Friday, August 15, 2014

The Great Lawsuit Response

If one thinks about the events starting Women's Liberation, (voting rights, social equality, etc.) one might come to the conclusion that this started in the 1910's to the 1920's. I am such a person, and thus was surprised when reading this article from 1843.

This excerpt from Margaret Fuller's "The Great Lawsuit" was, I might say, difficult to read. It was not quite as poetically understandable as Shakespeare, but wasn't in the mindset of a modern or contemporary example. It was something that was absolutely necessary to reread to comprehend.

Once my "modernized" brain got itself around the excerpt, I think I understand what Fuller meant. While I felt like she rather beat around the bush, (as you can see me doing so here also) her main point was quite clear. She saw a world in which it is possible to break down every barrier of sexism possible, and in doing so, people will live in harmony.

Now I want you to understand. I am all for women getting equal rights, especially with voting, equal pay and treatment in the workplace and in society. But I must disagree that the scenario that Fuller sees as possible is possible. I believe that women and men should be equal, but I understand that today's, and indeed, any day's, society will not allow that. Today, and for much of the years past, has leaned more in the favor of men. Women are disrespected daily, and for all the disgust that is thrown at sexual abuse, rape, murder, etc., such atrocities keep occurring.

However, for all I know, we could be living in a world dominated by women in a few years, or maybe a few centuries. Men would be sexually abused, raped, and murdered, much for the same reasons women are today. Now I don't want people to mistake that I don't know that both happen today, and I don't think it will stop into the future. But the pendulum of equality is a constant change from one side to the other. There are several pendulums for each social, religious, economic, or governmental issues, and each pendulum has its own time to keep. But however fast the pendulums swing, they never stay at the middle for long, and they never will.

I do not believe in a utopian society. The closest that we, imperfect beings as we are, can obtain would be a dystopian society, a world akin to that of "The Hunger Games" or "The Giver". For every Martin Luther King Jr., there will be an Adolf Hitler. For every Malcolm X, there will be an Osama Bin Laden. People assume that if you do one little thing you can make everyone happy. But there is no way out of it. There will always be a person that is offended by what you say. Thus, what is the point of dreaming of a utopian society, what point is there of political correctness, if there will always be a person to undermine such efforts? And even if people claim that no one is being persecuted or discriminated because of their beliefs, their skin color, their sex, their creed, there will always be someone to beg to differ with them.

While I agree that women and men should live equally, I disagree that they can live equally, and neither can anyone else, for that matter. Human beings will continue to look for Utopia, a way to live in peace. But doing small little tasks, or large, monumental tasks, in the name of equality is insignificant when put up against the stubbornness and resolute pigheadedness that is human nature.

(I say all these words fully believing them. You are free to respond in kind. If you are uncomfortable responding to this post in the comment section below, you are free to do so in person. But please be civilized. I may give my opinions, but I have also taken considerable time and effort to think them through. I do my best to control my emotions, however futile they may be in the end. I am not a pessimist, nor am I a cynic, for the most part. I see myself as a realist. And maybe you see me as an egotist. You probably are right.)

3 comments:

  1. This was a very intriguing post Saul. It seems to me that you claim to want an equal society but don't seem to believe in one. How does that work? You say "by doing small little tasks, or large, monumental tasks, in the name of equality is insignificant [...] against human nature", but by doing that, aren't you helping the oppressors cause? If blacks hadn't believed in an equal world, do you think they would have done the civil rights? If gays truly believed society was never going to accept them, do you think they would keep on fighting? No. In reality, small and large acts of kindness in the name of equality will fight that negative energy. If all human-beings wanted and believed in an egalitarian society, wouldn't it happen? Just like an entire society believing in racism, you will have the odd- balls who aren't racist but the majority always rules. Let's make the majority a peaceful egalitarian one with hope.

    In addition, I don't think it's very likely that women will be the oppressors in our civilization. The reason men can rape and murder women easily is because of their biological upper hand. Men naturally have more muscle mass.

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    1. I don't doubt that small acts in the name of equality are important, I just think that when comparing them to the power of human nature, they are insignificant. I said this basically in these sentences: " For every Martin Luther King Jr., there will be an Adolf Hitler. For every Malcolm X, there will be an Osama Bin Laden." The world lives in a constant cycle of the good and bad, always has, always will. I oppose any ideal that says the world will be a perfect one. There won't ever be equality. It's not like attempts to try for equality are without merit, I'm just saying that total equality is impossible. If people were perfect, we could live in a perfect world, but seeing as that isn't the case, we will never be allowed to do so. As depressing as it is, it's reality.

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  2. Saul, your response to the article was very much what I had though before I had gone through it again. I was also struck by your theory of the pendulum which on second thought, is a relevant theory and kudos to you as I had not really thought about that. Despite many of us having good intentions I also do not believe that we will never really fully reach a Utopian society as there will always be haters and we will never be able to change that. Fantastic interpretation, I did not think of that.

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