That is the same excuse white people give when we talk issues around white privilege. The common mistake here is the failure to recognise the undue privilege that comes as a result of an entrenched structure.
When men are called trash, or when white people are called out on their privilege, we are pushing back against the structural problems, not the individual.
As a man, you are inseparable from patriarchy, you therefore do not have the luxury of disassociating yourself or opting out of patriarchy, the ills that come with it and the benefits that come with it. Because this is not about an individual, but the system of patriarchy, you should not be offended at all.
As a man, what puzzles me most about men's push-back against being labelled as trash, is that we as men are also scared of each other. Men do not feel entirely safe in our country, because of other men. Indeed, men's experience of violence is not comparable to that of women, however, we too fear each other.
Men constantly and actively warn girl children and women close to them, against men. Uncles, brothers and fathers, try as much as they can, for as long as they can, to ensure that the females in their lives do not date, go out or even befriend males because they too know that men pose a danger to women.
Men don't need to be touchy, trash tag is against the ills of patriarchy
The country has its attention set on issues around gender-based violence, attention that is necessary and long overdue. During this period, a lot of dialogue has been taking place around the plight of women and children in South Africa, on social media, television and print media.
During these conversations, I have realised how quickly men push back against #MenAreTrash or how defensive men become when they are shown to be the main cause of the violence against women and children.
I hope after reading this, you will stop obsessing over being called trash and start seeing #MenAreTrash for what it is. Moreover, I hope after reading this, you think differently about your everyday actions and how they may be contributing to the plight of women.
Men are trash refers to the broader structural problems that are a manifestation of patriarchy, inequality, and men being able to get away with crimes against women. You just read that and are probably thinking to yourself, "but I did not choose to be born a man".
'You can never tell her she's safe': in just one year 54,000 Gauteng women were victims of violent crime
That is the same excuse white people give when we talk issues around white privilege. The common mistake here is the failure to recognise the undue privilege that comes as a result of an entrenched structure.
When men are called trash, or when white people are called out on their privilege, we are pushing back against the structural problems, not the individual.
As a man, you are inseparable from patriarchy, you therefore do not have the luxury of disassociating yourself or opting out of patriarchy, the ills that come with it and the benefits that come with it. Because this is not about an individual, but the system of patriarchy, you should not be offended at all.
As a man, what puzzles me most about men's push-back against being labelled as trash, is that we as men are also scared of each other. Men do not feel entirely safe in our country, because of other men. Indeed, men's experience of violence is not comparable to that of women, however, we too fear each other.
Men constantly and actively warn girl children and women close to them, against men. Uncles, brothers and fathers, try as much as they can, for as long as they can, to ensure that the females in their lives do not date, go out or even befriend males because they too know that men pose a danger to women.
Fight against abuse needs funding, not empty promises
Men, here is this privilege we were born with. Instead of being defensive when called out, let us think of smaller actions we can take to dismantle and undo the drawbacks that patriarchy comes with.
This is important for us to do because women are not the only ones who stand to benefit from the demise of patriarchy. We too as men stand to benefit. Patriarchy is detrimental to us too; it is burdensome.
Here are the small steps we can take; call out men around you on their misogynistic jokes, isolate the men who are known abusers, do not be complicit when injustice happens against women, in the workplace and in casual spaces, treat your sons equally to your daughters and raise boy children who do not think domestic work is for women.
If all of these smaller tasks seem tedious for you, imagine what it is like to be a woman.
All you have to do is keep yourself and fellow men around you in check when it comes to their displays and perpetuation of toxic masculinity and patriarchy.
Well, for women, the task is even bigger. Women have to attend self-defence classes, have to walk around with pepper spray, have to limit their movements, they can't comfortably walk or live alone, have to fight being paid less than a man for the equal amount of work, have to work hard at ensuring that they are not undermined solely because they are a woman.
Let men think of how we can do better to undo the ills of patriarchy, which would benefit society as a whole.
Call for action only way to conquer fear of confronting the monster of violence in our society
Fight against abuse needs funding, not empty promises
Great that the president now leads
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