not saying you are or would - "follow" was an ill-chosen word. I didn't mean that people are "followers" of her in the disciple sense - only that they adhere to her view on the topic.Ronja wrote:I'm neither completely "pro" Watson nor completely "pro" McGraw, and I certainly won't "follow" anyone uncritically.Coito ergo sum wrote: I hear many voices of women saying they aren't, and that elevatorgate was not a big deal - those followers of Stef McGraw, etc. -- why ought we dismiss their views?
That I don't know. I'm not sure that those speaking up at blogs and forums can be said to be those who feel comfortable enough "at" events. There's a large difference between a relatively anonymous invented screen name, and being somewhere physicall.Ronja wrote:[
That said, doesn't it make sense that a notable percentage of the women who speak up about "EleveatorGate" in atheist/skeptic/etc forums and blog comments are exactly those women who already feel comfortable enough to speak up in the atheist/skeptic/etc community? So that sample is likely skewed, though it is difficult to estimate which (all) way(s) the skew(s) go(es).
Naturally, one would expect that to be true. That's not completely it, though. All of us tend to make a judgment about what is reasonable. Surely, a woman who says she was made to feel uncomfortable because a guy offered to buy her a drink in a bar, may well not be lent much credence in that regard. Many folks may well be skeptical as to whether she was really made to feel uncomfortable in that situation, and even if so whether she is reasonable in complaining in that regard.Ronja wrote:[
IMO, pretty much everybody who has said that "elevatorgate was not a big deal" has pointed out that *they* themselves would not have felt uncomfortable in a similar situation.
Everybody can feel what they feel, of course. I might fall to the ground shaking in fear if a woman offers to buy me a donut. I doubt many people would take me very seriously though. Should they tell me I "should not have felt what I felt" if that happened? Or, is it that I'm entitled to my feelings, or does everyone have to take me seriously and respect them to the nth degree?Ronja wrote:[
If they also implied that Watson *therefore* either should not have felt what she felt or should not have spoken about it, then they can![]()
As for speaking up about it - she can speak up all she wants - but, the rest of us are entitled to our opinion too, and that opinion might be that what she's complaining about is no big deal. And, one of my objections to the whole thing is that she called this thing "misogyny" and "sexual objectification," and I found that to be ravingly over the top. What I won't do is agree with her suggestion that Elevatorgate represents some sort of larger example of a rampant misogyny at atheist and skeptick events, and I wont' agree that if a man hits on a woman like that it means he's sexually objectifying her.
Well, everyone has the right to tell her what they feel about the situation. She's not the only one with rights here.Ronja wrote:[
, because what she feels is what she feels, and nobody has the right to telle her to (not) feel this or that.
And, many times people claiming hurt feelings may sincerely be hurt, but that doesn't mean that we ought to take it seriously. Imagine if a man walked up to a woman, say, in a bar, and said, "I find you interesting, and I would like to talk to you more in depth. Would you like to come back to my place and have coffee?" And, maybe the woman was, truly, put out by that - she felt "uncomfortable." Is she "entitled" to her feelings? Sure. But, is it a big deal what the guy did? No. Neither is Elevatorgate. It's a breach of etiquette, at worst.
Who told her that? Nobody told her that.Ronja wrote:[
And to tell her that she doesn't have the right to speak about her experience or feelings is just idiotic, unless one is willing to claim oneself as some kind of Higher Authority for What Are Suitable Topics on the Interwebz.
I, for one, am just saying that she has the right to speak about her experience or feelings. I also claim that right, and I also claim the right to discuss her claims and to analyze whether or not her claims of misogyny, sexual objectification and other things that have been bandied about like - harassment, threats, intimidation, sexism, etc. - are really applicable to something as benign as Elevatorgate.
We are not required to respond only with, "oh, Rebecca, you poor poor dear. Your feelings are valid no matter what, and if you feel that way, it must mean that whatever you say caused you to feel that way is eminently justified and reasonable, and no matter what, if you say certain behavior must be changed because you say that behavior is misogynistic, sexually objectifification, etc., then by all means, that must be true - because your feelings are valid and after that, we are not allowed to comment because we just don't get it, we are clueless and we're just engaging in mansplaining."