GIMH
Norwood's on Fire
Look how easy this isGayle was in the wrong
Look how easy this isGayle was in the wrong
Indeed! The complete and utter final argument that locks the whole discussion! We needed that!Look how easy this is
This is a statement that attempts to undermine millennia of evolutionary imperative. How a woman looks has always been intrinsic of her value, from the complexion to distinguish youth and fertility to wider hips that indicate better success in childbirth. I don't deny these have been hijacked by marketing and fashion industries to twist what is attractive in 2016. Beautiful women are simply the winners of a genetic lottery inheriting a legacy that has huge value in the West and other women want them to feel guilty about it.When a man player makes a ***ual comment to a reporter, he is not just harmlessly flirting. He is reminding her - and the audience - that her looks are part of her value.
Attractiveness doesn't belittle the woman it's a bonus. Like a six-pack is a bonus for a man. You can still live your life how you want, its just the mountain may be slightly steeper.By centring the conversation on her physical attractiveness, it belittles the rest of what she does. It also places the "right" of the man to make a ***ual advance over the woman's right to be comfortable in her workplace. It re-enforces the idea that we are only here on men's terms.
God forbid your experience be belittled. Your ideas and feelings have no rights. If you are offended, vote with your feet. My right to belittle your experience if you think that the Moon landing were a hoax isn't trumped by your right to have your experiences protected. Some people's "experiences" are wrong in objective ways.It was belittling-women's-experiences BINGO.
No.MUH RIGHTS!
Yes I was wrong about using the word "never". Well done to focus on that. Yes, I should have said "almost never".
It might be, actually. Strictly speaking.Gayle was being gross and crass. He made an interview that should have been pleasant, awkward. I don't see this as a big deal as the underlying assumptions are flawed.
From the article posted by watson:
This is a statement that attempts to undermine millennia of evolutionary imperative. How a woman looks has always been intrinsic of her value, from the complexion to distinguish youth and fertility to wider hips that indicate better success in childbirth. I don't deny these have been hijacked by marketing and fashion industries to twist what is attractive in 2016. Beautiful women are simply the winners of a genetic lottery inheriting a legacy that has huge value in the West and other women want them to feel guilty about it.
Attractiveness doesn't belittle the woman it's a bonus. Like a six-pack is a bonus for a man. You can still live your life how you want, its just the mountain may be slightly steeper.
Then this talk of "rights". Neither of the examples are rights: the only rights that are important are the right to free speech (excluding hate speech). If a woman is offended by a man asking her out (which would be very strange) she should reject him and if he continues to bother her, get management involved. If the reporter had put Gayle in his place then this situation would have been avoided.
God forbid your experience be belittled. Your ideas and feelings have no rights. If you are offended, vote with your feet. My right to belittle your experience if you think that the Moon landing were a hoax isn't trumped by your right to have your experiences protected. Some people's "experiences" are wrong in objective ways.
Gayle was being lewd and there is a difference. I'm don't want Jack Nicholson to be fined or banned from film because he creeps me out.
Yeah no-one is saying Gayle has violated anyone's rights here. Having a right to do something doesn't necessarily mean you should, though.
The SJWs have taught you very well, right out of the textbook. Of course, rational debate and argument isn't on the agenda.
Congrats, the worst post in a thread full of them.Gayle was being gross and crass. He made an interview that should have been pleasant, awkward. I don't see this as a big deal as the underlying assumptions are flawed.
From the article posted by watson:
This is a statement that attempts to undermine millennia of evolutionary imperative. How a woman looks has always been intrinsic of her value, from the complexion to distinguish youth and fertility to wider hips that indicate better success in childbirth. I don't deny these have been hijacked by marketing and fashion industries to twist what is attractive in 2016. Beautiful women are simply the winners of a genetic lottery inheriting a legacy that has huge value in the West and other women want them to feel guilty about it.
Attractiveness doesn't belittle the woman it's a bonus. Like a six-pack is a bonus for a man. You can still live your life how you want, its just the mountain may be slightly steeper.
Then this talk of "rights". Neither of the examples are rights: the only rights that are important are the right to free speech (excluding hate speech). If a woman is offended by a man asking her out (which would be very strange) she should reject him and if he continues to bother her, get management involved. If the reporter had put Gayle in his place then this situation would have been avoided.
God forbid your experience be belittled. Your ideas and feelings have no rights. If you are offended, vote with your feet. My right to belittle your experience if you think that the Moon landing were a hoax isn't trumped by your right to have your experiences protected. Some people's "experiences" are wrong in objective ways.
Gayle was being lewd and there is a difference. I'm don't want Jack Nicholson to be fined or banned from film because he creeps me out.
I think what Dan was getting at was the implication that people have an unqualified right to free speech, the targets of said speech be damned. Which in literal terms is incorrect, in most commonwealth nations anyway.Yeah no-one is saying Gayle has violated anyone's rights here. Having a right to do something doesn't necessarily mean you should, though.
Haha, yesssssssss.The SJWs
I thought what Dan was getting at was that Captain_Cook was debating against an argument that no-one had made in the thread. Yeah Chris Gayle had the right to say what he did, but no-one was actually saying otherwise; just that he was wrong to do so. Free speech entitles you to say what you wish without forceful censorship; not without criticism.I think what Dan was getting at was the implication that people have an unqualified right to free speech, the targets of said speech be damned. Which in literal terms is incorrect, in most commonwealth nations anyway.
The bolded is pretty much the only thing in this post that I agree with. So hey, coulda been worse I suppose.Captain_Cook;3602271[B said:]Gayle was being gross and crass. [/B]He made an interview that should have been pleasant, awkward. I don't see this as a big deal as the underlying assumptions are flawed.
Right, so you're genuinely suggesting that evolutionary biology is a justification for ongoing ***ism in modern society? Yeah, no. And while this opinion is, in itself, a serious issue in society when discussing women in sport, even if we accept that looks presently are an intrinsic component of a woman's 'value', insofar as such a nebulous conceptualisation exists (**** talking about women like amorphous economic abstractions, ftr), that does not make Gayle's comments any less wrong; it is not a mitigating factor in judging the moral dimension of his actions, though obviously there's the structure-agency discussion in terms of causes of those actions.Captain_Cook;3602271[B said:][/B]
This is a statement that attempts to undermine millennia of evolutionary imperative. How a woman looks has always been intrinsic of her value, from the complexion to distinguish youth and fertility to wider hips that indicate better success in childbirth. I don't deny these have been hijacked by marketing and fashion industries to twist what is attractive in 2016. Beautiful women are simply the winners of a genetic lottery inheriting a legacy that has huge value in the West and other women want them to feel guilty about it.
And you don't take issue with 'unattractive women' (again, insofar as we can actually quantify a completely nebulous classification) experiencing worse outcomes because they didn't hit the 'genetic lottery'?[/quote]Captain_Cook;3602271[B said:][/B]
Attractiveness doesn't belittle the woman it's a bonus. Like a six-pack is a bonus for a man. You can still live your life how you want, its just the mountain may be slightly steeper.
My god, you are so white. If, by some chance, you are not white, I suppose I applaud your community for so well-and-truly ascribing the perks of white-ness to you. Dat privilege.Captain_Cook;3602271[B said:][/B]
Then this talk of "rights". Neither of the examples are rights: the only rights that are important are the right to free speech (excluding hate speech). If a woman is offended by a man asking her out (which would be very strange) she should reject him and if he continues to bother her, get management involved. If the reporter had put Gayle in his place then this situation would have been avoided.
This is basically the 'Islam is not a race' argument here. You've also, weirdly, taken the free speech argument about opinions not being protected and find-and-replaced 'opinion' with 'experience', as if the two are one and the same. To put it bluntly, they're not. That sentence makes no sense.Captain_Cook;3602271[B said:][/B]
God forbid your experience be belittled. Your ideas and feelings have no rights. If you are offended, vote with your feet. My right to belittle your experience if you think that the Moon landing were a hoax isn't trumped by your right to have your experiences protected. Some people's "experiences" are wrong in objective ways.
Huge difference between choosing to not watch a Jack Nicholson movie because he creeps you out and, uhh, being told that the only way to stop the creepy dude from hitting on you is to quit your job. Else you just have to put up with it, because some random bloke on a forum who's never experienced this doesn't think its that serious.Captain_Cook;3602271[B said:][/B]Gayle was being lewd and there is a difference. I'm don't want Jack Nicholson to be fined or banned from film because he creeps me out.
It wasn't she didn't so it is.My question is, if this was the Women's Big Bash, and she was propositioning him, would this even be a thread?
If anything it's Captain_Cook who ought to vote with his feet because the property owners attempting to sell their product to the public -- Ten, CA and the Melbourne Renegades -- have all sided with McLaughlin. If he doesn't like it he shouldn't buy it.Also this suggestion that Mel ought 'vote with her feet' by, presumably, quitting her job because if she wants to interview BBL megastars like Chris Gayle she's gotta deal with the ***ual harassment, is incredibly poor.