Re: [Gendergap] Announcing Inspire Campaign Grantees (Carol Mooredc)

2015-05-06 Thread Amanda Menking
+1
Eloquently put.

From: LtPowers 
ltpowers_w...@rochester.rr.commailto:ltpowers_w...@rochester.rr.com
Reply-To: Addressing gender equity and exploring ways to increase the 
participation of women within Wikimedia projects. 
gendergap@lists.wikimedia.orgmailto:gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
Date: Wednesday, May 6, 2015 at 11:29 AM
To: 'Addressing gender equity and exploring ways to increase theparticipation 
of women within Wikimedia projects.' 
gendergap@lists.wikimedia.orgmailto:gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: Re: [Gendergap] Announcing Inspire Campaign Grantees (Carol Mooredc)

Allow me to suggest a somewhat less insidious explanation.

Today's young adults have largely been brought up in an environment of 
egalitarianism. While we know that this environment isn't actually as 
egalitarian as it seems, and there are many privileges retained by the dominant 
demographics, today's college students by and large haven't been introduced to 
that concept yet. They're still operating under the primary and secondary 
school mindset in which boys and girls are treated (at least on the surface) 
equally.

(Racial privilege operates similarly.)

So young adults instinctively bristle when they see attempts to counter 
systemic bias, because a) they have never been shown that systemic bias, and b) 
they have an inherent predilection toward equal treatment. Any attempt to 
counter systemic bias (most famously affirmative action) is thus seen as 
unequal treatment and thus undesirable, unfair, or even immoral.

It takes a concerted effort to demonstrate to (and thereby enlighten) members 
of the privileged categories that a modicum of unequal treatment is necessary 
in order to bring about a more equal society. Until that happens, young adults 
will use their newfound powers of persuasion and activism to rebel against any 
unequal treatment.

If we view this more as a positive instinctual preference for fairness rather 
than as a negative instinctual defense of privilege, I suspect we might make 
more allies than enemies.

Trust me -- I myself have only recently (in the last 4 years or so) come around 
to recognizing the inherent privilege my gender and race grant me. It is very 
hard to overcome the instinct to prefer equal treatment over unequal.


Powers  8^]



-Original Message-
From: J Hayes [mailto:slowki...@gmail.com]
Sent: 05 May 2015 21:20
To: Addressing gender equity and exploring ways to increase the participationof 
women within Wikimedia projects.
Subject: Re: [Gendergap] Announcing Inspire Campaign Grantees (Carol Mooredc)

the counter-flyers are like men's rights
it's a rhetoric of role reversal
the culture of privilege does not like to be challenged
it must maintain a veneer, with critique muzzled
it's more small group validation, than attempt at dialogue
a FUD attempt to divide and conquer
changing dominate culture to be more empathetic is a long term project.

On Tue, May 5, 2015 at 5:16 PM, Carol Moore dc 
carolmoor...@verizon.netmailto:carolmoor...@verizon.net wrote:
Thanks for excellent comments. I should have been more specific than saying 
trashed and said the flyers were torn down, per article: The DAAP 
edit-a-thon was not met without opposition on campus, as promotional fliers for 
the event were repeatedly torn down and replaced with a satirical “Wiki Dudes” 
poster featuring Martin Luther King Jr., Jesus, Albert Einstein and Abraham 
Lincoln.

The good news is that on so many fronts and issues, not just Wikipedia, women 
are fighting back and that's the important thing... So overall I'm an optimist! 
:-)


On 5/4/2015 6:10 PM, Ellie K wrote:
1. Thank you, Carol Moore dc, for writing an excellent response to what (I 
agree) was a very silly and irritating comment at the  
http://blog.wikimedia.org/2015/05/01/meet-the-inspire-grantees/ post.

2. Regarding the edit-a-thons, you said:
 Hmmm, looks like some guys even object to edit-a-thons, trashing their 
 posters on campus... 
 http://www.newsrecord.org/news/students-combat-gender-imbalance-online/article_fd100a5c-e13c-11e4-9d73-d3ef3275ba46.html

Actually, the male students didn't trash the wiki women posters, but made and 
posted separate wiki dudes posters of their own.  The NewsRecord post said 
that doing so didn't constitute a Title IX violation, yet.

I find it kind of disturbing that male students would feel the need to react 
that way, by making the wiki dudes posters. It is obvious that there is less 
coverage of women in Wikipedia than of men, and that most notable figures in 
American and European (in fact, global) arts, history and science have been 
men, who have received plenty of attention and biographical scholarship already!

The fact that the anonymous male students went to the trouble of creating 
separate posters, rather than vandalizing the existing wiki women posters, 
indicates a level of forethought that is beyond mere impulse trolling.  If I 
were to wear my politically correct

Re: [Gendergap] Announcing Inspire Campaign Grantees (Carol Mooredc)

2015-05-06 Thread Sydney Poore
Hi LtPowers,
Thank you for offering a thoughtful response.

It is hard to know the motivation of the people sabotaging this particular
on campus project. But in general I agree with your comment.

I share your perspective that many young adults are opposed to treating
people differently based on race and gender especially if a direct link is
not made to an economic or other specific type of disadvantage that needs
to be addressed to level the playing field. Even then, some people will
reject any solution that targets one group over another for special
treatment believing that the solution perpetuates the problem by continuing
to treat that group differently.

It's sad but not surprising to know that some people feel so strongly about
it that they would attempt to sabotage an on campus event.

Sydney



Sydney Poore
User:FloNight
Wikipedian in Residence
at Cochrane Collaboration

On Wed, May 6, 2015 at 2:29 PM, LtPowers ltpowers_w...@rochester.rr.com
wrote:

  Allow me to suggest a somewhat less insidious explanation.



 Today's young adults have largely been brought up in an environment of
 egalitarianism. While we know that this environment isn't actually as
 egalitarian as it seems, and there are many privileges retained by the
 dominant demographics, today's college students by and large haven't been
 introduced to that concept yet. They're still operating under the primary
 and secondary school mindset in which boys and girls are treated (at least
 on the surface) equally.



 (Racial privilege operates similarly.)



 So young adults instinctively bristle when they see attempts to counter
 systemic bias, because a) they have never been shown that systemic bias,
 and b) they have an inherent predilection toward equal treatment. Any
 attempt to counter systemic bias (most famously affirmative action) is thus
 seen as unequal treatment and thus undesirable, unfair, or even immoral.



 It takes a concerted effort to demonstrate to (and thereby enlighten)
 members of the privileged categories that a modicum of unequal treatment is
 necessary in order to bring about a more equal society. Until that happens,
 young adults will use their newfound powers of persuasion and activism to
 rebel against any unequal treatment.



 If we view this more as a positive instinctual preference for fairness
 rather than as a negative instinctual defense of privilege, I suspect we
 might make more allies than enemies.



 Trust me -- I myself have only recently (in the last 4 years or so) come
 around to recognizing the inherent privilege my gender and race grant me.
 It is very hard to overcome the instinct to prefer equal treatment over
 unequal.





 Powers  8^]







 -Original Message-
 *From:* J Hayes [mailto:slowki...@gmail.com]
 *Sent:* 05 May 2015 21:20
 *To:* Addressing gender equity and exploring ways to increase the
 participationof women within Wikimedia projects.
 *Subject:* Re: [Gendergap] Announcing Inspire Campaign Grantees (Carol
 Mooredc)



 the counter-flyers are like men's rights

 it's a rhetoric of role reversal

 the culture of privilege does not like to be challenged

 it must maintain a veneer, with critique muzzled

 it's more small group validation, than attempt at dialogue

 a FUD attempt to divide and conquer

 changing dominate culture to be more empathetic is a long term project.



 On Tue, May 5, 2015 at 5:16 PM, Carol Moore dc carolmoor...@verizon.net
 wrote:

 Thanks for excellent comments. I should have been more specific than
 saying trashed and said the flyers were torn down, per article: The DAAP
 edit-a-thon was not met without opposition on campus, as promotional fliers
 for the event were repeatedly torn down and replaced with a satirical “Wiki
 Dudes” poster featuring Martin Luther King Jr., Jesus, Albert Einstein and
 Abraham Lincoln.

 The good news is that on so many fronts and issues, not just Wikipedia,
 women are fighting back and that's the important thing... So overall I'm an
 optimist! :-)



 On 5/4/2015 6:10 PM, Ellie K wrote:

   1. Thank you, Carol Moore dc, for writing an excellent response to what
 (I agree) was a very silly and irritating comment at the
 http://blog.wikimedia.org/2015/05/01/meet-the-inspire-grantees/ post.



 2. Regarding the edit-a-thons, you said:

  Hmmm, looks like some guys even object to edit-a-thons, trashing
 their posters on campus...
 http://www.newsrecord.org/news/students-combat-gender-imbalance-online/article_fd100a5c-e13c-11e4-9d73-d3ef3275ba46.html



 Actually, the male students didn't trash the wiki women posters, but made
 and posted separate wiki dudes posters of their own.  The NewsRecord post
 said that doing so didn't constitute a Title IX violation, yet.



 I find it kind of disturbing that male students would feel the need to
 react that way, by making the wiki dudes posters. It is obvious that there
 is less coverage of women in Wikipedia than of men, and that most notable
 figures