected him.

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:(

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I think this is a fairly general but accurate comment about boy's behavioral change. And it makes me sad to hear the little girl's perspective on the loss of friendship.

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So much this :/ Watching guys I cared about turn into dudebros was incredibly disheartening.

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What was doubly awful was to see how they started treating me differently. Like almost overnight all the qualities that made us friends disappeared and either I was either pushed into trying to sleep with them, or I was ignored because to them I was unfuckable.

THAT was a doozy for 13-year-old me to figure out.

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Unfortunately, the same happens to some girls. They're all sweet when they're young (mostly), just like boys, but as soon as they hit adolescence they turn into horrible bullies - mostly towards other girls; really severe, degrading stuff and spreading lies. I've always wondered what makes some growing girls suddenly flip a switch to become nasty. They developed such egos.
I watched a girl turn from a regular, outgoing person into someone that regularly disrupted classes with her friends and had to be removed. I remember she used to insult me when I got a haircut, and although I tried to never let it seem like it bothered me, it did feel embarrassing to be mocked so loudly in class in front of everyone.
Funnily enough, towards the end of school, she tried to ask me out and I flat out refused. She didn't really try to make fun of me after that, but her friends would regularly call me gay. I sometimes regret being so dismissive and only seeing the superficial, but I was kid too so what can you expect.

Sad thing is, this behaviour can last into adulthood, which is why in every single place I've worked at, there's always this weird immature workplace politics and behind-the-back mocking going on between women. It's kind of irritating being dragged into it when it always leads to some bickering, then a stand-off that occasionally gets someone fired or makes them quit.

I guess some people - regardless of their sex - just never mature for some reason.

6 years ago
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I think what it is - for both genders - is young adults/teenagers see what behavior gets normalized and 'rewarded' and what behavior makes one vulnerable, and they make the broadly socially smart choice, not the morally or truthfully right one. Because women are socialized to not directly express their anger (in straight-up confrontations or with violence, like boys do), it comes out in more underhanded ways like you've described.

Wihle I was never the stereotypical girl at that age (my method for surviving teenage years was falling in with the nerd crowd and violently rejecting femininity to the point of being 'one of the guys' for a feeling of safety and personhood) I do remember having flashes of almost.... 'predator/prey mentality', almost. I remember stopping being friends with 'nerdier', less well-off kids because I sensed how low on the food chain they were - and if I made fun of them, I'd go higher up. I couldn't articulate it then, but that's what I did. I wasn't at the top, but I certainly wasn't at the bottom.

That could be what happened to the girls you remembered. They saw how 'normal girls' behaved, or wanted to run in a 'better' crowd, so they sacrificed your friendship to do so, and changed in a way that most likely ended up for the worse. It certainly was far less genuine. I doubt there's a person alive who hasn't made a choice like that at LEAST once as a teenager - navigating that shit is hard enough without all the cultural programming one gets about how to stuff oneself into either tiny, fucked-up 'man' or 'woman' box.

I want to save those kids from going through that. I think we'd end up with far, far, FAR better adults.

I absolutely agree with your last point - it is crazy-making to be around people who just won't grow up. Like wearing clothes that are far too small, it's embarrassing to be around. They've never learned to be a person, just a teenage boy/girl, and can only operate through that lens.

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i had forgotten the BS of those times. suddenly they are coming back though my kids though.

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About 15 years ago some guys shouted at me as they drove by in their car. "Nice ass," they said.

It was then that I knew my life was over. There was nothing left for me but one Tumblr blog post after another in my quest for justice. There was a time I dreamed of being a proud donkey farmer, but that career would just be too painful now. Honestly, I cannot leave the house anymore as I am constantly calculating the trajectory of people's glances when I go outside, just to be triply sure no one is glancing at my ass.

I'm not sure if I'm on the brink of tears or seething with rage while writing this post, but it's definitely one or the other. Logic sped away in that car 15 years ago along with my anal virginity.

6 years ago
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there there its ok....

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6 years ago
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Geez, you're way too sensitive darling. You know you can't expect people to be held responsible for their actions. The way people treat you is your fault and the world is full of danger. Now shut your pretty little mouth, cause no one can be held responsible for what goes in it when it's open wide with all that complaining. By the way, nice ass. <end sarcasm>

I've had lots of people attempt to sexaully harrass and assault me as an adult and it's never really bothered me, because it was never really a threat. I lived a relatively atraumatic childhood and as long as I've been an adult I've been at the top of the food chain. If someone says they want to do things to me or touches me, then that's as far as it goes. There's low probability they can or will attempt to physically overpower me. If I did the same to a weaker person, the threat is implicit and compounded by similar past experiences. See, the implication there? Just think about other people and treat them with respect. We're all in this together.

6 years ago
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Real talk...

You seem to be conflating sexual comments with threats. They are not, in fact, one and the same thing, despite what certain people no doubt want to insist. While some sexual comments may be of a threatening nature, many are just annoyances unless you've got a chip on your shoulder.

I am not sure if you addressing me personally or people in general in your reply when you say, "Just think about other people and treat them with respect," but, in fact, I do. I would say generally I treat people with more respect than I am often accorded, in fact (case in point, I never have blacklisted anyone for a contrary opinion whether posted in plain speech or satire before). However, at the same time, I do not worry myself to death over whatever everyone around me might be sensitive to or triggered by. There is no pleasing everyone, as they say, nor is there any way to predict everyone's experiences. That said, I generally do avoid triggering other people when I am aware of an issue.

You're right that we're all in this together, and that should mean that everyone acknowledges the real complexities of social interaction, especially between men and women, and avoid both extremes of oversensitivity and actual threats. It also means both parties being held responsible for their actions and reactions.

However, that's not what most want to hear. Most just want something to be wound up over, especially if it earns them some virtue points in the eyes of a certain crowd. Yet, do you know what was considered the root of all virtues in the classical world? Patience. Not something I see being employed much.

Ready for more "respectful" blacklisting.

6 years ago
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UHHHH I TREAT PEOPLE WITH RESPECT!

EXAMPLE? NEver blacklisted anyone.

6 years ago
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Yep. Blacklisting someone is in most cases the most childish and hateful act one can perform on this site. Outside of it being used to blacklist people that are in some way manipulating the site to their advantage, it is typically used because, "I don't like your opinion and I can't stand that anyone disagrees with me!"

Unlike many here, I accept that others may disagree with me, and that doesn't bother me unless they have no argument or some illogical argument for their position. And, even then, it's not cause for me to lash out in the only way possible (blacklisting). Their parents really should have taught them to use their words rather than their (virtual) fists.

6 years ago
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""I am not sure if you addressing me personally or people in general in your reply when you say, "Just think about other people and treat them with respect," but, in fact, I do.""
Your reply chain opener actually suggests the opposite.

This conversation sprang out of using derisive humor, and even if you intended it to be in good will, it was a huge misstep if you wanted to have any kind of dialog on gender-related issues. No matter what you say after that, you have set a sour tone and discredited yourself has being honest. You may in fact be a respectful and chill person but when you lead with a cut and dry strawmanesque (if comedically exaggerated) jab, you give a distinct impression of being just another gender-war troll. Your language follows that opening example.

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Typical hypocrisy. People applaud satire and exaggeration when it highlights something they believe is an issue... when they consider someone else ridiculous. Then it is OK, and even celebrated as incisive (no I would not quite class my jab as that).

However, when it is directed at them, then it becomes an off-limits form of expression. If I was a late-night talk show host, cast member of SNL, or some Youtube personality, and I decided to parody someone or something you thought was ridiculous (or at the least exaggerated), you and many others would cheer. "Finally they will see how ridiculous they are being!"

6 years ago
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For it to be hypocrisy, it can't be just 'people' that do that, it has to be me. People who disagree with your sentiment or method are not a hivemind and therefore do not magically inherit blame or entire belief/conduct sets from one another, and you certainly do not seem to have any grasp of where my opinions actually lay.

If you feel I have done something that makes me a hypocrite, then cite what I have said or done (show me where) otherwise you're just using a blatant strawman in place of actually addressing the things I brought up, or at very best a total non-sequitur that totally ignores my post. If you don't feel I've done something that makes me a hypocrite, then why are you directing that post at me?

6 years ago
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Context is key. When you're in prison and another much larger man (assuming you're a man here) says "nice ass", then it's not "oversensitivity" to view this as a threat, that's a reasonable application of survival instinct. If a tiny old woman says "nice ass" to you in the check-out line, then it could be weird, funny, and gross, but it's not really threatening. As you say, "some sexual comments may be of a threatening nature" and these comments are typically made within asymmetrical power relationships. I work in a field where I see children and women who have been raped virtually every single day. Virtually every adult woman has been raped/"seriously" sexually assaulted or knows someone close to them who has. In general, men are more physically and economically powerful than women. It is a reasonable application of survival instincts to at least consider sexual comments made in an asymmetric power relationship as a threat. So, why get impatient and upset when that happens? You're probably a decent guy and it would be really silly to suggest otherwise just because of what you've written. I would suggest that it's not your "patience" or "logic" that makes it difficult for you to be patient with people in weaker positions than yourself, but rather a lack of experience, knowledge, and empathy.

6 years ago
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I'm sure there has been, but I can't say because I'm the wrong gender. Society views men that are harassed as weak, not confident, not manly enough, and as a dreg at the bottom of the heap. Cruel, but true.

6 years ago
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What about robot ? They got harassed, a lot..

6 years ago
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bump

6 years ago
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I can't.

6 years ago
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Depending on definition but going by MuIIys definitions in the other thread I've been harassed countless times. Can't say it bothered me too much though. Thank you for not making this thread as provocative as the other by the way.

6 years ago*
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Well, all I wanted was to read what other male experiences, and how they cope with them. Just sharing the stories.

6 years ago
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I won't be sharing my experiences, because this thread hasn't been up for long and already you yourself as the OP have made this comment, and high up on the first page is this reply, and I prefer not to offer up my personal stuff just for cheap lashing out or as ammo for people who seem to find the subject humorous.

6 years ago*
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+1

6 years ago
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6 years ago
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I'm a little confused about how the other one could be seen as provocative? (at least as far as the opening post goes)

The disclaimers may have been quite pointed, but when you see how people instantly resort to accusing people of silencing and dividing, people get short on patience. It's also mystifying to me when shortly after this one opened up, people were already making sarcastic/strawman style humor posts, and the OP even dropped a miniature "gay men are bad, women are bad, drunk women are worst" comment high up on this very page. I'm seriously not getting what scale of provocativeness people are going by here. I was hopeful for this thread being a great counterpart to the other, but it was almost instantly wasted by the needlessly bitter mentality. After having seen that I don't want to open up my own stuff because it just feels like it would be adding validity to the people drawing senseless lines in the sand, y'know?

6 years ago
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The disclaimers may have been quite pointed, but when you see how people instantly resort to accusing people of silencing and dividing, people get short on patience.

So you are saying that the "pointed" FAQ was warranted after the fact? I suppose that's one way of looking at things

6 years ago
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I'm saying it's warranted when it's a recurring pattern.

6 years ago
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I think never happened to me, is this good?
Maybe, i'm just to stupid to see.

I wanted to see your silly joke.
Thank you!

6 years ago
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I was once harassed by some female coworkers at a company party. When I complained to my boss about it, he told me to be happy, that the girls were giving so much attention to me...

6 years ago
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^ this

Flip the genders around and you would probably have meeting with HR and a review of the company's sexual harassment policy.

6 years ago
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I've had a similar experience. I was standing with a small group of women talking about regular things, but the topic turned sour (bitching about other people), so I excused myself with a toilet break. I then did not rejoin that group and started talking to my boss (about unrelated things). Later on, when I was retrieving drinks, I was surrounded by the same group of women; poked and prodded by pointy nails while one of them angrily told me I was a dickhead (for reasons unknown at the time). The other two laughed when I tried to jovially shrug them off as being drunk.

I didn't really know what to do and tried to move past them, but was grabbed and had nails dug into me while asked where I thought I was going with repeated, quieter accusations of being a dickhead.

It turns out - as I'm sure you've guessed by now - that they thought I was bitching about them to the boss. In the end, I never did tell him what they did anyway. I'd guess they were projecting. From then on, they were moody with me in the workplace. Glad I got out there because it was getting depressing.

6 years ago
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As a man you can't harress me easy, only if you are dirty or a man... :P

As woman you can touch me, catcall me etc... i don't have any problem with it... BUT it's not the same when you do this to a woman, there are culturel and psychologic differences...

Public situations...:

When you say to a man: "Damn your dick looks long!" // Every man would be proud... ^^

When you say to a woman: "Damn your boobs looking superb!" // Most woman would feel strange... :/

6 years ago
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Indeed. Whitelisted you.

6 years ago
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Good thing i'm so hideous that no one bothers.

View attached image.
6 years ago
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:( I'm sorry. Nice ass?

6 years ago
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Im so lonely and sitting at my home all the time, id welcome the harrasement...

6 years ago
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6 years ago
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Nice ass.

6 years ago
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3 girls (age 20 - 24), my brother and i was playing darts. Known these girls from a open air festival (so around 3 days).
One of them grasped, hard, from behind between my legs.
It was not funny, it was not good or anything else positive.
I made very clear that i don't want that and when she do such things again that i will slap her that she never forget it.
She was the "leader" of that 3 girls, i thinks she want to be "cool/strong".

When i flirt with a female and such things it is a other situation but there was only, nice, talkings and playing darts. No touch/contact. So absolutly no reason or invitation to do anything in this direction.

And a other experience was a female stalker.
Not really a sexual harassment but the same reactions from people around.
That female stalker fly 850km (~550 miles) to me, come with a drug addicted guy and telled him we were a pair and i had still 2 modern talking CD's from her (WTF... ich als Metaler soll von ihr noch Modern Talking CD's gehabt haben ? Das alleine war schon ne Belästigung :DDD). They made trouble at the house. After a few minutes i called the police. They came after 50 minutes. In that time the fem. Stalker and the drug addicted guy are gone. All at the neighbourhood thinked i am a gangster because the police came -_-. Later that fem. sign me up at different sites (Ebay and so on), spread my phone number in the internet and so on.
The police done nothing. Not from interest for them. You as a man should hold out such stuff and for sure you can't be only a victim. You must have done anything wrong that she react in this way.... blablabla (so in short you are guilty not the female..).
I had this "fun" over 1 year.
The reason why this female go crazy was because i not choose her as my girlfriend... i choosed a other one (i ever thought it is my choice with which females i want do good and bad things :DDDDDD).

And now question yourself what would be happen when this 2 things happens to a female ?
I am sure the police and people around react complete different.
In germany it gave at that time only women's representative. No one for males.
Right now it give women's and mens representatives BUT that are the same people as before and what i hear they do exactly the same for mens as before (= nothing). Only looks good and made the semblance of a gender equal handling.
Gender equality stands in the laws.... but in Reallife it is NOT the same.

6 years ago
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The reason why men and women are treated differently here is because 1. men are more likely to be violent 2. and men are generally stronger than women and can overpower women.
I don't need to remind you that dating men is one of the most dangerous things a woman can do. Whenever a woman is killed, it's probably by a man because of romantic reasons. Whenever men are killed it's done by another man. Think. This isn't an unfair thing. It's to protect women who are almost always the victim.

6 years ago
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There's specific cases like the one he's talking and should be threated the same way. What If a girl like Ronda Rousey who as a mere example is your couple suddenly on a jealousy rant she beats you up badly. I mean there's a lot of girls that do martial arts, should they be threated differently in court just because they're women? He has a point

6 years ago
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Sorry that explanation is partly stupid.

  1. Yes mens have more aggressiv genetic stuff (hormones) and the education is that a man had to be strong. In a boygroup is that one the looser that show weakness (and its not funny for the guys that seen as weak). The boys/males at the top of that hirarchie get the girls.
    Sounds very easy... is very easy.... humans are animals (that can reflect more and change there behavior when they want and concentrate on it). A lot of people don't want see that fact because they thing a animal is in any way under the human. Not my thinking.

  2. Yes. And this make it better when woman are the offender ? That is the reason for NOT the same RIGHTS for each gender (as wrote in the laws) ?
    I am not the strongest male but yes i am mostly stronger then a female... and what bring me that when i am the victim of sexual harassment or against that stalking ? When i use my strenght to defend myself against that then i will be punished not the "weak" woman. That's fact.
    On the other side each woman can use her strenght to defend herself against sexual harassement.

Woman kill too. Woman are not every time victims !
Read all around.. your sentence is so wrong that i question myself if you really think that this can be true.

And please not forget that most men's not go to the police because it is a shame.. it let them look weak (not good -education, groups and stuff i explained before- outside your flat/house with your partner that know your weakness too)

6 years ago*
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Disclaimer : I didn't read the post you were replying to. Skimming through replies before sleep. Sorry if I totally missed something vital, as this is more just a talking point and it does deal in generalisations. You're totally forgiven if you want to disregard this post given it is spammish ;P

"The reason why men and women are treated differently here is because 1. men are more likely to be violent"
I'm not so sure that takes into account the absurd number of abuses upon men that aren't reported. It's cyclical. They don't get reported because of how they are treated when they do, but the opinion that men are more violent and less effected by abuse is perpetuated because of lack of reported / resolved cases. Think of it like the rape reporting issue. If a system fails to properly respond, the statistics it generates are flawed.

It should make people consider how women would react if they were expected by their host culture to express less emotions, and were openly mocked for showing the full human spectrum. It stands to reason that they too would become pressure-cookers more prone to violent outbursts when their stressors (or specific buttons) become pushed. Violence is not something I easily glaze over, but as someone with a crazy layer of neurosis, an anxiety disorder and an inferiority complex, I'm all too familiar with the kind of dark seed it can plant in you when the only recourse you feel you have is total and utter silence and tolerance, or pretending it doesn't effect you and you have to laugh it off or be seen as less.

There are layered issues in our society, and the attitudes and pressures are a complex landscape that interplay with one another. What may seem like a simple (if horrible) stat often has an underpinning that can be addressed. I feel that one of the best ways to deal with negative issues that seem to stem from men, would be to take steps to rehumanise them. Unless you have an exceptionally small or infirm frame, a gentleman who loses his temper is almost immediately seen as a potential danger and something that needs to be immediately suppressed for the safety of others, whereas the fairer sex is typically assumed to have been provoked into that state and (somewhat patronisingly) has to be placated. It's surprising how these gendered attitudes usually have a dual role when damaging preconceptions are in play, which is why I still insist that in an ideal world, the whole 'gender wars' participants would be each others greatest allies.

I can't claim innocence either. I would love to claim to be a total and complete egalitarian in attitude and in action, but try as I might, because I like everyone else was raised with the whole gender stereotypes thing, I do feel a natural inclination to protect women if I happen across a public argument that seems to be out of hand. And yes, I do feel more threatened if I end up taking part in one and the other person is a guy. Though I try to mentally recognise that they're no more or less likely to engage in violence based on sex alone, that ingrained trend is there. My personal experiences should actually dictate to be more worried about violence from women, and how I also wouldn't be able to respond with a likewise degree of force without immediately being seen as the aggressor. Cognitive dissonance is a weird thing, but it pays to be mindful of the many pitfalls and oversights in ourselves and our interest groups / polling techniques, and always remember the traps that orbit around matters of statistics.

I don't even know where I was going with this. I think maybe bare stats without full consideration just irk me, and that I am almost never convinced by stats alone given peoples unconscious habits of bias. Anybody can attribute something to a sex without quoting credible sources (and credible sources can have crippling oversights or even direct disagreements with other credible sources). Reading between the lines is where the truth usually resides, and flat stats always make me go "hmmmm".

So uh...
Yeah.
I'm gonna... press 'submit' now, and hope I didn't come across as preachy. That one thing just tripped a ponderous stint, and I figured this thread was as good a place as any to drop it. Almost none of that was pointedly directed at you, just a spin-off rambling. xP

6 years ago*
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Only time was in the public sauna where a guy said I,had a nice package between my legs...

But again that is harassment from a male... to a male... does it count?

6 years ago
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Could be a compliment lol

6 years ago
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Speaking as a gay male, I think, yes, it is harassment if there wasn't any kind of mutual interest being shown. Fortunately the vast majority of gay men -- because we've had to be careful in public about showing interest -- can take a hint as well. So if you ever do encounter this kind of boorish behavior, simply saying "I'm straight and not interested" will put an end to the situation 99.5% of the time. The remainder, well, there are always desperate douche-bags in every group. If it happens in a business space like a sauna don't feel bad about telling the management and letting them deal with the guy.

6 years ago
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Yes it wasn't warranted and no interest shown, no eye contact whatsoever and never said anything to the person...

What made me even more uncomfortable was he said it as he was leaving the sauna and rubbed his hand across my knee ... I was horrified! I was only one in the sauna...

I figured it was his way of making a pass so as long as I didn't respond then I was good... but I stayed awhile in the sauna after he left afraid to do anything.

6 years ago
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Yep, he was making a pass. And doing it while he was leaving so that he was primed for flight mode in case your response turned ugly.

Sorry you had to go through that. You likely had way more power in the situation than you realized. If you had seen him later and said "Not cool dude. Don't do it again or I'll report you to the staff," he likely would have freaked and left the place very quickly.

6 years ago
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6 years ago
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Once a girl was putting herself all over me and trying to get a kiss out of me and I didn't want anything. She ended up managing to kiss me in the cheekbones and I was able to walk away after that. I felt very uncomfortable.

Btw, how do you access those reforced.nl giveaways? I never figured it out.

6 years ago*
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The reforced.nl images are the same as regular signature of giveaways, but with the giveaway code hidden. People post them to show the name of the game they give and its status, but include the code in their post or in the tooltip of the image. In this case it's probably in the line below "Some giveaways", but I can't figure out how to resolve this string into giveaway codes.

6 years ago
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Statistics
91 guesses
46 players
45 solvers

6 years ago
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Ahh, so it's one of those?

Free tip of the day: For important topics (like this one) which could benefit from frequent bumps, even sgtools filters are counter productive, let alone a puzzles.

6 years ago
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i don't want people come here (this thread) only for giveaways really, but if they intend to create a dialogue and then they see and want a giveaway as an extra not as a reward to create constructive talk.

6 years ago
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The point is that some people, who would otherwise contribute to the dialogue, won't do it if they don't see this thread. One compromise could be to request people who enter the giveaways to share their view, even if it's just a one-liner "haven't experienced harassment". Even if only few will do it, it will still help keep things visible.

6 years ago
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Interesting, thanks didn't saw it

6 years ago
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Ah, ok, thanks! I thought you clicked in the image and it took you to the giveaway.

6 years ago
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6 years ago
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I can't believe someone seriously complained about being harassed as a man in the catcalling thread. That's like someone says they've just discovered they have cancer, and replying "but I just cut myself while shaving too."

6 years ago
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As far as I know, no one did. It's just included in the "FAQ". Your analogy sounds a bit weird though. Are you implying that harassment is inconsequential if the victim is male?

6 years ago
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The meaning of the parallel is duplicitous:

1) that the scale and importance of one problem is several orders of magnitude greater than the other.
2) that replying that way would show a worrying lack of self-awareness, at best.

6 years ago
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Are you talking about cancer versus razor cuts or female victims versus male victims?

Also, just to get it perfectly straight, complaining about getting harassed in an awareness thread about harassment is showing a serious lack of self-awareness in your opinion?

6 years ago
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Shh, be careful now. You'll shatter their fragile view of reality.

Some people don't like and refuse to accept the idea that men undergo harassment just like women, but are even less likely to report it due to being seen as weak. Their response to compare male harassment as "cutting yourself while shaving" basically goes back to this: "Men's problems aren't as big of a deal, you're strong get over it."

6 years ago*
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I never said anything like that, that's just a pre-made, biased narrative that you're bringing to the discussion, from the beginning to the end of your post, sadly.

6 years ago
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complaining about getting harassed in an awareness thread about harassment is showing a serious lack of self-awareness in your opinion?

If you don't understand why complaining about razor cuts shows a lack of self-awareness, I'm afraid there isn't much more I can say.

6 years ago
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Except that a show of solidarity is a good thing. Honest discussion of matters is a great way to bring people together (assuming we can avoid the usual charged garbage that certain unsavory people throw into gender-related discussions). By belittling those who chip in with their experiences based on their sex, you are only serving to dismiss people, which just fuels the ongoing divisiveness and provide the sexists who always attend with extra ammo. Harassment is harassment. Reducing it is a good thing, and people shouldn't be scoffed at when trying to discuss matters unless they're trying to muffle other peoples experiences with their own.

6 years ago
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No worries, I honestly didn't expect anything else but I figured I'd give it a chance

6 years ago
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Would you mind trying your reply again but being more clear?

To pre-empt a potential lack of reply :
Harassment is harassment. Genitalia doesn't confer a magical shield against intimidation or dehumanisation (and the implication that being a male means you should tolerate more in terms of harassment flies directly in the face of deconstructing the gender bullshit that women face).

6 years ago
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(and the implication that being a male means you should tolerate more in terms of harassment

Men are subject to way less harassment than women, so honestly I don't know where you get that from.

6 years ago
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So you're not going to clarify yourself then?

I was speaking of the implication of men being expected to be more tolerant of harassment they face. I didn't say anything about the quantity. You are falsely equating the two, and I don't appreciate the goalpost moving. Why can't people just have an honest conversation about these things for once? It's pretty fucking depressing to go through the same old shit every time. :|

6 years ago
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I'll just go ahead and say what most of you think.

Men get harassed way more than women, we just don't bitch about it.

Let the blacklisting of angry feminazis begin :)

6 years ago
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I'd be surprised if 1 out of 20 men think this.

6 years ago
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I'm assuming you're male?

Women actually get harassed way more than men. Men getting sexually harassed at their workplace is a rarity or an oddity, while for women that's almost a given. Men and women are both loathe to speak about such harassment, but it is not nearly close to equal, let alone leaning towards men.

Not to say that men can't get harassed, or that it's not equally awful when it happens to men, but you'd be shocked at just how common harassment of women is.

6 years ago
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I didn't want to this to happen, EVERYBODY on both threads knows about how it happens, I'm not talking about the frequency of how it happens to males or females, i'm talking about how it happened and how some cope with it.

The other thread invited to create a new one about this topic, so I did it.

6 years ago
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I reckon it's a terrible idea to post in such a thread, but here I go anyway.

I feel like we have a situation where women abuse men that is extremely common.

It's when woman make a man pay for things like entry fees, drinks and food, taxi, buy them cloths and many other things or have them fix their electronics, do sanitary installations and renovation or garden works by making them believe there was a chance and pretending they were interested in them.
Extremely common.

But I'm sure people will say this is okay, something totally different. Not a form of (sexual) abuse. Men just are expected to be nice, right?
To me this is at the very least on the same scale as woman having to endure catcalling (but to be honest actually on top of the emotional pain that comes upon realizing you've been abused (possible for quite a long time) you actually wasted a lot of hard work, money and time).

Ironically this is what happens to men when they talk / try to flirt to woman in the places they are allowed to talk to them, in bars and such - because when they do it anywhere else then it's catcalling.

6 years ago
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i didn't know women stopped random strangers in the street and forced them to work for them or buy them stuff, then discarded them.
i thought guys had a choice when a girl asked them something, unlike harassed women.

by making them believe there was a chance and pretending they were interested in them.

so you are saying men do all these things to get sex from a woman, not because men can be nice.
basically everything in this world revolves about either getting paid while working, or getting sex when helping someone.

6 years ago
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But I'm sure people will say this is okay, something totally different.

I won't say it's OK but yes, it's completely different. What you're talking about is not abuse, it's manipulation. When you find out you're manipulated you can usually drop the whole thing and walk away. It's not possible with abuse.

And as Mully said below, sex is not some kind of reward for helping women, just like helping other men doesn't get you easy money or free beer.

6 years ago
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Manipulation is not abuse?

6 years ago
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They're different words for a reason.

6 years ago
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Is this really a good argument? Just because they are different words doesn't mean it's not abuse imho. Some are even suggesting that saying "How are you doing?" to a stranger is abuse in the other thread.

6 years ago*
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It's all about intent. I didn't want to go into dictionary mode, hence the one-liner, but I'll elaborate. I used "abuse" but I should probably have used "harassment" instead (bear in mind I'm not a native English speaker, on top of having the vocabulary of a five-years old so I might be semantically wrong).

In the case of the manipulative girl detailed above, she has a goal (getting free stuff or whatever), manipulation is just a means to that end. If you find out about the manipulation, you can usually just tell her to fuck off and be done with it, since it won't work anymore, although it might turn into abuse at some point ("give me that or I will tell your boss / wife / dog you raped me", that kind of thing).

Harassment is almost never a means, but its own end. When confronted with it, you can't choose to dismiss it if the harasser wants it to continue. You don't have any choice in the matter.

6 years ago
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Funny how you should use having a vocabulary of a five-year-old. This is exactly what our English teacher kept repeating to us in a university course. I still think I'm on par with at least an eight-year-old native speaker lol.

I'll, obviously, grant you that manipulation is not harassment but it's still hurtful behaviour and from my perspective to a higher degree than eg. getting spoken to or whistled at in the street.

I'm not sure I follow with your distinction regarding avoidance though. How is it easier to walk away from being manipulated, even if you suspect that you might be, than just keeping walking when harassed on the street?

Also, could you elaborate on "It's all about intent"? It feels like you're confirming what I've been saying in the other thread but I don't want to assume anything.

6 years ago
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I'm not sure I follow with your distinction regarding avoidance though. How is it easier to walk away from being manipulated, even if you suspect that you might be, than just keeping walking when harassed on the street?

It's not really about it being easier, but more about having control over the situation.

Also, could you elaborate on "It's all about intent"? It feels like you're confirming what I've been saying in the other thread but I don't want to assume anything.

It's the whole ends vs means thing I mentioned. I can forgive a harmful method if the goal isn't, but I find harm for harm's sake despicable. I don't really know what you said in the other thread since there are replies pretty much all over the place and I didn't read every single post.

6 years ago
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Well, then I don't understand how someone being manipulated has more control over the situation than someone being spoken to or whistled at in the street.

So you assume that all manipulations aren't intended to be harmful but all catcalling is then? I got to admit that, since people seem to be using catcalling and street harassment interchangeably I don't really know what goes into the terms.

6 years ago
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I meant that you have more control over the situation when you understand you're manipulated, not during the time you don't realize it.

I'm not assuming anything in absolute terms, there's always room for interpretation. But the more I try to elaborate the further I stray from FeiLing's example (which was what I was commenting on in the first place) into the realm of general notions.

(Catcalling as a term can't be translated in French, the act it refers to is encompassed into the broader concept of harassment, so I'm not really the best person to ask about semantics - remember the whole 5 yo vocabulary thing. It's something that I would have a lot of trouble explaining without going into examples, and I don't want to do that.)

6 years ago
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I feel concrete examples would have been good for the overall discussion. As far as I can tell street harassment, as it's been defined in the awareness thread, can be anything from simply addressing strangers in the street to actual physical assault.

6 years ago
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When you find out you're manipulated you can usually drop the whole thing and walk away. It's not possible with abuse

But it's possible with catcalling 🐱

6 years ago
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It's usually possible (and often the best choice), but not always. "Abuse" was a bad term on my part anyway.

6 years ago
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There is a key distinction here that you are missing.
The word you are looking for is a "user". While that is dishonest and shitty, men also do this too, such as lying and also leveraging their stature, money and physical belongings to persuade for things they want without being forceful or hostile. It's a power dynamic that both men and women partake in, and yes, it results in a lot of honest folk being burned. People who are users are almost universally seen as douchebags, both men and women.

"Abusers" however are those who use open belittling or objectification, taunts, intimidation (both passive and active), mockery and coercion that skirts the line of legal fine-print. Catcalling is a form of abuse but thankfully one that is usually on the mildest side of the abuse spectrum, merely objectifying and annoying the target, though it can frequently segue into open mockery. The problem is that there are cases of catcalling that are more overtly (and knowingly) intimidating, though that is usually male catcallers on lone women, and usually preys on worries of people becoming violent, which is pretty much an act of coercion where the aggressor carefully makes sure they can claim innocence. When you mix these two sides together, it causes even innocent compliments or mild catcalling to take on a shade of doubt, where there is that underlying worry of it turning sour if the caller is rejected. Men are totally just as likely to receive a similar kind of negative attention, but it is just less likely to take the catcall (flirt / sexual) flavor, and instead be a challenge or a taunt by default.

At first glance, the difference between a user and an abuser can seem small, especially with how varied catcalling can be in intensity. However abuse is always done to a person, whereas users require participation from the target. Users are universally seen as douchebags, but abusers are sometimes ignored as something to be tolerated, and targets speaking up can be seen as 'whiny'.

I think it's an important distinction to make.
And yeah, people suck, regardless of what genitalia they're rockin.

6 years ago*
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Closed 6 years ago by MeeMesmo.