And?
You've just provided a description of the attitude towards social contact held by one section of society. It definitely hasn't always been that way, not everyone agrees even now and I can be pretty certain it won't continue to be that way forever. So how does that have any bearing on my argument that there is no universal code? — Pseudonym
By design that spectrum is very large. What unite the people that are on it is that they are all somewhat dicks and can be shielded from just retribution by their power and position. That's why Franken got burned. — Akanthinos
I've also had a few gay guys hit on me, and try and talk me into something I had no interest in doing. — Marchesk
Demanding a universal code before making the effort to self-regulate is obvious nonsense. — Benkei
Fascinating pile of pseudo-ethical crap in both those videos (it almost makes me wonder if YouTube might not be the best source for serious ethical debate, but hey, who am I to judge) — Pseudonym
So what behaviour do men strive for without a universal code? Who gets to decide? — Pseudonym
Mmm consent is sooo pseudo-ethical. — StreetlightX
Do we need to ask for consent before... — Pseudonym
The trouble is, many people, mostly women, have long felt they couldn't object, even if they didn't like the last bodily or linguistic move in the language-game. So they conceded permissibility ground against their own wishes. — mcdoodle
No one's confused about grabbing someone's groin. What's being argued is exactly what level of contact requires consent as you'd know full well if you'd actually taken the ethical debate seriously rather than posturing with virtue signalling. — Pseudonym
If women have honestly felt unable to object, I would ask why they felt that way. Who made them feel that way? Because the implication in this entire movement is that men, as a whole, made them feel that way. — JustSomeGuy
Men as a class, not 'as a whole', I would say. — mcdoodle
Just as the majority of people in my impoverished town, as a class, know they are hopelessly disempowered compared to, say, bankers, as a class. — mcdoodle
Do you really think that men just spontaneously made up this kind of behaviour; that men, desperate to attract women, in their desperation somehow came up with a set of behavioural strategies that actually all women secretly hated but didn't tell anyone until Jack Dorsey was kind enough to invent Twitter. — Pseudonym
Personally, I'd rather live in a world where kindness and what I consider gentlemen like behaviour was seen as a virtue both in a friend and in a sexual partner, but we do not live in such a world and that's because men seem to like being bastards and because women seem inordinately attracted to bastards. — Pseudonym
You read my comments and accused me of virtue signalling because...? — Benkei
This is so incredibly silly I don't even understand why you even write it. — Benkei
Because you appear to be strongly defending a position popularly defined as a moral good without actually having an answer to the difficult moral issues it encompasses. That's basically the definition of virtue signalling. If you had actually answered any of my questions about the extent of physical contact that is to be self-regulated I might have re-considered my assessment, but as it you've continued to ignore any of the difficult questions in favour of waiving you're 'sensitive nice-guy' flag, so I'm quite happy to stand by my assessment. — Pseudonym
Repeating the accussation of virtue signalling just means this conversation is over. I don't accept it and you're crossing a line. — Benkei
I haven't just repeated the accusation, I explained it, and I don't consider virtue signalling to be a wholly bad thing so my intention is not to insult you (which is more than can be said for your intimation that I'm a passive aggressive misfit with some kind of fixation). — Pseudonym
How do you know men know how to behave? — Pseudonym
How have you arrived at the set of bahaviours you consider appropriate? — Pseudonym
How have you justified imposing that set of behaviours on other people? — Pseudonym
women seem inordinately attracted to bastards — Pseudonym
To dismiss what I've written as mere virtue signalling to me is an indication you didn't read my posts or are being uncharitable. — Benkei
I don't accept that studies have established women fall for bastards — Benkei
Are there grey areas? Of course. — Benkei
Through empathy. I imagine whether I'm ever confronted with the type of unwanted behaviour women are complaining about. I conclude it doesn't happen, so there's an inequality there. Then I take at face value it is unwanted because they say so. From there I develop a reasonable idea of what I consider appropriate. — Benkei
Do we agree women should not acquiesce to sexual behaviour they consider unwanted? — Benkei
Social norms have made it difficult for women to communicate or report unwanted sexual behaviour and they should be free to do so; e.g. it needs to be taken seriously and without fear of reprisal. — Benkei
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