Canadian_watcher wrote:Stephen Morgan wrote:Canadian_watcher wrote:Stephen Morgan wrote:I'm not sure how that's supposed to disagree with what I said.
Canadian_watcher wrote:Stephen Morgan wrote:
Well, in the modern era men were the first to form trade unions for mutual economic activity, but women tend to monopolise collective organisation explicitly by sex, as a sex, for that sex.
wrong.
see:
The pickett: Tasmanian mine workers defend their job " Women didn't work in the mine yet women won the thing for the men. And yes, most of them had a financial interest since a lot of the men workers were their husbands, but that makes zero difference because there *is* no difference in the motivation of union activity no matter who is in the union.
see also:
Strikes of the 70s and 80s: the Invisible Role of Women Which tells of three miners strikes in the US where women organized for men.
and this more recent one from Jolly Old England (and Wales and Scotland) You must remember or have learned about the mining strikes there, right chum?
Miner's Strike 1984-1985
I never said that female organisation is monopolised by organisation for their sex, only that organisation for one's sex is dominated by women. In other words, women may joins organisations for things other than women's issues, but organisation for one sex in dominated by feminism and women's issues and so on. If you get a list of organisations with the highest proportion of female members, you have a list of women's organisations. If you get a list of organisations with the highest proportion of male members you just have a list of organisations. Because women are more likely to organise for their sex than men.
dude, that is so not what you said.
Look, there is this thing called "collective organisation explicitly by sex, as a sex, for that sex", is what I said, which "women tend to monopolise", and which are something other than "trade unions for mutual economic activity", which are traditionally dominated by men.
I was writing in response to:
a)
C_w:
and the big one, I think, is that women knew early on that there would be no power unless they got together. Like with unions only for non-economic (as well as economic) reasonsb)
tru3magic:
Men were the first to gather for the pooling of resources to enhance power (we see how well that has gone and where it has got us).I think tru3magic(/WUaL) was implying that men had banded together in cooperation to create the patriarchy, but he could have been alluding to trade unions, it wasn't entirely clear. Anyway, I was saying that men had banded together, as tru2magic said, but in trade unions in pursuit of mutual economic advantage and collective action against the powerful, not to pursue the interests of their sex against women, whereas women have organised more recently into organisations aimed at the advancement of women as a class while men haven't done similar. Men still predominate in the membership of trade unions and mutual economic organisations generally, without that organisational ethic transferring into agitation for the betterment of the position of men, or into any sort of class-consciousness for men-as-a-class, rather than workers-as-a-class or the gender consciousness now common amongst women.
Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that all was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, and make it possible. -- Lawrence of Arabia