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Where the conversation begins. Follow for breaking news, special reports, RTs of our journalists and more. Visit http://nyti.ms/2FVHq9v  to share news tips.

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    The New York Times‏Verified account @nytimes 20 Nov 2017

    Opinion: We have to re-examine our toxic, privileged, encroaching masculinityhttp://nyti.ms/2B6DWM7 

    6:31 AM - 20 Nov 2017
    • 212 Retweets
    • 540 Likes
    • Audrey Jackqueline Okumu Reagan Hannah Hedges Faisal Ali Brian Descovich Emily✟ Sosena ;;)FREDDY;;QUEEN(;;
    120 replies 212 retweets 540 likes
      1. New conversation
      2. Lawrence Polyakov‏ @Larrypolya22 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @nytimes

        I thought gender didn't exist? You lefties never fail to amaze. When u need gender or sex all of the sudden you are all feminists and men are masculine(which they should be). You need to get your story straight

        2 replies 1 retweet 8 likes
      3. JB‏ @JB01202017 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @Larrypolya22 @nytimes

        I love when you guys make ridiculous accusations when trying to manufacture hypocrisy.

        1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
      4. Lawrence Polyakov‏ @Larrypolya22 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @JB01202017 @nytimes

        Dems are walking hypocrites, we don't need to manufacture anything. "Step aside Moore...Franken apologized and called for an ethics investigation so he can stay.." LOL

        0 replies 1 retweet 1 like
      5. End of conversation
      1. Wesley Grumbles‏ @WesleyGrumbles 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @nytimes

        Manhood coerced into sensitivity is no manhood at all.

        0 replies 2 retweets 7 likes
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      1. New conversation
      2. Miss Jo‏ @HaramHussy 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @nytimes

        This is rapidly becoming a woman problem. Too many women are misinterpreting flirting as harassment. It is pathetic. It demeans those who have really been harassed

        1 reply 1 retweet 12 likes
      3. Megan Connelly‏ @meganconnelly48 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @HaramHussy @nytimes

        Women who are speaking up aren’t talking about flirtatious behavior. They are talking about being groped w/o consent. How is that confusing?

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      4. Vassago‏ @VisagoMureen 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @meganconnelly48 @HaramHussy @nytimes

        Megan, its not those women parse' there are others that presume to speak for them saying things like if a man approaches a woman and tries to flirt he is being "invasive" "abusive" and is exercising "privilege."

        1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
      5. Miss Jo‏ @HaramHussy 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @VisagoMureen @meganconnelly48 @nytimes

        Some are speaking up about exactly that. Asking someone out on a date is “harassment” or saying “you look great”. It is a double standard because women are freely able to do this to men.

        2 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
      6. Megan Connelly‏ @meganconnelly48 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @HaramHussy @VisagoMureen @nytimes

        Ok, some people will complain about anything. But that's not what the article, or the campaign against sexual harassment, is about. It's about raising awareness that a lot of men still consider it their right to grope, harass, and rape women and the rest of society supports them.

        2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      7. Megan Connelly‏ @meganconnelly48 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @meganconnelly48 @HaramHussy and

        Maybe you can enlighten me. I'm not aware of any cases in which a man has been fired or retaliated against for asking out a coworker wo some other inappropriate behavior. I am, however, aware of volumes of cases were women were retaliated against for complaining about harassment

        2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      8. Vassago‏ @VisagoMureen 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @meganconnelly48 @HaramHussy @nytimes

        It would have to be repetitive asking out for one to be fired, but lots of men get reprimanded, investigated, humiliated, transferred, all because of an accusation (even false ones) of something as harmless as that.

        1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      9. Miss Jo‏ @HaramHussy 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @VisagoMureen @meganconnelly48 @nytimes

        Their careers never survive. Just the smell of harassment will put them on suspension and it is grossly unfair.

        1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
      10. 3 more replies
      1. Sick Of This Shit‏ @SickOfThisShitz 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @nytimes

        Wow Your “Opinion” Peices Have Been The Worst This Month #StopIt

        0 replies 0 retweets 7 likes
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      1. Gary Windmiller‏ @WindmillerGary 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @nytimes

        How come the gals I smoke and drink with at the Legion Hall seem happier than the New York Times broads?

        0 replies 0 retweets 6 likes
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      1. Taranis Reborn‏ @Taranis_Reborn 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @nytimes

        Fact: This is misandrist.

        0 replies 0 retweets 5 likes
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      1. New conversation
      2. David Ybelt‏ @Wibbly111 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @nytimes

        yet men are also victims......

        1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes
      3. 1 more reply
      1. New conversation
      2. veppi‏ @pssps24 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @nytimes

        No, women just need to make their boundaries known to men every time they feel uncomfortable. It's confusing to men sometimes tbh, some women like the attention and keep quiet, others might see it as out of the line.

        1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes
      3. SlimDavidson‏ @angry_andro 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @pssps24 @nytimes

        Have you ever thought of this: WE ARE TOO SCARED TO TELL YOU NO!! men don’t accept and respect the boundaries we do try to express

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      4. veppi‏ @pssps24 20 Nov 2017
        Replying to @angry_andro @nytimes

        I'm a woman. I know women who don't express their annoyance because they don't want to seen as a bitch or no fun, and I think that's on them. Plenty of other women push them off with a disdainful look, I got no sympathy to the women who don't stand up for themselves.

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      5. SlimDavidson‏ @angry_andro 21 Nov 2017
        Replying to @pssps24 @nytimes

        Seriously? You have no pity for the women that have been CONDITIONED by the men they’ve encountered to expect unfair ridicule and even violence when they stand up? As much as I agree women should be able to stand their ground, it’s not the fault of women that fear is very real.

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      6. veppi‏ @pssps24 21 Nov 2017
        Replying to @angry_andro @nytimes

        Women like to pride themselves on being independent, walk the walk then. I dun believe they're conditioned to this and that. I also dun believe men are conditioned to think they can't cry or such. Both are whiny when they blame society, they're adults who can think for themselves

        2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      7. jakob royce rupp‏ @roycetheradikal 21 Nov 2017
        Replying to @pssps24 @angry_andro @nytimes

        It’s not delusion! It’s De-giorno

        0 replies 1 retweet 1 like
      8. End of conversation

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