Monday, January 05, 2009

Post2Hugo

I am in the midst of working on other things, but I thought I would toss this little morsel to all of you snapping piranhas out there in the dark waters of cyberspace, demanding to be fed! ;-)

I stumbled upon this item while I was digging through forgotten folders on my computer. It was in a text file, and appears to have been a comment which I posted on Hugo Schwyzer's blog way, way back in the dusty past. I can only faintly remember this, and I think that it dates to my pre-blogging days!

The file was titled 'Post2Hugo', and I must have saved it as per my usual modus operandi when I am posting comments on other people's websites. I keep such items for sentimental reasons of course, but also because I may want to exhibit them later and say "look what Joe Blow didn't let through moderation on his blog! Well here it is, you get to read it anyway!!"

I also save such items for their intrinsic value, since I am often inspired by the heat of the moment when I compose them, and they are often pretty decent material. The following is a case in point. It was evidently posted to a thread where a certain news story was under discussion—exactly which story I cannot say, although I think it might have been the one about the retired NYC doctor who committed a spectacular arson/suicide when he was apparently getting shafted in a divorce settlement. (He set fire to his Manhattan brownstone flat.)

I share the following because the points it makes are damned important— and central, and pivotal—and because it summarizes those points rather well. And no, Schwyzer did NOT let it through moderation. At least not so far as my quick Google query could reveal:

Regarding what DaveTheRave said: Quite so! Steals the words straight out of my mouth. But still, I'd like to add a bit.

The feminist modus operandi is to throw a SPOTLIGHT upon episodes of malfeasance by males, the more spectacular the better. And if there is a titillating sexual aspect to it, that's the best of all!

The motivation behind this policy is both anti-male, and political. Let me put that plainly; the purpose is to collectively blacken the name of MEN, to harm MEN as a group, to injure MEN as a group, to poison the well of opinion against MEN as a group... and all for the central purpose of justifying further political action against MEN as a group.

An incident of spectacular male villainy (or even buffoonery!) surfaces in the news, and the feminists are all over it like flies on sh~t! They can never treat the episode sui generis, oh heavens no! It is always a morality tale about men in the abstract. In so behaving, feminists show themselves activated by base considerations.

They are also pouring gasoline upon the flames of the present gender crisis, which is unwise in my opinion.

Regarding the news story under discussion, my own position is very simply that a crime has been committed, that the accused (if he were still alive) would be entitled to due process like any other citizen, and that if found guilty by proper standards of evidence ought to recieve a sentence fitting his transgression. I offer NO excuses, NO justifications for what he did. I will undertake NO spin-doctoring of a political nature in this case or any similar case. I will take the plain-vanilla, Joe Friday facts exactly as they are, because....well, I'm a Joe Friday kinda guy, I reckon! ;)

I would expect others to do the same. And if they fail in this, I would take them severely to task for it. The ball is in THEIR court. The onus is on THEM specifically. I sincerely hope they will straighten up and fly right. If they don't, then a worsening gender crisis will be one of the PREDICTABLE consequences.

6 Comments:

Blogger ForeignWomenOnly said...

"The motivation behind this policy is both anti-male, and political. Let me put that plainly; the purpose is to collectively blacken the name of MEN, to harm MEN as a group, to injure MEN as a group, to poison the well of opinion against MEN as a group... and all for the central purpose of justifying further political action against MEN as a group."

BINGO... Perfect description of 99% of the stories that we see in the media about women who are "victims". It's even permeated every FICTIONAL comedy show on TV today... every man is a buffoon and a bad father (not one good father or intelligent man in all of America according to today's TV). Could you imagine if the media and TV portrayed ANY other group in such a biased negative light???

--FWO

4:33 PM  
Blogger Fidelbogen said...

"Could you imagine if the media and TV portrayed ANY other group in such a biased negative light???

Ah-so! Ancient MRA wisdom there. . .

This reminds me once again of the prevailing double-standard which governs "bashing":

Male-bashing is okay; it is "praised with faint damnation".

Female-bashing (or "misogyny" as some people like to call it)?? Don't you dare!!

Now, while I don't advocate female-bashing, I don't honestly see it as anything to get fussed about. If male-bashing is socially licensed (and it IS!), then I think it is ironic as hell to lecture men if they say snarky things about women. In fact, such behavior (on the part of men) is only logical, and only to be expected. Universal symmetry demands it!

10:43 PM  
Blogger Marty Lee said...

I am currently in a news forum where "gender issues" are often highlighted. What I find disconcerting are the numbers of men who can spout the exact same sort of conspiratorial drivel I read years ago in some feminist manifesto on campus. It's quite as if their minds don't have the power to resist and idea, even a bad one!

If we live in a Nanny State, Nanny is a feminist.. To wit:

There is close resemblance between deontology and linguisticism not least in the assumption that duties, like verbal habits, are 'learnt in the nursery' and what nanny has told us goes for the rest of the world too.

2:10 PM  
Blogger Fidelbogen said...

@MartyLee:

"There is close resemblance between deontology and linguisticism not least in the assumption that duties, like verbal habits, are 'learnt in the nursery' and what nanny has told us goes for the rest of the world too."

Ah-so! Here I recognize your favorite thesis, that we are (mostly) all (and always have been) uncritical participants in the societal norms of our respective historical time-frames.

4:45 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yo,Fidel! Stumbled upon this.Pretty good stuff.Thought you might like.

http://www.welmer.org/2008/08/31/sticks-and-stones/

12:52 PM  
Blogger Fidelbogen said...

@Anon:

Thank you anon! I went to that URL, and behold! It was very, very good! :)

9:41 PM  

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