#YesAllWomen Inspired Resources

[Updated 5/26/2014 at 9:04 PM]

If you heard about the #YesAllWomen hashtag on Twitter, you know it’s about women sharing their experiences with misogyny after the Elliot Rodgers incident.  After having a chat with Jason de Kanter, I put together a list of useful resources for people who want to deal with issues of misogyny and sexual assault – and being better people.  It’s male-focused because this is from my view – of a guy who wants us to become better people.

 

Any other links, let me know.

Historical

– Steven Savage

Elliot Rodger Is The Hidden Normal

You’ve heard about Elliot Rodger, the man who essentially went to murder a bunch of women because he felt rejected by women overall and decided to take his revenge.  It’s horrible, and his 140 page manifesto reveals a narcissistic, self-centered, entitled person who literally felt justified in killing people because of their gender because someone wouldn’t date him or sleep with him.  He was a person who had adsorbed toxic faux-masculinity of the MRA and PUA world.  He was in short, a horrible person.

He’s also far, far too common.  There are plenty of could-be Elliot Rodgers out there, plenty of people who are like him but just haven’t picked up a gun yet, too many people who regard women as property they’re entitled to.

Women face this all the time.  There’s plenty of people like him.  You can find the extreme “manosphere” documented at WeHuntedTheMammonth (which does so with humor probably as the only other reaction is horror).  You can read about how women face hatred for their gender and disregard for their gender in the #YesAllWomen hashtag.

Elliot Roger wasn’t as out there as we think.  That’s hard to cope with because we like to think we’re good.

You hear his whining voice in every guy who thinks “women” are to blame for everything.  You see the gleam of hatred in the eye of every overpaid pundit who talks about women as another species.  It’s in Steubenville, it’s whenever the media write off some rape case involving a popular media figure.

You hear it when you talk to your female friends and relatives.  It’s everywhere.  Are you the “person who hears it all” in your group of friends?  Then you know how bad it is with the certainty of a sunrise.

Right now bad treatment of women is far too normal in our society.

It’s just we don’t admit it, even though we know it is.

It’s sick, bizarre, disgusting, and beneath us.  It’s horrible, it’s human, it’s degrading.  It’s wrong in a way that’s hard to express.

But people are trying to express it.  It’s time to solve it.  To fix it.  It’s time to not let this fade into the background and scrubbed-away bloodstains and a bad television movie.

Right now Elliot Roger is out there in a way, his hatred and self-centeredness was a manifestation of the larger problem.  There’s another Elliot Roger in the head of a guy who thinks women should date him as he’s so great, he’s in the voice of someone casually calling women “bitches.”

He might even be in your head or that of your friend or family.  Or you.

So it’s time we exorcize the sick son-of-a-bitch.

Get him out of your head.  Work to overcome any misogyny you picked up in the culture. Don’t accept hateful behavior and call it out. Raise awareness of things. Donate. Make a difference.

Or we’ll do this all again, mourn again, and write it off again the next time there’s a horrible killing.  Just like little bits of hatred-of-women are written off all the time.

– Steven Savage

 

 

 

Mental Health In The US Is More Mental Than Health

USA Today is going to do a multipart series on the lack of mental health care in the US.  I’d recommend reading this and following it.

My background is actually in Psychology, all the way back to my college years.  Thus issues like this are ones I was and am concerned about, and it’s been frankly obvious but not talked about that the mental health care in the US is pretty bad – basically it’s prison, emergency wards, and the streets.  And the morgue.

It’s wrong on many levels.  It’s frustrating as it’s been bad for awhile.  It’s painful that in our age of snarky gotcha politics no one is going to actually do something unless a lot of us push for it.  That’s a hint, by the way.

So I’m hoping this gets some damn attention.  As a guy who gladly votes to raise his taxes, I’d like to get some better social services, please.

Because something like this means the system, such as it is, is going to break spectacularly.  More.

– Steven Savage