On a thread about feminism in TGC, someone touched on a point that got me thinking about how different societal divides (women vs men, public vs private etc.), seem to distract from more important (but less-interesting) issues, that support those who wield disproportionate power in one form or another (such as the church in the past), and I wonder what people think about this topic? (a wider field of study that touches on this, is called
Intersectionality)
You don't need to read the whole quote below (highlighted bits can suffice):
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After all, some feminists would lead you to believe that if you reject their views you reject equality.
It's a very powerful position to be in for feminists, where any criticism of them results in the critic being turned on by society.
Of course it's not a new concept, where two mutually exclusive things (feminism and equality) get tied together as one. Two that spring to mind in 20th century history are from Germany and the USA regarding patriotism and nationalism. The Nazi government lead people to believe that if they didn't support fascism and Hitler they were not patriotic Germans, they were traitors and the enemy. In the 50's and 60's the American government convinced people that anyone who didn't support them could be a communist.
I'd love to know the private thoughts of radical feminists, the thoughts that are too extreme to make public, it might not be comforting.
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This is a very, very important point, in my view (though I may be overstating this

), and in those two cases
you see a divide/dichotomy created, in order to support power, and in those two cases the message is overtly about power.
With a lot of other societal divides/dichotomies (pitting men/women, homosexual/heterosexual, nationals/non-nationals, public/private workers against one another), I really wonder if many of them are promoted to provide a
covert way of supporting power - to distract from the more important/complicated issues in our society/economy/politics, that support power (such as economics itself - a field of study where the dominant school is, in my view, built with flaws deliberately designed to support power, and to dissuade the public from being interested in looking for these flaws).
The British have (arguably) done this and fostered this in colonial nations in the past, as a means of controlling them (e.g. fostering ethnic divides everywhere they have previously colonized), and I think (with some of what I've mentioned above) it may be ingrained at a very deep level into our actual societies as well - just, I don't know if it's intentionally used to support power, or whether it just co-incidentally supports that, or whether it is a real lingering set of societal problems, that are just being opportunistically lengthened/exploited by some in power (which, lacking any evidence, can only be a conspiracy theory, so it's not something I believe, just wonder about - it doesn't seem totally implausible).
Hell, a lot of our societal divides/problems that we are only slowly resolving now, have been created by the church and religion, who have wielded power in one form or another for (I think) a millenium+; who's to say it's not politically advantageous for 'the powers that be', to continue exploiting and milking the last out of these divides as well, before they are gone forever?
What makes me especially suspicious about stuff like this, is when you see people who are extremely ideological about whatever their niche 'cause' is (EDIT: to the extent that they support increasing the rights of the group that is the focus of their cause, while harming the rights of another group - sowing division), and who don't seem to have any rational reason for it, and seem smart enough to know better - sure, most of them are probably just deluded in one form or another, but I wonder if some proportion of them may be deliberately proliferating ideas supporting their divisive 'cause', knowing full well that they are nonsense, in order to promote divides in society that support power.
There's a very interesting field of study related to this called
Intersectionality, which I've been meaning to learn more about.