I don't have 'such an issue' with the site - it's really useful. I'm suggesting it could be for parents, not just mums, and it could be less pink. It's reinforcing gender stereotypes.petal wrote: Why join a site if you have such an issue with it?
And what a way to join and start some kind of argument about it
petal wrote: And of all the things that need dealing with in terms of sexism this site is not it !
That's what annoyed me
All the crap women have to deal with and a man comes along having a go
I thought this was a site about parenting. It's really useful as that, and men are on here and allowed on here. It's not just a site about being a mum, whether you like it or not, and no matter what the welcome email says. The information and discussions are useful and interesting no matter which parent you are. I think your comparison to a gay issues forum is crass. You clearly have no idea how sexist you are.petal wrote: Shall I now go to a gay for and complain they don't talk about straight issues enough
Thanks Annabel - sorry if I've offended people or been a bit stroppy in sticking up for myself. I want to keep it friendly and am happy to do so!Annabel (admin) wrote:Hello everyone
Thank you so much for all the comments on this thread.
There are a number of really really important and interesting questions raised here and I'd love to reply to them right now but I am out tonight and want to reply in a reasoned manner.
Putting aside, however, any NVN specifics can we please please please keep this conversation friendly?
I haven't had to lock any threads in December so far and I'd hate for this to be the first of the Xmas season!
Thank you, as always, for using NVN!
I think it works because it's for parents, so I think as a local site it woudln't have that USP. There's streetlife, etc., for that. I personally would like it to be parenty.supergirl wrote: Perhaps it is time for NVN to move on to a more gender neutral local site.... a local forum for local people? Or smthg similar?
There are differences but it's impossible to know just how far they run outside of all the million cruddy influences that are out there. My 3 year old boy likes pink, for now, and princesses, but that'll wane as the wider world markets muscley men to him.supergirl wrote: BUT... Benaldo, you must never forget that men and women are not wired the same. Even if you raise your children gender neutral (it us possible) you will see huge differences. For one a girl/woman talk. Even when she says that she is introvert and not cery talkative she will experience emotions that will either need to get out somehow either talking or writing. Boys/men experience emotions too and have to deal with them too but the way they go about it is very different.
I think you should read the other comments I've made in this string. White people can complain about racism, if there's racism happening. Why not?littlechicken wrote:Crying out 'sexism' just because this platform is created with women in mind first is outrageous and undermines the very real issue of sexism.
Sexism is constant, ingrained in the way society operates to the detriment of...women, not men.
If you are white, straight and middle class, then society operates in your favour.
It is like white people complaining about racism. It cannot happen because white people are part of the privileged majority. When it comes to sexism, men have the privilege. You complaining about a pink logo when a woman dies every 2.9 days as a result of male violence in Britain makes you sound self involved and ignorant.
Why is it a problem that the welcome email said "a mum's guide to south london"? There are men, users of this forum, who find a mum's guide to south london very useful.
If it is 'my stereotype', where did it come from?! A life and world that perpetuates such tosh. Read my other comments - I do not think pink is just for girls. I put my eldest in his pink jumper for the annual nursery group photo this week, so there! And not to make a point - just because he likes it and I think he looks great in it!SW11_1234 wrote:Maybe it is your stereotype.. I see a jaunty man with some cowboy boots and long fashionable hair pushing a pram who happens to like pink and shopping.. Your belief pink is only for girls has marred your judgement.
As for the gentleman and a van, he is a man, he has a van, he wears a hat and likes blue.. So be it..
Nothing wrong with your initial post benaldo, up until the last sentence, then it gets slightly confrontational, had this been omitted I have no doubt your responses would have been vastly different.
You're right, yes - I shouldn't have said "sexist". I didn't say the content isn't discriminatory. I said I continued into the site anyway, despite the pink and the "mums'" welcome.littlechicken wrote: So basically I am saying that discrimination does not equal sexism and it is not fair if men call out sexism if they have been discriminated against. In this case , you haven't been discriminated, you have been offended by what you perceived to be feminine only. The pink logo and the welcoming email to mum's guide to south london. As you said, the content is not discriminatory nor exclusive and you were also allowed to join regardless of your gender.
As someone else pointed out, it would all have been well had you not dropped the sexism bomb.