Author Topic: Why so many young Democratic men think feminism has done more harm than good  (Read 123 times)

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Offline Kamaji

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Why so many young Democratic men think feminism has done more harm than good

By Adam Coleman
June 5, 2022

One of my favorite aspects of modern American culture is our ambition to improve others’ outcomes and find ways to make life fair for everyone. We may bicker about the methodology, but wanting fairness in our society is generally bipartisan.

Feminism, in its early days, was sold as a political and social tool to bring fairness to women by advocating for their ability to choose their destinies. Feminism helped shine a light on our blind spots and forced us to question our cultural attitudes surrounding women’s roles within our society.

Today, however, we are facing a different wave of feminism, one that no longer seems to strive for equality but favoritism. It is a feminism that on the strongest end is proudly misandric and takes no issue with being derogatory about the male sex. The wave of feminism we are dealing with is far past just wanting a seat at the table — it wants the table itself, and it wants men to sit on the floor.

The Southern Poverty Law Center last week released a poll with Tulchin Research in which they asked men of different age groups and party affiliations if they believe feminism has “done more harm than good.” Not surprisingly, of younger (under the age of 50) Republican men, 62% agreed. But of younger Democratic men, 46% agreed, 41% disagreed and 13% stated they didn’t know.

When asked if men should be represented and valued more in our society, a whopping 60% of younger Democratic men agreed, which was not far off from the 65% of younger Republican men.

Many people, including myself, were surprised because we associate feminism on a political level with the Democratic Party. Yet Democratic men appear to be becoming unsettled with the direction modern feminism is leading us culturally.

Obviously, there are differences in worldviews between men of the two political parties, but they share something in common where they see feminism is greatly affecting them: relationships.

The interpersonal-relationship dynamics between men and women today feel more combative than hopeful for long-term success. Many men find themselves in a position where they feel as if their partner is attempting to compete for a position of power, and if their partner’s path towards power is obstructed, the men are easily discarded. Because of this, many men feel as though their existence within relationships is treated as optional, rarely a necessity.

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Source:  https://nypost.com/2022/06/05/why-so-many-young-democratic-men-think-feminism-is-causing-harm/


Offline GtHawk

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What the heck is a Democratic man? Is that supposed to be a member of the Democrat Party, if so than shouldn't the be referred to as Democrat men? I'm tired of this co opt of the word democratic/democracy as if their party had a damn thing to do with democracy.