Man or Bear Discourse Might Feel Familiar to Atheists

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  • čas přidán 2. 05. 2024
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    #manorbear #atheism #feminism #elevatorgate #richarddawkins #videoessay
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Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @SiriusMined
    @SiriusMined Před měsícem +613

    "Elevatorgate" was 2011, not 2017

    • @SteveShives
      @SteveShives  Před měsícem +422

      You're right, of course. It even says "2011" in my script, but I misspoke when shooting it and didn't catch it. Thanks for the correction, my friend!

    • @SiriusMined
      @SiriusMined Před měsícem +101

      @@SteveShives any time, my dear friend

    • @allanolley4874
      @allanolley4874 Před měsícem +69

      He does actually say 2011 the second time he identifies the year later in the video. I was going "wow it was as recent as 2017 it felt way further back than that" and then he said 2011 later and I went "oh yeah that makes a lot more sense".
      I just assumed I (and CZcams autocaption) had misheard what Steve said because he mumbled a little.

    • @cantordavid613
      @cantordavid613 Před měsícem +21

      Thank you for this outspoken contribution. More content creators need to post videos like this one ❤

    • @artosbear
      @artosbear Před měsícem +1

      Don't worry easy mistake, it was 2017 forward when super bigot atheism personalities like RR had taken over the space and busted up the actual community organizing that was going on around ACA.

  • @BlUsKrEEm
    @BlUsKrEEm Před měsícem +871

    As a teenager I once ran into a bear on my bike ridding down a forest bike trail. Full on collided with an adult black bear. Scariest thing I'd ever seen at the time. Quickly got my self off the ground, grabbed my bike and took off faster than I've ever pedaled before. The bear made some huffs and scary noises, but it didn't chase me, or do anything other than be grumpy amd confused.
    As an adult who bikes I've regularly had men tailgate my bike with their trucks. Honk horns or throw things at me as they pass me in my bike lane.
    Not sure what this adds to the discussion, but as a cyclists I know which one I'd pick.

    • @anjafrohlich1170
      @anjafrohlich1170 Před měsícem +147

      That bear really was just mildly annoyed and baffled, huh xD

    • @fuzya8636
      @fuzya8636 Před 27 dny +158

      Damn can't believe you hit and run'd that poor bear

    • @hwaht8084
      @hwaht8084 Před 27 dny +88

      Just you wait, that bear is getting together a crack legal team to make sure you pay for that transgression!

    • @silverink1824
      @silverink1824 Před 25 dny +26

      im sure tha bear never chased you or honked at you woot bear for the scary win happy you're safe tho

    • @bloodink9508
      @bloodink9508 Před 24 dny +7

      It's pretty much a take on Pascals wager, which itself seems so ridiculous given the atheists' answer to that wager.

  • @G1itcher
    @G1itcher Před měsícem +1847

    The argument of "you can't complain because other people have it worse" is such a terrible non-argument. I can't imagine saying that with a straight face and thinking "yes, I definitely made a good point there".

    • @willowarkan2263
      @willowarkan2263 Před měsícem +196

      And it's such an emotionally manipulative tactic too. Weaponising one's own empathy against oneself, either having to argue the straw-man(which sucks), trying to argue how the argument is disingenuous(thereby allowing them to shift the conversation away), or giving up and feeling like shit.

    • @jeffengel2607
      @jeffengel2607 Před měsícem +93

      Yeah. There's "worse" and there's "bad enough". As it happens, both are (amazingly!) bad enough.

    • @SophiaAphrodite
      @SophiaAphrodite Před měsícem +96

      Especially when it was said by a rich, straight, white male.

    • @TehNoobiness
      @TehNoobiness Před měsícem +81

      Some people believe that the most important thing to do with any movement calling for change is to limit how fast that change has to happen. They usually think that, by doing so, they're going to limit the amount of extremism in the world.
      Someone should politely inform them that the status quo that they're measuring from _is_ an extreme position.

    • @TheReaperofHades
      @TheReaperofHades Před měsícem +83

      I don’t think it’s an argument made in good faith. It’s usually made to derail the conversation and make the “complainer” appear entitled or whiny.

  • @tankfu1
    @tankfu1 Před měsícem +656

    As a man, I think I'd rather be alone in the woods with a bear than another man as well. I also have 40 acres where I am routinely in the woods alone with a bear that is not interested in being anywhere near me. I guess the bear is more afraid of men, too.

    • @thealrightygina5725
      @thealrightygina5725 Před měsícem +63

      Yep men can be super dangerous to other men as well (iirc statistically men kill men of the same race in greater numbers than any other demographic but I could be wrong). The difference I think is that men are taught to believe that they can protect themselves (even if the individual can't) while women are taught the opposite (even if the individual can) and thus the fear response is stronger in women.

    • @Laura-kl7vi
      @Laura-kl7vi Před měsícem +17

      @@thealrightygina5725 You leave out the main difference; the average woman is outweighed and outpowered by the average man. It's not only what you learn, it's physics.

    • @Dreadkid08
      @Dreadkid08 Před měsícem

      @@thealrightygina5725men are 3x more likely to be murdered (at the hands of other men) than women. I’ll also take the bear. Unless I have a food bear wont be interested in me

    • @thealrightygina5725
      @thealrightygina5725 Před měsícem +45

      @@Laura-kl7vi I left nothing out. That's why I said "the individual". Not every woman will be out of her weight/strength class against a man, and not every man will be at the top of the same in an encounter with a woman. But they sure as hell are taught that, per your saying it's "physics" when there's a huge amount of overlap between xx and xy people, not even getting into intersex individuals. There's a reason people can easily be led to believe someone is of the opposite sex with a bit of a makeup and a costume change, irrespective of that person's gender identity.

    • @hydratejsn
      @hydratejsn Před měsícem +14

      ​@@thealrightygina5725 Very good point. I will use this to talk to men around me who think these talks are of a smaller concern to them just because they are men too.

  • @damenwhelan3236
    @damenwhelan3236 Před měsícem +342

    From a woman:
    "If i was attacked by a bear atleast society would believe me"

    • @nezuminora9528
      @nezuminora9528 Před 20 dny +45

      And no one would ask what you were wearing

    •  Před 19 dny +5

      Posthumously

    • @mischarowe
      @mischarowe Před 14 dny +1

      Depends. People have survived bear attacks.

    • @mischarowe
      @mischarowe Před 14 dny +6

      @@nezuminora9528 Or tell you that you had it coming. (Unless you deliberately aggravated it, but that's not even on par with the "male" alternative.)

    • @azlanadil3646
      @azlanadil3646 Před 13 dny

      @@nezuminora9528 I would.

  • @--Animal--
    @--Animal-- Před měsícem +2888

    The author wrote a response saying "I've gotten dozens of angry messages and threats from men after writing this story, I've gotten zero threats from any bears" and it pretty much validates her fears.

    • @zacharybosley1935
      @zacharybosley1935 Před měsícem +123

      that's an Oof of gargantuan proportions.

    • @RoonMian
      @RoonMian Před měsícem

      In the USA statistically one to three people per year are killed by black bears. One to three people per year are killed by brown bears.
      In the USA statistically a man murders his current or former female partner twice per day.

    • @lexxstrum
      @lexxstrum Před měsícem +155

      To be fair, most bears can't get any reception or WiFi out in the woods, and even if they did, they don't have thumbs. Or Cellphones.

    • @gregdobson280
      @gregdobson280 Před měsícem

      Because bears have heard the argument and have the ability to respond over social media? Goodness, the stupidity of you people really knows no bounds.

    • @crocoshark4097
      @crocoshark4097 Před měsícem +251

      Why would a bear be offended? They too would probably prefer to meet a bear over a human.

  • @gregthewalnut603
    @gregthewalnut603 Před měsícem +1898

    I was a big “not all men” guy until my niece was born. The first time she and I were at Walmart and she was approached by a stranger while I was a few yards away it hit me: “Maybe not all, but some. Who are unidentifiable and look just like the rest.”

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs Před měsícem +360

      I so hear you. My oldest niece just turned 13, looks older, and is suddenly having to deal with guys. Adult men acting vile at her on the street wherever she goes. She's taken to wearing oversize, baggy clothes as much as possible, and I just wish I could be her full time bodyguard.

    • @Saucialiste
      @Saucialiste Před měsícem +139

      More than some, too many

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +239

      Not all snakes are venomous... only takes one, though.

    • @thomascromwell6840
      @thomascromwell6840 Před měsícem +133

      The same for me. I grew up a sheltered conservative and saw things differently when my first girlfriend shared her experiences with me.

    • @BladeValant546
      @BladeValant546 Před měsícem +137

      I was too until I was told by a woman on a double date that thanked me that I was a normal person. That changed my point of view.

  • @FishareFriendsNotFood972
    @FishareFriendsNotFood972 Před měsícem +168

    I'm a serious hiker and mountain climber, who has done extensive backpacking in Wyoming, we're talking 78 mile hikes in back country. I take these trips alone and I'm a woman. So I have literally dealt with the 'man vs bear' scenario MANY times, as have many serious hiking friends I have. Every single time, I have chose to hike on and build my camp for the night away from strange men, knowing that it increases my risk of encountering a bear. Never regretted that choice, but I have heard really terrifying stories from fellow female hikers about creepy men on the trail. Also, I got lost one time hiking rural Michigan (it's so flat and monotonous in parts it's really easy to lose your sense of direction) so accepted a ride from a strange dude, long story short, I ended up throwing myself out of the car at 40 mph when I realized he was taking me deeper into the woods for God knows what. So, I am an expert in this question, who has put my life on the line with this one, and I am 100% TEAM BEAR.

    • @quinintheclouds
      @quinintheclouds Před 25 dny +21

      oh god, that's terrifying, I'm so sorry

    • @crazydragy4233
      @crazydragy4233 Před 18 dny +17

      Glad you made it out! That's such a terrifying scenario in a modern vehicle because many doors are controlled by the driver or auto locked during movement

    • @Shasarazad
      @Shasarazad Před 14 dny +3

      Thank goodness you're ok!

    • @graywing6336
      @graywing6336 Před 12 dny +3

      That sounds absolutely terrifying, I’m so glad you got out

  • @spikeoramathon
    @spikeoramathon Před měsícem +553

    When I mentioned in another comments section about how the trope of "man who won't take no for an answer" was romanticized and shouldn't be, I got some man "schooling" me that it was all women's fault because we played the "no means yes or at least no means ask again" game, a game I've never played. Now I know that this game does exist - but not nearly as much as men think it does. But I just love how women can't seem to state how we're uncomfortable with things without being blamed for it, even by our fellow women.
    For instance, at eighteen, I was grabbed and groped and had to run away from some 40-something guy whose response to my casual "hey, do you have a watch, what time is it?" (pre-cellphone era) was to grab me and proclaim it was "kissing time." I never told anyone, because I knew that I would be blamed for talking to a stranger (I'd been painting a mural at the time and he just stopped by), being alone somewhere (the place I'd been hired to paint the mural was an empty dorm during summer break), or somehow 'leading him on' by chatting with someone who turned up while I was working (I hadn't even looked in his direction and was talking to him while painting).
    But even now, four decades later, I know that there's many men - and women - who would still find blame with 18-year-old me somehow, rather than blame a society where a 40ish man feels entitled to grab a teenage girl who only wanted to know whether it was time to break for lunch yet. See, until we know you, we don't know who's going to see us as a plaything, and who's going to respect our bodily autonomy.
    So, yeah, I'd totally take my chances with a bear.

    • @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf
      @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf Před měsícem +58

      We won't even know once we know them!!!

    • @naraferalina2308
      @naraferalina2308 Před měsícem +39

      I am so sorry to hear that. I hope you can heal from your past experiences. You are not alone. My grandmother was raped as a child/teen and got the blame for it.
      My grandmother was 15 when she ran away from home. She extremely rarely talked about her past. The only thing she told was in voice that was only anger:
      "I had tits this big! And an ass that large. I had to get out of there! I had to get out of there!"
      The went to college age 15 and later joined the army. Education was free in Russia 2nd WW era. She studied something related to economics because it was lucrative and she never wanted to depend on men. She never trusted men. Leaving us to guess that she was either sexually abused by multiple men, or one multiple times. In any case. As china/russian border culture goes, it's all about keeping face and rubbing elbows. She clearly got the blame for what happened and ran from home first chance she got. A common reason for stigma, is women believing rape is avoidable in the hopes it won't happen to them because of x reason. Same goes for disease.
      While in the army, she met my grandad. Back then, alcohol was prohibited. And as young people with 0 experience with alcohol do, she and him got drunk. Now I, my mum and my grandmother all have very low blood pressure by nature. So she passed out. She got pregnant from that night. Grandad married her to save her image. But she became abusive. The one man she trusted knocked her up after one night. I give my grandad the benefit of the doubt. I think he made merely a very poor choice because he didn't strike me as the type to take advantage of someone. Not on purpose at least.
      She had these moments where she'd be shouting, but with unfocussed eyes. Looking at someone. She would hit my uncle, and tell him to hit my mother from a young age. Even when my mom was pregnant she tried to get my uncle to hit her. Despite him being fucked up, he did not hit my mom while pregnant. My grandmother was a horrible person and I am glad she died when I was young.
      Needless to say, my mom's psyche carried my grandmother's hatred and emotional abuse. My sister and I raised ourselves because our mom was messed up from a lifetime of abuse, and we had no dad we could count on. Except for a stepdad for about 3 years. All because some man/men wanted to take advantage of a little or teenage girl, and the stigma that followed mental health and having been raped.

    • @Susirajantakaa
      @Susirajantakaa Před 27 dny

      Oh I so despise women who play "no means try harder". That is shitting on every other woman on the planet. If all the men would just take no as NO, this kind of games would quickly end. If woman is interested, then don't say no and absolutely DON'T PLAY EMOTIONAL GAMES!

    • @maem7462
      @maem7462 Před 27 dny +8

      Exactly bc stranger danger exists for a reason. Some of the reason is stuff like this

    • @maem7462
      @maem7462 Před 27 dny +3

      @@ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf
      That can happen as well

  • @SciFlyGal
    @SciFlyGal Před měsícem +1288

    When this discourse started I initially thought that “bear” meant a large hairy gay man… needless to say I was confused

    • @zoushaomenohu
      @zoushaomenohu Před měsícem +211

      I mean, it'd still be the right answer no matter which! :P

    • @VoteBidentoSaveDemocracy
      @VoteBidentoSaveDemocracy Před měsícem +106

      As the other kind of bear, I initially thought the same thing.

    • @jazmineraymond7495
      @jazmineraymond7495 Před měsícem +55

      ​@@VoteBidentoSaveDemocracyAlso preferable.

    • @vlmellody51
      @vlmellody51 Před měsícem +28

      I once went to a gay bar with friends because I just wanted to dance and have fun without being hit on. My ass was pinched as I walked in.

    • @crocoshark4097
      @crocoshark4097 Před měsícem +38

      I saw a reddit thread about the "man vs. bear debate" and had questions about a debate between a man and a bear.

  • @aidenmartin6674
    @aidenmartin6674 Před měsícem +1051

    Someone else said “men have left a lot more human bodies in the woods than bears and bears live in those woods”

    • @leebrashear9821
      @leebrashear9821 Před měsícem +28

      Excellent point!

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před měsícem +17

      Well said

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Před měsícem +42

      Someone will no doubt take that and argue its cuz bears eat the bodies; whilst entirely ignorin the pt 9,9

    • @bowsersbigbeanburrito
      @bowsersbigbeanburrito Před měsícem +56

      Because there are more humans than bears, you also encounter more humans than bears in your life so thats why there is more of a chance to get killed by a human.

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 Před měsícem +69

      @@bowsersbigbeanburrito LOL. Jesus, y'all just can't stop yourselves from proving the point, can you?

  • @jaymontana2708
    @jaymontana2708 Před měsícem +350

    Every guy getting angry is picturing himself as the man in the woods/elevator, and never even attempt to empathise with the woman.

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +71

      They can’t handle a hypothetical rejection.

    • @chloesibilla8199
      @chloesibilla8199 Před 25 dny +6

      You put it perfectly

    • @LarthV
      @LarthV Před 25 dny +7

      The more interesting question is, what would I do if I empathise with her and _am_ the man in the woods? Run the other direction? Try not to look her in the eye? The truth is, realistically, I can't do anything. Aside from the pointless "tell the other men not to" recommendations. Why would they listen to me? They do not care about that woman's personal _integrity_, why would they care that I told them something? Just because I am a weak, cowardly person that happens to be male?

    • @quinintheclouds
      @quinintheclouds Před 25 dny +22

      @@LarthV in the elevator situation it was made pretty clear -- don't proposition women in spaces they can't easily escape. In the woods is a hypothetical. It's not about what the man should do, it's about which the woman would prefer if given the choice.

    • @quinintheclouds
      @quinintheclouds Před 25 dny +27

      @@LarthV as for your second bit, the answer is because a lot of men are more likely to listen to another man telling them "hey, this behavior is creepy/makes women uncomfortable" than they are to listen to a woman saying the same

  • @enravotaboyadjiev7466
    @enravotaboyadjiev7466 Před měsícem +422

    The thing that gets me about the Elevatorgate and the muslim woman argument is that we know that being permissive about mild misogyny leads to the normalisation of moderate to severe misogyny, if I can put it that way. It's been scientifically proven, and it's been dubbed the Pyramid of violence and of course it doesn't apply just to misogyny but also other types of targeted violence. Essentially, the more you tell women to shut up about being uncomfortable in elevators, the closer you get to not allowing women to drive or leave their homes without a male relative. It just blows my mind how many people just don't know about both the Pyramid of violence and the Paradox of Tolerance, cause, at least in my opinion, concepts like these are essential when politics are discussed. Fundamental, even.

    • @restinwalken
      @restinwalken Před 28 dny +12

      Exactly

    • @darksev.6468
      @darksev.6468 Před 27 dny

      I feel like it's less that people don't know about them and more that they're being obtuse on purpose. I can't talk too much about women's experiences because, yk, not really my forte, but something I've noticed is that the issues LGBT people face today are identical to the ones that racial minorities used to (and sometimes still) face back in the day.
      There's a reason people like Rosa Parks are so important. It doesn't really matter where you sit on the bus, but only in a vacuum. Within the context of the time, something so innocuous as not being allowed to sit here or there was significant not because of the action itself, but because of what else it allowed and the normalization of worse behaviours.
      People who claim not to understand the Paradox of Tolerance are either stupid or, most likely, just arguing in bad faith. Of course we shouldn't tolerate certain views. Of course we shouldn't tolerate Nazis and KKK. Fucking of course. Anyone with a fucking brain can figure out why. People who say shit like "I thought you were the ToLeRaNt OnEs" are acting stupid on purpose.

    • @Undercover_Femboy
      @Undercover_Femboy Před 25 dny +19

      It's always been mind boggling to me, why can't people understand this simple concept. Why is it so hard for people to be empathetic towards others. It's a bit sad

    • @maracaegrizzley8734
      @maracaegrizzley8734 Před 24 dny +19

      Tolerance is a Contract. the Paradox can be resolved if you realize that it's not a Law, it's a Contract. If you refuse to abide by the terms, you are not covered by them. But absolutely, yes, you are correct on all points.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 17 dny +5

      I’ve known about the effect for a long time, but didn’t have the name “pyramid of violence”. Sounds great to use against terves as well.

  • @stenchofjustice
    @stenchofjustice Před měsícem +758

    To be fair unless the bear is preparing for hibernation, or protecting it's cubs, the chance that a bear would actually attack or hunt you is pretty low.

    • @thizizliz
      @thizizliz Před měsícem +106

      Which is one of the reasons we'd choose it.

    • @zoushaomenohu
      @zoushaomenohu Před měsícem +78

      EXACTLY! And if you you make enough noise, the bear will hide from YOU!

    • @RealCaptainJaws
      @RealCaptainJaws Před měsícem +87

      If it's less than 25%, then it's less than the percentage of men willing to admit to coercing women into sex.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před měsícem +16

      ​@@zoushaomenohu
      These are comforting ideas, but I don't know that I'd rely on them if I was face to face with a bear.

    • @sandracraft517
      @sandracraft517 Před měsícem +45

      @@alanpennie8013, no one wants to be face to face with a bear, esp. not one you've somehow pissed off into attacking. The point is the amount of risk involved -- men are higher risk. Look at it this way: might it kill me? yes, bear/yes, men. Might it rape me? no, bear/yes, men. Obviously, team bear.

  • @williamgeorge2580
    @williamgeorge2580 Před měsícem +628

    IIRC the elevator guy came out and said "My bad. Don't do what I did." So good for him.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před měsícem +47

      Indeed.

    • @maxpeterson8616
      @maxpeterson8616 Před měsícem +24

      I recall him being tracked down and interviewed by Integral Math. Did not get around to watching it, but Integral Math was a big Watson detractor.

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před měsícem

      If only that would have been the end of it.
      Instead we got fuel for the "alt-right"

    • @ChristyAbbey
      @ChristyAbbey Před měsícem +121

      Yep. And was promptly called a simp and white knight.

    • @timhaldane7588
      @timhaldane7588 Před měsícem +85

      @@ChristyAbbey Oh, FFS. 😒 People suck.

  • @DinoRubble
    @DinoRubble Před měsícem +426

    I knew my ignorance was complete when the conversation of “how many people do you tell when you go out with a new person for the first time?” My reaction was, tell someone? Why would I tell someone? Every, and I mean every woman at the table said they had a list of people they tell and who are waiting for a text/call indicating a safe arrival home post date. Never in my life have I even thought about doing something similar.

    • @MirrimBlackfox
      @MirrimBlackfox Před měsícem +102

      It is a normal farewell among women/enbies/fems to say something like "Call me/Text me when you get there?" the idea being to let you know that they are home safe and if you forget it is not abnormal to get a call from that friend checking on you, just in case.
      It is not a *bad* idea for anyone, but it is a normal thing.

    • @margaretjohnson6259
      @margaretjohnson6259 Před měsícem +29

      start. it's dangerous out there.

    • @kallista5194
      @kallista5194 Před měsícem +97

      ​​@@MirrimBlackfoxhe's referring to something else. He's referring to specifically telling people you are going on a date with a person you don't know well enough to trust, it could be a rapey murderer. So women will Specifically Tell Friends Who They Are With, Where They Are Going, When They Should Be Home. Because when a woman goes missing, the first 24 hours are often the difference between life & death.
      This has little to do with pleasantries regarding driving home safely.

    • @WendyWinchester
      @WendyWinchester Před měsícem +15

      Bless you for understanding.

    • @laurelgardner
      @laurelgardner Před měsícem +68

      And yet, men will be ANGRY about this rather than ever even thinking to be grateful for just how much risk and effort women make to keep giving them chances.

  • @juliawolf156
    @juliawolf156 Před měsícem +417

    So in short: A bear is predictable in how it reacts to you unlike a man. Sure, i could draw a man who i‘d have the time of my life with in the forest. But i could also draw a man who‘d have the time of his life hurting me and i cannot reliably scare the man off by flailing my arms around and screaming loudly.

    • @cbunny6671
      @cbunny6671 Před měsícem +60

      The worst a bear can do is kill you.

    • @somewhatfunnyguyy
      @somewhatfunnyguyy Před měsícem +15

      I think that that is good reasoning and while I disagree with you I can see where you’re coming from. However, using this reasoning, you must also choose a bear over a woman you don’t know. I think that this question does pose an interesting position about men, but also humanity in general and their ability to hurt people for the sake of hurting them or for self enjoyment. A bear would not torture you because it has no reason to, while a human may torture you for no reason at all. That is what can make humans scarier than bears in some situations.

    • @Macrochenia
      @Macrochenia Před měsícem +64

      And if a woman actually is attacked by a bear, she won't have to endure legions of complete strangers coming out of the woodwork to ask if she led the bear on or was dressed too provocatively.

    • @siukong
      @siukong Před měsícem +8

      I think the words _predictable_ and _reliably_ are carrying far too heavy a load in your comment.

    • @gillsmoke
      @gillsmoke Před měsícem +4

      No they don't. Women don't encounter bears. The do however encounter Men, an known bad actor vs a unknown? I might take my chances with the bear too.

  • @Eban11235
    @Eban11235 Před měsícem +146

    I'm a talllish fat guy. I'm pretty close to a bear already. It's alarming that as a big guy I make people uncomfortable just by existing. I hate that and I hate that it's a reasonable worry for them.

    • @tamatebako_yt
      @tamatebako_yt Před měsícem +30

      honestly, with men it's kinda like with dogs: the big ones are usually harmless, its the small, angry ones you have to worry about ;)

    • @elizabethlee2136
      @elizabethlee2136 Před 23 dny +3

      Yeah sorry. Just imagine being small and less strong and being confronted. Its rough on all sides. THanks for being aware though

    • @vapx0075
      @vapx0075 Před 23 dny

      @@tamatebako_yt My ex was tall and had a lot of weight. He liked Star Trek and Doctor Who like me :(. Seriously, all indicators suggested he hated women. I was struggling to understand why he asked me out. I dodged an argument by using massive qualifiers on Kirk being a womanizer. I postpooed my own judgement on his behaviours until I saw the other side of these rage matches he talked about. Believe me, there was no match. He simply screamed the most terrifying incoherent and pointless things and cast a permanent judgement on the person. He stormed off without ever acknowledging or apologising that he screamed at a fragile traumatized person. I lost every friend I'd managed to find up here as well as my entire social life because he played the victim so fg well. In this story, I was the bad guy.

    • @Sarah_Bragg
      @Sarah_Bragg Před 21 dnem +5

      If it worries you, if you’re in a situation where it seems you’re particularly concerning, be visibly disinterested in the woman, by playing a game on your phone or otherwise concentrating on a task. It also helps to intentionally get distracted for a bit if you’re incidentally following so as to provide a space bubble.

  • @gabrielbruce1977
    @gabrielbruce1977 Před měsícem +460

    A bear did not approach me at the pool at 14 and flirt with me because I was wearing a two-piece for the first time, a bear did not approach me at work and ask when I got off because he wanted to have sex (I was 18, he was 60something), a bear did not introduce me to his parents and admit to having a crush on me while being twice my age, and a bear did not require me as a female employee at the time to be alone behind a desk in front of him while he towered over me and threatened me because my manager wasn't in today... and I couldn't throw him out unless he got physical. A bear did not break my leg for being "insubordinate" to him.

    • @Elpatriarcaresponde
      @Elpatriarcaresponde Před měsícem

      No, un oso sólo te comería viva.

    • @hayuseen6683
      @hayuseen6683 Před měsícem +27

      To be fair and balanced (TM) breaking a leg is a bear thing. If one met an equivalent number of bears it's not unlikely for a bear to do that. But then a bear breaking one's leg isn't even close to the top 10 threatening situations you mentioned. Still a net positive with bears and broken legs.

    • @cupguin
      @cupguin Před měsícem +37

      One of my earliest memories was the girl beside me being grabbed out of a fountain we were paddling in since we were basically toddlers. Not a bear just some random man who decided to grab her and run off.

    • @cardemis7637
      @cardemis7637 Před měsícem +58

      ​@@hayuseen6683 If I'm getting my leg broken either way. Might as well pick the bear.

    • @yesitschelle
      @yesitschelle Před měsícem +37

      @@cardemis7637 Really, bears are more predictable. You probably aren't getting your leg broken with the bear. They'll protect cubs first, then food, then themselves. Let them protect what's valuable and you're good, with the caveat that polar bears and those weakened from injury are more dangerous.

  • @andrewwamser7075
    @andrewwamser7075 Před měsícem +221

    I am a man, and I would pick the bear. I'd pick the bear over almost any random unknown human being, male or female. Bear might hurt you if it's hungry or threatened. Humans will hurt you just for fun.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Před 28 dny +39

      I'm a 6'5" tall man, and I was regularly the tallest boy in my class or school. I was also a fairly shy and introverted person for various reasons, but would notice how when I'd come around a corner and almost run into a girl or woman, most of the time they will flinch or look scared, and that affected me from a young age. About the only thing intimidating about me is my height, but to be reacted to in such a way was a shock to me too.
      I was raised by a mother who had been assaulted by a family member, and learning about that from her at a fairly young age horrified me and made me empathetic about her, and eventually towards other women and girls--I had no sisters and only one female cousin, but it didn't take long for me to put two and two together over how females would react towards me, and I reacted by becoming the stereotypical "gentle giant". I've noticed a fair number of other tall men behave like this, too, and I don't think it is an accident. It doesn't feel good to be reacted to out of fear just over your size, but a lot of tall men probably have learned to expand their empathy through this way. The good thing is I've been able to use my size to intimidate men who were messing with women--the fact that so many people, male and female, react to someone tall with fear or deference is another sad commentary on how some people have used their size or strength to harm other people.

    • @grayscales1864
      @grayscales1864 Před 27 dny +8

      Plus if you see a bear in the woods, you can immediately get out your bear spray to protect yourself. If you come across a human and do that, you risk breaking social rules and potentially offending/angering the man so that he does attack. Also, defending yourself by immediately spraying a man like you would with a bear might not hold up in court.

    • @phastinemoon
      @phastinemoon Před 24 dny +9

      Or worse -- claim that hurting you is the ethically right thing to do.
      "You have the effrontery to be squeamish, it thought at him. But we were dragons. We were supposed to be cruel, cunning, heartless, and terrible. But this much I can tell you, you ape -- the great face pressed even closer, so that Wonse was staring into the pitiless depths of his eyes -- we never burned and tortured and ripped one another apart and called it morality." -- Guards Guards, Sir Terry Pratchett.

    • @phastinemoon
      @phastinemoon Před 24 dny +1

      @@rikk319 And, frankly, that is definitely a thing that we are all grateful for.

    • @Shasarazad
      @Shasarazad Před 14 dny

      @@phastinemoon STP 🧡 He always had such good takes on society. I'm re-listening to Guards Guards right now, such a fantastic book!

  • @erinrising2799
    @erinrising2799 Před měsícem +364

    the North American Bear Center cites that you are 167 times more likely to be killed by a man 18-24 years old than you are by a black bear.

    • @greyish7212
      @greyish7212 Před měsícem +23

      Tbh, the killcount depends on the chance of human-human/human-bear contact, and in this situation you are placed with a man/bear in the woods by default. Or do the statistics in question take this into account?

    • @emmanuelbeaucage4461
      @emmanuelbeaucage4461 Před měsícem

      I'm pretty sure a woman in her life cross path with hundreds of thousands more men than wild black bears tho...
      😅

    • @NightimeInDeepSpace
      @NightimeInDeepSpace Před měsícem +29

      @@greyish7212 You're not taking to account laws and repurcussions that hold humans back from acting on impulse. Even with that in place doesn't stop men. Imagine the statistics if life was a free for all for men.

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +28

      @@somepenguin508
      The ratio is pointless since people also live in areas where there are bears.
      Less than 200 kills from bears in over 200 years. Those 200 years included settlers moving across the states and meeting bears, destroying their homes, and killing them.
      Thousands of women die yearly in the USA alone.
      So yeah you can ratio that however you want.
      I lived in the woods. Met bears. First 12 years of my life. I could get mail as a child with bears outside. They moved on once that door opened.
      I was hurt far more by men those first 12 years. Even more after.

    • @cinnastag
      @cinnastag Před 28 dny +11

      ​@@somepenguin508it does however take into account that bears are predictable...men aren't

  • @missinterpretation4984
    @missinterpretation4984 Před měsícem +750

    It’s the entire thought process. I’m alone in the woods, I see a bear, I think oh crap there’s a bear, does he look angry? I think I’m supposed to be loud and he’ll hopefully go away. I see a man, I think oh crap did he follow me? Does he want to hurt me? How badly? Will it just be here or does he want to chain me up in his basement. Oh god am I about to spend the rest of my life being tortured? The bear walks away, I think oh phew, wow I just saw a bear! I wish I’d gotten a pic. The man walks by, I think ok was that it? Is he following me? Is he going to be waiting at my car? I’m miserable the rest of the time. The bear decides to attack, either I die or I survive and receive a ton of support from my community. Maybe the whole country. The man attacks, I hope he kills me. But if he doesn’t, I now live with immense emotional trauma and a world who oscillates between not believing me and blaming me. It’s the bear, I choose the bear whether it passes me by or attacks me, live or die, I choose the bear. What’s so hard to get?

    • @Jenifer_R_
      @Jenifer_R_ Před měsícem +35

      Well, you've certainly thought this through!

    • @arneehret6973
      @arneehret6973 Před měsícem

      Nice victim complex, have you ever considered therapy or are you americant?

    • @MustardSkaven
      @MustardSkaven Před měsícem +7

      Only the creeps are going to understand your motivation.

    • @loorthedarkelf8353
      @loorthedarkelf8353 Před měsícem +70

      Not for nothin, this is why I have a walking stick. Not so much to lean on when my knees hurt, but because men who follow Not Men to their cars look for people unlikely to hurt them. If you carry a big stick, you are less likely to be followed because not only do you have something to hit with, *it extends your reach past his.*
      It's also helpful for dissuading feral dogs. Not bears so much tho. But bears don't tend to invade your personal space or ask if anyone is waiting at home for you.

    • @valentapaxman
      @valentapaxman Před měsícem +13

      Maybe he's thinking the same about YOU.

  • @Antifrost
    @Antifrost Před měsícem +100

    Were I asked that same question, I'd've also picked the bear. Partially because I'm aware that bear attacks usually occur when they feel threatened, but also because "man in the woods" is a classic horror trope for a reason.

    • @scienceandponies
      @scienceandponies Před měsícem +5

      Yeah, as a man, my response to the question depends a bit on how "in the woods" I am. Are we talking on a hiking trail in broad daylight passing another tourist in a national park? Or am I deep in the middle of nowhere and suddenly encountering hill folk?

    • @CoffeeNCardio
      @CoffeeNCardio Před 14 dny

      Most classic horror tropes are just like...women's lives. There's some really interesting literature about it.

    • @janthran
      @janthran Před 3 dny

      @@CoffeeNCardio except for most stuff about aliens, which is actually just a true history of what white people did to the rest of the world

  • @tunafarrell2067
    @tunafarrell2067 Před měsícem +160

    My wife hadn't heard of this "man vs bear" thing. When I explained it to her she said "yeah, I'd choose bear".

  • @DanaColeDares
    @DanaColeDares Před měsícem +234

    I can understand that Elevator Dude may have been uncomfortable asking her something like that in front of others; rejection is already unpleasant, and PUBLIC rejection is even MORE unpleasant.
    But what that means is that he chose to put his own comfort ahead of hers. Even if it was thoughtless rather than deliberate, that's still not a great way to present yourself.

    • @ajregalia1334
      @ajregalia1334 Před měsícem

      I think that last point is the biggest issue, a lot of guys don't know how to present themselves with a woman. If I don't see angry responses I see defeatist ones
      "So I should never approach a woman?"
      "Guess I'll stay single forever"
      "If I don't make a first move nothing will happen"
      Black and white logic with no room for nuance and no awareness for when it is or isn't appropriate to ask someone out/how.

    • @Susirajantakaa
      @Susirajantakaa Před 27 dny +16

      The elevator guy could have just said that he would love to discuss more with her, would she be interested of doing so sometime in the future?
      Instead of suggesting her to come in his hotel room when she have already stated she is going to sleep.

    • @vixxcelacea2778
      @vixxcelacea2778 Před 26 dny +17

      @@Susirajantakaa This. Asking someone to go to your room whether you mean it to or not, means wanna have sex. Even if it's not the motivation or personal implication, that is the colloquial one.
      All he needed to say is that he enjoyed her talk and would like to talk some more. Wanna grab lunch/coffee (in a public place is the implication) sometime and talk?
      If she said no, then well, obviously rejection hurts, even if there was no romantic/sexual inclinations, being rejected sucks and it's awkward, but you respect someone's feelings as they respect yours.
      No doubt if this scenario did take place, as people often are, she would have been super polite and said thanks for the offer, but she's busy or just plain doesn't want to.
      He says, that's alright and to have a good night.
      I swear, rejection scenarios and how to mitigate and reduce the awkward/socially rebuffed feeling should have been practiced in high school as mandatory. Because it's an emotion most people don't know how to deal with. It would be better for everyone, including the person rejected in order to not feel so terrible and to empathize with the zillions of hypothetical reasons someone might say no. Either in purely platonic endeavours or romantic/sexual.

    • @lachouette_et_le_phoque
      @lachouette_et_le_phoque Před 20 dny +7

      love the other replies explaining what he could have done instead. This could have been such a good learning opportunity for socially awkward men in the skeptics community to learn what are appropriate ways of asking women out, but noooo, people had to immediately get offended and lament that "you can't even ask a woman out these days without being labeled a predator".

    • @im.empimp
      @im.empimp Před 16 dny

      @@vixxcelacea2778 & @lachouette_et_le_phoque - 💯💜

  • @missinterpretation4984
    @missinterpretation4984 Před měsícem +330

    It’s been drilled into our heads our entire lives to never put yourself in a situation where you’d be isolated with a strange man. Don’t park far away in parking garages, don’t walk down dark streets at night, don’t go jogging on isolated paths, careful if you travel alone, careful getting gas alone, never go near a van, and on and on and on… since before I knew what s3x was, I was taught to never be kidnapped, once I was older I was taught to plan all my activities to avoid being isolated w men, so yeah if I’m hypothetically alone in the woods I’m not picking to see a man I don’t know. My dad would be like did I teach you nothing?!?!

    • @moonballoonsmith8238
      @moonballoonsmith8238 Před měsícem +80

      And if you did not assume the worst and plan against it, a huge amount of the response would be an accusation that you were, “asking for it” even if you did not survive the encounter.
      If the bear killed you, almost no one would have accused you of that.

    • @HeadsFullOfEyeballs
      @HeadsFullOfEyeballs Před měsícem

      And then it turns out that the vast majority of assaults and abuse are actually perpetrated by family members and friends, not scary strangers. But we _really_ don't like to think about that.

    • @twilightgardenspresentatio6384
      @twilightgardenspresentatio6384 Před měsícem +13

      I like your dad

    • @gimligimlass5509
      @gimligimlass5509 Před měsícem +42

      As a man who was raised by a single mother and who has two older sisters, these lessons were drilled into me as well.
      My experiences with other men growing up has only shown me that these are reasonable lessons for people to learn. As an adult man I have a lot less to worry about now, but I still prefer the company of women I know (or bears!) to just some random person. So I can definitely understand the preference.

    • @martibee8984
      @martibee8984 Před měsícem +37

      How many men will tell you they don't trust other men, but still get angry at you if you don't?

  • @douglasphillips5870
    @douglasphillips5870 Před měsícem +217

    As male presenting I'm often asked by women to walk them to their cars at night. I used to think of this as me doing a good deed, and I felt good about myself. Then I thought about how women need someone to walk them to their car, and it's not out of fear of bears, and I'm sorry that they need that

  • @gozerthegozarian9500
    @gozerthegozarian9500 Před měsícem +82

    She literally just gave a helpful hint wrt human interaction. You could tell the dudes who were genuinely socially awkward from the dudes who used the pretense of social awkwardness to get away with creepy/transgressive behaviour because the former's reaction was "Huh. Noted!" and the latter's was the frothing geyser of entitled rage that tore the Deep Rifts into New Atheism and eventually drowned that movement's positive potential in a slime pit.

  • @subtlegong2817
    @subtlegong2817 Před měsícem +38

    I’m a good natured and decent man and I know that if I approached a woman by herself in the woods I would be suspicious by implication alone. I’m not offended by this. I’m going to be a father soon and I know one of my responsibilities if it’s a boy is to raise him not to be an entitled predator. Too many fathers fall short on this responsibility. To be absolutely clear I would pick the bear, too.

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +8

      Good on you sir. Men like you are the ones that restore trust in men. Not ones that call women crazy.
      Best of luck to you, the wifey, and your son/daughter!

  • @orlando-from-The-Bronx
    @orlando-from-The-Bronx Před měsícem +338

    Straight men well understand boundaries... when surrounded by gay men. Also, love Rebbeca Watson. I'm subscribed to her channel and recommend it.

    • @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf
      @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf Před měsícem +52

      This is truly the best comment ever. If a guy is acting like he doesn't understand boundaries, put him in a gay bar.

    • @Rockyzach88
      @Rockyzach88 Před měsícem +3

      I'm subscribed to her channel and didn't even know about this. I appreciate the skeptics, especially in these times.

    • @HonoredMule
      @HonoredMule Před měsícem +15

      Lovely thought. Too bad these are the same kind of people who decide homosexuality is evil. Cognitive dissonance dodged.

    • @jwhite-1471
      @jwhite-1471 Před měsícem +11

      @@HonoredMule We're talking about atheists, who are much less likely than other subsets to have an issue with the concept of homosexuality. In fact, that was part of the point in the beginning of this video, when he was talking about how surprising the lashing out at Rebecca Watson was, considering the folks who were doing it are historically less likely to be bigots (at least in the same ways as those who are religious).

    • @HonoredMule
      @HonoredMule Před měsícem +12

      @@jwhite-1471 My bad for leaving my statement open to religious interpretation. Nevertheless, "(at least in the same ways as those who are religious)" covers a multitude of similarities based on power dynamics regardless of whether they're codified as religion. And "less likely" to be bigots doesn't make the ones who are less bigoted, but bigotry isn't even the root cause here. It's discomfort with sharing and possibly losing status as topping the sexual food chain.
      Because it's about power, not ideology.
      Ideology is the justification - not the motive - which is why atheism _doesn't_ cure sexism, nor should that ever have been expected.

  • @emisformaker
    @emisformaker Před měsícem +201

    A bear can be deterred through fairly reliable methods. Make yourself seem like enough of a threat, or even too much trouble, and the bear will usually go away. And even then, I have yet to hear of anyone being r*ped by a bear.
    As another respondent to this question said, "The bear can only kill me."

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +18

      Bears Going Their Own Way are IMO on average better than men who join the reddit for Men Going Their Own Way.

    • @mytmouse57
      @mytmouse57 Před měsícem +6

      With a black bear, maybe. Never try pulling that with a grizzly.

    • @emisformaker
      @emisformaker Před měsícem +27

      @@ExtremeMadnessX If you understood the argument, you wouldn't have left this reply. Just saying.

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem

      @@mytmouse57 Has a grizzly bear ever raped and THEN killed a woman?
      Meanwhile, are there any known incidents of a man in the woods r*ping a woman and then killing her?
      Well, are there?
      You can also pull up stats on polar bears, but that still doesn't address the point.

    • @Elpatriarcaresponde
      @Elpatriarcaresponde Před měsícem +1

      ​@@emisformakerSi, por favor, vayan con el oso, nos hacen un favor a todos.

  • @edcrypt
    @edcrypt Před měsícem +53

    Asked my wife if she had heard about the man or bear TikTok. She said "my love, I'm still on Twitter. I've known about it for a week". So I became the person who knows about stuff a week later on CZcams because long-form videos take time to make...

    • @andrewzimmer9161
      @andrewzimmer9161 Před měsícem +13

      "my love, I'm still on Twitter."
      That's going up there with "'Tis the East, and Juliet is the sun" when future historians look at Cute Shit Couples Say to Each Other™

  • @ProphetofZod
    @ProphetofZod Před měsícem +66

    I once asked a young woman to come to my room at an atheist conference. It was because there was a crowd there doing a livestream, and they wanted her to participate. But I anticipated her feeling some caution about the situation, so I gave her my room number and left her to get a friend before coming up. I didn’t take it personally. People just need to use normal caution, and I can’t see being so obtuse or easily offended that you don’t give women room to do that.

    • @Marialla.
      @Marialla. Před měsícem +7

      Lol, you mean you let HER leave to find HER friend to bring along for her SAFETY. I read it wrong when I first scanned through and thought you meant you left her there while you brought a friend of YOURS to the room, and I thought OMG that's so horrible...
      Then I saw who you were and realized I had totally misunderstood the inflection there. I know you from your channel and I know you would never be that kind of bad guy.

    • @kanderson-oo7us
      @kanderson-oo7us Před 27 dny +5

      Thank you! It's astonishing that (too many) men take it personally when women who don't know them well use the basic precautions drummed into us from a young age! "But I'm a nice guy!". WE DON'T KNOW THAT!!! And the cost of finding out otherwise is just too high.

    • @JustBuyTheWaywardsRealms
      @JustBuyTheWaywardsRealms Před 25 dny

      @@kanderson-oo7us that's because if it's about other men we don't have precotion like that so it can be baffling for us I guess because I don't talk to woman they are too scary except my mom of course

    • @Shasarazad
      @Shasarazad Před 14 dny

      Zod ❤ Thank you.

  • @casket-crew
    @casket-crew Před měsícem +237

    I had completely forgotten what a turning point that was. For me, I always think about the age old trope of fathers being protective of their daughters and distrustful of the boys in their lives. All you have to do is examine where that feeling comes from to realize it's a mirror.

    • @EroticInferno
      @EroticInferno Před měsícem

      Absolutely agree. That’s what I’ve always said.
      Fathers that aggressively defend their daughters from “bad boys” are just saying, “I was a shit bag to women so I know what men are capable of.” My father never behaved like this because he trusted me to choose my partners and he didn’t just automatically assume the worst of others.

    • @twilightgardenspresentatio6384
      @twilightgardenspresentatio6384 Před měsícem +32

      Im protecting my child from the children of my peers
      I know who their fathers are, what they’ve done and what they teach.
      To do less would be to put them in a danger I am well aware of

    • @MrJerks93
      @MrJerks93 Před měsícem +23

      Great point. Men know what men are capable of.

    • @gimligimlass5509
      @gimligimlass5509 Před měsícem +27

      For some people it's a mirror, for others it's their own past experiences with other people.
      As a man myself I can say that I'd rather not be alone with some unknown man in the woods. Not because I'm "aware of what I, and therefore other men, am capable of" (because, and this really shouldn't be a surprise to anyone, women are capable of the same things), but because my experiences with other men have taught me that they're more likely to be a threat.
      That said, I probably wouldn't want to be alone in the woods with some unknown woman, either... but the last few dates I've had were nature walks, so maybe it's not so cut-and-dry for me.

    • @gurgleblurgle7345
      @gurgleblurgle7345 Před měsícem +26

      I've known at least 3 men in my life that were sexually assaulted by other men. I wish we could hear more stories from men on this too. Who knows how many other guys I know that have been assaulted and are too embarrassed to say anything.

  • @Coyote001
    @Coyote001 Před měsícem +254

    Carl Sagan and Neil deGrasse Tyson showed the ability to read the room and show intellectual humility; Dawkins has none; he always came across as smug at best, arrogant in an "I am intellectually superior to you," at worst. Sagan and deGrasse want to educate you, to convince you, while Dawkins TELLS you what is true, and if you disagree, he doesn't want to try to convince you, he'll just dismiss you as "You just don't get it." And I say this as a cis, hetero male, who is a scientist.

    • @gozerthegozarian9500
      @gozerthegozarian9500 Před měsícem +58

      100% correct take on Dawkins, as evidenced by his transphobia - the man is literally rejecting the scientific discoveries made in biology during the decades since his own most recent publishings in the wider field out of sheer egomanic resentment against anything feminist and progressive. Instead, he uses the supposed authority bestowed upon him by a book as old as I am and (at least) as out-dated as my taste in popular music to shit on trans people, all the while knowing nothing about the scientific aspect of trans-ness.

    • @iiiiitsmagreta1240
      @iiiiitsmagreta1240 Před měsícem

      ...Neil DeGrasse Tyson is also probably a r*pist, and has been accused by many women of various sorts of sexual harassment.
      It never fucking ends 😔

    • @timhaldane7588
      @timhaldane7588 Před měsícem +28

      One of the major reasons Sagan is infinitely superior to Dawkins.

    • @ugolomb
      @ugolomb Před měsícem +10

      It came across even in his books, much as I enjoyed and continue to enjoy them -- especially when he strayed from biology to more general points, especially about religion. I remember in several cases running into virtually the same point in books by Dawkins and Daniel Dennett, but finding Dennett's formulations much more nuanced and well-reasoned, and therefore much easier to accept or at the very least consider.

    • @Coyote001
      @Coyote001 Před měsícem +21

      @@gozerthegozarian9500 That's what I meant by Dawkins lacking any intellectual humility; he won't admit ignorance on a topic and/or have the willingness to critically evaluate his own views. As a person, he's probably a nice enough fellow, unless you cross into a topic he's hardheaded about, then he becomes Mr. Hyde. At the end of the day though, he's just another Upper-Class, over-educated, up-his-own-behind Tory, and his mask has now totally slipped off.

  • @SF-kc6zv
    @SF-kc6zv Před 20 dny +7

    If she had gone back to his hotel room and she had been assaulted, all of these dudes would be the same ones telling her “well duh! you shouldn’t have gone to a strange man’s hotel room”

  • @SumBrennus
    @SumBrennus Před měsícem +102

    Thanks for that. I'm going to be honest and come right out and say it: I am viewed as creepy by many women. I can't help it. Which is why I have instituted the following safeguards: 1) not trapping women alone... EVER. 2) a social seeing eye friend who is neurotypical who can tell me when I am acting creepy and -- most importantly -- 3) not going into social situations alone and generally avoiding group activities whenever possible. This has greatly helped. Everyone needs to work on their self-awareness. Sometimes you cannot change... so you need someone else to help.

    • @amandaski
      @amandaski Před měsícem +20

      A seeing eye friend 😂
      Do you have to petition for one of those or does it work like the cat distribution system?

    • @hayuseen6683
      @hayuseen6683 Před měsícem +2

      Which really pairs down what you can do in life and comfortably participate in society.

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 Před měsícem +7

      The same time through i think we need to remind and make more effort, to not generalize man. Ther eis a difference between being careful, and plain generalizing.
      Ok i just hate the stupid gender generalizing fighting , not helping
      Through nothing against being careful.
      And yeah yeah toxic masculinity, but it should never generalize so many people , as people, dehumanizing still bad. Same way dudes should look at woman as people first.
      And womrn not being called out, for that , without playing in the gender war bs, is still nessesary too igf its really too far, thats, terfs grew out of the not feminist, just manhating , school of feminism. Ther is real harm if that isnt adressed aproviate too, as we see. Or hateful bigots can weaponizr tolerated, manhate, and transphobia and bathrooms, its literally from manhating, straight.
      Men, are people too, ok that should neve rbe forgotrten, and women. and enbys. Hateful women too nrrd to be called out of they spread harmful hate, and i dont mean reactionary sexuists just wanting excuses to stoak gender wars, who make it harder to adress that .

    • @anjafrohlich1170
      @anjafrohlich1170 Před měsícem +19

      Another reason why women's safety is everyone's problem. If there was less reason to be constantly fearful guys like you wouldn't need to constantly follow such constraining rules because there would be less fear and distrust all around. And, let's face it, nobody is happy following constraining rules just to exist in a social context. It's not how anyone want to or should have to live.

    • @kanderson-oo7us
      @kanderson-oo7us Před 27 dny +7

      Thank you for being so self-aware, and taking steps to make women feel safer / more comfortable around you! I guarantee that you're less "creepy" than a lot of the neurotypical guys in these comments telling women that we're stupid & irrational for being cautious around strange men - even though 1 in 4 women is sexually assaulted, by a man. Thank you for being a decent person!

  • @christopherddrew7555
    @christopherddrew7555 Před měsícem +220

    10 or so years ago I was listening to my female friends tell me that one of the scariest things they experience is having a strange man walking behind them . They simply didn’t know if he was following them or just going the same way. Worse still he he was catching up with them. Would he just pass, would he say something, touch them, something worse?
    When I realized they all kept keys in their hands or something else like that because they were so worried I decided to adjust my behaviour especially at night.
    Whenever possible if I am going the same direction as a woman I cross the road. That way they have lots of space.
    I figure if we tell women that they always have to be vigilant about their surroundings that’s the least I can do.

    • @noneYa66613
      @noneYa66613 Před měsícem +32

      I, for one, appreciate that. Many men would find offense at the notion of going a bit out of their way to make a woman actually feel safe. So thanks.

    • @extrams0
      @extrams0 Před měsícem +37

      the thing is - most guys don't even realise that. If you're walking a direction, you're just walking.
      Ever since a friend told me that - I *always* cross the road if I happen to walk behind a woman at night.
      In my head "walking 10m extra distance vs potentially terrifying someone for 5-10-... minutes " isn't a complicated issue.

    • @iiiiitsmagreta1240
      @iiiiitsmagreta1240 Před měsícem +22

      Trans woman here, but early enough in transition that I still present as a guy. I worry about this all the time, and I try to do the same thing if I'm ever walking in the vicinity of a woman/fem-presenting person at night.

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +18

      This behavior, that is giving her lots of elbow room, respects the truth that humans live with a lot of unknowns, which seems a particularly atheist truth. She doesn't know whether you're dangerous, that uncertainty causes tension, so you change at least one variable in her calculus, allowing her to reduce her Oh Shit I'm In Danger level.

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Před měsícem +6

      I walk with a cane, not rly bcuz i need it, tho it does mitigate some pain in the long term; but bcuz i know that if some man, or anyone rly, atks me out of nowhere... I alrdy have a wpn in my hand rdy to swing
      I also know my cane means men are more likely to underestimate me and assume im weaker than i am; so they arent as rdy for when i pick that cane up and full sprint away from them
      Tho notably, if i encountered a man comin at me with hostility in mind while out walkin around the streets, as opposed to woods; im not usin that cane to hit the man, im usin it to brk a window to get someone out there to stop the man from atkin now theres witnesses
      Not that it always works mind you, some men dont care if theres witnesses. I had a man atk me at a bus station once with a dozen ppl around and he only cared about the witnesses when my fellow women got up and headed towards us to get him off of me.
      Notably, that man got away with it too; even tho a cop was literally watchin the whole thing, she didnt do a thing to intervene, i had to rely on other women at the scene to protect me. So for him, atkin a woman in broad daylight was a safe thing for him to do with no risk; and bonus pts, itll make his gf think he's such a badarse bcuz he assaulted that lady who shouted at her for nearly hittin her with her car

  • @katestewart-taylor9736
    @katestewart-taylor9736 Před měsícem +142

    I once came face to face with a black bear in the woods. He took off running. All the bears I’ve ever seen are running from humans

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs Před měsícem +21

      An old friend's mom (who lives in a rather rural and forested bit of Northern Ontario) regularly chases bears out of her garbage with a hockey stick. If only it were that easy with men.

    • @katestewart-taylor9736
      @katestewart-taylor9736 Před měsícem +17

      @@thing_under_the_stairs I lived in a game land for a decade. Bears were not a big worry of mine. Wild hogs and drunk hunters were the big danger.

    • @Dreadkid08
      @Dreadkid08 Před měsícem +6

      A bear will choose to be in the woods with a bear too

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +2

      Mine ambled. Granted they were chilling in my yard and I was just a kid.

  • @jplayzow
    @jplayzow Před měsícem +54

    The immediate followup was a bunch of guys proving the joke response of "There's two types of guys, the ones who understand why women said bear, and the ones who make women choose bear." and it's still going so great work uploading relatively relevant content

    • @khajiithadwares2263
      @khajiithadwares2263 Před 26 dny +1

      Intellectual men: Yes, I can see why she would choose bear. (Vertical cooperative relation)
      Emotional men: That woman better pick me over a bear, or else *_jealous rumble_* (Horizontal competitive2reel)

  • @IheartDogs55
    @IheartDogs55 Před měsícem +34

    I left xtianity and became an atheist at the start of 2016. I'm a white, cis-het married mom. Your channel is one of the first that I came across after my deconversion. I watched the last several "An Atheists Reads" episodes. I'm not a cinephile, so when you moved on, so did I. Your series introduced me to skepticism and critical thinking. You laid a foundation that has enabled me to grow into what I am today; I'm a secular humanist. I had to do a large amount of introspection so that I could weed out my selfish attitudes and self-righteous indignation aimed at the "others" in my life. Bad thinking and bad behavior are human traits. I'm delighted to stop by here and see your own personal growth. Well done, Steve. Thank you for helping me how to learn and grow as a human. Be well.

  • @lorensims4846
    @lorensims4846 Před měsícem +86

    Ha! No I haven't heard about either of these "events." To me the better choice would be "Would you rather be in an elevator with a man or a dog?" I'm convinced the dog would win every time.
    I've been concerned with these issues for my whole life, to the extent that I never wanted to approach a woman to ask her to go out with me. It just feels entirely too pretentious.
    I have, in fact, never gone out with a woman who didn't ask me first.
    I've been married twice, and had other romantic relationships as well.
    My first wife complained that I was not what she expected in a man, that I was all too eager to go along with whatever she wanted to do. "Doormat," she said, and left.
    My second wife also said that I was not what she had come to expect in a man and she was delighted. We got along famously. She was the love of my life.

    • @marieroberts5664
      @marieroberts5664 Před měsícem +7

      I am sorry for your loss. May she rest in peace, regardless of faith or lack thereof.
      I'd rather the doggie too!

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +4

      "I'm convinced the dog would win every time."
      Are there Bingo games in every elevator, where you live?
      Are there chess sets in elevators, and do you play chess with dogs?
      do you mean win an election?
      what's zero-sum about travel in an elevator?
      ...
      ...
      ---
      ... wait, do you mean a fight?
      why would a fight happen?
      why would you start a fight with a dog in an elevator?
      why would you start a fight with a human in an elevator?
      are fights 100% inevitable whenever two beings are both in an elevator, and one of those beings is you?
      (fights are NOT inevitable, or even common, when I share an elevator with another mammal, whether that mammal is my species or any other)

    • @loorthedarkelf8353
      @loorthedarkelf8353 Před měsícem +7

      My hubby was similar. Kind, adaptive, fun loving, empathetic, sweet, affectionate-- nothing I expected. We started dating as teens and *I* was the one intending to have s3x and run... but fell head over heels instead! 15 years later and we've been married for 12 of them :3

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Před měsícem +4

      I have a huge fear of dogs and yet id still rather be in that elevator with a dog
      Like, the last time i was on a walk and an unleashed dog got let out by a negligent owner, i froze up and shut my eyes and stood stock still as that dog came up to me bein all playful and friendly; until the owner got the dog under control and he had to come up to me and gently tell me the dog wasnt out there anymore before i cud even open my eyes... And id still choose an unknown dog bcuz i know that far less dogs mean me actual harm; ive been dealin with men meanin me harm since i was a bloody infant!

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Před měsícem +2

      ​@@rileymclaughlin4831 srs or sarcasm?

  • @doggodoggo3000
    @doggodoggo3000 Před měsícem +60

    I worked at a zoo and have even helped raise bears.
    honestly my fear level of men and bears is about the same. Ive been in the woods with both.
    living in the country. a seeing a bear is kind of one of the perks i have some really good bear photos. theyd get into our bird seed and trash, a bit of a nuisance at best.
    if l looked outside and saw a random MAN id be legit worried. and watch him way more carefully than the bear.

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +3

      Grew up with bears in my yard. Never got to work with them though. And they usually buggered off soon as I came out.
      I’d pick bear in a heartbeat.

  • @JayeEllis
    @JayeEllis Před 26 dny +6

    All Rebecca Watson said was we don't like to be cornered and asked when we cannot feasibly leave. I think that's perfectly valid. If he'd asked her in the bar, on the way to or off the elevator, no issue. She said 'poor time and place, thought you might like to know' is all. The rest of the 'everyone' made it an issue, not her.

  • @Sylvie_without_surname
    @Sylvie_without_surname Před měsícem +37

    One of the most eye opening things I've learned from being a trans woman is the limit of empathy. Before coming out, I thought I got it. Then, as now, most of my friends were women, and of course I listened when they talked about their feelings and experiences. I read feminist theory and enjoyed feminist art and I thought I got it. I was so wrong. Once I and the world started seeing me as a woman, I started living it. I began seeing things through new eyes. Innocuous stuff suddenly wasn't, and I look back with regret at ways I used to behave. There's stuff I don't wanna go into detail about in an internet comment, but needless to say I've learned extra caution. Not because it is all men, but because it could be any man.
    None of this is to say that empathy isn't a virtue to be cultivated, or that it's bad to listen and try to understand. Just that there are more serious limits on understanding experiences so different from your own than most of us seem to think, and we should all have humility about it.

  • @cheeksakimbo6591
    @cheeksakimbo6591 Před měsícem +157

    All the Woman I've ever asked has some story of sexual harassment or worse.
    ALL OF THEM.
    Hell I feel uncomfortable just thinking about it while they live it every day, what a huge asshole would I be to blame them.

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +16

      I don't know what percentage of men have ever asked ANY woman whether she's ever been harassed or worse.
      I suspect it's less than 50%.
      We're part of a system, and even if we're individually innocent (most of us), our role in the system gives us a moral obligation to seek improvement in the system.
      This is uncomfortable for many of us.

    • @Alresu
      @Alresu Před měsícem +8

      @@rileymclaughlin4831 I personally never asked. And I am pretty sure I never will. I try to be the kind of person people can open up about things like this on their own and I fear asking a person who is not ready to talk about it would just push their boundaries.

    • @martibee8984
      @martibee8984 Před měsícem +19

      Every woman I've ever known enough to have more than a casual conversation with has at least one horror story. Apparently I have a therapist's face, and ears, because complete strangers will open up to me about these things too. I have five stories myself. None of those stories are counting anything less than actual assaults.
      The statistics are easy to find, and the people working those stats say that they fall short due to the unknown cases. I find it hard to believe that anyone can't figure out why women feel this way. Thanks for the empathy.

    • @Rosaedora
      @Rosaedora Před měsícem +12

      @@Alresu if you ask something easy like what age was the first time you got cat called that will probably start the covo without pressure. (spoiler, most women it's, like, 9 to 12 years old). my mother in law told me she had never been cat called, but was flashed by a man at 9 and groped on the bus at 12. I got the cat calls starting at 10 years old walking past men on my way to school. these old men said it was because I was wearing shorts. Never wore them again. That was normal for us, at least for my generation it was. Some of my friends didn't even consider it harassment because it was such an everyday thing in grade and middle school.

    • @britishrocklovingyank3491
      @britishrocklovingyank3491 Před měsícem +9

      When I make a new woman friend in my age group, I am 51, and always wait for the two stories I usually hear when our friendship grows trusting enough. The rape story and the 20+ year old boyfriend they had when they were about 15 or 16. I know exactly why they choose bear.

  • @harjutapa
    @harjutapa Před měsícem +257

    My favorite reaction to this question is all my fellow queers who answer with "the bear please 🥰"

    • @willowarkan2263
      @willowarkan2263 Před měsícem +21

      Yeah that question does mean something rather different in that context.

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs Před měsícem +29

      I see what you did there!
      The sad part is that even those of us who aren't into big hairy dudes will still take a literal bear because for a lot of us, it's also still the safer option, especially for AFAB queers of every flavour and trans women.
      Edit: just asked my trans BFF and her enby roommate. Both chose the bear without hesitation. Not surprised, since all three of us have had bad experiences (to put it mildly) with cis-het men. Why all the hate, guys? Just why?

    • @invisiblefan2387
      @invisiblefan2387 Před měsícem +1

      OK, that’s 100% different. A big burly guy is definitely someone you would rather have with you in the woods instead of a regular skinny guy.

    • @ntp5358
      @ntp5358 Před měsícem +1

      Not knowing the context, I thought this video was some "anti-gay" bullshit video lol

    • @matheussanthiago9685
      @matheussanthiago9685 Před měsícem +7

      Furry community: "don't mind if I do"

  • @joearnold6881
    @joearnold6881 Před měsícem +79

    Ah, elevatorgate, and by extension the larger shameful episode that was gamergate, that was the time I learned that, just because some other people had also reached the correct conclusion on a question that society at large tended to be wrong about, that didn’t mean they were right about anything else… or even very smart… or hell, it didn’t even mean that they were decent human beings.

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +22

      Dawkins doesn't like the idea that there's anything at all wrong without our society OTHER than theism. He wants the simple morality of "if you become an atheist, you are now a Good Person and have no further room for personal growth"
      The atheism of a Stalinist gulag is not a universal cure for injustice.
      If we burn down religion, including the Golden Rule, was anything of value lost? do we need to find or build a better alternative?
      That's a pretty deep split.

  • @timhaldane7588
    @timhaldane7588 Před měsícem +26

    Thank you so much for that glorious ending. These things hurt my soul because I wish that women didn't have good reason to feel the way they do, and every time something like this comes up it's a reminder of the unsavoriness of the world we live in. We men so easily forget what it used to be like, to be made to feel small and vulnerable. Remember middle school? Yeah. Puberty did us men a favor. We stopped being targets. One day I realized, what if I never stopped feeling the looming threat of being a target? What if everywhere I went, I had eyes on me from people, large imposing people, whose motives I couldn't discern? That was the day I chose to be a feminist. I appreciate your take here, Steve. Thanks.

  • @Moonbeam143
    @Moonbeam143 Před měsícem +255

    I'm a transgender woman. I choose bear all the way.

    • @ChristyAbbey
      @ChristyAbbey Před měsícem +31

      Yeah, it's wild how much we can intellectualize it, but then *living* it... I didn't know how bad.

    • @loorthedarkelf8353
      @loorthedarkelf8353 Před měsícem +27

      Enby here, same.

    • @valentapaxman
      @valentapaxman Před měsícem

      Would you respect a woman's decision to not want a trans"woman" in a female space with her?

    • @jessicatymczak5852
      @jessicatymczak5852 Před měsícem +31

      With you sister, bears are so much more resonable

    • @maradjade1848
      @maradjade1848 Před měsícem +23

      Yep I'm also a trans women and I would choose the bear every time.

  • @shinyagumon7015
    @shinyagumon7015 Před měsícem +362

    The amount of men trying to dissect and "prove" that choosing the bear is actually scientifically wrong and women should feel bad for doing it is too damn high.
    Like, I'm an autist struggling with rhetorically questions, and even I got that it's obviously not meant to be literal.
    Maybe spend more time analyzing why women feel that way instead of getting pissy about it; maybe you could actually learn something.

    • @pureflix8086
      @pureflix8086 Před měsícem +61

      _learn something?... US MEN?!!_
      HOW DARE YOU!
      NOT IN MY MURICAH!!

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs Před měsícem +64

      The problem is that they don't want to learn, they just want to be right.

    • @stepheng1523
      @stepheng1523 Před měsícem +58

      For real. How devoid of empathy must these guys be to enter a discussion of a women's issue and make it about themselves?

    • @xionkuriyama5697
      @xionkuriyama5697 Před měsícem

      It's a retreat to literalism that lets them be smarmy and appear smarter than they really are. The sad part is how many people fall for it.

    • @gingivitis9148
      @gingivitis9148 Před měsícem +14

      I low-key got gamergate brainrot back in the day. Having your views threaten really feels like being actually threatened, if these guys had a choice between a bear and someone like Steve to be alone in the woods with, they'd probably choose the bear too.

  • @SurataV
    @SurataV Před měsícem +295

    When Elevatorgate happend I was one of those who actually read the discussions about it (FTB, the Randi Forum, a few others) as they happend and tried to explain why exactly the response from women not just to the events Rebecca described but the later harassment and hostility were so suprising and frightening to many women in the atheist community. It was...an experience. Certainly eye-opening. Dehumanising. Our experiences, our thoughts and reasons were just called emotional, irrational, unreasonable, delusional. Wiminzamiright? Talk about unconscious leftover religious indoctrination.
    One of the ways some tried to explain our perspective was the Schrödinger's Rapist analogy. Sort of an empathy thought experiment thing.
    Goes like this:
    Just as Schrödinger does not know if the cat is dead or alive until he checks, a woman does not know whether a man is a rapist (or otherwise violent) until they reveal that they are (murderers also don't kill everyone they meet, so not being threatening in some situations is not proof someone is safe - you know, the whole absence of evidence is not evidence for absence thing).
    The idea was to get those men to empathise with the situation of not-knowing, not being able to know.
    But the men, all of the ones I talked to about this, without fail, empathized and identified not with the logical, obvious option of the human in the thought experiment (Schrödinger/woman), but with the cat (rapist/not-rapist). Which told me that for some reason those men were either more rapey than they let on, or would go out of their way (some even violently considering the harassment, and excuses for the harassment) to not have to empathise with a woman.
    Like I said, it was eye-opening.

    • @mielipuolisiili7240
      @mielipuolisiili7240 Před měsícem

      "unconscious leftover religious indoctrination"
      I don't think you should try to blame the misogyny of atheists on religion tbh. Assholes exist everywhere, not just in the ideological groups you don't like.

    • @beksfue5937
      @beksfue5937 Před měsícem

      Misogynists will always pick shooting themselves on the foot over doing anything that would benefit any woman (even if it's just a small amount of good for ONE woman) because they're so brainwashed into seeing women as "the bad -guy- gal" and the source of all their tragedies, that anything that could be seen as a "win" for women feels worse than an actual bullet destroying their foot for them.
      Example: a spoiled rich boy in my country, with a history of violent crimes committed against women, men, and even animals, is finally going to jail on attempted feminicide charges. Now, a normal person would not give a damn about why he goes to jail, so long as he's put away for a long time (hey, one can dream!) But all the "men's rights "activists"" have come out to say that "ItS uNfaAaaair", absolutely not giving a sh that if he goes free, he'll go on screwing over as many people as possible (including the men whose rights they claim to care so much about).

    • @millersam07
      @millersam07 Před měsícem

      I can only imagine it's because on some level those atheistic men still hold deeply misogynistic views. That they see women as beneath them, so to even attempt to see things through their perspective means it first gets filtered through the misogynistic mindset to lower ones self to the status of a woman. Those men know women are treated as lower class citizens, and they can't even subject themselves for one thought experiment what it must be like to exist as a woman everyday. For women not only does that telling response show you who the potential threats are, but also shows who are the cowards that won't stand up for the ladies they supposedly claim to support.

    • @nathanjora7627
      @nathanjora7627 Před měsícem +7

      Or, mayhaps, they have even just a shred of understanding of statistics and can understand how this fear, as understandable as it may be on an emotional level, is also extremely bigoted and irrational.
      It’s funny that in your analogy it’s men, not women, that should be afraid of the other person (the potential murderer/rapist) given how much more likely men are to be assaulted than women.

    • @hydratejsn
      @hydratejsn Před měsícem +66

      ​@@nathanjora7627 Wow, I'm impressed by how you could read an entire paragraph about how men dismiss the women's experience because of bias and lack of ability to see different perspectives and then respond to said paragraph with bias and lack of understanding just as OP described.
      Must be a breeze to live with such low awareness.

  • @jsdutky
    @jsdutky Před měsícem +62

    My understanding of the Man or Bear thing is not that women would prefer to "take their chances with a bear." The key to the Man or Bear thing is in the provided reasoning for the choice of the bear: "when the bear attacked me at least I would be believed."

    • @kathleenjohnson4592
      @kathleenjohnson4592 Před měsícem +17

      It's both.

    • @martibee8984
      @martibee8984 Před měsícem +18

      It's not just being believed. There also being questioned about what we did to provoke that attack, and what the bear is limited to in its attack. A bear might maul you, and leave you injured or dead, but it won't SA or torture you in all the unimaginable ways that some men will before it mauls you. There are things worse than death. Thanks for being empathetic.

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +2

      Same thing. And damn right bear.

    • @leighreinhart6185
      @leighreinhart6185 Před 21 dnem +7

      There's another important element of the question that gets overlooked... the woman in the woods *does not want* to encounter either a strange man OR a bear. She just wants to do her hike through the woods in peace, being bothered by nothing and no one. Both the unknown man *and* the bear are potential threats, so it's not really a question of which one she would "prefer" to encounter, but the mental calculus of which one of those two threats could cause worse potential harm.
      And last I checked, bears don't sexually assault humans, they don't torture humans, and they don't carry guns. People do all those things.

  • @potatopotatow
    @potatopotatow Před měsícem +47

    I have to admit I would choose the man, but only because I have an irrational fear of getting eaten alive by a bear. Plus, the bear mace should work against the man too.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před měsícem +2

      Better probably.

    • @John73John
      @John73John Před měsícem +13

      I'd say any fear of getting eaten alive by a bear is pretty rational.

    • @Rosaedora
      @Rosaedora Před měsícem +4

      Bears just want to be left alone. They really don't want to come anywhere near humans unless the humans are irresponsible campers. Like, obviously don't run up to one! But if you're tromping through the woods singing Christmas carols they'll steer clear. Make sure to hang your food up. You can take bear safety courses. (you can also take man safety courses, but they are longer and involve more like how to get out of zip ties, ways to escape being choked out, pressure points)

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +2

      So dude walks up friendly from the opposite way to you and you’re gonna immediately spray him when he’s close? Have fun with the lawsuit.
      Bears don’t sue.

    • @anjafrohlich1170
      @anjafrohlich1170 Před měsícem +8

      @@magnarcreed3801 Dude, you got some hidden aggression there. You should work on that. Micro-aggressions ain't cool. Therapy helps.

  • @weaselwolf
    @weaselwolf Před měsícem +80

    The number of men who can't take no for an answer in a thought experiment only highlights why they pick the bear

    • @frederf3227
      @frederf3227 Před měsícem +5

      When a black person enters a store and the shop keeper follows them around is that wrong?

    • @Errenium
      @Errenium Před měsícem +19

      ​@@frederf3227bait used to be believable.

    • @TheSeptet
      @TheSeptet Před měsícem

      @@frederf3227 When you get your teeth kicked in for being a smug little shit, is that wrong?

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +7

      @@frederf3227
      Being followed for possible theft vs being avoided to avoid being beaten, sa’d, kidnapped append, etc.
      Not even close bro.
      And sure. Follow the mf. When they don’t steal anything you can feel silly.
      Women won’t feel silly for being alive.

    • @ai-aniverse
      @ai-aniverse Před měsícem

      @@magnarcreed3801 unless you are Latasha Harlins and get blasted for existing. but go on..

  • @NoahL_
    @NoahL_ Před měsícem +53

    As someone with social anxiety who overthinks a lot, nothing terrifies me more than unintentionally making someone uncomfortable. It doesn’t help that I have a tendency to miss social cues. So yeah, I live in constant fear of being the guy who comes off as worse than a bear.

    • @frederf3227
      @frederf3227 Před měsícem +11

      That's unfortunate for you. I hope that the opinion that people have of others which aren't you and is applied to you just because you resemble those others doesn't hold you back from enjoying living. That sounds sarcastic but I absolutely mean it genuinely.

    • @tamatebako_yt
      @tamatebako_yt Před měsícem +17

      I can say with confidence that you are not part of the problem. It has been shown that people who are convinced they have no biases are more prone to bias! I think that kind of applies here as well!
      Also, practical tip: Words are a powerful tool, use them. Most people think they will "ruin" a conversation by voicing their fears, but it has actually the opposite effect and people very much appreciate it, at least in my experience!

    • @normalgamergal
      @normalgamergal Před 29 dny +6

      One of the best ways to help mitigate is to provide outs during discussions and interactions. Being honest about your fear is also good. If you instigate something, make sure the other person knows they can say no without reprisal or offense. Also, notice your surroundings. If it's a private and/or enclosed space, the other person may be feeling pressured to not offend you since so many men respond to offense with violence. Your even little shows of compassion and understanding will go a long way to making a lot of women less fearful about communicating their fear or discomfort. You still might make mistakes from time to time but so many guys don't even do the bare (haha) minimum that you'll be doing a lot to help yourself.

    • @Maria-fz8km
      @Maria-fz8km Před 20 dny +1

      The men who have made me cautious would follow me all throughout public events, or strip down to their underwear and circle me. If you're not doing that I think you'll be okay.

    • @tedonica
      @tedonica Před 15 dny +2

      Fortunately, doing things that show that you empathize with women's situation helps a TON here. Like, for example, if you're out for a jog and approaching someone from behind and going to overtake them, you can call out "passing on your left." It helps make your intentions clearer and shows that you're thinking about how you come across.
      Also, how you position yourself can help. If you are in a room with a woman, position yourself so that she is between you and the door. By intentionally giving her an "escape route" you signal that you understand why she would want one.

  • @seannyhan2254
    @seannyhan2254 Před měsícem +15

    My wife asked me a version of this, "Would you rather (daughter's name) was trapped with a bear or a man?"
    I responded "Bear" without hesitation.
    I have practically no social media presence, didn't know this was a thing, was answering cold, with no background.
    And it was easy.
    I'm also sorta amused at the thought of an "atheist community". The idea of defining oneself an one's associations by something one doesn't believe in has some humor to it.

    • @alexanderflack566
      @alexanderflack566 Před měsícem +5

      The community bit came about because of a lot of anti-atheist bigotry from Christians (look up Jessica Ahlquist for one such example that was occurring around the time the movement was at its peak). Getting discriminated against at school, in jobs, etc. tends to cause people to join together who otherwise wouldn't; as an example, there probably wouldn't be an LGBT movement if there were no discrimination against people who are in it.

  • @ElicBehexan
    @ElicBehexan Před měsícem +135

    When my wife was 21 (before I met her) she was grabbed from behind by a man. The next thing she remembers is standing over this crying man. She walked to the nearest pay phone (remember those?) and called 911. When the police arrived one of those 'clever' guys asked what happened to her "boyfriend." She replied, of course, he wasn't her boyfriend. Then one asked what happened. She replied she hit him with her stick. My wife was legally blind. She had one of those blind sticks that fold up. Because she was going to catch a busy to her joy being the night operator at a hotel it was dark - like 10 p.m. - and the form of her blindness was such she could see better in the dark than in the light. She had the blind stick folded once down the middle. The police officer asked her to put it down, which she did. Now, about this time another officer, who had heard the call, drove up. He gets out of the patrol car, walks up and said: "What's going on (insert wife's name.)" This officer moonlighted as a security guard at the same hotel. He then assured the other officers that if she had hit him, he did something. Well, they took him to the hospital where they discovered she had broken both of the lower arm bones, his collar bone, dented his head and ruptured his testicle. During the operation they had to remove the other because of the damage. Now, while this was probably 1982, they were still able to pin 7 rapes on him and the assault on her. For years at parole hearing she'd go and every time he saw her, he started to cry until the lawyers asked her to not come anymore. Honestly, I'm sure she'd've taken the bear... Oh, and I fought off two guys who picked me up to carry me someplace. Ya know, if I can handle a 1000+ horse, I showed I could fight off some guys too.

    • @birdbrainiac
      @birdbrainiac Před měsícem +3

      That's awesome.

    • @noneYa66613
      @noneYa66613 Před měsícem +28

      She was lucky. If that cop, who was also a security guard where she worked hadn't shown up it sounds like it could have been very different, and in many instances it has. I'm glad your wife had a good outcome. For most women it isn't so good. We fight our assailants and we are the ones who go to jail.

    • @LanceEads
      @LanceEads Před měsícem +18

      Rarely do you hear of an attacker receiving the consequences he truly deserves. This is definitely one of those all too rare cases. I'm sorry you and your wife were subjected to these horrible experiences, but it's also heartening to hear how you each dealt with them. Thank you!

    • @christasimon9716
      @christasimon9716 Před měsícem +13

      So, she went Daredevil on his sorry ass. Is my takeaway.

    • @iiiiitsmagreta1240
      @iiiiitsmagreta1240 Před měsícem

      If I ever get lost in the woods, I want your wife to be there with me.

  • @leXie1337_chan
    @leXie1337_chan Před měsícem +62

    By the time I'd learnt of this phenomenon, the question had been posed to men whether they'd rather their *daughters* be alone in the woods with a man or a bear, and after that a woman or a bear... Seemed to get the point across effectively.

    • @noneYa66613
      @noneYa66613 Před měsícem

      But only for the men who value their daughters. I know some who happily encourage their daughters to be subservient to men.

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Před měsícem +33

      I hate that they refuse to understand these things until they can imagine the woman as some man's smth

    • @hayuseen6683
      @hayuseen6683 Před měsícem +5

      Personally I'd choose the bear both times, but I'm very misanthropic. Humans are hard to be around without dread.

    • @shelliblossom8953
      @shelliblossom8953 Před 27 dny

      @@hayuseen6683 totally agree just because women are smaller and less likely to do something dont mean they wont

  • @thescifiZipacna
    @thescifiZipacna Před měsícem +51

    Y’know what struck me when I watched Rebecca Watson’s original video about “Elevatorgate”? Her tone of voice when she said “guys, don’t do that”. It was like “I know I don’t have to tell YOU guys this, but…”
    Truly, we don’t deserve nice things.

    • @khajiithadwares2263
      @khajiithadwares2263 Před 26 dny

      Maybe she knew there are more than 1type of guy out there, ...but there is a paradox in telling people at large how to behave around YOU (as if YOu represent everyone else of your own group)
      Paradoxical filtering .... Live Narration: czcams.com/video/lo-bMs0FhEc/video.html
      Lets just say ... saying and shouting rules only works for people that are willing to listen, so you end up talking to the wrong crowd, since the people that would not have done you harm, end up listen, but those that end up pushing boundaries, would have and won't listen either way.

  • @BurningBlades1
    @BurningBlades1 Před měsícem +7

    Instructions unclear, currently trapped in a wooded elevator with a large, hairy, friendly homosexual man.

  • @verlongates2279
    @verlongates2279 Před měsícem +13

    I'm a man. It's not illogical for a woman to prefer sharing 'the woods' with a Bear than with a Man. Usually, if/when a woman (or a man) IS sharing 'the woods' with a bear, there is an EXTREMELY high chance that the bear will never become known to you. Men feel an obligation to 'announce themselves' and become 'significant' in one way or another if they know there is a woman. Bears are unlikely to interact unless they think you have some food available.

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +3

      Yep. Or a mama with cubs. I’d much rather die from a protective mom than a bored man.

  • @bizikimiz6003
    @bizikimiz6003 Před měsícem +11

    I am a cis, heterosexual man, and I have felt threatened (and many times uncomfortable) by other men.

  • @arcanineryu
    @arcanineryu Před měsícem +31

    Not only is it unlikely the bear would attack, but most women understand that the likelihood a man would attack increases over time when stressed and isolated. Like a regular dude might be fine to be trapped in the forest for a day. But by day 2-4 of looking through the forest for civilization? When the man is stressed, sleep deprived, and starving/dehydrated? The average man has extremely poor emotional regulation skills. And many women are forced to intuitively understand that the more a man gets stressed, the more likely he is to take his frustrations out on you.

    • @dkecskes2199
      @dkecskes2199 Před měsícem +2

      Yup. Quark and Garak, having a discussion about humons over root beer.

  • @StealthMarmot_
    @StealthMarmot_ Před měsícem +6

    Instructions unclear, now stuck in tree after trying to get honey.

  • @TsunamiNR
    @TsunamiNR Před 29 dny +8

    A few years ago I came home from work with the bus and a woman left the bus at the same stop I did. As she was walking home I noticed she looked at me afraid and started walking faster. As I noticed that it was dark and late and it was also raining which means I was wearing a raincoat with a cap on, I could understand why she'd feel unsafe... Yet there wasn't much I could do except walking slower.
    It's not a nice feeling to be aware of how uneasy or even afraid you make others feel, even if it is completely unintentional... And it must have been even a lot worse for her.

    • @kanderson-oo7us
      @kanderson-oo7us Před 27 dny +2

      If it happens again, you could say something like "hey - I'm sorry if I'm making you uncomfortable. I'm going to cross the street now". (Or "I'll wait while you go ahead" )

  • @Contevent
    @Contevent Před měsícem +14

    I (cishetmale) had a similar issue recently, but it was with the expression "all men are predators".
    While I understand that this is just the short version of a much more complex and nuanced thought process, and that it actually means "a woman must, for her safety and her friends, always assume that the men around her are secretly trying to get her", it doesn't change that the expression itself is quite provocative.
    I was upset and felt insulted, but I feel this was legitimate considering the wording.
    Still, the true issue is that, well, women needs to be constantly on their toes. And while it's not a nice feeling to hear that, and it can lead to a lot of misunderstanding, the expression still stand valid.

    • @tedonica
      @tedonica Před 15 dny

      All men are predators. Some are vegetarians.
      Regardless of intention, men pose a *physical danger* to women. That's what makes them predators, the same way a lion is still a predator even if it isn't hungry.

  • @LollipopKnight2
    @LollipopKnight2 Před měsícem +45

    You said men shouldn't try to act more like bears, but if that's the lesson they take from the exercise, maybe it's best for them to wander naked into a nature preserve, to live mostly on nuts and berries.

    • @Kaotiqua
      @Kaotiqua Před měsícem +21

      ...and to generally not assault humans, of _any_ gender.

    • @mielipuolisiili7240
      @mielipuolisiili7240 Před měsícem +3

      Tempting proposition

    • @jwhite-1471
      @jwhite-1471 Před měsícem +4

      And to take a several months long nap.

  • @parallaxnick637
    @parallaxnick637 Před měsícem +18

    It was a hard knock when I realised not all atheists were Trekkies.

    • @jayanderson9375
      @jayanderson9375 Před měsícem +1

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @tedonica
      @tedonica Před 15 dny +1

      Unfortunately, not all Trekkies are very media literate. They say things like "when did Star Trek go woke?"
      Much like religion, being fans of the same media doesn't mean you took the same lessons away from it.

  • @jdcrosier2682
    @jdcrosier2682 Před měsícem +73

    I fully understand why people would choose bear, but it still stings quite a lot. Being seen as dangerous by default hurts, especially because it’s entirely out of my control.

    • @paulchapman8023
      @paulchapman8023 Před měsícem +34

      “‘Dangerous!’ cried Gandalf. ‘And so am I, very dangerous… And Aragorn is dangerous, and Legolas is dangerous. You are beset with dangers, Gimli son of Glóin, for you are dangerous yourself, in your own fashion. Certainly the forest of Fangorn is perilous - not least to those that are too ready with their axes…’” (The Lord of the Rings, The Two Towers, chapter 5: “The White Rider”)
      Everyone is dangerous in their own way; what matters is not being too ready with your axe.

    • @tamatebako_yt
      @tamatebako_yt Před měsícem +51

      you can use this knowledge to your advantage tho. if you can empathize with women in a way most men cannot, you will always have a (good) partner. men often complain that "women have it so easy" when it comes to relationships and sex. yes, it is easy to get sloppy, degrading, and dehumanizing experiences if you so desire. sifting through the mud to find a kernel of gold is not a privilege.
      someone compared it like this: while the male loneliness epidemic can be compared to dying of thirst in the desert, women's loneliness can be compared to dying of thirst in the ocean. i think that's pretty accurate.

    • @j8000
      @j8000 Před měsícem +40

      Both problems are valid.
      Both problems also go away if women's safety is dramatically improved. Too bad that seems unrealistic.

    • @lkf8799
      @lkf8799 Před měsícem +19

      No need to feel hurt if you're not one of the bad ones because we're not talking about you 😉
      It like a running into a strange dog. People love dogs. But you don't know if this one might bite so you're cautious. We're just being cautious, that's all.

    • @dani007a
      @dani007a Před měsícem +5

      I think I'd choose a bear over any person I don't know, man, woman, or enby.

  • @lucyinchat
    @lucyinchat Před měsícem +15

    There was a newspaper article about a young boy protected and fed by a bear before he was found by the authorities, and some people thought that it was better that it was not a man.

  • @mattmarino6272
    @mattmarino6272 Před měsícem +82

    Floored by the amount of explanation & coercion it takes to get some dudes to engage with empathy

    • @Frommerman
      @Frommerman Před měsícem +10

      Patriarchy tells men they can't have empathy. Why are we surprised when they act on that imperative?

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +2

      The resistance can be very strong.
      We're part of a system, and even if we're individually innocent (most of us), our role in the system gives us a moral obligation to seek improvement in the system.
      This is uncomfortable for many of us.
      The ones who argue seem to me kinda like Germans in 1941 who say no, they haven't recently seen their Jewish former neighbors, but how DARE you. insinuate some sinister theory in which they are passively complicit in genocide.

    • @frederf3227
      @frederf3227 Před měsícem +3

      I empathize with their plight. I will not accept being painted as a subhuman threat just because of my gender. If you package one as the other, it's rejected, try again.

    • @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf
      @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf Před měsícem +9

      ​@@frederf3227It's your responsibility to hold your fellow males accountable. If you don't want to get categorized as a threat, that is. We women can think of you any way that suits us, and safety is what suits us best.

    • @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf
      @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf Před měsícem +5

      ​​@@frederf3227What makes you think that as women we're going to "try again"? We're not trying anything. We're walking away.

  • @pupmorningstar
    @pupmorningstar Před měsícem +430

    The Venn diagram between the men upset about this and men you wouldn't want to be in the woods alone with is 1 complete circle

    • @jamaisj
      @jamaisj Před měsícem +34

      Well, that's the shallowest retort I've seen all day.

    • @OsirisLord
      @OsirisLord Před měsícem +50

      My wife introduced me to this dilemma and I said the bear immediately without hesitation. I don't know maybe it's the Canadian in me I lived in a place where if you saw a bear it wasn't a big deal if you just stood your ground. But if you encountered a man in the woods it meant you stumbled over an illegal weed farm or meth lab and if they saw you they'd shoot you.

    • @fisyr
      @fisyr Před měsícem +22

      I wouldn't say I am upset, because at the end of the day you can't really control what you fear or not.
      I more find it sad that an animal that in principle can tear people effortlessly is considered less scary than a fellow human being.
      But I kind of get where that idea comes from: a person can do far worse than a bear.

    • @williamwontiam3166
      @williamwontiam3166 Před měsícem +2

      @@OsirisLordDo you not have hikers up there in Canada?

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Před měsícem +28

      @@jamaisj- In what way? Far too many of these guys go online and demonstrate why we pick the bear.

  • @Respectable_Username
    @Respectable_Username Před 28 dny +3

    The thing the "not all men" crowd always forget is that, yes, it's not all men, but you can't tell _which_ men. So every time you're somewhere alone with an unfamiliar man, you're rolling a D20. Most of the time, you'll be fine. But no woman wants to risk rolling a Nat 1 in that scenario!

  • @SylviaRustyFae
    @SylviaRustyFae Před měsícem +20

    Ive only lived openly as a woman for the last six yrs... And yet ive had more than that many encounters with men alone, or worse once; a man and his female accomplice who turned on her sisters for the sake of a mans approval

    • @Rosaedora
      @Rosaedora Před měsícem +2

      So sorry that happened to you

  • @maracaegrizzley8734
    @maracaegrizzley8734 Před 24 dny +4

    I don't know if it needs to be said or not, but for the record, "come to my place for Coffee" is a code phrase along the same lines as "Netflix and chill". It *might* be said sincerely. But it also probably isn't. I know that I, in particular, have Issues deciphering coded language, so having someone else explain the phrases and what they *really* mean is helpful, because I take people at their word way too often.

  • @TypoKnig
    @TypoKnig Před měsícem +45

    Well said! I look forward to a society where nobody feels threatened. We’ve got a long way to go.

  • @Nukeknockout
    @Nukeknockout Před měsícem +5

    I'm 6'3, which I know is tall for a woman. I don't deal with a lot of sexual harassment (I still deal with some), but nearly all of my much shorter friends do constantly. The lesson I'm taking from this is that the sort of man who catcalls and gropes and follows is not doing it because they don't understand the behavior is bad. They know it's bad. So they don't do it to someone unless they think they can overpower that person.
    If I run into a bear in the woods, the bear isn't doing mental math about whether they're taller than me or stronger than me. The bear isn't deciding what kind of behavior they think they can get away with or what second location they think they can get me to. The bear is just going to do bear things, and if I back off and stuff it'll probably leave me alone.
    Whereas if I run into a man in the woods I have no idea what is going through his head. I have no idea if he's armed, if he's been following me, if he's going to go wait by my car so I can't leave the woods.
    So. Team bear.

    • @octavianpopescu4776
      @octavianpopescu4776 Před měsícem

      Well, you say you have no idea what's going on through his head, but you immediately think of dangerous situations. If I'm in a forest, I'm on a walk or something, it's unlikely I'd go alone, because there are bears and wolves and other stuff, but let's assume I'm alone for some reason. I don't know/care if there are other people, I'm looking at trees and listening to birds sing, breathing in that fresh air or maybe jogging. That's what I'd do in a forest, not stalking people. If I see a woman alone in a forest... I wouldn't even talk to her, not even a hello, I'm just minding my own business. I'm more likely to think about a fictional debate with a historical figure than about the lady who's also in the forest. "Weren't we supposed to play a friendly against Colombia before the Euros? Did I miss that match?" (I just Googled that, we lost 3-2 back in March) would be something I'd wonder, not "where is her car?" Being treated like a potential criminal is what's insulting and why there's a strong reaction.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Před 28 dny

      @@octavianpopescu4776 You lack the empathy to understand why a woman would act that way. Maybe you're hopeless, maybe not, but if you had a good relationship with your mother, maybe think of who you'd rather have her run into, a bear or a man.

  • @Sigart
    @Sigart Před měsícem +3

    Man or bear reminds me a bit of a hypothetical question from tumblr; what would stump you the most when you answered the door after an unexpected knock, a walrus or a fairy. Most people answered that the walrus would be most surprising. The theory people responded with was, we know how walruses act and a walrus making its way to your front door and also knocking seems more farfetched that an imaginary creature would.
    Point is, it's easier to imagine the threat you know than the threat you don't.

  • @francesca234
    @francesca234 Před měsícem +23

    It is also very important that the objectively correct answer does not matter in the man or bear question because it is a thought experiment like the trolley problem. Even the people who say man, many of them understand why other women say bear and the fact that so many women say bear is important information. If a large group of women would prefer to run into a bear than a man, then something is going on there. People are answering honestly for them and like any sociology study, or political poll it doesn't matter what you think the answer should be, it matters what people answer.

    • @jwhite-1471
      @jwhite-1471 Před měsícem +5

      Right? The literalism in the offended responses is so completely off base.

  • @danic9304
    @danic9304 Před měsícem +56

    Aaand that was when my admiration of Dawkins died on the vine. He then trampled the vine into the dust by becoming a terf.

    • @Black-Swan-007
      @Black-Swan-007 Před měsícem +13

      I had the same reaction to the author of Harry Potter. I admired her and thought her of as an ally when she revealed that Dumbledore was gay. When it came out that she was a TERF it broke my heart and every shred of admiration I had for her went up in flames. I don't even say her name anymore.

  • @BrotherAlpha
    @BrotherAlpha Před měsícem +21

    You can go on this very site, look up "Man tells bear to leave" and there are dozens of videos of men telling black bears to leave and the black bear leaving.
    So yeah, as a man, I would rather be in the woods with a black bear than another man.

    • @cassandrabelyeu2419
      @cassandrabelyeu2419 Před měsícem +2

      Bears respect boundaries and consent until they’re hungry enough to consider eating you.

  • @BastrdGod
    @BastrdGod Před měsícem +10

    Instead of "imagine if you were a woman...", try "imagine if you were you, in an elevator with a drunk honry gay Andre the Giant/Thanos".
    The people that ignore whatever scenario you provide with them as a woman will NEVER get the point because they refuse to believe life is any different for people that are different from themselves.
    They just simply don't believe women get harassed more, or that life is just more dangerous as a woman.
    Weirdly enough, it's usually (not always) the same people that insist "trns people shouldn't be in sports because men are inherently stronger".
    Which makes no fkin sense.... how do ya believe one of those, but not the other??.

  • @harjutapa
    @harjutapa Před měsícem +37

    Elevator gate was the first thing I thought of when I saw your video title, so I guess great minds think alike?
    Please don't bring up that I didn't make the connection at all until I saw your video, I need this one. It's been a rough month.

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +2

      I only made that connection about five minutes into the video. I thought it was gonna be some God or Man :: Bear or Man cosmology. So you got there faster than I did.

  • @Kcthetransgirl
    @Kcthetransgirl Před 26 dny +3

    Statistically speaking, bears are far less likely to call me a slur and gun me down in the middle of the night.

  • @ChristyAbbey
    @ChristyAbbey Před měsícem +20

    I thought I understood pre-transition. Just wasn't prepared for the weight of it. OMG BEAR!!! Rebecca was right, I thought. Now I've been Rebecca even old and ugly as I am.
    BTW, if you check out TikTok, one woman who was famously mauled by a bear chose... wait for it... bear!

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem

      Link pretty please 🥺

    • @hasanmuttaqin464
      @hasanmuttaqin464 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@magnarcreed3801yt doesn't allow link

    • @crazydragy4233
      @crazydragy4233 Před 18 dny

      ​@@hasanmuttaqin464 Yeah but someone could thrown in a creators name at least and date of upload

  • @arklestudios
    @arklestudios Před měsícem +22

    What amazes me is how often Men(TM) will talk about Elevator Gate and insist that Rebecca was crying and screaming the entire video where she told the story, and she just... wasn't. And I saw the video pretty recently too, Sarah Z used a clip of it for a video a few years ago. Rebecca didn't even raise her voice really. In fact she was so dead pan Film Twitter dismissed the video for having "Marvel writing." *badumtish* Seriously though, describing her talking about that dude in the elevator as "screaming and crying" is like describing the Normandy scene from Saving Private Ryan as a slapstick routine.

  • @mooncalf191
    @mooncalf191 Před měsícem +213

    Everyone should pick the bear. Regardless of any gender considerations. Bears are relatively safe if you leave them alone. Humans, not so much. Too unpredictable. Game theory says pick the bear.

    • @mooncalf191
      @mooncalf191 Před měsícem +40

      As an afterthought, as a person who was born and is comfortable presenting as male, I don't want to minimize the difference between genders and the fact that most (human) predators are male. I wish it wasn't so.

    • @emilyz4104
      @emilyz4104 Před měsícem +53

      Yeah. I think a lot of people aren't understanding that part. The question is "who would you rather encounter" and not "who would you rather have to fight" after all. Bears are usually fairly safe if you keep your distance.

    • @Borgcow
      @Borgcow Před měsícem +1

      Really depends on the species of bear

    • @Tuaron
      @Tuaron Před měsícem +17

      As a man, I'm afraid to pick bear...because I've seen too many pictures and videos of them being adorable, and I'm afraid I'd do something stupid like want to pet it.

    • @crocoshark4097
      @crocoshark4097 Před měsícem +3

      What if I'm lost though? I feel like that's an important factor. I thought "stuck in the woods" was part of the scenario and that implies being lost.

  • @ttintagel
    @ttintagel Před měsícem +42

    The thing is, with the bear at least you know what you're getting.

    • @solarisone1082
      @solarisone1082 Před měsícem +5

      Exactly! Bears don’t have hidden motives.

    • @saberhap2639
      @saberhap2639 Před měsícem +2

      @@solarisone1082 Wish women didn't have hidden motives

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs Před měsícem

      @@saberhap2639 To paraphrase Margaret Atwood, men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them.
      Can you see the issue here?

    • @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf
      @ElizabethGeiger-ye1sf Před měsícem +4

      ​​@@saberhap2639What you wish is irrelevant. Women's safety is more important than your wishes.

  • @caligo7918
    @caligo7918 Před měsícem +14

    I'm a big guy and trained martial arts for years, so I am absolutely 100% sure, i not only made a lot of women, but also quite a few men very uncomfortable, by purely existing in the same space. I'm also an introvert and therefore uncomfortable in crowds.
    Being uncomfortable, to me, seems to be a basic, daily feeling of almost all humans.

    • @frederf3227
      @frederf3227 Před měsícem +1

      Women don't care. Expect a lot of "not everything's about you! No one cares about your feelings!"

    • @EPBK
      @EPBK Před měsícem +2

      The point of the thought experiment is that you don't even have to be a muscular, obvious threat to be potentially much more dangerous than a bear to many people, especially women. It's potential danger, but we have great precedent to show us what might happen if we implicitly trust.
      Someone else said it best: "at least if I was attacked by a bear, people would believe me."

  • @radicalfishstickstm8563
    @radicalfishstickstm8563 Před měsícem +15

    The big thing I don’t understand is why some people think they’re owed complete trust from strangers. Do they trust strangers unconditionally? Probably not, right?

    • @electricbrein180
      @electricbrein180 Před měsícem +7

      This is the part that always befuddles me, the ones who respond as if you've personally called their character into question instead of chalking it up to generalized wariness of strangers. I mean, being *completely* unwary of strangers is literally a sign of certain cognitive disorders, why on earth would you expect automatic, on-sight trust from everyone as the default?

    • @radicalfishstickstm8563
      @radicalfishstickstm8563 Před měsícem +3

      @@electricbrein180 “no, no you don’t understand. It’s a grand conspiracy hatched by all the people that make me uncomfortable (certain races, genders and socioeconomic groups) to game the hierarchy. That’s the reason why I’m an unpopular shmuck and not because I am utterly lacking in self-awareness.”

  • @renaigh
    @renaigh Před měsícem +17

    I would rather encounter a bear fishing in the woods with his boyfriend.

  • @stevewithaq
    @stevewithaq Před měsícem +25

    Okay, I'm torn about this video.
    On the one hand, it's a well-thought-out piece highlighting how this discourse can be both toxic and useful in identifying toxicity in groups.
    On the other hand, it seems like at least part of the reason you made it was so you could do your Dawkins impression...
    Aw, screw it; it's too funny an impression. Take my like.

    • @rileymclaughlin4831
      @rileymclaughlin4831 Před měsícem +8

      Porque no los dos?
      When Dawikins became an atheist, he went from the smug arrogance which I hate among some (not all) Christians...
      ...to the same smug arrogance minus the theology.
      Like, dude, if you had to lose one or other other, then a humble Christian who keeps her theology to herself, and prays quietly at home where no one else can see, is a better person.
      Dawkins thinks that he's a better smarter wise person than MLK Jr., was, on the mere grounds of who has the God delusion.

  • @theepicone100
    @theepicone100 Před měsícem +7

    Damn i wonder why men would take issue with the idea a random man is more dangerous than a bear.
    Really though, people that are on the receiving end of bigotry shouldn't be shamed for having negative reactions.

  • @WhichDoctor1
    @WhichDoctor1 Před měsícem +18

    The thing with bears is most of the time if you’re stuck in a forest with one and you don’t bother them they’re leave you alone. The thing with men is they’re very likely to not leave you alone.

    • @frederf3227
      @frederf3227 Před měsícem +1

      Very likely so >50% of all men encounters you're accosted?

    • @adididavidi6185
      @adididavidi6185 Před měsícem

      Lol lmao even.
      The vast majority of murders and rapes don't come from strangers and the vast majority of bears are brown aka bears that will absolutely eat you if there hungry and are not afraid of you

    • @magnarcreed3801
      @magnarcreed3801 Před měsícem +1

      @@frederf3227
      Good chunk yeah. Not just accosted. Approached, heckled, shamed, assaulted. A bear won’t do any of that. It’s either gonna see me and run or maul me. I won’t have to question a bears motives.
      How many bears you been attacked by?

  • @thizizliz
    @thizizliz Před měsícem +13

    Well said. Thank you. What a shame that so many don't get it and aren't willing to listen.

  • @alyssahallister
    @alyssahallister Před měsícem +12

    I never knew that was the inciting incident until years later when I found Rebecca's CZcams channel, perhaps because I've never used Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, etc. But I certainly saw the sea change and lost a TON of people I had thought were friends who decided all of a sudden that they were on Dawkins' side - on the side of the weirdo creepazoid. And seeing them all take what was clearly the wrong side on this topic was a massive red flag that ended every single one of those relationships, to the point that the only friendships I still have which date back to before I graduated college were a handful I made online while seeking out new communities to find fellowship in once I realized that I wasn't going to find that in the groups I had been playing D&D with, watching anime with, going whitewater rafting with, and hanging out at the diner just outside the campus with. It's really sad to look back and realize that a lot of those people are probably MAGA supporters now in spite of the Christian dominionism in that movement, but at least I dodged a bullet with all of them.

  • @Dreadkid08
    @Dreadkid08 Před měsícem +4

    As a man, I too prefer to be in the forest with a random bear over a random man

  • @JeanieD
    @JeanieD Před měsícem +7

    I am a fan of Rebecca Watson, and was familiar with this story. I can add, I’ve been in situations where it was clear that the man was absolutely clueless of the fear he inspired in me. And, in fact, I was molested as a young teen by a friend of my parents and wasn’t believed when I told my parents, which me me not only not trust men, but not trust my own parents.

  • @sadpacman3290
    @sadpacman3290 Před měsícem +24

    I am a cis-bi man who has been attacked by a man. I am on team bear. I grew up in a female-dominate house and I was raised knowing about this stuff. But I am also an autistic person who takes what people complain about people literally and to heart to avoid making the mistakes of other people. I get told "this is a bad thing that only bad people do", I'm going to not do it. I read "TOP 10 things guys do to make women uncomfortable", I'm going to memorize that list and NOT do that stuff. I do my best to make myself a tiny thing that doesn't take up space because I am afraid of offending or angering ANYONE. It is a major source of anxiety for me. So hearing that, no matter what I do, I am going to be viewed as threatening has been a very negative experience. I can completely agree with the female perspective AND feel like this means I'm a vile piece of shit just for being born male and the whole conversation wants me to take garden shears to my crotch. But if I say that I am tired of this argument, I get lumped in with the assholes.

    • @noneYa66613
      @noneYa66613 Před měsícem +2

      Why do you direct this at yourself if you aren't a guy who is out to hurt someone? Women are as varied as men, good ones and bad ones. Ones who want to live their lives in peace and those who want to make drama. It's a curse on society as a whole. You can't lump yourself into any group. Be yourself. Be sincere. Be honest. But don't expect anyone to want to heal you, fix you or protect you. If you are looking for someone to take care of you then you will be disappointed. In fact don't look for someone at all. Pursue the things in life that you are passionate about and you will meet like-minded people. It will happen before you know it.

    • @gundamkaizer6947
      @gundamkaizer6947 Před měsícem +1

      Yup. It do be like this.

    • @Myrcella_Rykker
      @Myrcella_Rykker Před měsícem +4

      Your fine. And don't you dare mutilate yourself. Your not responsible for all men. You are just responsible for yourself. And by the sound of it you seem to be a kind, and thoughtful person.

    • @Nick-o-time
      @Nick-o-time Před měsícem +5

      ​@@noneYa66613because even if they know it's not them, they know that strangers often perceive them this way, and it hurts, but it hurts worse because we know it's justified for women to feel this way and we can only do so much about it.

    • @JaniceLHz
      @JaniceLHz Před měsícem +1

      @sadpacman3290
      I am sad you feel this way, but understand why.
      Dealing with other people can suck, and it can suck more because of things beyond our control.