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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!news.service.uci.edu!ucivax!gateway
- From: muffy@remarque.berkeley.EDU (Muffy Barkocy)
- Subject: Re: Women's and men's safety
- Nntp-Posting-Host: alexandre-dumas.ics.uci.edu
- Message-ID: <MUFFY.92Dec17113231@remarque.berkeley.edu>
- Newsgroups: soc.feminism
- Organization: Natural Language Incorporated
- Approved: tittle@ics.uci.edu
- Lines: 74
- Date: 21 Dec 92 23:32:38 GMT
- References: <1gkv73INNaqq@agate.berkeley.edu> <3144@devnull.mpd.tandem.com>
-
- In article <3144@devnull.mpd.tandem.com> dwelch@devnull.mpd.tandem.COM (Dan Welch) writes:
- >In article <1gkv73INNaqq@agate.berkeley.edu> vanhoek@bend.UCSD.EDU
- >>(Karen van Hoek) writes:
- >>It's definitely true that men don't go wandering in a lot of areas
- >>late at night, but the number of areas where men _can_ go walking
- >>late at night is far greater than the number a woman can go to.
-
- >Not true at all. What *is* true is that men think they are safer in
- >certain places. The truth remains, however, that they are just as
- >vulnerable to assault.
-
- [...]
- >You male friends are fooling themselves -- as, to a certain extent,
- >you are, too. Anytime you go outside at all you are placing yourself
- >at risk. Men often feel that they are not as much at risk, because
- >(after all) they are rough and tough and able to handle themselves.
- >The fact is, though, if someone has a gun pointed at you, there isn't
- >a whole lot you can do, no matter how rough and tough you are.
-
- [...]
- >Karen, I understand your feelings, but you have to understand that the
- >"safety" men have is just an attitude, and one that may be wrong. I
- >am willing to go walking at night, not because I think I am some great
- >hero that can fend off attack, but because I know that, in reality, my
- >chances of being attacked are pretty small.
-
- You're right that no one is absolutely safe, and that a man who thinks
- he is "safe" is fooling himself. However, there *are* differences for
- men and women:
-
- 1. Women are, on average, smaller. My SO can pick me up and toss me
- across the room if he wants to. He's not in incredible shape, although
- he's fairly strong, but I am very light.
-
- 2. Women *look* more vulnerable. If someone was going to pick me or my
- SO to attack, would they pick the stocky, muscular one or the skinny,
- lightweight one? This is a societal percetion, too - people *think* of
- women as vulnerable, and in need of protection (see the "chivalry"
- threads that pop up every once in a while - this is one reason this
- stereotype of women *needing* protection and men being "good" and
- providing it is so damaging). I understand from some crime-prevention
- shows that I have seen that muggers *do* prefer attacking women (this is
- from an interviewer talking to a guy who was convicted of several
- muggings).
-
- 3. Women are less likely to be trained in defense. My brother was sent
- to self-defense training; I was not. Certainly, I *could* take such
- training, but how many people really do? A lot more men learn to fight,
- one way or another. Not all attackers have guns, after all. The guy
- who tried to snatch my purse didn't have any weapons at all.
-
- 4. Women are often dressed more vulnerably - dresses, high heels, etc.
- This is not as changeable as it might seem; some offices *require* this
- sort of dress for the female administrative staff, in particular.
-
- It would be interesting to see some statistics on random-victim crimes
- (i.e. not bar fights, gang wars, crimes of passion, etc.) to see what
- the proportion of male and female victims is there. For example, if a
- person is watching people walk down the street and choosing one to rob,
- how often will they choose a woman vs. a man?
-
- Muffy
- --
-
- Muffy Barkocy | ~Can you tell me how much bleeding/it
- muffy@mica.berkeley.edu | takes to fill a word with meaning and/
- "amorous inclinations"? Aha! I'm | how much how much death it takes/to give
- not "not straight," I'm *inclined*.| a slogan breath?~ - Bruce Cockburn
-
- --
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