• SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    “Men are victims of the patriarchy too” is an incredibly powerful message that I wish more men understood.

    • smeg@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      “You’re gay if you don’t like football”, “you’re wasting your life if you don’t want to get married and have kids”, “you’ll never find a husband if you don’t wear makeup”, “you’re not a real man if you cry”. The patriarchy is sexist to everyone, and that’s why everyone should give a shit.

    • digger@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      When I found out the patriarchy wasn’t about horses, I lost interest.

      • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        It’s like when you talk to a small business owner. They’ll talk about how the banks and big companies screw them left and right, but they’ll also tell you that they think they’ll end up Bill Gates. Same delusion

          • orrk@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            The amount of people who didn’t understand the whole thing about ken in that movie was scary.

            • shalafi@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              No shit! I wanted to cry for him. I GOT him.

              And my fiancé did weep a little during “the speech”.

              That movie hit hard. I’d love a man version of that speech, but it would have been wildly out-of-place, and I wouldn’t have wanted America Ferrera’s rant to have been watered down by a “both sides” thing.

              “What are your thoughts on the “Barbie” movie?”, would be a great dating site question for any of us. Weed out the assholes in a hurry.

              • Klear@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                I’d love a man version of that speech, but it would have been wildly out-of-place

                I felt it applied to men in a lot of ways still. Sure, a lot of details, I had to adjust in my head, but I didn’t feel like I need a man version to get it. There were some woman specific things in there and a whole lot of human things.

    • Aqarius@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I find it interesting that, under a post on how men and, even more often, women, ignore men’s mental health, you feel the need to specify that it’s the men that lack understanding of the problem.

      • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        In conversations I’ve had around this I’ve found that women get this immediately, even if they hadn’t considered it before. But men tend to be very resistant to the idea.

        • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Keep in mind, just because someone “gets it” that guys can need emotional support, it doesn’t mean they have deprogrammed themselves from the patriarchy.

          In the very story in the post, the wife said she repeatedly brought it up to others and they (including women) still didn’t ACTUALLY provide support to her husband.

          • Aqarius@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            If anything, “resisting the idea” sounds an awful lot like “not wanting to set yourself up for disappointment”.

    • gjoel@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I hate this way of putting it, especially because it puts the blame on a single gender. It’s not JUST men who shoehorn people into gender roles, we all do it.

      It’s off putting to me and I tend to dismiss the entire thing because it basically says that men being bad also hurts men. Had it said that men also are victims of gender roles I would immediately agree, and I can’t imagine that I’m the only one who feels this way.

      • teruma@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        That’s why it’s so important to specify that men are victims of patriarchy, not victims of men. Everyone, regardless of gender, has an environmental tendency to reinforce the societal structure that we label “Patriarchy”, as you say (and I/many agree), but there’s far more to it than the idea of “men first women second”. The idea behind the phrase is not “everyone vs. men” but rather “everyone vs. harmful but deeply engrained social construct”.

        • gjoel@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Then why use the label “Patriarchy”? It has a very specific meaning that I don’t feel applies to many western societies and definitely not to the sociatal structure and norms that we happen to live in, regardless of who is in charge. I think we agree on everything but the term.

          • matter@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Because it still puts men on top in most ways, even while it hurts them too.

            And it definitely applies to all western societies.

            You can see it in this very story. “Men are strong, they don’t need help. Women are weak and emotional, that’s why they need support.” Yeah, it’s devastating for men in this situation, but it’s the same logic which makes people say men are natural leaders or whatever.

            • nehal3m@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Don’t forget that leadership is not a cakewalk either; it comes with responsibility and sacrifice. It is a burden as are most ‘advantages’ that men ‘enjoy’.

              • matter@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                In a just world it would be, but the consequence of being labelled and perceived as a “natural leader” is that one can get away with shirking their responsibility, avoiding sacrifice, and abusing their position without much repercussion.

          • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            The Patriarchs in question does not refer to all men. It specifically calls out the culture of the "elders"and those who have had ample opportunity to become established influences through the system. Those who subscribe to old fashioned beliefs and those at the top of the power structures that benefit from their compliance from younger, poorer generations. Emotionally distant men and limiting variability within the group makes the entire demographic more easily exploitable. A lot of roles in the family and society exist for men outside the title of “patriarch” but patriarchs specifically use their role to self legitimize their power over other people and make everyone in some way subservient.

            It’s kind of a shorthand for “old fashioned” conservative systems of organization that prime men to be “leaders in embryo”. The gendered component is still valid because it is still a dominant model that is marbled with minor subversions of it. Women and non-standard men may have changed their place in the family but even when they reach the top they have to make themselves non-threatening to the cohort of established powers and play by their rules to succeed.

    • CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      As a father who is very involved in my kids’ life, I feel this frequently. At the start of each school year I submit my contact info as the primary contact info and yet sometimes emails will circulate among the class moms anyway. Or I’ll get a text from another kid’s mom asking for my wife’s number so they can plan something.

      When we started making friends with parents of my kid, all the moms in the group created a chat group which they still use to this day. The dads didn’t make one because that’s just not a thing you do, and I wasn’t invited to the moms group, even though I knew them at least as well as she did, and I am the extrovert and my wife is the introvert. So I frequently feel lonely and isolated (I also WFH) and my wife is socially overwhelmed.

      Yes I could just buck the system and try to get the dads to have a group, or have my wife add me into the moms group, or similar things in other areas of life. But that’s the point: any time I do that I’ll be going against the grain.

      • CADmonkey@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I have struggled so hard with this. My child’s school cannot seem to understand that I, the father, am the one who primarily takes care of my daughter. My wife and I have started to flat out refuse to give the school my wife’s contact info, even as an “emergency contact”, just to make them communicate with me. I did manage to make a bunch of faculty at her old school mad when I asked, publicly, why they felt the need to discriminate against me when trying to contact patents, and this had the unintended effect of making a bunch of other fathers in the group pop up and ask the same question. Now my daughter is old enough that she, herself, will call them out on it. Having a ten year old lose her shit and tell the teacher that she needs to contact the right parent is really funny, almost as funny as when they insisted on contacting my wife instead of me, again, to complain that my kid had yelled at them for not contacting me.

      • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        I deal with this also except my ex abandoned us to move states away. She will still get notifications via email or text that she forwarded to me because they have her information on file. They have her information because I was forced to provide divorce paperwork showing I had custody of the kids to enroll them in school. Wonder how many moms get asked for paperwork proving custody when they try enrolling their kids in school. It’s reduced over the last three years but the first couple were ridiculous. Finally have a mom of one kid and dad of another kid that recognize I’m a parent to my children. Everything is stupid though. Every doctors apt, school visit, dentist apt, hell even trips to the store. Some BS content like “where’s mom” or “oh you’re filling in today”. I’m so sick of it. I cope by telling myself that at least it would be worse if the love of my life died horrifically instead of going bananas and abandoning us and I had to deal with this shit. At some point I’m worried I’ll snap at people but I never want to say anything negative about her around the kids.

      • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Very similar. With our work schedules I end up spending more time with the kids than Mom does. My commute is much shorter and I can work from home a day or so a week. I feel like there is this whole network I am freezed out of.

    • rosymind@leminal.space
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      1 year ago

      Agreed.

      My husband has had virtually no emotional support from anyone, so much so that he doesn’t understand how to communicate any of his feelings.

      “How do you feel?” “I don’t know” “Can I do something to help?” “I don’t know”

      I definitely don’t ignore his mental health but his lack of communication drives me up the pole. Often I have to just walk away out of frustration. I wish I understood how to get through to him without it making me want to bash my own skull against the wall. I think a big part of it is that he doesn’t want to admit that he has any emotions at all

      • CADmonkey@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        “How do you feel?” “I don’t know” “Can I do something to help?” “I don’t know”

        Yeah. That’s real fun isn’t it? And I really don’t know. I’m luckier than most men, in that I have an understanding wife who doesn’t use my emotions against me.

        • rosymind@leminal.space
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          1 year ago

          Seems like you two chose each other well!

          My husband is usually functional, but when things go wrong he crawls up inside himself and just doesn’t wanna come out. I deal with problems by facing them head-on, and he deals with them by pretending they don’t exist. Obviously that creates conflict (which then doesn’t help either of us. It’s extremely frustrating to know there is a problem but not know what that problem is)

          He’s told me that he’ll go to therapy. I’m hoping that a third party will be able to help him unravel why he doesn’t know how he’s feeling, and how to communicate his needs

          • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            I am like that too. When I go over my limits, my tendency is to isolate myself.

            I am better now, but I’ve been with a psychotherapist since 2020 and I am a lot better now at identifying my emotions and not isolate myself.

            For me what worked was learning to identify my emotions. My first reaction to pretty much any negative emotion is anger and I don’t think that will change. However, I’ve learned to identify the emotion after the anger and then I speak it out. Sometimes, just a small statement to myself (" I acknowledge this emotion X") and sometimes, it leads to a long thinking about the situation that caused the emotion and how that made me feel.

            So to help your other half, helping him identify the emotion after the anger would be the first step.

            • rosymind@leminal.space
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              1 year ago

              I concur, but after 3 years of me trying to help him identify what he’s feeling, a third party has to get involved. The problem is that I get frustrated and that doesn’t help anyone. He absolutely needs someone neutral to guide him. It can’t be me

              • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                I understand. And a therapist will have a multitude of tools to help him find the right one to start the journey.

                I wish you the best and hope that your situation will get better soon.

      • teruma@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Therapy and/or an ADHD diagnosis (not joking, one symptom of neuroatypical people is the inability to identify emotions in themselves (like me lol)).

        • rosymind@leminal.space
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          1 year ago

          I suspect autism with him. He’s an Engineer, so he has a lot of Braun power but I’ve had to teach him to greet me, say please and thank you, and introduce me to people I haven’t met. He literally left me in his friends doorway when we were dating. (It was a party and he opened the door, walked in and started hanging out with their 3year old while I stood there dumbfounded until I started introducing myself as his girlfriend. Yes, we broke up over it, but we figured it out and now we’re married)

      • kshade@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Maybe this could help him? It’s from a peer counselor who deals a lot with these types of problems, usually with fairly nerdy guys, many of them on the spectrum.

    • Sharkwellington@lemmy.one
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      I think it’s sadly one of those things that people don’t understand until it happens to them. They’ll leave other men to their private hells and when it’s their turn they wonder why everyone has abandoned them like they did other men so many times before.

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        private hells

        “Hanging on in quiet desperation…”. Huh. That lyric always hit home, didn’t know why. LOL, I’m not even English!

        We have all learned through experience to shut the fuck up. I’ve dated, a lot in the past 35-years of adulthood. Know what happens when a woman sees you cry? Dumped. Every. Damned. Time. And none of them ever expressed that it was a problem. But after enough experience, even my dumb ass can draw a cause -> effect line. And some asshole will try to be kind and say, “She wasn’t a good person anyway!” Whatever. I still got dumped, over and over again. STFU, both of us.

        Hell, I’m getting married next week. Third time’s a charm! Seriously, no woman has ever loved me so deeply. No woman has ever treated me so finely. I have never felt so comfortable, and more importantly, secure with a woman. It’s all a bit hard to get my head around, honestly struggling to internalize it. But read on…

        Last night I tried to tell her how much cracking stress I’m under this month.

        • Thanksgiving week, I’m getting my young children (8 and 10), for the first time in 4 fucking years. I’m scared to fucking death.
        • My company just did a re-org. A welcome change to be sure! But I got a new boss in 2-days, and while I love him to death, and many people clamored to join his team, he’s going to be challenging to sync with. It’s next door to starting a whole new job.
        • I’m getting married on Black Friday.

        “Oh! You are having second thoughts about marrying me?” (Her tone was “scared shitless”, not “antagonistic”.)

        See what I mean guys? I should have just sucked it up. All I did was hurt her and gained nothing for my own mental health.

        We gain nothing, and stand to lose everything, by showing weakness to our women. It’s not their fault and I’m not condemning them. They’re every bit the primates we are.

        EDIT: She just came home from work and her first words were, “Are you still scared?” Damn what a woman. And how so very nice to be wrong this time.

        • calypsopub@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Sounds like you finally found the right woman.

          I knew he was the one when my husband (then boyfriend) cried in the theater when (spoiler alert) ET died. I wish more women had empathy for men’s unique struggles, but some of us do exist.

          After his best friend moved away, my husband gradually settled into this dynamic where I was his only emotional support. Meanwhile I actively nurtured friendships with several women in my life. When he died, I had a network of people checking on me. I shudder to think how he would have fared if the situation were reversed.

          Many friends and family asked me how they could help. I always replied that I wanted them to include my then-21-year-old son in their family plans occasionally, especially those who could provide a male role model. I asked male friends and relatives to check in on him occasionally and encourage him as he struggled through a deep depression to finish his degree. Only one person bothered. I am still angry about this.

          We all need to be the change we want to see. Women need to be more aware and more accepting of men’s emotions. Men need to work harder at forming and maintaining deep friendships. Look around and notice men in your circle who are struggling. Ask yourself how you can reach out to them.

          Society is doing a crap job at creating ways for men to get support. So stop waiting for that to happen and do it yourself.

        • goatbeard@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          It sounds like you have enough self knowledge to begin to connect with your emotions. I suggest you tune your soon-to-be wife into this process, it sounds like she will be understanding when you get on the same page. Best of luck!

    • Iceblade@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, the 99% of us have far more in common with each other than with the 1%. It’s oligarchy through plutocracy, not patriarchy.

      • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Ideals of masculinity aren’t instilled in children by the 1%, they are perpetuated by parents and peers at a personal level.

    • WhyDoesntThisThingWork@lemmy.world
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      Calling it the patriarchy has very negative tone towards men, and basically blames men for the problem, In my experience, this issue isn’t created by men and saying it’s because of the patriarchy is just a form of victim-blaming. Even when trying to advocate for men feminism somehow manages to be sexist.

      • TheHarpyEagle@lemmy.world
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        It’s true though. The patriarchy has perpetuated the idea that men are strong and stoic and women are weak and emotional, so it falls to men to be the leaders. The idea that men also need protection and understanding runs counter to the concept of patriarchy, hence why it hurts men as well as women.

    • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      I think most of us understand how things are. The problem is the one’s whose opinions matter don’t give a fuck about changing anything because they’re at the top of the hierarchy. They benefit from treating the rest of us like shit.

      It’s kind of a worthless statement really.

      • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The ones at the top of the hierarchy aren’t the ones instilling these toxic ideals of masculinity in to young men. Parents and peers are perpetuating this on a personal level.

        • lady_maria@lemmy.world
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          What about the mainstream media, which is almost entirely controlled by the 1%? And the corporations who advertise their curated versions of masculinity and femininity in order to make us feel inadequate so we buy more if their shit?

          Obviously, parents and peers often buy into that garbage and impose that sams toxicity on boys and men, too, but thats because they’ve also been force-fed the same garbage everyone else has their entire lives. It’s a systemic problem.

          • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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            Media perpetuates these ideals but they didn’t originate with them. These ideals of masculinity have been around for hundreds of years before the modern media.

            • lady_maria@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              No, but I never said that they originated with the media, either. Your original comment indicated that you were talking about the present, so that’s what I was referring to as well.

              My point is that the media influences gender norms and expectations at least as much as—if not more than—parents and peers, and has done so for generations. As the media largely represents the ideals of those with power and money, those same people are effectively “instilling these toxic ideals of masculinity in to young men”.

              • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                You say yourself here, “the media influences gender norms… at least as much as”. Yeah, of course, it is a problem throughout all layers of society. Your earlier comment seemed to be saying that blame should be mostly with the 1%? I’m not sure what you are saying here.

        • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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          Because if you don’t adhere to these ideals you won’t be successful in life. You won’t get anywhere in your career. Women aren’t going to date you. You’ll be bullied and beaten down at every turn. Until something changes at the top these parents and peers are doing them a favor.

          • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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            I’ve rejected these ideals my whole life. I was bullied as a kid but once I got out of school I found my people and never looked back. Never had a problem with women, the ones I dated found my emotional openness attractive. I’m successful in my professional life, tech lead at a financial software company.

            I understand that different places have different degrees of pressures for this kind of thing, but what you’re saying is a lie. You’ve been programmed by the system to believe it and it is probably making you miserable. And if you have kids, it’ll make them miserable too. It doesn’t have to be that way. I feel bad for you.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Nah. It’s just an attempt to steer the conversation back to women’s issues. It’s just less on the nose than “…And that’s why you need feminismTM!”

      • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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        I’m not quite sure what you’re saying here? You don’t think that the masculinity that gets taught to men is a problem for their mental health?

        • HauntedCupcake@lemmy.world
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          I might really misunderstand what patriarchy means in this context. But I’m using the definition “a system of society or government in which men hold the power and women are largely excluded from it”.

          I don’t see how this is relevant to the “masculinity that gets taught to men”, as this idea is also perpetuated by women, so I don’t see how having a matriarchal or neutral society would fix this.

          It seems to be more the result of the expectation that men need to be providers and protectors, which can be an expectation regardless of if the society is patriarchal or matriarchal or neither.

          Sorry if I’m being ignorant. I’m just trying to understand better

          • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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            To my mind the central mechanism for systemic control by the patriarchy is enforcement of gender roles. Men should be like this, women should be like that. Of course there will be ideas of masculinity in any society, patriarchal or not, but I think the aggressive enforcement of those roles and punishment for deviation from them is specifically an aspect of patriarchal systems.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            On top of that, given the systematic exclusion of men from child rearing, re teaching elementary school, babysitting, or even parenting while male is all but criminalized in the Western world so nearly no men serve in those roles, I’m left to question who is responsible for “the masculinity that gets taught to men.”

            • GoofSchmoofer@lemmy.world
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              I think unfortunately over the past 50 years the “masculinity that gets taught to men” comes from movies and TV shows.

        • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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          I’m saying it has the same energy as one of those insufferable Christians popping their heads into every conversation at all and saying “And that’s why ya’ll need JesusTM.”

          Someone starts blabbering about the “patriarchy” in a discussion about men’s issues, they’re not contributing to the discussion. They don’t genuinely care about the topic at hand. They’ve found an excuse to insert themselves into conversation.

          • Dkarma@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yep “well if men weren’t such assholes they wouldn’t hold the few good apples down like this”

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        1 year ago

        Thanks for articulating that. I’ve always felt that the title for a phenomenon that oppresses people based on their gender shouldn’t be named for one of them. It doesn’t help anyone.

    • Cringe2793@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Men do understand it. We live through it every day. It’s the women who need to understand it. It’s the women who seem to think that men have great lives and everything is given to them. That’s not the case at all.

      • SamuraiBeandog@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Men might understand that they are unhappy, but I don’t think most men blame that on the cultural ideals of masculity that are pushed on them their whole lives. If most men do understand that, then why do they struggle so much to change? The common messaging in men’s mental health is usually around telling men that it is ok to have feelings, ok to talk about them, ok to cry and show emotions. If men understand that they are being victimised by other men (and themselves) and the social pressures to conform, why is it so difficult to get those messages through to them?

        And I mean, the fact that you feel the need throw blame on women here (who are also victimised by the same system) seems like you’re not actually blaming the patriarchy?

        • Aqarius@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          men understand that they are being victimised by other men (and themselves)

          throw blame on women here (who are also victimised by the same system)

          You seem to conflate “men” and “patriarchy”.

          • Cringe2793@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yup, I was trying to think of a way to say this succinctly, but you’ve done it. It’s sad that the majority of the thinking here is “y’all are doing this to yourselves”. I think I’ve basically given up trying to argue this point with people already. Seems like a lost cause, and not something that will change in my lifetime.

      • adrian783@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        ehhhh. often it comes out as “I’m unhappy because of women”. it takes a special kind of introspection to really understand that you’re participating in and probably reinforcing the system that you’re suffering from.

    • Fogle@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      It’s all very much a class war that gets masqueraded as a sex/political war

      • TAG@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Maybe it is just that I have had a long day, but please explain how the wealth devide is causing people to feel like they need to conform to toxic gender roles.

        • KepBen@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Well if there were any force in history with such a well-established power to affect change besides wealth we might build a second track.

        • orrk@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          why? you know what the “patriarchy” actually is? like, what actually enacts the problematic things people say is caused by the patriarchy? it’s the capitalist class for the most part.

            • orrk@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Fundamentally? capitalist structures are nothing new, the only real difference is the justification to the selective ownership of capital, and that is more pervasive and more predictable than any patriarchal structures throughout history.

        • Fogle@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I have more in common as a CIS “white” male with any race of gay, trans, person than I do any rich white male

    • Jake Farm@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Most feminists don’t even acknowledge this. Or they say even if men are victims, they deserve it for participating in the patriarchy.

      • matter@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Wrong, this is something almost universally acknowledged in feminist circles.

      • lady_maria@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        As a staunch feminist whose friends are all feminists, I have never heard a single one say—or even imply—anything like that. I very much know how extremely painful it is to have your feelings ignored and invalidated, so garbage like that is a dealbreaker.

        If you’re hearing this claim from people irl, they’re saying it because they’re shitty people… not because they call themselves “feminists”.

        • wervenyt@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Whereas plenty of guys have. I’d like to consider myself a feminist, but in my experience, I’m not welcome to the label, since it seems that progressive women are less compassionate than “nonpolitical” ones when it comes to relating to the issues of men. It’s obviously not some issue with feminism, but we don’t get to have popular movements and also ignore their ills. The vast majority of educated feminists agree with you. The vast majority of people in the streets calling themselves feminist seem entirely in it for themselves, and it’s really tiresome when well-meaning feminists who aren’t just exercising their trauma, the people that men like these most-need to have honest conversations with, insist that men don’t know what happens to them.

          Apparently, there are no misandrists, according to online discourse. Should I tell my memories they’re wrong, that I should have just been more open-minded as a young child when more than one teacher preached that men are evil and stupid, and deserve subjugation? Or maybe, just like how misogynists are good at covering it up around their friends, so are the handful of misandrists who do exist?