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- Xref: sparky alt.feminism:6395 misc.misc:4161
- Newsgroups: alt.feminism,misc.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!ftpbox!mothost!lmpsbbs!areaplg2.corp.mot.com!bhv
- From: bhv@areaplg2.corp.mot.com (Bronis Vidugiris)
- Subject: Re: violence
- Organization: Motorola, CCR&D, CORP, Schaumburg, IL
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 10:16:11 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.101611.29415@lmpsbbs.comm.mot.com>
- Followup-To: alt.feminism
- Sender: news@lmpsbbs.comm.mot.com (Net News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: 137.23.47.37
- Lines: 79
-
- Muffy Barkocy writes:
-
-
- > No, the issue is that every time someone talks about the violence that
- > is practiced against women, some people here start shouting about the
- > violence that happens to men. Not only do they not seem to want us to
- > work on the problem *we* are concerned about, but they further want us
- > to work on *their* problems. No one has *denied* that men have
- > problems, those are simply not necessarily the problems that many
- > feminists are concerned about. It is apparently more interesting to
- > advocates for men to attack anyone working on women's problems than to
- > *do* anything about the problems they are supposedly so concerned about.
- >
- > Muffy
-
- Heaven forfend that we should ask *you* to work on a problem that's not
- yours. Reciprocity demands, though, that if you don't work on our problems,
- we shouldn't work on yours - it's not in our best interests, for one thing.
- Besides, you wouldn't want to ask US to work on YOUR problem - would you?
- [No one is actually and literally directly asking in so many words, but
- that's almost besides the point. I do think the question of is it 'US' and
- 'THEM' or is it 'US' - i.e. are we all in the same boat together or not -
- as being a valid issue, though.]
-
- So, the question remains - is violence a 'men's problem' and a 'women's
- problem', or is it everyone's problem?
-
- I have some preference for it being everyone's problem, myself. Politics
- has been moving away from that direction - unfortunately, IMO.
-
- BTW - if you do happen to come up with a solution (I hear a lot of *talk*
- about solutions, but no actual solutions) please let us know. If it's a
- reasonably and non-discriminatory solution, I might even be for it. If
- it's sexism and gender discrimination in the guise of a solution (like, for
- example, the Biden bill - mostly sexism, very little solution) I for one will
- probably not be interested.
-
- To do something unprecedented in this thread, I will actually start actually
- talking about a real 'solution', though I see it as impracatical.
-
- Even a cursory study of the statistics of violence quickly shows up an
- interesting an obvious anamoly - Japan. In spite of a very high population
- density (which is a definite risk factor for violence), it has a very low
- violence rate (for homicides and many other forms of violence).
-
- The question comes up - why is Japan different? Especially, how is it
- different from the US, which has a very high rate of violence?
-
- Naturally, the answers to this question are many and varied, and largely
- subjective. The following are some of my own thoughts - and, as I am not
- really as familiar with Japan as I would like, I may be missing the boat :-(.
-
- I see a very tight, rigid, and *unwritten* social code as being one component
- of the 'Japaneese' system. People are so busy trying to figure out what the
- rules are that they have less time and inclination for violence. The custom
- that people don't actually say what they mean directly, but 'drop hints',
- contributes to this atmosphere. People intrigue heavily, but rather than get
- into loud arguments and stab each other with actual knives, they use the time
- honored methods of politics, inuendo, and intrigue to stabe each other with
- verbal knives. Of course, the high suicide rate shows that sometimes the
- verbal knives can be just as telling as the physical ones, but such is life.
-
- Another, slightly less morbid, aspect of the Japennese society that may
- contribute to lower violence is better education. I think some of this
- comes from social attitudes - being well educated is more of a social
- advantage in Japan (IMO) - in the US, managment is the 'fast track' to
- success, education is not emphasised nearly as much (IMO).
-
- BTW - I'm not sure I'd really like living in a society like Japan
- (esp. the intrigue ridden one of my imagination) better than the US
- personally - but it would be arguably safer if the US were more of a mirror
- image of Japan culturally. I wouldn't mind the emphasis on education,
- though.
-
- Using the Japaneese model, 'women's lib' is not really an important factor
- for low violence - Japan is not especially noted for non-sexist gender
- roles - quite the opposite is my impression - but continues to have low rates
- of violence - for everyone, not just 'men' or 'women'.
-
-