Doesn't it make you swoon? |
Why I don't really relate to the MRM is rooted in my
overarching distrust of identity politics. I do think that there's all kinds of
room to criticize the excesses of feminism, and some points made by the MRM are
valuable in that regard. Decades of
ideological protectionism has produced a very real feminist echo chamber with
next to no external checks on its claims.
The MRM can by helpful in remedying that. The MRM also brings our attention to real
issues that men are confronted with.
Glaring disadvantage (to varying degrees depending on jurisdiction) in
divorce settlements and child custody arrangements being the most obvious
example.
The feminist demonization of male heterosexuality; this
presumption underlying much of feminist theory that male sexual attraction
towards women is somehow demeaning and objectifying of women is something else
that needs to be challenged and the present taboo against disagreeing with
feminism desperately needs to be broken here.
The MRM can help in that regard.
The equation of compliments and polite civil greetings on part of men
towards women with harassment, objectification or even oppression, commonly seen
on social media, is a manifestation of this.
If taken at all seriously, especially in any kind of public policy
context, this kind of thinking could effectively close the door on prospects
for male-female encounters of all but the most institutional kind.
The ever expanding definition of rape, and the ever
narrowing definitions of consent, and the increasingly onerous requirements for
obtaining legal consent - an express verbal "yes" given for every
touch, kiss or caress, and even that be nullified if there's any alcohol or
mental illness or any factor that could in the slightest call into question the
strict legal capacity to give consent, constitute another manifestation of
this. The end game here, I suspect, is
to make legal intercourse, for all intents and purposes, impossible for men.
Although most feminists profess to disagree in principle
with the notion that all things "boy meets girl" are inherently
sexist or oppressive - and may even trot out their own relationship as proof of
this, the restrictions imposed on gender dynamics by these kinds of very
popular demands made by very widely circulated and credible media outlets that
represent the mainstream of liberal opinion on gender issues, would make
establishing even platonic, let along erotic relationships extremely
difficult. That many feminists choose to
make exceptions to their own rules for themselves and the men they get the D
from should not be taken as proof of feminism's flexibility and open mindedness. It should be taken as proof of moral
hypocrisy on part of the feminists so doing, and a tacit admission on their
part that their system of sexual morality and conduct is no more reasonable and
in alignment with human nature than that of the religious conservatives they so
smugly see themselves as superior to.
Compound that with inundation of feminist perspectives casting heterosexual
relationships in so consistently negative a light; as being about nothing other
than unequal distribution of domestic labor, unequal pay, riven with male
insecurity and unreasonable male behaviors contrasted to the relief women are
expected to seek and experience in all-female spaces, as characterized by
universally poor male sexual performance and an expectation of female
preference for marital celibacy, dildos, lesbianism, asexuality, promiscuity, anything other than relational intimacy - all hermetically sealed by a propensity to
yell "fragile male ego" at any dissention from any of the above on part of
men - as if this kind of petty weaponized rejection is something we should just sit back and relish, and feminist gender dynamics become a mortal threat to healthy
heterosexual relationships, even if it turns out to be death by a thousand cuts
rather than a swift beheading.
A strong MRM could be a countervailing force for reason and
love in gender relations. On the other
hand, groups like MGTOW could just up the ante and make things worse rather
than better. Don't get me wrong: you,
dear reader, be you male or female, have every right as far as I'm concerned to
live your life as you see fit, and if that involves not having a significant
other of the opposite sex, good luck to you.
I once wanted an unattached life myself.
May you succeed where I failed.
But to advocate widespread rejection of the opposite sex, as feminism
often implicitly and, in the case of separatist feminism, explicitly does, and
MGTOW likewise does, is to advocate for the infliction of protracted neurosis and frustration culminating in a demographic holocaust
upon whichever population is to embrace this as a form of gender based
political activism. It would inflict
incalculable and irreparable damage on the psychological fabric of such a
society.
But even a less strident form of male activism than MGTOW
could end up becoming a gender flipped version of the worst aspects of
feminism. I've noticed that in every
debate I've ever read between feminists and MRAs - though flame war is a better
description in just about ever case, since debate implies a reasoned exchange
of views and that's most definitely not what happens - the exchange always
boils down to each side saying to the other, "you're just ugly and can't
get laid" - with cats and mother's basements figuring in there somehow.
Inevitably, one side resigns in frustration over the strident unreasonableness
of the other, and both remain more convinced than ever that the opposite sex is
hopelessly screwed up. There's not much
of a future in this.
Taken to their logical conclusions, demands upon
heterosexual relationships would end up more closely resembling shari'a law
than they would anything previous generations of liberal feminists struggled
and fought for.
Wait a minute ...
Of course, feminism -
in its more reasonable forms, is still needed to protect and safeguard the
rights of women. Life is certainly not all wine and roses for all women at all
times, and men are not blameless. This is especially true in communities where,
for religious reasons, women still very much are second class citizens. This is what I find both astounding and
disturbing about What looks like an alliance of feminists and Islamists,
particularly in opposition to the Trump presidency. While I don't condone the more boorish things
Trump has said about women, you can't compare the danger posed to women by
macho locker room bluster with the danger posed to women by shari'a law. Given the dour attitudes that both feminists
and Islamists appear to have towards free and fun expression of happiness and
attraction between the sexes, however, I can see the kinship the two might have
with one another, though from where I sit, it promises to be a stormy
relationship.
What I worry about regarding the MRM, though, is its own
potential to become a kind of rank gender partisanship. That "Male good female
bad" thinking could, and does, easily arise from it.
Because that, in its own way, is exactly what happened to
feminism. What began as being "just about equality" or just about
"the same treatment of women as for men" has become a blinding and
fanatical form of gender partisanship. Motivated by dogmatic adherence to
feminism, whole cohorts of young women (and their male sympathizers) have
circled the wagons and harnessed collective groupthink to hermetically seal
themselves away from any kind of criticism or dissent. Driven by a sense of
universal and historical mission, these women regard themselves as quite
entitled to ceaselessly make unilateral demands of men with no countervailing
concessions, tar all men with collective responsibility and guilt by association
for the very real crimes and misdeeds of some men, and to effectively kill any
prospect for intimacy and trust between the sexes by making militant
confrontation the permanent and universal norm for gender relations. Backed by
unilateral academic and media support and an arsenal of canned responses and copy pasta with which to respond to nay-sayers, the impact that this has had on gender
dynamics is nothing short of devastating.
As an antidote to this, we need to step back from identity
politics. We don't need a male version of the same thing. Given what we should
now know about ideological and identitarian polarization, feminism and the MRM
will most likely feed off one another and each further radicalize in response
to the other. This is certainly what I've seen in every single exchange between
MRMs and feminists that I've ever seen. If that process becomes normalized, it
could well mean the death of heterosexual love in its entirety. The prospect of
this worries me greatly. I really hope people of both (yes, both) genders can
learn to take a step back from their attachments to gender ideology and start
reasoning honestly about these kinds of issues.
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