And you've shown evidence of doing exactly that in this thread. You are using these gender studies analytic techniques and just blindly applied them beyond their applicability.
I can most assuredly tell you that I personally have not been blindly adopting anything, including anything from feminism of any sort or from gender studies. I may borrow or use this or that, if I agree with it or think it's useful, but never, ever, blindly. I do this with anything I find useful or interesting if I at least agree with it partly and might not agree with everything else in its context or with what the holder of a certain view would say. One can take a point or an idea and run with it in a different direction to (or even from) where the maker of the point was running with it.
If you on the other hand think I was blindly adopting them, that's ok. I will just strongly disagree.
Which is extremely common in the "discourse" today. Among the left it's today standard. And most of these feminists aren't even post modern philosophers, haven't read their works and have no idea what the foundation is that they're standing on. It's a perverse and perverted discussion and debate.
I partly agree, up to a point. But the Left-Right ding-dong pigeon hole thing bores the crap out of me, sometimes, to be honest.
Or to quote a friend of mine when commenting on this "I think the only possible solution for [pomo/gender study] feminists is that all men start acting like women". I think that's what's going on.
What your friend says is his opinion, and yours if you agree with him. It is far, far away from mine. In any case, I've already gone on at length about the questionable usefulness in
this discussion of referring to what some feminists think, even if it's true, which I doubt it fully is, for many or perhaps even any feminists (not ruling out the occasional one perhaps). It's certainly what your friend sees it as.
I've followed David Fuller and Rebel Wisdom closely, since it's inception. I am among those who think that these types of men's retreats is exactly what men need. The problem with David Fuller is that he worships at the feet of Jordan Peterson, and I think Jordan Peterson is a clown. I'm a liberal. I'm not a conservative. I think Peterson has conflated conservatism with sensible critique of the current pomo gender study type feminism. And that's the problem with this latest wave of men's group retreats. It's funny that the workshop leaders brought in to facilitate workshops are the same guys who have been running men's retreat workshops in the 1970'ies. So they're old "men must learn to show feelings" hippies. They're brought in because they are exceedingly good at running workshops, but their values go completely counter to Jordan Peterson's conservative values. That's a cultural clash I've bought popcorn to see erupt. It's yet to happen.
Like this guy:
https://ritesofpassageinstitute.org/
I feel sure there are men's groups and men's retreats and approaches to masculinity of different varieties. I felt I agreed with a lot of the article that I posted, as written by the journalist who wrote it, and he did express certain reservations. I am also sure that men's groups or men's rights or whatever form some discussion takes, can be dubious and imo ropey, and I am certainly no fan of Jordan Peterson (even if I will sometimes take an interesting and imo at least partly valid point he makes and run with it in my own preferred direction). On the whole, what Jordan Peterson is doing is (a) counter-productive, (b) reactionary and (c) ideologically-driven, in particular the conservatism. Some of it is just plain rubbish, imo.
But overall I'm a big fan. I think this is exactly the kind of thing men need. Not all men. But the men who are way out on the extreme end of masculine behaviours.
Good.
Though I think it's something that many more men could benefit from, not just those way out on any extreme. Tangentally, I feel much the same about talk therapy, that it's not just for the 'mentally ill'. But that's another topic. In both cases, I'm not saying I think 'just any' (men's retreat or talk therapy) is good. I would be discerning. I would advocate for what I would call 'good versions' of either. What I mean by that might need to be elaborated on, but I don't have time right now and in any case, it would only be using my own version of 'good'. Horses for courses and all that.
As long as we cling to a fantasy that all we need to do is educate these men on how to be less aggressive... we will never get anywhere.
I disagree.
Here's the thing. Much progress has already been made. And we can't deny that feminism, amongst other things, has helped, including helping some or many men. We can say that and be only referring to 'certain types of feminism' if you like. If you think that nonetheless feminism has been overall more unhelpful than helpful, fine. I'd disagree, but it is complicated. More than anything, I have to reiterate that
I'm not interested, here in this thread, in focusing on feminism.
That's why I think the toxic masculinity label is bullshit. I don't think it's toxic.
I disagree.
I think this is the way it is, and we need to accept it, and design a society around it. Or go back to what many of our ancestors did, separate men and women.
I disagree, at least with the second part. I'm not sure what the first part (designing a society around it) would involve.
I might say more, but I have to go work. Apologies also for not responding to all of your points.
I will at least end on two notes of agreement.
First, Thanks for your last post.
And second:
But, no matter how we solve it, we need to stop ignoring reality, ie inherent gender differences that lead to convergent gendered behaviours.
Ok. Sure. I agree.