I ask for no sympathy for the socially inept. Sympathy is irrelevant here. What I think is required is "perspective." It's not the fact that the guy is socially inept that matters, because his social ineptness ought not allow him to get away with something that is seriously wrong. Example - socially inept guy doesn't think it's wrong to touch a woman he doesn't know on the buttocks. He says, "Hey baby, nice butt," and gives her a gentle pat on the behind. Does his social ineptness make him deserving of sympathy for that assault? No. Not at all.hadespussercats wrote:\
I get where you're coming from, Coito.
Just a few thoughts:
I have sympathy for the socially inept guy trying to make a connection. But something that the socially inept need to learn in order to become ...ept? is that there are actions and behaviors that read very differently from how they seem inside their nervous, hopeful minds.
So what's the perspective I'm suggesting is needed? In the case we are talking about the guy (socially inept, sexual predator, mass murderer, or serial masturbator - whatever) asked a woman to his room for coffee at 4am in an elevator. What I'm suggesting is not that we give inept men a pass. What I'm suggesting is that even if he knew it was dopey and he was plenty "ept" and even if he was maybe doing it to mock Skepchick or something or purposefully to piss her off..... whatever....it just ain't a big deal. It's nothing. She is a 27 year old, or thereabouts, woman - not a 12 year old child. People customarily say things to each other and quite often say things that we think are impertinent. Such things are just things we have to deal with.
We're often asked to swap sex roles when dealing with issues of sexual harassment. If you wouldn't say something to a man, then don't say it to a woman, we are told. Well, if we do that here, what would we find....Elevator Girl gets into elevator at 4am drunk after returning from a bachelorette party. She sees guy who she knows has a girlfriend, but she's now tipsy and horny and not thinking straight, and she says she finds the guy "interesting" and giggles as she asks him if he'd like to come to her room for "coffee." This makes the 27 year old guy "uncomfortable" because he reads it as being asked for sex by a woman who knows he is not in the market.
What would we say of him if he started lecturing women not to "do that" because he felt "sexually objectified" and that it made him feel "uncomfortable?" I submit that most of us would hand-wave it away, and say "dude, WTF? Some girl asks you for "coffee" and it's a big deal to you? Give us a break!"
And, of course, perspective is needed there too. Creepy behavior - yes - avoid it. But, does creepy behavior mean "misogyny" and "sexual objectification?" Even if Michael Scott said that - it would be no big deal. Creepy and funny, yes. Major example of something that is fundamentally wrong with society and men? Hardly.hadespussercats wrote: I always think of Michael Scott [from The Office] in these situations-- like how Jim had to explain to him at the office Christmas party that he couldn't grab Ryan and try to force Ryan to sit on his lap while saying, "I need this! I need this!" If you know Michael Scott, you know he honestly just had no grasp how that behavior would seem-- he was so focused on playing Santa, and wanting to make a connection with the guy he had a man-crush on, that he just couldn't see how creepy his behavior was.
I don't agree that she started off only with that benign motive in mind - sort of trying to teach the clueless guys the whens and wheres of pick-up moves. No, she started right off with the "sexual objectification" line, and the "threat" line, on her blog. And, she's gone well into the misogyny line too. Hatred - HATRED - of women.hadespussercats wrote:\
I think, from what I've heard, that the picture you're painting of the elevator scenario is probably right-- a dopey guy making a hail mary pass. And, whatever Watson has said since, the sense I got from her original post is that she understood that too. Before the rhetoric got so out-of-hand, I think what she was trying to do was play Jim to Elevator Guy's Michael Scott-- trying to get him to see that asking that question in those circumstances (four in the morning, alone together in an elevator, in a foreign country, after she'd called it a night, etc., etc.) could come across as really creepy and threatening-- and that refusing to examine his behavior in that light shows a disrespect for the likely fears, vulnerabilities, and desires of the woman he was approaching. Refusing to acknowledge that the woman has feelings that deserve sympathy (just like dopey Elevator Guy arguably deserves sympathy) means that the woman's feelings don't count. And deciding that a woman's feelings don't count is the same as treating that woman as an object. A sexual object-- because it was arguably in the context of a veiled sexual proposal.
Moreover - a veiled, or unveiled, sexual proposal is not per se "sexual objectification." Trying to pick up a girl is not sexual objectification, sexism or misogyny.
And, there is no real allegation that Elevator Guy thought Skepchick's feelings didn't count. The video I posted above made a great point when it went through the actual presentation that Skepchick made. She talked about email threats and rape. She didn't at any time suggest that she was opposed to being approached by men in general, or would have an issue with someone asking her a question. She says that men ought to have gotten that impression from watching her speech, but not only do we not know if this guy actually sat through her speech (she doesn't know), it's not even apparent from what she said in the speech that she would be upset at being asked for coffee.
And, let's also use some perspective here - there is nothing to the level of "disregarding her feelings" in asking a question involving staying up a little bit longer for conversation at 4am, when she's said she's tired. People say they're tired for lots of reasons, not all of them literal. And, one might say "I'm tired" because one is looking for a gracious exit. People are often asked about doing things after announcing their tiredness. Big deal. It's happened to me in the middle of the night - have they disregarded my feelings?
It remains a tiny, miniscule offense at best. "I already fucking said I'm tired, douchbag." Is the response, or words to that effect. It doesn't become a federal case just because guy might have had getting in her pants as a motive.
This is what I find extraordinarily embarrassing about the "feminist" (for lack of a better word) response to this whole situation. Really? THIS is what you're going to hold up as the poster child of misogyny, anti-feminism, sexism and objectification? Come on. Strong, adult, women need to be treated equally with strong, adult men. A man making this same complaint would be laughed out of the room. What should be the response to a strong, adult woman making the complaint then? Pat pats and there theres and and lectures to "clueless" men who "don't get it" and who we just KNOW really hate women, and think of them merely as objects to be used for male pleasure, and this whole thing is just emblematic of "male privilege?" I think trying to make this mole hill into that mountain does a disservice to the ultimate goal of overall equality.
I am sure it is a string of thoughts and conclusions that lie underneath it.hadespussercats wrote:
I think you're right, that Elevator Guy probably didn't understand that-- that he was probably just doing his best to connect with someone he was drawn to. The vitriol in this case does feel excessive. But my sense is that the string of thoughts and conclusions I've described above is what lies underneath it-- and is why so many women are so angry.
I think also, though, that what may well be underneath it all is the simple fact that is going unstated: If coffee means sex, then Elevator Guy made Skepchick out to be a cheap whore, who could be asked back to a hotel room at 4am and implicit in the asking of the question is that he felt there was a chance the answer would be "yes." She, like many women, don't like to think they're giving out some sort of vibe that they are easily bedded. That pisses some women off. Skepchick speaks the language of feminism, however, and so she replaced "suggesting I'm a common whore" with "sexual objectification and misogyny."