hydrophilic attack
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i asked someone out on the bus once based on looks only, but she had initiated extended ocular copulation on two separate bus trips so i felt pretty confident she'd go on a date, which she did
This. I realize some of ya'll sheltered on Gaf, but this is the reality.
There are women who enjoy it. There are women who don't. These are the facts. I'm looking for your stats on the percentage of women who are ok with being called out to. Can you post those findings for me?So, let's do a quick Google Search and see what some studies say.
http://pashionistas.com/post/139926490718/5-statistics-that-prove-catcalling-is-a-problem
- Over 99 percent of American women say theyve been a victim of street harassment
So, this pretty much happens to all women. Should we be OK with it, because a minority of those women might be OK with it?
- Majority of women, globally, say they first experienced street harassment before the age of 17.
Seems this happens to most girls growing up. Should we still find the general behavior acceptable, even if that leads to men doing this to young girls, or should we draw a line and say: no, just stop it?
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But by all means, continue excusing this behavior, because apparently there are some women who have no problem with it /s
that's what the discussion is about right? but OP is stating all catcalling is sexual harassment which is up in the air.There's a difference between showing interest and being creepy and inappropriate.
i'm not sure it's the same reason i mentioned it.That comic is infamous for a reason...
it sounds like you agree with OP that all catcalling is sexual harassment.There are plenty of ways to show interest in someone of the opposite sex in the right time and place without sexual harassment. You know you could....*gasp* treat them like a human being.
How could this thread remind you of that?
excelsiorlef, thanks for asking. i think the comic humor is it depends on who's doing it that makes the advances feel unwanted. i was responding to a post that i agreed with that the thread felt like a lecture not a discussion and by some of the responses, i'm not sure if i disagree with myself yet.Let's not act like who does the catcalling and how they do it plays a significant part in how women respond to it.
Now multiply that remark by a few hundred a year, thrown in with some more obscene remarks, women being followed, men getting threatening, and you see why some rather draw the line at the start, instead of excusing part of this behavior.Woman walks down the street, A guy on the street sees her and says "Hey Beautiful", She ignores him and keeps walking. The guy goes back to what he was doing.
You have no facts, you have an opinion.There are women who enjoy it. There are women who don't. These are the facts. I'm looking for your stats on the percentage of women who are ok with being called out to. Can you post those findings for me?
Woman walks down the street, A guy on the street sees her and says "Hey Beautiful", She ignores him and keeps walking. The guy goes back to what he was doing.
Well, there was that wolf-whistling OK-ed by three women example, but in general, it's not a welcome thing.
Edited in some public places I mentioned, not that it alters the message that much. Walking up to someone you find attractive and asking to go grab a coffee or something isn't creepy in my opinion.
This is completely ridiculous. This is how humans interact. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this.Asking some stranger out on a random street corner based on absolutely nothing but her looks is kinda messed up.
The point is that those situations I mentioned are happening. And the girl can't predict how it will go. So she is already forced to be on the defensive and lookout for what is going to happen. This is not a nice environment for her to be walking around in, while just going to get some groceries, on her way to work, the gym, whatever.
You are asking women to just ignore this behavior, but that won't solve the actual problem. And like I said, ignoring it will have some men become aggressive, shout more remarks, call her a bitch, etc, etc. Or it might be taken that she actually likes it, because well, she didn't say otherwise. The woman being called out loses no matter what.
Just because you don't consider something harassment because it doesn't fit your definition (which is skewed by your gender and environment), doesn't mean it's not a problem for other people.
Also, ignoring doesn't work. Because if it worked, then catcalling would have ended years ago.
I'll just disagree that walking up to someone just randomly on the street without meeting them first and saying wanna date isn't weird.
What? Do you ask someone about their job, interests, hobbies and values before asking them out or something? That's what a first date is for, imo. It's not superficial asking someone out because you find them attractive, it would be if that's the only reason you want to pursue a relationship and don't care about their other qualities, though. Holy shit.
The reason women almost have to wear earbuds or headphones on public transit, or grocery shopping, or exercising, is so that dudes don't try and hit them up.
No one wants to be hit on when they goin bout they business
Now multiply that remark by a few hundred a year, thrown in with some more obscene remarks, women being followed, men getting threatening, and you see why some rather draw the line at the start, instead of excusing part of this behavior.
I suppose we can take that approach which is actually reasonable and should be expected. I think it is similar to using racial slurs, while in some context it might not be offensive, it is generally a risky word to use so why not avoid it, I suppose it is a case of net negative as you say. That said, I am very much a liberal type person, a lot of my thinking tend to swing that way so its hard for me to understand the origin of catcalling or its generalisations. All I know is that it used to be a way to solicit or invite some form of sexual attraction by both male and females in the past....well to the present to as well
I'll just disagree that walking up to someone just randomly on the street without meeting them first and saying wanna date isn't weird.
I'm going to preface this post by saying that I'm male, so I admit to not knowing what it's like to be cat-called near constantly. Because of that, I defer to girls to tell me how they feel about it. I've never cat-called someone, and because girls have communicated to me explicitly how it makes them feel, I never will.
However...I can't wrap my head around how it makes people feel uncomfortable. I mean, girls have said so, so it obviously is (and as a guy, I have no place to tell them otherwise), but it's still something I just can't see.
I've always been a fan of the Golden Rule. Do onto others as you want them to do onto you. And, well, I would absolutely love if I got cat-called when I went out.
Maybe it has something to do with the level of self-confidence? I've never had any confidence in my appearance, thought I was attractive, or had anyone tell me otherwise (besides my parents/grandparents/sister, but they're obligated to tell you so they don't really count). As such, if I went out and had a girl every 10 minutes yell at me some variant of "Hey sexy!", I can't see how I would take that as anything but a compliment and a confidence booster. That holy shit, someone actually does find me attractive. Would I feel differently if it actually happened? Possibly, but I don't see it right now.
I don't know, I'm just experiencing a huge disconnect between my own feelings on being cat-called and how girls say it makes them feel.
Do people here consider complimenting a stranger catcalling? Since if so that's kinda messed up. I mean i completely understand that it's not at all ok to yell sexual shit at randoms but personally as a man, i have always been super flattered be it a man or woman who comes up and compliments me out of the blue. Sure it was a bit weird when a gay guy came up to me and told me that i melted his heart and the ran away giggling but it was still flattering even if weird.
The reason why i'm asking this is because i was a bit confused at the "hey girl" thing in this thread.
We're derailing this, because i feel we should be able to both agree that yelling at a random passer-by "YO, LEMME GET YOUR NUMBER!" does not constitute 'asking somebody out'.
But sometimes they do want to be randomly hit on, so it's okay to take that chance, if I'm understanding these posts correctly
that's what the discussion is about right? but OP is stating all catcalling is sexual harassment which is up in the air.
i'm not sure it's the same reason i mentioned it.
it sounds like you agree with OP that all catcalling is sexual harassment.
*gasp* i'm not sure the sarcasm makes your point taken better
maybe i should've started with: "i have 5 friends that are girls, 1,2,4,5." before i posted.
excelsiorlef, thanks for asking. i think the comic humor is it depends on who's doing it that makes the advances feel unwanted. i was responding to a post that i agreed with that the thread felt like a lecture not a discussion and by some of the responses, i'm not sure if i disagree with myself yet.
I'm going to preface this post by saying that I'm male, so I admit to not knowing what it's like to be cat-called near constantly. Because of that, I defer to girls to tell me how they feel about it. I've never cat-called someone, and because girls have communicated to me explicitly how it makes them feel, I never will.
However...I can't wrap my head around how it makes people feel uncomfortable. I mean, girls have said so, so it obviously is (and as a guy, I have no place to tell them otherwise), but it's still something I just can't see.
I've always been a fan of the Golden Rule. Do onto others as you want them to do onto you. And, well, I would absolutely love if I got cat-called when I went out.
Maybe it has something to do with the level of self-confidence? I've never had any confidence in my appearance, thought I was attractive, or had anyone tell me otherwise (besides my parents/grandparents/sister, but they're obligated to tell you so they don't really count). As such, if I went out and had a girl every 10 minutes yell at me some variant of "Hey sexy!", I can't see how I would take that as anything but a compliment and a confidence booster. That holy shit, someone actually does find me attractive. Would I feel differently if it actually happened? Possibly, but I don't see it right now.
I don't know, I'm just experiencing a huge disconnect between my own feelings on being cat-called and how girls say it makes them feel.
In class on a cell phone can't exactly do a through search right now. I was referring to the post I quoted. Those were facts. Do you deny that ?Now multiply that remark by a few hundred a year, thrown in with some more obscene remarks, women being followed, men getting threatening, and you see why some rather draw the line at the start, instead of excusing part of this behavior.
You have no facts, you have an opinion.
So, verbal street harassment has around 70% angered, 30% anxiety and 20% fear.
This. I realize some of ya'll sheltered on Gaf, but this is the reality.
This is completely ridiculous. This is how humans interact. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this.
That's... not entirely what I said, but sure. No worries.
I thought the discussion is whether reality is fucked up, not whether it is what it is.
We are talking about the earlier links like this? http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/features/3636135/Why-women-like-being-wolf-whistled-at.htmlIn class on a cell phone can't exactly do a through search right now. I was referring to the post I quoted. Those were facts. Do you deny that ?
Yes, it happens. And that is the exact problem. Because it shouldn't happen. There shouldn't have to be a response, because the act itself shouldn't happen. That is the whole point.I agree with you that its not a nice enviroment, and dont get me wrong, im not advocating for men to catcall. Like I said before, its stupid and no men should do it.
What I am saying is, a guy that loudly says something is not the same as a guy who follows and harrasses a woman. They both did something stupid, but I dont believe they should be viewed as the same asshole.
As for how women respond to the behavior, I am not asking for women to do anything specific, I dont have that right. I just dont really follow what the ideal would be for reall life situations. Catcall happens. If not ignoring, which again I see no data to support that ignoring it leads to more assaults, that I knwo of, what else can she do? What would, in your opinion, be the best response for this situation?
There is a very, very high chance that that woman has been previously harassed, fondled, grouped, abused, raped. There is a near-zero chance that she has never experienced unwanted sexual advances or been made to feel like her privacy and private sexuality aren't respected.Woman walks down the street, A guy on the street sees her and says "Hey Beautiful", She ignores him and keeps walking. The guy goes back to what he was doing.
And yet sometimes it's not. Sometimes catcalling is meant to get a stranger's attention so they can holla at them.
but the examples were talking about is literally hey girl give me your number....
That's what I've been saying the entire time so
I thought the discussion is whether reality is fucked up, not whether it is what it is. Lots of women put up with this shit daily and get on withtheir lives because, what's the alternative? Like so many things, that doesn't make it right.
Well then it becomes sexual harassment then, but before then it's not.
He was responding to my post, which wasn't about cat-calling.
Yo, who the fuck these people askin randos on the street they ain't even made eye contact with out? I don't mean in clubs, or in a cafe. I mean out on the damn street.
Who askin someone at the grocery store out? Why you askin folks out when they exercising? Who does this shit
Sorry, I got lost.
You are in for a treat.
No, guys who don't consider the context for their actions and think they are entitled to impose their desire on strangers if they think they're being "witty/charming" are the problem.In most cases, I agree, but not all. Guys that are disrespectful, creepy, too aggressive, etc... are the problems. Decent looking guy that yells something witty/charming to an attractive girl on the street, gets her attention, she laughs and then sees him and crosses the street to go talk to him and they chat for a minute and he gets her number is NOT the problem.
There is a very, very high chance that that woman has been previously harassed, fondled, grouped, abused, raped. There is a near-zero chance that she has never experienced unwanted sexual advances or been made to feel like her privacy and private sexuality aren't respected.
In that context, why in the fuck would you risk upsetting, hurting, or even scaring a total stranger on the grounds that she might, just might, find it flattering? What do you gain from this? Why wouldn't you indulge in just a moment's self-awareness to realize this behavior is needless, very likely unwanted, very possibly hurtful?
You're arguing that it's OK to continue doing something, even though the vast majority of women will find it intimidating and harassing, because sometimes a rare woman will respond positively to it. That's so goddamn dehumanizing, because it suggests that the feelings of all the other women in the world, don't compare to your desire to really capitalize on that 1% chance you'll get a woman to sleep with you.
Most people think they are more charming and witty then they actually are. So what that person might see as charming, the girl might see as creepy and aggressive. So maybe don't go around yelling to attractive girls on the street to get attention.In most cases, I agree, but not all. Guys that are disrespectful, creepy, too aggressive, etc... are the problems. Decent looking guy that yells something witty/charming to an attractive girl on the street, gets her attention, she laughs and then sees him and crosses the street to go talk to him and they chat for a minute and he gets her number is NOT the problem.
In most cases, I agree, but not all. Guys that are disrespectful, creepy, too aggressive, etc... are the problems. Decent looking guy that yells something witty/charming to an attractive girl on the street, gets her attention, she laughs and then sees him and crosses the street to go talk to him and they chat for a minute and he gets her number is NOT the problem.
The example I provided was not "hey gurl give me your number". I reiterated that it wasn't that, and you're still saying it was. Why is this happening?
Well how about you respond to what I'm saying instead of quoting me and responding to yourself?
Yes, it happens. And that is the exact problem. Because it shouldn't happen. There shouldn't have to be a response, because the act itself shouldn't happen. That is the whole point.
I'm a guy, so I'm just guessing at this, but I would guess the worst thing about catcalling is the public nature of it. You're being put on the spotlight in a sexual context. And in this public spotlight, you're typically expected to take the compliment even if you find it degrading.