It depicts a very real and dangerous problem and to simply trivialize it and brush it under the rug does not solve it.
The truth is the truth - whether you like it or not and the reality is that women do deal with these issues of harrassment and public sexual advances many times in India.
To say some Indian women would have gone through their entire lives not facing some form of harrassment was laughable to me.
I suspect women in my country have to at least deal with some form of harrassment, even if it's dirty jokes aimed at them or something of that nature. I still suspect it is unlikely that this is typical of a day in India for a woman.
To call this 'manism' is to imply that this behavior is typical of men, or that there is something inherent about being a man that causes one to try to rape people. That's one of the problems of modern Feminist thought, which sees men as bad and sees men as the enemy.
Here are some stats on street harrassment faced by women across the world. There are different surveys conducted on this. One of them states that 95 % of women in India and Pakistan would have faced harrassment. Another one says seven out of ten.
I've never been there. Maybe women have men bumping against them on the bus like that video all the time. I don't know. But I do wonder what is included in 'harrassment.' Does it include a man yelling crudely out of a window, "Hey baby shake that thing", and dirty jokes? Or is it more along the lines of the man on the bus bumping his body against the woman's, or men trying to rape women right in the street? If it includes the minor things, yes, just about every woman has been harrassed. Probably most girls dont' get out of high school without hearing some sort of inappropriate dirty joke.
In my country, Feminism hasn't helped this. If you read dating advice from modern men, they might suggest splitting the bill for the first date. Some women don't want a man to open the door for them. The previous philosophy in my culture is that the man calls the woman on the phone. He opens the door for her. He walks on the side of the sidewalk that has the traffic, in a kind of protector role. If he marries her, he takes on the responsibility to provide for her. I heard of men telling their wives they are lazy and need to get a job, nowadays. In the old days, it was considered rude for men to use profanity around women. Profanity is rude anyway, but those who used it used it around other men. Now, society pushes gender neutrality, and boys from middle or high school use profanity indiscriminantly. One of my professors in college was older and said he still bristles when women use the F-word. When he was younger, women didn't talk like that. But I suppose equal rights and exposure to every other word being the F-word in Hollywood movies have changed that.
And your solution - go with a man. So now women have to hire bodyguards? Don't you think the men committing these things should be the ones to change ?
Certainly, the men should change, but in the meantime, individuals should protect themselves. If I lived in a rough neighborhood, I could tell himself I shouldn't have to lock my door because the people out there should change. I could put up a sign on my house that says, "Don't tell me to lock my door. You guys stop breaking into houses." But for personal protection, that wouldn't be very smart. If a typical day in India involved a serious rape attempt as in that movie, it would make sense for women to walk around with male escourts (husbands, fathers, brothers) to get to and from work or shopping or to travel in very large groups. I certainly hope the situation is not that extreme in India.
" Feminism which:
- Is based on Marxist reasoning
- Is anti-family
- Portrays being a wife and mother as slavery
- Has lesbians as influential thought-leaders
- Stirs up hatred against men
- Blames for all women's woes
- Depicts all men as potential rapists and abusers
- Creates division is society
- Is opposed to the Biblical teaching on oneness between man and woman
- Is opposed to the Biblical teaching that wives should submit to their own husbands
- Is too divorce-friendly.
"
Which is NOT the case for some of the women here who have been trying many, many times to try and explain that to you.
I think as a brother in Christ, you do them a great injustice to refuse to ''READ'' really "READ" what they're trying to say and give them the benefit of doubt.
I have read what posters have said. With the millions of women who hold to philosophy above and call it 'feminism' out there, why would you want to call yourselves 'Christian Feminists'. It doesn't make sense to use the label if you don't subscribe to the same school of thought to some degree. If you call yourselves 'feminists' won't your adherents identify with the writings of people who belong to the movement described above? Why not use another label?
And also, I didn't name 'feminism'. I had nothing to do with it's development or evolution, certainly before I was born. I wouldn't have named such a woman after being 'feminine' if it were my choice. But you are labeling 'manism', associating that random set of things that bother you about certain men in your OP with 'man.' As if being a man made one fit the description. If 'manism' is a bad thing to you, why wouldn't you think being a man is a bad thing? The leaders of radical Feminism also seem to think of men as being bad, too.
May I tell you that when I saw your post deriding feminists and then crying foul about manists, I believe then and there my thread achieved success.
Do you realize the hypocrisy RIGHT there? You're upset about the term manist, and you do not like the generalization it represents but you have no qualms generalizing feminists into the list that you just gave me!
The difference is, feminism already exists and millions out there hold to a certain philosophy. You are creating the term 'manism' (aren't you?). If millions hold to the philosophy I described, does it make sense for a small group to go by the same term, but with a different definition? How many of their adherents will distance themselves from the other philosophy if they use the same time?
Now, coming back to myself, I would say that I am neither a feminist nor a manist.
That's a good thing.
If you want to go ahead and make up a term called "Womanism" and become a "Womanist" or make some dangers of that, then go ahead. Just always speak the truth.
I don't think it would be appropriate to list things about some women I don't like and create a philosophy named 'womanism', just like I don't like the term 'manism' for traits about men. Feminism is already labeled and named and has it's followers. I think it's an unfortunate label, but it already exists.
And may God bless you, too