You're reading modern sensibilities into it.
It's certainly much more modern than Deuteronomy!
I'm not saying they have a hidden agenda, but that women communicate differently than men do. That they would is entirely in keeping with biology; almost necessary even.
No doubt. In fact, in the nature vs. nurture debate, I solidly land on the nature side of the equation and always have, in opposition to most of my behavior theory and social services peers, who want to see themselves as having more impact on people than they do.
Men and women are and by necessity need to be distinctly different. Men are from Mars; women are from Venus, and all that. But passive-aggressiveness has been empirically studied, as have young children, and it isn't among the gender behavior markers that show up at early ages. In fact, it doesn't really come into play until after the onset of puberty, when gender differences result in females having something males are freshly interested in and let them bargain with. Now,
there's some human nature!
We have to start with people where they are now, not where we'd like them to be.
Of course, and that's where I started. Go back and read the entire thread if you don't believe me. I only got testy with her after she combined finally getting honest with us with acting as if she'd been victimized.
Besides, it's not disrespectful to ask background questions to ensure one is addressing the root cause.
As I said, so we're agreed -- and further indication that it wasn't appropriate for her to act like being asked respectful questions was disrespectful.
Speaking of laughable,
@rockfox, I do find it amusing that the man who finds a feminist conspiracy under every emoji is now defending a woman's right to guilt trip men into displaying sympathy when she has combined beating around the bush with unsubstantiated allegations.
No one will reasonably take that impression
Now there's a statement that reflects a typical fly in your ointment: you rely too much on anecdotal evidence. To assert that something is laughable and then base it on the incredibly small sample of people you've observed on Biblical Families through your particular filter on the threads that have attracted your attention (which I suspect are most threads but clearly couldn't be all of them, because you are under the illusion that . . .
masculinity [being] judged by the number of children . . . near as I can remember hasn't even been talked about.
. . . and I've observed at least a minimum of a dozen times when such comments have been made) is not the functional use of logic for which you are generally known around here. I'm tempted to wonder if the reason why you haven't observed what I'm talking about is because you might not even notice when it happens because it wouldn't bother you, given how insistent you are on ensuring that no taint of feminism ever gets reflected in your being, but I have no evidence for that, and that makes me think I'd probably be barking up the wrong tree if I started doing serious wondering along those lines.
And, again, don't turn this into a black-or-white thing (i.e., all-or-nothing), nor would it be appropriate for you to make another attempt to paint what I'm saying as supposedly applying to either . . .
. . . or even anything close to a
majority of men. I know you hate straw man arguments and red herrings, so don't pull them on me. I have only observed a decidedly
very s
mall minority of men in Biblical Families whose sum participation creates the impression that they think being reproductively prolific is more important than whether they treat their wives with respect or stay on top of their addictions or hold their marriages together long enough to really get to know all their children, but I've had the occasion over the past year to observe two such men showing out in this way, and even more disturbing to me when that was happening was: (a) that no one else publicly called them out on it, and (b) that after I did confront one of them the wagons got circled.
The circled man in question was done no favors, because what was going on behind the scenes never got addressed (and talk about no need to even have to read between the lines), and the episode left the impression that such an approach is at the very least not
unacceptable to Biblical Families folks. And,
@rockfox, you can call it laughable or assert until the cows come home that there's nothing to this, but this
particular issue (which, by the way, isn't the only example of types of unsuitable male behavior I've mentioned) is one that I didn't first come across on my own. Instead, I went to look into it only after more than one single woman with whom I was communicating pointed it out to me. My first response was to assert that they have every right to confront that themselves, but the response each woman had was to say that they don't mind getting into heavy discussions on BF forums, but when it comes to certain topics they've learned that it's best to avoid getting grief from men by just letting boys be boys.
I suppose that what this kind of thing does in my mind is make me wonder: do we collectively believe that single women also deserve some covering? or do they only get that if they marry one of us?
And, again, we can mistakenly say that it's a problem of them misunderstanding what's going on that can be cleared up with some re-education and some thicker skin on their parts, but I would assert that that's a point of view that only someone who has no expectation of meeting people in person would convey (btw, despite the fact that I would be surprised if we ever meet her, I'm fully prepared to discuss whatever she wants to discuss in person with NoWayInHell if she ever shows up at a retreat). We cannot get away with just putting it off on bad hearing; there is also bad speaking. Effective communication includes addressing both sides of the equation. It also strikes me that the only thing I can see that's consistent about you asserting that we should just accept female passive-aggressiveness while also asserting that women having the impression that some men are promoting some disrespectful-toward-women behaviors is not a problem is that, in each case, you don't want people to be hamstrung on the misbehavior side of the ledger.
We can't get withing 100' of that subject without a chorus of men calling it wrong and expressing their concern about what others would think. To the contrary, when a woman expresses desire for such things there are men attacking her perspective and telling her she's wrong. Yes, I'm talking about that very voluntary participation situation you speak of; lots of pushback even there; men making it clear it's not ok. Even though such actions make those women feel attacked, unwelcome and unsafe.
In cases like this there isn't a problem with people not speaking up to say it's not ok, they do, the real problem is you don't like the topic at all because it offend your sensibilities.
Actually, you're wrong about voluntary-wife-spanking offending my sensibilities. I simply don't care, am not offended by it and don't even oppose whatever Fifty Shades stuff two consenting adults do behind closed doors. Furthermore, on the contrary, I
do oppose any man on here or elsewhere giving any grief to any woman who expresses a desire for a good spanking (or for being a divorced single woman, for that matter). This giving-of-grief is what I would refer to as another example of unsuitable male misbehavior, so please feel free to add it to the list on my previous post, and I acknowledge right now that I've observed that as well. In fact, I observe that kind of thing out in the Real World a whole lot more often: men who give women grief for not being down for the liberal struggle like those men think those women should be.
That's a good example of behavior that deserves your scorn for being overly influenced by feminism.
But here's what puzzles me about you making this comment in the context of this discussion: I've already mentioned that I've observed such behavior here on BF forums, so I'm stipulating that I know that it has happened; I have further acknowledged that I should have included it in my list of unsuitable male misbehaviors. However, while I know that men have done such things, and I have no problem comprehending that women would be uncomfortable for being given pushback about their desire to be spanked, what I
don't understand is why
their husbands wouldn't have already insisted that the pushback be denounced and deep-sixed when it has been exhibited to the extent that it made the wives of those husbands "feel attacked, unwelcome and [particularly] unsafe." While substantively different from some of the unsuitable male misbehaviors I've already identified, it is difficult for me to comprehend, if a man who opposes violence in the home behaves violently enough toward another man's wife in his opposition to violence that that other man's wife legitimately feels
unsafe, why is it that this is the first time you're raising the issue, especially given the rank hypocrisy inherent in scaring a woman because one doesn't believe women should live in fear? It is possible that I just missed the forum thread in which the made-to-feel-safe woman's husband rose up against such injustice, but that still leaves me curious about why you so vigorously oppose my desire to draw a red line around some of these unsuitable male misbehaviors?