An Indian family member was telling me that Indian men are much more emotionally expressive than British men but that she's much safer here.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @natehanco
There's always more than one variable. In this case, a cultural difference in the acceptability of violence against women and children.
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Replying to @Maxtropolitan @natehanco
Yes & I'm not sure how this could be any less acceptable in the US or UK? Much longer prison sentences, Have to segregate in prison.
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In films, if a woman slaps a man, its funny. If a man slaps a woman, we know he's the villain. It's just not culturally acceptable.
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It's crazy to say we have a culture that teaches men to be violent against women & girls.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @natehanco
We have a culture that teaches men to be violent, period. And it does also have some degree of chivalry thrown in on top of that (1/x)
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Replying to @Maxtropolitan @natehanco
No, not period. We have a society which notices that men like physical contests more & when criminal, engage in violence more.
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There is evidence that men cry less easily than women coz of tear duct differences & that they find talking therapy less helpful generally.
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That women are more drawn to social interaction & to finding psychology interesting. And that they find emotionally weak men less attractive
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Replying to @HPluckrose @natehanco
Emotionally weak and emotionally available are very different. Look at the genders in a Tom Jones audience versus at Black Sabbath.
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Yes, they don't have to do that, either. There's no more right to access anyone's emotions than to access their body.
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