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- Newsgroups: soc.women
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ra
- From: ra@asuvax.eas.asu.edu (Starcap'n Ra)
- Subject: Re: Sexist? Dangerous?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.235919.14392@asuvax.eas.asu.edu>
- Organization: soc.women
- References: <1992Nov13.100559.16318@leland.Stanford.EDU> <1992Nov16.210017.11701@netcom.com>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 23:59:19 GMT
- Lines: 78
-
- barry@netcom.com (Kenn Barry) writes:
- > Suppose it was at a costume party; Halloween, perhaps, or the
- > Hooker's Ball?
-
- Well since the whole idea of a costume party
- is for everyone to dress unusually, comments on
- personal appearance would be appropriate to the
- occasion.
-
- > Suppose it was at a single's event, where meeting
- > strangers is the name of the game?
-
- No.
-
- Of course, I'm talking about opening comments from
- a stranger. After meeting someone at a single's event
- and talking 10 or 15 minutes on other subjects, I might
- then consider making a comment on their appearance if
- I really felt the overwhelming need to and it was
- a private conversation.
-
- > Or from a "safe" distance, like across the street,
-
- No, almost even worse. It would seem too much
- like heckling.
-
- > and in an innocuous manner? Suppose "nice hat" is a
- > lead-in to asking where you bought it, because he'd
- > like to get one just like it?
-
- The whole point of fashion is being clever enough
- to dress better than everyone else, Kenn! :-) It's
- rude to ask someone to divulge their fashion secrets
- and thus allow everyone else to look as good as they
- were clever and resourceful enough to do on their own.
- Try asking a lot of people with unusually clever stuff
- where they bought it and see how many vague "Oh I don't
- remember"s, "Oh it was a gift"s, and such you get.
-
- > I think "appeals to the referee" in such trivial matters of
- > social etiquette are just a way of avoiding responsibility for making a
- > personal judgement of the situation, and further poison a social
- > atmosphere which is often pretty poisonous already.
-
- Your point is well taken, and I share your
- remorse about poison social atmosphere, but with all
- the shit a woman has to take from hordes of rude men
- every single day, you can't really expect them to be
- all that concerned about hurting your feelings.
- They just get *tired*, if not downright angry, you
- know? And remember, she has no responsibility to
- communicate at all, never mind make a personal
- judgment of your character at first impression just
- because you happen to feel like informing her of
- something about which she's probably already quite
- aware.
-
- As regards the poisonous social atmosphere of
- which you speak, I will only go so far in catering
- to that. I won't make remarks to strangers on their
- appearance, but on the other hand I won't go so far
- as to cross the street just because some woman
- approaching in the opposite direction might be afraid.
-
- > Tell me one needs to exercise judgement and I'll agree
- > with you; tell me a compliment that was well-meant and
- > well-received is a social sin by definition, and I won't,
- > no matter what Miss Manners says.
-
- Well fair enough; of course, nothing is
- absolute. (?) But really, don't you find listening
- to women fawning over each other's outfits tedious
- at best?
-
- --Starcap'n Ra {ames,gatech,husc6,rutgers}!ncar!noao!asuvax!kennedy
- {allegra,decvax,ihnp4,oddjob}--^
- ^---------------The Wrong Choice
- internet: kennedy@asuvax.asu.edu
-