The pushback has started. Well you knew it would.
Catherine Dunphy has an article on the Women in Secularism conference at RDF – an original, not a link. There are sneery how dare you comments from some usual suspects (like Geoffrey Falk, for instance, who has been shouting at me for years for glaring faults like having no tits). It’s all so reflexive, you know? “How dare you say there’s sexism in the atheist movement, you shrill strident hysterical ugly bitch with no tits?!!”
Bernard Hurley says
I didn’t see any comments over at RD.net. Have they been deleted?
Ophelia Benson says
The page loads without comments sometimes, for no reason I can see. It did it to me. Just reload, I think – at least, that worked when I tried it.
Stewart says
I’m seeing the comments. Have not yet decided whether to go back and look again later…
Ophelia Benson says
Stephanie Zvan has a great comment there.
Josh Slocum says
Geoffrey Falk is predictable, but Miranda Hale is disgusting. Like Abbie Smith she’s carved herself out an identity as “the cool chick” that guys don’t feel threatened by. This requires throwing women’s issues under the bus, pretending not to see things she’s perfectly capable of understanding, and lying. I hope she finds it worth it years down the road.
Melody Hensley says
This is what you call a sister punisher, a woman who turns on other women to gain favor of sexist men.
Ophelia Benson says
Yeah – it’s puzzling. The payoff is friendship with…the kind of people who like that kind of thing. Score!
Marta says
Stephanie’s comment is very good indeed.
I couldn’t be at the conference and I very much wanted to be. I’ve appreciated your live blogging, Ophelia.
hyperdeath says
Well there are some advantages. Franc Hoggle is the man to speak to if you like bizarre anagrams. Geoffrey Falk is the man to speak to if… well… just trying to think of some nominal virtue… perhaps… sorry can’t do it. Anyway, it can’t be all bad.
Ophelia Benson says
I know, it’s a hard choice. franc hoggle et al. on the one hand, and the people I spent the weekend chatting with on the other. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm…just cannot decide.
CatherineD says
It seems that I have kicked up a bit of a storm with my brief article on the RDFRS regarding the Women in Secularism Conference. Honestly I thought it was a pretty benign, though I did say two terrible things.
First I used the word feminist. When I use that word, I generally understand it to mean “the advocacy of women’s rights on the ground of the equality of the sexes”, OED. Apparently I hadn’t realized that it was also code for a “whinny” woman.
Secondly, I did not realize that many people were unaware of the pervasive sexism that exists in human cultures.
When I said that “I wasn’t jumping at the opportunity to align myself with secular organizations who though most likely unaware, were perpetuating a subversive status quo.” I was trying to give them the benefit of the doubt, despite the fact that my encounters with skeptics in my local secular community were dominated by aggressive members of the Men’s Rights Movement.
I have no desire to get into name calling or other petty behaviors; it serves no purpose. But I won’t diminish myself to appease the nay sayers who’s only goal seems to be to have me and other secular women retreat into the background.
Despite the negativity, I hope at some point we can put aside this schism amicably – it’s a productivity drain and I think we would be further ahead as a movement if we could fairly and equitably close this chapter.
Stephanie Zvan says
Comments on the post are now closed. I’d like to think it was because of the guy who called me a “whiny feminist with a massive chip on her shoulder”, but I doubt it. He’s a regular.
Michael says
Oh not again.
Michael
Ophelia Benson says
Hi, Catherine – nice to hear from you.
Yes really; how dare you say such things. It’s an outrage.
In many places the schism is being not so much put aside as mended. In one or two others it’s being dug deeper (can a schism be dug? probably not), but the people digging are talking only to each other.
Ophelia Benson says
Comments closed, again. Fantastic. The schism-diggers shut down every discussion of women-in-secularism that appears there.
CatherineD says
Thanks Opheila! I appreciate your support and I am happy to know that the schism in some areas is on the mend! There are many wonderful men in the secular movement who are helping to make that happend and we saw some of them this past weekend!
Bernard Hurley says
The word “feminist” conjures up some very strange visions in some people’s minds. I regularly attend Philosophy for All’s monthly Feminism Forum and I’ve not been eaten yet. However I have met a lot of men who think they are “not allowed” to attend or that they would be made unwelcome. I don’t understand why; Pfa’s publicity doesn’t say anything of the sort.
Ophelia Benson says
Absolutely, Catherine. I’ve just learned that one of them, Leo Igwe, is going to be at TAM this year – and I’m beside myself with joy because so am I, and I long to meet Leo.
Hooray!
CatherineD says
Thanks Bernard!
Josh Slocum says
What I just sent to all the staff contacts I could find at rd.net:
Ophelia Benson says
It is unfortunate, because it means they just let the feminism-haters shut down a discussion whenever they feel like it. That hardly seems reasonable.
Simon says
Thanks for the response Catherine-good to meet you at the conference. If you’re comfortable sharing, perhaps you want to tell people the location of your local skeptic community? My guess is that will give people an idea of who we are talking about.
Luna_the_cat says
FWIW, if Miranda Hale demands examples of sexist secular institutions or what-have-you again, by all means feel free to point her to my field, programming. If she wants examples, they’re not hard to find.
Illuminata, Genie in the Beer Bottle says
Color me completely unsurprised. I thought most people know that, if you’re interested in social justice vis a vis atheism, RDF is the very last place on the net to visit.
Tony Ryan - Coffee Loving Skeptic says
Maybe I’m being idealistic and naive, but is there some way that those most prominent (i.e. with the largest reach in the community) skeptic/atheist speakers on both sides of this debate could somehow come together, in person, and talk through the issues rationally and decide upon a fair strategy going forward? It ‘might’ help reduce the friction and negative sentiment. Plus, all the back and forth on blogs is only making it worse.