Writer4003
Writer4003
Writer4003

Again, ethnic and religious groups face different forms of discrimination than gender groups. Why? Because gender permeates all races, ethnicities, nationalities, religious groups, et cetera. It cannot be the same because you’re trying to compare two different types of discrimination.

Yes, as I said, if you change the words I actually said into something xenophobic and religiously biased, it becomes offensive. Changing words changes the meaning of what is said.

Again, you’re not looking at the existing power structures in either context. You can’t just erase that factor. Muslims are still a disenfranchised group in Germany.

And the response is another form of discrimination. There’s layers of marginalization in that example. And yes, you were talking about the assumption that terrorists are Muslims. You brought it up. Don’t try to backtrack.

That’s not the context for this event. This young man killed his ex girlfriend and another young man because he felt that his ex girlfriend belonged to him. His rage was directed at the young woman, sometimes other men are there and feel the effects, too, of course, but this was about his inability to let go of

This is a demonstrable pattern. It’s more like when a marginalized group of people tells you that there’s something wrong - that they’re being victimized in some way, you should at least consider what they’re saying. Why? Because they’re the ones living it. If you want to learn about what it’s like to be a baker, you

It’s even more satisfying when they ragequit.

The point is that these two were killed because the man who killed them believed he owned this woman.

And that justifies appropriating this tragedy for your own? Want real talk? That’s immature. If you must know, I deal with PTSD myself. I don’t mean to equate our situations, but you can’t go around acting like yours is the only issue anyone has ever faced. There’s a pattern here, this is the latest example. If you

Again: If you only bring up the “all people are violent, not just men” thing in situations like this, you don’t give a shit about victims, male or female.

I’m a student at this school. A lot of events (especially sporting events) were postponed, but we proceeded as scheduled today with a MLK Day of Service. We heard some great speeches and then broke into groups to make blankets for hospitalized veterans, prepare school supplies and lunches for elementary students, and

I feel pretty sorry for him. He’s so lonely he has to behave like this while three poor families are shattered.

If you’re so worried about the status of men, why don’t you spend the time you would have spent behaving like a child here and go volunteer with men who have been abused by their girlfriends? Why don’t you help some veterans? Why don’t you sew some binders for trans men?

Hateful. Filth.

Three young people are dead. A college campus is in mourning. I’m sorry that your life is so empty that you have nothing to do but antagonize people who have been affected by tragedy, but you can spread your hateful flith elsewhere.

You can bury your head in the sand all you want, but there’s a pattern of men being violent against women.

I’m a student at Geneseo. I didn’t know any of the people involved, but I did live on the same street where it happened. It’s really shaken everyone at the school. Administration has been as kind and helpful as they could possibly be in a situation like this. But I’m angry.

A lot of women here are talking about how they assumed it couldn’t happen to them because they were so strong. It’s just not as simple as “not putting up with it.” It’s vastly more complicated than sheer force of will. I think that’s what most people are getting at when they say it can “happen to anyone.”

A person like you has a girlfriend?

The point wasn’t that there’s no way to have legal sex on the job, it was that having sex, unlike say, shooting someone, can never be part of an officer’s duties.