I think rather than move the space it's probably better to essentially form parallel movements that are explicitly mixed gender from the get go, heavily SJ informed, but start from a place of open and honest curiousity about what people of all genders' experiences are like.
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Replying to @GeniesLoki @sullyj3
Various thoughts: 1. I can't quite tell if you're agreeing or disagreeing with my pessimism. Agreeing, perhaps, since you propose a new group.
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2. It's nice that many are willing to shift their views, but cold comfort if a) hurtful people continue to run amok in the SJ movement and b) males still don't have a trustworthy support movement...
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...The mere existence of people with positive views towards males doesn't help those in need. If 95% of feminists are quietly, passively pro-male and 5% are rampant abusers, the favorable ratio doesn't indicate a movement healthy for men.
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3. I'm certainly curious and open to hearing more about a proposed parallel movement, it's not something I've really thought of.
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Replying to @__rowboat__ @sullyj3
It's something I've thought of but honestly founding a movement sounds exhausting so I mostly just try to move the needle with Twitter threads and other writing and kinda hope that having enough good memes out there will help.
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Replying to @GeniesLoki @sullyj3
I don't mean to demean your attitude or efforts - I am genuinely grateful. But this is an example of why I am pessimistic and why I think that pessimism is important. The range of reaction is largely between "I drink male tears" and "I'm pro-male, but not doing much about it."
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Boys and men don't have the biggest ID group problem set in the world, but I think it's important, at a practical level, for us to know how alone we are in dealing with those problems.
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Replying to @__rowboat__ @sullyj3
I don't think men are alone in dealing with those problems though - I think they often get a lot of one on one help. It's true that there's not as much broad political support for them but, well, that's why I talk about this stuff.
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Also note multiple positive reactions to this thread from women. It's not the sweeping political change one might want, but you mostly don't get that from a single Twitter thread...
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Also also it's not like "I'm pro-male but not doing anything about it" is much different from your average man's reaction to feminism.
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Replying to @GeniesLoki @sullyj3
I bristle at this, I think a big reason men don't do more is they're trapped between two movements with significant anti-male toxicity problems, but besides that: lack of help from other men supports the "men lack support" hypothesis, it's not counterevidence.
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