home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.words-l
- Path: sparky!uunet!world!kieran
- From: kieran@world.std.com (Aaron L Dickey)
- Subject: Re: Deep beliefs
- Message-ID: <BzqC0r.F4F@world.std.com>
- Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA
- References: <Pine.2.4.9212230941.A29136@mickey.cc.utexas.edu>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 20:38:51 GMT
- Lines: 76
-
- Susan Harwood Kaczmarczik <amadeus@CCWF.CC.UTEXAS.EDU> writes:
-
- >I don't guess you've ever been hooted at and ogled on the street by
- >perfect strangers too often. Ya know, each time it happens I keep waiting
- >for that special inner glow -- that one that tells me that Cindy Crawford
- >and I are this close, and I too can soon have my own workout video -- and
- >it hasn't come yet. Must be some defect in my character... or maybe I
- >just need a good, well, you know.
-
- Too often? Try never. I've been publicly harrassed on the street (and
- plenty of other places) quite enough, but mainly because I'm deemed not
- attractive *enough*. That, combined with being almost completely ignored
- at social functions, says just as much to me about societal shortcomings
- as getting "approving" catcalls. Perhaps the grass is always greener, but
- I'm not so sure...
-
- You don't want to be in a Cindy Crawford-style video anyway. All the
- experts are saying her techniques are physically dangerous. :)
-
- >Oh, that's what it was doing for me! I see. Now I welcome those
- >catcalls, I really do.
-
- I didn't say you should be happy to put up with such crap, just that the
- downside of attractiveness is, IMHO, a small price to pay for all the
- doors it opens up in society.
-
- >BTW, I don't consider myself amazingly attractive. I'm pretty, I have
- >(well I did before I had a baby) a nice figure, and I have slightly larger
- >breasts than average for my size (except for now, when I could feed
- >Somalia without much effort). It's that latter thing, I think, that has
- >contributed to most of the involuntary salutes I've gotten in my life.
-
- You don't have to be *amazingly* attractive, just not "ugly". As for your
- breasts, well, ::ahem::, you're probably right.
-
- >You would rather have people howling at you on the street than get turned
- >down for a date?
-
- Honestly, yes. I would gladly trade the occasional, or even the often,
- howls for the howls of unattractiveness and loneliness I have now.
-
- >I agree with you that sexual harrassment works both ways. But what are
- >you angry about? Which group are you trying to champion here, men or
- >not-pretty people? I think if you look at the numbers, women of all
- >levels of attractiveness are still getting discriminated against --
- >whether not hired for a job because she's not pretty enough or turned down
- >for an opportunity because they need someone smart not pretty, and she
- >might be a temptation -- more than men.
-
- I'm trying to champion mainly non-"attractive" people; I was just making
- the point that I don't think it's all a matter of men in general being
- sexist jerks. Women do it too, and I think a lot of people overlook that.
- And I don't doubt that women suffer all sorts of job discrimination for
- all sorts of reasons; I also know from experience that the exact same
- things happen to men, though not as often.
-
- >It's not men so much as it is the system set up by men and, sadly,
- >maintained by men. To say that all men are assholes is just as foolhardy
- >as saying all attractive people have it easy.
-
- Well, to a point I agree about the system...I don't think it's quite as
- male-dominated as it once was, however.
-
- >(BTW, have you read _The Beauty Myth_? Some interesting points on this
- >very subject...)
-
- That bitch? I always wondered who she slept with to get into Oxford. :)
- Seriously, I haven't read the book (though I've been meaning to), but I
- have seen her being interviewed a number of times, and find her take on it
- all rather interesting. I also find it interesting that a number of her
- critics attacked her for putting her picture on the back cover (like 90%
- of all other book covers aren't printed the same way these days) because
- she was "too attractive". Sometimes you can't win for losing.
-
- --Aaron
-
-