Actually, systemically, yes. Men are judged on appearance. If you saw a handsome in-shape man in a well-tailored business suit and a older chubby man in dirty coveralls, who would you consider to be the "better man"?Eric wrote:Individual men, yes. Systemically, no. You don't see a system in place where men are judged on their appearance, where their job performance is judged on their gender, where their opinion is judged by the size of their boobs, and where how they are dressed plays a role in determining how a crime against them is treated. There are reams of studies showing these are all true for women, as a systemic issue.
OK, on gender of man versus woman, I'll concede, except in certain professions. Note how many women excel in sales jobs, even though their gender has nothing to do with what is being sold.
Re: boobs: no. For men, it's their height, the size of their biceps, and the size of their wallet that matters. Ask any short skinny guy. There are plenty of studies showing how height gets preferred treatment.
Re: how dressed: ask any guy dressed like he's from the 'hood versus a guy in a business suit.
So, it still applies. And the men on the short end of the stick aren't supposed to complain. "Suck it up, take it like a man." In other words, it should be OK that they're getting screwed by the system, too (at least in the opinion of the people on top of the system).
Precisely. Just because one group is oppressed doesn't mean that others aren't oppressed, too. Nor that some of the "oppressed" aren't gaming the system for their own profit (i.e., strippers, clients of divorce lawyers).Eric wrote:Are their exceptions? Of course there are. But to use people you know to make a general case is like me saying "I know a lot of gay men, so most men must be gay". Any study that uses a small sampling is bound to have errors when applied to a larger group, our personal knowledge & circle falls into that "small sampling" category.
This problem isn't going to go away until it is no longer profitable for it to exist. People maintain this system because they are either profiting off it, or are being deluded or forced by peer pressure to maintain the system. Witness the stereotypical "nice guy", otherwise known as "sucker".
Off my soapbox now....

