Feministing: The Question of Accountability in Feminism

Article here. It's about how men in the "pro-feminist" movement can be accountable to women, not how women can be accountable to others in general. Take a look at pick your jaw up off the floor-- or just laugh at the irony. Excerpt:

'One of the buzz words that kept coming up at the pro-feminist men's conference at St. John's last week was accountability. How can men be accountable to women? How can pro-feminist men be accountable to the feminist movement?

There were no easy answers. Michael Kaufman, founder of the White Ribbon Campaign, wisely debunked the idea that there is some all-powerful feminist committee who serve as the accountability police. Obviously it is a diverse movement filled with folks who would consider some things okay and others offensive--as evidenced by the comment section of this very blog on a daily basis.

On the other hand, it does seem critical for men interested in doing feminist work and identifying with the feminism to be accountable to certain basic ideas--like the notion that men have, for too long, possessed a disproportionate amount of power in our society. This means that in feminist spaces, men should be cognizant of how much they talk, what sort of influence they exert, what kind of leadership they inhabit. But then again, shouldn't men and women always strive to be cognizant of these things.'

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How much men talk? That amounts to gagging, which is an element of fascism.

btw, what the heck does it mean to 'inhabit leadership'?

-ax

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