Interesting analogy

Topic by Russky

Russky

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This topic contains 2 replies, has 3 voices, and was last updated by Flamesabers  flamesabers 4 years, 9 months ago.

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  • #40634
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    Russky
    Russky
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    13503

    Imagine that one day you wake up and all of the sudden, the same phenomena applied to women would also apply to kids, and Kidsinism appears.

    How devastating that would be for a society?

     

    Imagine kidinism supporting equal rights for children, claiming that children are oppressed, always been oppressed, that they don’t get equal pay, don’t have voting rights, can’t f~~~ or buy liquor.

    And the social engineers through states, through churches, through schools would raise children to imagine that they have same rights as adults, that they’re not responsible to do chores, put up with parentoarchy (!) and vote democrat.

    And state would own all the kids, let them all drink and f~~~ at daycare, put parents in prison for made-up parental abuse.

    This is pretty much what feminism is like in a nutshell

    proud carrier of the 'why?' chromosome

    #40811
    +1

    Anonymous
    1

    I saw a poster with kids holding signs similar to feminism, but with Childisnim (or something like that) written on it, using the same arguments as feminism does. It drove the point home for me, and it is a very clever comparison.

    🙂

    #41092
    +1
    Flamesabers
    flamesabers
    Participant
    55

    I think a major shortcoming of childisnism is that even though adulthood may seem like a long ways away for some children, all children realize at some point or another they’re going to grow up and possibly become parents themselves. If changing to the other sex was as easy and natural as growing up, feminism would never take root because females would either realize at some point they would change into their evil oppressors or they would already see feminism as being nonsense because they were male earlier in life. Unlike feminists bemoaning that men don’t see how they’re discriminated against because men can’t possibly understand male privilege, children can’t use the argument to adults “you don’t know what it’s like to be a child.” We all were children at some point in time. Some people had more difficult childhoods than others. Unlike some grand conspiracy like patriarchy, I think the quality of people’s childhood is largely dependent on the quality of their parents, other family members and how much money they have. Children recognize this when they try to persuade their parents to do something by saying things like “my friend’s parents let him stay out late on Saturday night.”

    Another reason I think childisnism will never take root is a number of adults perceive children as having an easier childhood than what they would have had decades ago.

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