General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Why is DU in a gender war anyway? [View all]Romulox
(25,960 posts)self-professed "feminists".
For example, discussions about class and economic inequality are not welcome by many feminists, and are often ignored. It seems like despite all the talk of "intersectionality", class-based analysis strains a lot of current feminist thought. With this in mind, I have to wonder if some of the multitudinous "gender discussions" (almost always accusatory and confrontational from their conceptions) are intended as distractions from critiques of the status quo that favors corporations and the wealthy over everyday people.
Thus discussions of "feminist" issues such as the percentage of female CEOs, and how left-leaning men need to "check their privilege" predominate out of all proportion versus discussions about class inequality, working conditions for the poorest, infrastructure decline, and declining resources for children, all of which disproportionately affect women, people of color, and the poor, categories for which there is a massive overlap.
I don't think this is an accident or coincidence.