RE: So did Atheism + bite the dust?
February 9, 2015 at 9:09 am
(This post was last modified: February 9, 2015 at 9:13 am by TheMessiah.)
The term Feminazi was not coined by Rush Limbaugh, it was popularized by Rush Limbaugh because he had access to radio. It was created by a professor of economics at the University of California at Davis named Tom Hazzlet. If someone accuses any complaining woman of being a Feminazi, then this is bad --- but someone can also accuse radical Feminist advocates for female superiority to be Feminists, conflating it with equity Feminism.
The term Feminazi, while not a literal analogy is one of the greatest terms to use. It can successful separate the Feminists who campaign for greater rights (such as tackling issues such as FGM and gender discrimination laws) from the radical Feminists who seek to impose female superiority.
Such as seen in this link: http://www.dottal.org/feminazi_quotes.htm
http://www.experienceproject.com/stories...ty/1269918
^ Many women have a bad rep for being a 'Feminist' because too often, radical Feminism is associated and conflated with Feminism on a broader scale.
The term therefore can disassociate the radicals from the moderates. Feminists, who do not wish to be conflated with radical loonies can say ''I'm a Feminist. Not a Feminazi'' - that's actually a great way to get men to side with Feminism too.
Being a ''real man'' is a nonsensical social construct, often used as propaganda. There is no universal truth to being a ''real man''.
The term Feminazi, while not a literal analogy is one of the greatest terms to use. It can successful separate the Feminists who campaign for greater rights (such as tackling issues such as FGM and gender discrimination laws) from the radical Feminists who seek to impose female superiority.
Such as seen in this link: http://www.dottal.org/feminazi_quotes.htm
http://www.experienceproject.com/stories...ty/1269918
^ Many women have a bad rep for being a 'Feminist' because too often, radical Feminism is associated and conflated with Feminism on a broader scale.
The term therefore can disassociate the radicals from the moderates. Feminists, who do not wish to be conflated with radical loonies can say ''I'm a Feminist. Not a Feminazi'' - that's actually a great way to get men to side with Feminism too.
Being a ''real man'' is a nonsensical social construct, often used as propaganda. There is no universal truth to being a ''real man''.