Comment on Picasso artworks put in female toilet as part of art gallery response to court ruling
Bassman27@lemmy.world 5 months ago
Promoting equal opportunity by denying men seems counter productive. I feel sorry for all the young males who may want to see these pieces / who are studying fine art.
Even more ironic considering they’re paintings made by a male.
grue@lemmy.world 5 months ago
LOL, nah. Demonstrating exactly how hurtful the discrimination is by turning it against the group usually doing it is a very effective strategy. This notion that the historically-oppressed group needs to act all perfectly noble and correct in order to keep the legitimacy of its grievance is nothing but reactionary, pearl-clutching bullshit.
If those “young males” don’t like it, they should blame the old males who fucked it up for them. Otherwise, the only response a male can have to this that isn’t sexist is “well played.”
Bassman27@lemmy.world 5 months ago
What is there to gain from punishing the current generation who’s more open to the idea of true inequality? If anything you’re just pushing them towards being against the cause…
Nice try though lmao
grue@lemmy.world 5 months ago
The effect of the policy isn’t only on the “young males” that you’re so inordinately concerned about; it’s also on everyone who observes the situation.
Translation: “By demonstrating the hurtfulness of sexism to them, it’s women’s own fault men are becoming sexist!”
Wow, that’s right on up there with “if she weren’t wearing a sexy dress, she wouldn’t have gotten raped.” Got any more victim-blamey bullshit?
Bassman27@lemmy.world 5 months ago
This has nothing to do with rape victim blaming.
Really clutching straws here to prove your point…
calcopiritus@lemmy.world 5 months ago
If you punish me for something I didn’t do. Then I’ll hate you. There’s nothing more to it.
If you wanna do “sexism against men because they are sexist towards women” you should at least do things that you suffer from. There are no men-only art galleries in Australia. How is this supposed to teach men “see how you feel? That’s how I feel every day”.