pull down to refresh

I'd be curious how much is an innate male/female difference in psychology and how much is the newness of women being in these situations.
My understanding is that many norms have developed amongst male athletes to keep these things in check.
I do think the dominant factor though is that the WNBA has been devoted to obsessing over identitarian grievances, so that's going to lead to situations like this.
That's an interesting question. In my experience playing sports and just being a man I think boys learn about physical limits and mutual respect in a very different way from women. I don't know if it is innate or cultural. May be a bit of both.
Of course we aren't even supposed to talk about these things but I don't care. I forget who I first heard explain this but you see the difference in conflict resolution between men and women when you observe how some women (not most) will speak to a man that is much larger than them vs. how a man of the same stature would. Boys when I was growing up learned really fast that if they open their mouth they better be prepared for at least the possibility of violence. I think it is different for girls. At least it used to be.
I've talked to my wife about this and she mostly agrees but she points out how girls fight in a much more advanced and subtle way. Point is, I think this whole WNBA thing is complicated and the way the WNBA has positioned itself as you say, doesn't help.
reply
I've been wondering if one of our social problems is that we haven't found the right replacement for credible threats of physical violence. I think you're right that a lot of social norms were ultimately enforced that way.
I was thinking about it in the context of parenting, but I think it applies very broadly. I know it's something Jordan Peterson used to talk about.
reply
He's probably the one who has explained it best. Many things he says used to be norms people took for granted.
reply
Negative stereotypes being reinforced by WNBA players who hate Caitlin
reply
100%
Its not a good look. Even if it has nothing to do with stereotypes it sure is easy to see it that way.
reply