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Make this place more welcoming to Women and POC

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Maysie
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Joined: Apr 21 2005

I forgot to say to E.Tamaran that swearing at babblers is not okay. Stop it.

Stargazer, you're right about Slumberjack's post, which I cross posted with. That context is always missing from any analysis of what the seal hunt has become.

I never called you racist, Stargazer, nor would I. I respect you a lot, Stargazer, and you know it. But as a moderator I also need to think of someone coming upon a thread, and seeing a discussion ensue without knowing the backgrounds of the various babblers. This is what I mean when I say words matter. On babble most of the time it's all we have.

I think this discussion has been helpful and I'm going to keep it open for now. Drift is good, sometimes. And I need to go away and think about what you have said, Stargazer. Thank you for that.


Unionist
Online
Joined: Dec 11 2005

Ok, Maysie, in that case, I'll jump in!

FWIW, I fully support Stargazer here, and the attack on her is unconscionable - especially coming from someone who wished "death by orca" to FN leaders on this board just because they don't share his view of the Olympics.

I personally find the seal hunt (as practised on the East Coast anyway) to be inhumane. But I oppose the self-righteous campaigns centred in Europe and the U.S. condemning it. It's up to the people who live by that hunt to decide. Meanwhile, the glitzy crusaders should turn their attention to the crimes committed by their own countries under such flags as NATO before shedding crocodile tears abroad.

 

 


Stargazer
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Joined: Jun 9 2004

Aw but see, E. T knew my background, and choose not to see the distinction I made, and then attacked me twice over it.

I am unsure why he/she aligns himself/herself with the Euro practice of culling for fur when there has and always will be a difference.

But okay, I'll stay out of this thread for woman and FN people from this point on. Although it is a little ironic, given the thread is about FN, POC and woman on Babble.

Someone gets themselves all jacked up over something which was never said, and I am the one who needs a talking to. Argh!!


Maysie
Online
Joined: Apr 21 2005

Okay.

True confession time.

It's Sunday morning.

And on a personal level I've had an extremely difficult past few weeks. Not that that's any excuse.

AND, the biggest reveal, I didn't read the thread on the Nene Caribou hunt that E.T. linked to. Until just now. This is a dumbass rookie moderator mistake that I should have known better than to do. Fuck.

Stargazer, I apologize. I'm going to leave up my arguments and all my posts as they are, so people reading it can see what has transpired. But I stand, humbly, corrected.

So.....

Is there any way to get the thread back on track? In my irrational state of eternal optimism I will keep it open for now.


Unionist
Online
Joined: Dec 11 2005

Maysie wrote:

Is there any way to get the thread back on track?

Absolutely. You can condemn E.T. for calling Stargazer racist and calling for G. Muffin's banning. You can warn him that such further actions will exclude him from this board forever - because he has acted this way many times in the past. Now, I'm not a mod, so I wouldn't normally make such suggestions - except that you prefer to leave this poisonous thread open, and you asked, so there's my suggestion.

 


jas
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Joined: Jun 6 2005

G. Muffin wrote:

No probs.

As the amazing Temple Grandin says, we owe animals a decent life and a humane death.

Well, technically, we don't owe animals any kind of death, but given that we have a relationship with them, I know what this means. I respect Temple Grandin a lot, and her work.

 


G. Muffin
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Joined: Sep 28 2008

jas wrote:
G. Muffin wrote:
As the amazing Temple Grandin says, we owe animals a decent life and a humane death.

Well, technically, we don't owe animals any kind of death

Or life, for that matter.

Quote:
I respect Temple Grandin a lot, and her work.

She's one of the people I most want to meet.  Her and Oliver Sacks.  Extraordinary characters, both.


Stargazer
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Joined: Jun 9 2004

Maysie don't sweat it. I sure would not want to have your job. You can't be there 100 percent of the time, or read every thread. I certainly don't expect you to. Relax and have a good day.

I don't want to see E. T. banned, but it would be nice if he/she would calm down a bit with the f bomb. As unionist pointed out, this is not the first time.

 


Sineed
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Joined: Dec 4 2005

My husband and I got to see Oliver Sacks when he was last in Toronto promoting his book Musicophilia.  He's much the same as in his books.

I'd also like to meet Temple Grandin.


skdadl
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Joined: May 5 2001

It's true that "barbaric" is etymologically a term of bigotry (I would say essentially bigoted, but Derrideans are not supposed to say essentially). It is onomatopoeic -- it was the way that Greeks had of describing both the language of the people they first made contact with around the Black Sea and those people themselves. To the Greeks, since they couldn't understand the language, it sounded like nonsense -- "bar bar bar," Greek mockery that means something like noise or nonsense, and definitely Not Greek. I see that the wiki says the equivalent in English would be "blah blah blah," but I don't think so. Blah blah blah has content -- it means you're describing the speech of someone who's saying something you probably understand but disagree with or are bored by. Barbaric signifies a nothingness, and the Other.

 

Since I learned that, I've stopped using the word almost entirely. I might use it on my own bastards -- eg, I might describe the conspiracy behind the Cheney torture regime as barbaric. The word definitely jumped out at me when I read Jason Kenney's smug and cynical rewriting of Canada's handbook for immigrants -- there's a despicable document we have to revise as soon as possible.

 

But back to the OP: I started reading this thread because I believed I was included in the OP (I am a woman and a feminist). This is a site focused on left politics in general, and it has always been true that it has drawn a lot of people interested in electoral politics, although many others aren't. It has always drawn some people interested in foreign policy, although many others aren't. Electoral politics and foreign policy aren't the whole of politics (I'm presuming people here agree), but they are the only politics some people care about. Discussing them and debating them is often boring if you're not a wonk (I definitely feel that way about electoral politics), or it leads to pretty fierce contention. I haven't seen anything like the old Middle East threads that used to happen here -- I mean, I remember days when people sat all day pounding the keyboards at one another. I'm not sure when that stopped -- maybe everyone just got tired? Everyone figured she could write the entire debate out, all sides, in her sleep? But I digress.

 

Anyway, a lot of people simply withdraw when they see that kind of contention happening. I don't want to overgeneralize, but I think it is observably true that more males than females are happy to engage in it. I do not believe that people who refuse to fight are wimps; a lot of fights become stupid and boring, and not that many women have much invested in comparing sizes. Sorry if that sounds like an anti-male statement: I don't mean it that way; I love men. I'm also willing to fight when I think some point bigger than me matters, and I love foreign policy. But I don't feel the urge always to have the last word -- I think that's the kind of contention that a lot of women turn away from because they just can't take it seriously.

 

There are women around here who are great at electoral politics and some who are strong on foreign policy, but they are minorities and I don't see that changing soon. Maybe others could expand on why that's so.

 

I'm not FN, so maybe I shouldn't pipe up on that score, but E. Tamaran's reactions to Stargazer kind of shocked me. As a feminist, I am always really annoyed (usually it's just an eyeroll, though) by people who expect all feminists to think the same way about everything. I love being turned into a stereotype about as much as anyone else -- ie, not at all. And I can assure E. Tamaran that there is no lock-step think among feminists about many things, as people here must have seen a couple of months back during the more heated debates over decriminalization. Slumberjack's post seems to me a valuable historical brake on sheerly abstract commitments.


jas
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Joined: Jun 6 2005

For the record, I use the term barbaric to describe what I see as barbaric practices: torture, prisons, factory farming, zoos, cockfighting, dogfighting, bullfighting, and many other systems which systemically and violently express and reinforce a captor/captive, master/subject relationship where the lives of the captives are not respected.

 


Unionist
Online
Joined: Dec 11 2005

Wow. Skdadl actually posted on-topic - and rather brilliantly too. I also appreciated SJ's and jas's posts. Maybe this thread can be salvaged yet.


Stargazer
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Joined: Jun 9 2004

Skdadl saves the day! I'm just happy she's around again :)


G. Muffin
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Joined: Sep 28 2008

Skdadl, thanks for your thoughtful post.  "Barbaric" is a loaded word, I guess, and I'll try not to use it.  "Inhumane" is another problematic one.  I care very much about the English language and it frustrates me to see it mangled in the name of gussying it up in order not to offend folks.  

For example, I am a crazy or a lunatic and am proud to be so.  I also smoke.  And my support group is called Smoking Cessation for People Living With A Mental Illness.  Believe me, calling me crazy is infinitely better than calling me a person living with a mental illness.  For one thing, it sounds as though there are two of us.  

I'm on solid ground here because I'm a member of the "special" group.  I have no such entitlement when it comes to our First Nations people so I stand corrected (actually sit corrected).  Live and learn, I guess.  [Insert platitude here.]

I care very much about animal rights and I think the seal hunt is horrible and a black eye on Canada (as if we needed one).


al-Qa'bong
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Joined: Feb 27 2003

This is why it's good to have chicks around here:

 

Quote:

I do not believe that people who refuse to fight are wimps; a lot of fights become stupid and boring, and not that many women have much invested in comparing sizes. Sorry if that sounds like an anti-male statement: I don't mean it that way; I love men. I'm also willing to fight when I think some point bigger than me matters, and I love foreign policy. But I don't feel the urge always to have the last word -- I think that's the kind of contention that a lot of women turn away from because they just can't take it seriously.

 

This bit pretty well nailed it. Years ago, when I used to post on the "Class Struggle Anarchism" forum, Mme. Qa'bong questioned me as to why I was wasting my time engaging in such nonsense (she puts babble in the same category) when there are so many real, serious things I could be doing.

 

Oh yeah; tuna sandwiches are barbaric.

 


Ghislaine
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Joined: Feb 15 2008

Al-Q: could you not call women "chicks" (even while complementing them) in a thread about why babble is not more welcoming to women and POC?

Considering that various dictionaries list "uncivilized" "savage", etc. for synonyms for the term barbaric, I think it should be avoided. Even if it is being used to describe non-FN people, the connotations are that they are just like those "barbaric uncivilized savages". That is the historical context. 

The seal hunt has proven quite contentious here. I think what we have to obviously keep in mind is that there are going to be differing view of it amoung FN people and the Inuit. But, one thing to remember is that the Inuit themselves do not want simply the right to hunt seal for subsistence eating only. This is patronizing. There are Inuit business designing and selling clothes made from sealskin. It is has been a boost to their economies. It has meant that more people can stay in their communities. 

I think we need to stop with this dichotomy that no Inuit or FN person wants to hunt seal for anything other than immediate sustenance, why there is a racist view that that is all they should want or be allowed to do. 


remind
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Joined: Jun 25 2004

Michelle
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Joined: May 10 2001

al-Q, please don't bait by using the term "chicks" in this thread.  The rest of your post is excellent - why mar it with a term you know is going to be contentious?  Yes, some babble women occasionally use it in a cute or ironic way to identify themselves.  I think you know why it's not appropriate for you to do so, especially here.  Thanks!


al-Qa'bong
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Joined: Feb 27 2003

I thought skdadl would like it.  As for its being contentious, only the hopelessly narrow-minded would find it so, given the context. 

I wish I didn't have to explain this, but using this particular term while stating that women are generally too serious-minded to partake in the frivolity of online forums was supposed to reinforce the point I was trying to make.


skdadl
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Joined: May 5 2001

G. Muffin wrote:

For example, I am a crazy or a lunatic and am proud to be so.  I also smoke.  And my support group is called Smoking Cessation for People Living With A Mental Illness.  Believe me, calling me crazy is infinitely better than calling me a person living with a mental illness.  For one thing, it sounds as though there are two of us.  

 

LOL. In a minor way, Muffin, I know the experience. Sometimes, o' course, the two of us think we are the most interesting people we know (and we don't even have to get out of our pyjama to think so).

 

But srsly, I think you're right to be bothered by euphemisms. I don't know the answer to this one. You can see why nice people work up some of them in order to avoid objectifying others. The problem is, that desire to be nice above all feeds into the tyranny of the bourgeois proprieties and enables real bastards to play the same game from the opposite direction. "Enhanced interrogation techniques" and "extraordinary rendition" and "redaction" are just so much more polite, y'know, than torture, kidnapping, and censorship, and if you push a lot of people by using the harsh true words, they will write you off as an extremist, or maybe they'll do even more than that.

 

Telling the truth is an exceptionally important thing, even when we put it clumsily. Clumsy language is often more truthful than euphemisms ever can be. Orwell thought so, and he warned hard against the politically subversive powers of euphemism, polite lies.

 

Being kind is an exceptionally important thing too, though. It can be funny when you call yourself crazy the way you sometimes do, or when I do, because we've both adjusted. I'm not sure I want to give some other people permission, though.


skdadl
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Joined: May 5 2001

al-Qa'bong wrote:

I thought skdadl would like it. 

 

I did, actually, al-Q. It made me laugh. I call the other "girls" "chicks" all the time. Sometimes I catch hell for it too. As I say, feminists don't always agree with each other.


Slumberjack
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Joined: Aug 8 2005

What is frivolous for some is distinctly objectionable for others, regardless of context. It matters as well who is using the descriptive words. For example, I can't imagine the label of 'pinhead' being accepted as a matter of frivolity except among the closest of good humoured friends, and even then its probably wise to use such a term sparingly.


al-Qa'bong
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Joined: Feb 27 2003

And then some people are just plain careless readers.  I said that posting on internet forums was frivolous, according to my seriously-minded missus.


Michelle
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Joined: May 10 2001

As I said in the previous post I made, there's a difference between women calling each other "chicks" in jest or affection, and guys calling women "chicks" in a thread about why women and people of colour don't frequent babble so much.  A newcomer would have no idea that you were sharing an in joke with skdadl, and there are lots of women out there who find "chick" degrading coming from men.  Yes, there will be the occasional feminist woman who just loves it when guys call women "chicks".

I know feminist women who jokingly call themselves and each other "bitch" too, as a term of endearment or even empowerment.  Doesn't make it okay for a guy to use such a term on babble in a discussion such as this one, even if your very best female feminist friend thinks it's cute when you call her that.

I don't know why it's so necessary to go over these extremely basic principles of feminist discussion.  Like, seriously, what year is this?  You're not a stupid person, al-Q, so I have to conclude that you're just doing this to troll and bait the moderators and posters that you know will take offence.  I'm getting sick of it.  Which is fine for me because it's my last day so at least I won't have to deal with this from the moderator end of it, thank goodness.

But you know, it sure makes me feel less and less like bothering babbling at all when I read that kind of feminist-baiting shit coupled with the injured innocence routine afterwards.

Did I mention that I'm a woman?


skdadl
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Joined: May 5 2001

Forgive the OT, but someone should start a thread about marriages/partnerships where one partner is an online addict and the other thinks her/his partner is spending too much time talking to "imaginary friends." I must know at least a dozen couples like that now. I don't know how they cope.


skdadl
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Joined: May 5 2001

Sorry, Michelle. We cross-posted. I didn't mean to undermine you.


E.Tamaran
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Joined: Oct 17 2009

For RevolutionPlease:

Sigh... In a thread about why are there so few women, POC, (and I guess FN) on Babble, so far we've seen FNs culture described as barbaric and a man calling women chicks. Not a good sign.


al-Qa'bong
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Joined: Feb 27 2003

Quote:
You're not a stupid person, al-Q, so I have to conclude that you're just doing this to troll and bait the moderators and posters that you know will take offence. 

 

I suppose you'll conclude whatever you want, but I said in as many words that I wrote it because I thought skdadl would appreciate it. Then I went on to say how it reinforces the argument I made that women aren't as frivolous as males.

 

How can you construe any of this as trolling or baiting?


remind
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Joined: Jun 25 2004

Personally, I took no offense at Al'Qs use of the word "chicks" and really do not see it as a sexist word at all, and have found way more other things sexist here than that recently, so again I guess it is a subjective and a experiential thing occuring.

Words used in a sexist tone have a way of imprinting upon our emotional selves, I believe, so when we hear, or read, them again, the first emotional impact we felt when we experienced them as a sexist put down, comes into play and thereby overshadows our perceptions of the word or words, and how we see them being used currently.

 

Chick(s), chickie, or even chickie poo, have always been used  as female empowering words in the circle of friends I have had for decades now. And here Caissa would say context counts. ;)

 

Having said that, not all women perceive as I do, nor I as other women do, our experience base is different pertaining to word use in a sexist manner, so am not trying to undermine the moderators  definitive statement not to use it, as it can and does offend some women when they hear men using it broadly.


G. Muffin
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Joined: Sep 28 2008

E.Tamaran wrote:
so far we've seen FNs culture described as barbaric

Not by me, we haven't.


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