JackRiddler wrote:8bit, general agreement...8bitagent wrote:First off, with the exception of Great Britain, virtually every war has been brought to us by males.
That's just silly. The presence of a female who fought her way up against the males to the top of an existing war machine (let alone of one who happened to be born into the royal succession during a period of frequent warfare) does not suddenly make war a female thing. War is a masculine-gendered, overwhelmingly male activity, in almost all places and times. Women have certainly been among the cheerleaders and supporters and naturally home front workers, and very often among the fighters of last resort (as in my own mother region, the Mani). More recently a small proportion have broken in to regular national forces. Look at what it took, and the often violent treatment and resentment they've received from their own ranks. (Look also at the simultaneous disconnect in the pop culture, many examples of which might make you think the fighting female now rules and with her bare hands kills men three times her mass and in multitudes, just like Eastwood or Schwarzenegger. The fantasy image of female violence is almost 100% out of proportion to the reality, and highly sexualized, I wonder why that is. Or wait, did I just answer my own question? But still, why?)
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I'd agree, especially with the massive pop cultural disconnect.
Have you seen this trailer? I was literally shocked by this one, though not surprised
I was struck by how the GOP shot down Al Franken's bill in the wake of the KBR case of a female member locked in a crate and repeatedly attacked and raped by colleagues.