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Why do gender stereotypes keep getting crammed down our throats?

Started by Mia and Marq, November 14, 2007, 01:28:13 AM

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RebeccaFog

Quote from: Pica Pica on November 16, 2007, 08:47:18 PM
you trying to rob us or something? that was never worth that.

Tell you what, take your entire mind, part exchange and I'll give you fifty quid and a few stolen televisions.
since everybody except you seems to know that 'quid' isn't a real word, I'll just pretend you said 'squid' and I'll take it!   :)
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ChildOfTheLight

Quote from: Rebis on November 16, 2007, 10:48:01 AM
I prefer to charge a little charge for my thoughts, if you don't mind.



That'll be .27 cents

Wow, the dollar has gotten weaker.
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Bustus

We suppose human brains are just wired to think that way. People get scared when they can't grab hold of something and stuff it into a neat little box. For the sake of maintaining public order, we're therefore taught to be nice and stay in our boxes. It's so much easier to look at a genetic female and "know" that this person thinks, acts and dresses in what are considered feminine ways, not to mention is attracted to males. Being different is bad, as it defies the precious boxes that allow us to "know" what others are like, and since knowledge is power, people are rendered powerless. That's why they must then cram us into other boxes instead, no one can escape the boxes.

Commercials are definitely among the worst. You're right in that pretty much any cleaning product ad seem to be geared towards women. We don't get it. Carina hates cleaning, and that isn't going to change no matter how good the product may be, not to mention how pink it is. Cleaning being a feminine thing is just another example of the Order of Boxes, if we may call it that. Also, we despise anything that attempts to teach you that men aren't supposed to care about anything at all but beer and football, at the most. Since when was considering what you wear a feminine trait?

Oh, and a last pet peeve... Dividing boys and girls in school and assigning them to different classes! Hello, shouldn't we have stopped doing this back in the previous century? Why is it "obvious" that a boy wants to hammer nails into a board while a girl would rather be knitting? Most of the children seem to comply with it, as it's what they've been told, it's what boys do and girls do. The Order of Boxes reigns supreme.

You know, just for once, we'd love to see a product with two variants made for males and females respectively, where the one for males was pink and the one for females was black.

~Bustus
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Enigma

Quote from: Bustus on November 22, 2007, 01:06:57 AM
Oh, and a last pet peeve... Dividing boys and girls in school and assigning them to different classes!

Boys and Girls learn differently.

Boys learn through hands on activities and being able to actually see and touch things.  Girls are much better at grasping concepts and learn better using the traditional educational model.  Further, as they get older, by segregating the sexes they've found that both boys and girls are more likely to speak up in class and participate more in their education.  Its the same logic that showed that when men and women work out together, men overdo the exercise and increase the potential for injury (ie lifting more weight then they're capable of) and women underdo exercise.

Lastly, I hope you're not suggesting co-ed PE classes....  ;)
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Bustus

We were thinking more about dividing boys and girls and giving them different subjects, actually teaching them different things. While there may be differences in how they learn, there is absolutely no way to tell whether someone would want to do woodworking or knitting by their sex. This practice does nothing but reinforce the belief that any male goes into the male box and any female goes into the female box. We've also seen cases of giving males more math while females got more language classes, because "math is a boy thing and language is a girl thing", apparently.

Co-ed PE classes? You mean, both sexes having PE together? Isn't that how it usually is, or is that just here?
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