Tuesday 19 July 2011

The man with no name

Okay, so we've all seen this woman's face by now:


She's the lovely specimen who drugged her soon-to-be ex husband, tied him to a bed, waited for him to wake, cut his penis off with a kitchen knife. She then put it down the garbage disposal in order, one presumes, to eliminate any possibility of reattaching it.

*giggle*

When police arrived, she merely told them, "He deserved it." So what was his offense, that merited the amputation and destruction of his penis? Apparently, he filed for divorce.

*titter*

And now, as he lies (possibly) recovering from near-death from shock and blood loss, he has become the punchline of a joke that began with Lorena and John Wayne Bobbit. Filed for divorce? "That'll teach him," quips an audience member during a recent episode of CBS's The Talk. Followed by host Sharon Osborne's assertion that, though she's unaware of all the details leading up to the attack, "it's quite fabulous."

*haha*

Now quick, all of you. Can anyone here tell me, off the top of your head, what Catherine Kieu's husband's name is? Don't know it? Huh. I must confess, I don't know it, either. And while this may indeed be simply because his name has been withheld (would YOU want to go through the rest of your life aware that everyone knows you have no penis?), watching this video by Angry Harry (who is actually a very calm and rational dude, as well as brilliant), I'm coming to realize that we as a society are perfectly content knowing nothing meaningful about this man.

In a very insidious way, he does not exist to us. He is neither human nor real, and because he is neither human nor real, his suffering means nothing to us. We feel less empathy for him, an actual person, than we feel for Holden Caulfield of Catcher in the Rye. We feel less empathy for him than for Optimus Prime, for fuck sake.

Why is this? Because he's a man, and we are trained as a society to see "men" as something less than whole people? More and more, we view men through their usefulness to society (firefighter, soldier, crew member, miner), their wrongdoings (rapist, murderer, thief, robber), or through their relationships with women (father, brother, son, husband).

In the first case, we have no empathy for them because, as Angry Harry said so eloquently, they've been reduced from human beings to "human doings". In the second case, we view them through the lens of their victims, making it all to easy to distance ourselves from their humanity. And in the third, we view them through the lens of the women in their lives. Our empathy is for her, even if she doesn't deserve it. No matter how despicable her crime was, no matter how inexcusable, no matter how unwarranted, no matter how evil, her suffering is somehow more worthy of sympathy to us than his.

She deserves our understanding, our support, our pity. And what does her victim deserve? Who cares? It's not like he even has a name. He only exists to us through his role as "husband of the penis mutilator". His suffering is so abstract to us as a society, we can even feel comfortable laughing about it.

Somehow, I don't think the man's friends and family are giggling over this. I really don't.

In a recent discussion about why I believe in the causes of MRAs, I said these words:

As a mother, I'd throw myself in front of a bullet for either of my sons, because their lives matter to me. But more importantly their lives matter to them.
And I think this is something that is utterly forgotten in the quest for ever more rights/privileges for women. That men are human beings unto themselves. If they're alive, they're not only someone's father/son/husband/wallet. If they're dead, they deserve a portion of the tears shed, not just the women who will have to live without them. They have value in and of themselves, not just a value that can be measured as a function of their usefulness or importance to women or society.

We've all heard the expression of common, progressive wisdom in that a society can be measured by how it treats its women.

And how it treats its men? If this was the yardstick we were forced to measure our society by, if it was one that even entered into the public consciousness, I'm pretty sure we'd be failing.

7 comments:

  1. Awesome and very eloquent as usual! :D

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  2. Not just failing - an EPIC fail - that is where we are now.

    Look around!

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  3. That's what I thought at the time too. We kept hearing about this animal's name. Noone was interested in the man's name. Mr Nobody.
    Excellent blog.

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  4. Men don't exist huh?
    I challenge you to a thought experiment:
    all men on earth go on strike. How long before society crumbles?

    I found your blog the other day. It is absolutely a godsend.

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    Replies
    1. As for the topic itself, the reason for this phenomenon is that society views its narrative with a female (or with females) as the protagonist.

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  5. Peegee, if men got fed-up with how they are being treated by this vagina-worshiping society and suddenly went on strike, I don't think these blind, spoiled feminist women have any idea how fast and how much harder their lives will get. Sure, at first most women will be accusing us all of being misogynists. Hell, there will even be manginas saying how evil we, the more sensible men are for not kissing the asses of all these bitter, psychotic and ungrateful women. BUT, eventually, that princess / whore mentality will kick in and women will turning against each other for pushing men away. They don't want to have to live the harshness of reality, alone. They want men to help them through it all. It's just in their nature to be so self-obsessed. They have to to take care of that baby inside of them. BUT, we need to draw the line at some point. They are being psychotic.

    All I can say is thank goodness for women like Karen or else, I would have no faith in the opposite sex anymore.

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  6. Great post as usual.

    By the way, I am pleased to note that that bitch Kieu got 7 years to life and will at least serve 7 years:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_Kieu

    At least she didn't get off as easy as Lorena Bobbit.

    ReplyDelete

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