What the catcalling video gets wrong | FACTUAL FEMINIST

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025
  • Have you seen the RUclips video that shows an attractive young woman being harassed by men in the streets of New York City? It’s attracted more than 33 million views so far. Some say stopping the verbal assault of women in the street is the new frontier for human rights-and they see this video as a critical tool in raising awareness. Could they be right?
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    Partial transcript:
    Have you seen the RUclips video that shows an attractive young woman being harassed by men in the streets of New York City? Well, it’s had attracted than 33 million view so far. Some say stopping the verbal assault of women in the street is the new frontier for human rights-and they see this video as a critical tool in raising awareness. Could they be right? That’s coming up next on the Factual Feminist. Now, street harassment can be very annoying and it’s possible this video will do some good as a reminder to men that women often don’t appreciate it. But the feminist anti-harassment group that put out this video -Hollaback-it does not merely want to improve public manners. It wants to raise consciousness about what life is like for women under patriarchy. According to this group, street harassment is “a power dynamic” that silences women’s voices and reminds them of their subordinate status. Its website calls street harassment “the most pervasive form of gender-based violence.”
    Let's check some facts: The viral video ad was created by an agency that specializes in creating viral video ads. It’s a riveting bit of advertising, but it forces the complicated issue of street interactions into the simplistic, Oppression 101 victimology morality tale. It is propaganda, not evidence of a crime against womankind. The video gives the impression that the woman is relentlessly targeted. But we only see highlights from a ten hour shoot. We have no idea what happened during the other 9 hours and 58 minutes. Viewers are lead to believe the harassment took place everywhere in the city. But some writers at the website Mass Appeal took a careful look and were able to determine that most of the footage-80 percent-is from one street in Harlem and Times Square. If the ad makers would manipulate our perceptions about the where the harassment took place, what else might they manipulate? Hey, I am not blaming them. It’s an ad.
    But here is a second and more serious problem. The video overrides critical distinctions. Unsolicited attention from strangers ranges from friendly comments, to rude and annoying jeers-to stalking. Why conflate these? Street interactions are complex, and context matters, is it night? or is it day? what’s the neighborhood? Some women might feel flattered or delighted by comments like “good morning, beautiful,” while others would be put off. Amanda Hess argued that comments from a male strangers like “How are you this morning? “are “just another unearned claim for a woman’s attention.” Well, anyone who has ever walked a city street knows that there are many annoying, unearned claims to your attention. If we deserve to be protected from comments, then what about panhandlers, evangelists with pamphlets, and Greenpeace volunteers with clipboards? I love the environment, but I don’t like being shamed for not stopping when they ask “Do you have a moment for the environment?” Personally, I’d probably prefer that a man whistled at me, than have to respond to that.
    Urban streets are free spaces-not gated communities with a rigid set of bylaws. And the First Amendment applies as well. According to Hollaback’s mission statement, the group is hoping to find a way to inspire legislators and the police to take action. They’re vague about what precise actions they have in mind. But Northwestern Professor Laura Beth Nielsen is not vague at all. She wants a law prohibiting, “uninvited harassing speech or actions targeted towards individuals in public spaces on the basis of sex,” because it would “weigh in on the side of equality.” Equality? Is she serious? Harassment can happen anywhere, but it is more common in economically deprived neighborhoods.
    #aei #feminism

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @QueenyMartha
    @QueenyMartha 10 лет назад +1865

    As a woman who has been even followed in the streets I agree with you 100%. I believe that thinking harrasment is someone saying "Hey beautiful" or "good morning" is trivializing REAL harrasment. We gotta stop being oversensitive and placing our emotions over rationality.

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад +177

      ***** Hey beautiful, good evening to you, I hope you have a good day now, god bless... Quadruple harassment! LOL

    • @liesdamnlies3372
      @liesdamnlies3372 10 лет назад +146

      Loathomar
      My god. You should be in jail. What would ever posses you to say such horrible, horrible things!?!?!

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад +85

      ***** I am pure evil... MWWUUAAHHAHAHAHAHAAAAA!!!!!!

    • @HyperSonicSquall
      @HyperSonicSquall 10 лет назад +57

      yeah, definitely the worst part of that video were those dudes following the woman and there's no doubt that happens because there's some messed up people out there.
      THAT is the problem, but it's sandwiched between a whole lot of non-problems

    • @lolumaria
      @lolumaria 10 лет назад

      I'm sure they were following you for your clever opinion, less criers more flyers

  • @HushtheMag
    @HushtheMag 8 лет назад +150

    I don't Get it. Christina is a feminist.....but she uses logic and reasoning.

    • @nehemiah7914
      @nehemiah7914 8 лет назад +11

      I know right? I just discovered her, and I must admit that I was fairly startled when the title "Factual Feminist" came up, I was like...damn! What's the catch! Her coherence and centeredness is astounding.

    • @kaleknelson8429
      @kaleknelson8429 8 лет назад +6

      and We love her for it. because there's a difference between some of the shit that people claiming to be feminists do and what an actual feminist is. when people say look up the definition, there should be a picture of this lady next to it

    • @Tchado1000
      @Tchado1000 8 лет назад +1

      If all feminists are like Christina , I will happily call myself a feminist and join the cause , but sadly it isnt so I am not , and the new wave doesnt represent real feminists of intellect , integrity and equality.

  • @CrissyMoss
    @CrissyMoss 9 лет назад +282

    It would be too easy for "harassing speach" to become "you disagree with me so you are going to jail." They are already getting it in some instances. A law like this would just make it easier. What a horrible idea.

    • @jeremysears7402
      @jeremysears7402 9 лет назад +19

      Exactly. They already have "manspreading" on the books in some states. And it's been used to attack minority men and even men on empty trains where no one is taking up space. These delusional people feed the state with money and extra powers to punish people over petty things.

    • @albertmoreno6408
      @albertmoreno6408 9 лет назад +9

      We already bitch about how many people are in prison or court system in the USA but imagine if this became the law. Our prisons would be overflooded with harmless prisoners. Btw I don't agree with cat calling it's disrespectful but outlawing is a dangerous slippery slope.

    • @tubblestop414
      @tubblestop414 8 лет назад +1

      +Albert Moreno catcalling can't be called disrespectful because there isn't even a real concrete definition for it,well from what i can see,there isn't...

    • @canadiangopher4443
      @canadiangopher4443 8 лет назад +20

      I have gotten to the point now that I do not say hi to women on the street or on a bus etc, I just pretend they don't exist. I do not hold the door open for women anymore. I will not give up my seat on a bus for a woman. I will do nothing for women other than my wife and my family because I don't want to risk having one of these nutjob feminazis try and have me fired, or arrested etc, so the only women who exist now are my wife and my family members. If I see a woman getting beat up by her boyfriend I will ignore it, cause she is not a damsel in distress who needs a man to save her, she is a strong empowered female. If a woman is in a car accident and the car is on fire, she can get her own damn self out. Women want to call me a rapist/sexist/homophobe/racist just because I was born with a penis, well then why should I have any respect for them.

    • @phays10
      @phays10 8 лет назад

      +michael reynolds is it actually enforced?

  • @advocatusdiaboli7669
    @advocatusdiaboli7669 8 лет назад +680

    I thought telling someone good morning was just common curtesy.

    • @dantemcr129
      @dantemcr129 8 лет назад +2

      +Pope Urban hahaha lol xD the fuck? true

    • @leylastuber7397
      @leylastuber7397 8 лет назад +24

      Well, would you say good morning to the same lady, if she walked by with a man on her side? If yes - good for you! If no - why is that? If it's only common courtesy, then it'd be also okay to do so in that situation.

    • @leylastuber7397
      @leylastuber7397 8 лет назад +21

      That's also absolutely true. I agree with you. The problem with sexism is, that it goes both ways. And it always depends on the situation an the "tone" of what you're saying. Like you consciously avoid giving compliments, I consciously avoid wearing make up with certain dresses. Although I wanna be pretty on some days, I won't dress up because of the harassment. (I live in Zurich, Switzerland btw.). There might also be pleasant compliments, sweet smiles - but most of them have this predatory undertone. Stuff like licking their tongue, while staring at you, making sounds like they're calling a dog... this is horrible. But I do know that nice guys are suffering because of those jerks as well. Which makes this issue a whole lot more complicate.I feel like many men who comment here take it personally, reacting in a "I'm not like that! I'm just saying hello!" - way. And I believe you. Most of you ;) But fact is, that there are other people, other guys who behave in that very threatening way. An it is reality. It's just not black and white. Let's just be aware of what we're doing and how we react. Brushing it off like it was nothing is ignorant. Blowing it out of proportion is also no way of handling it.

    • @requiemforamerica8432
      @requiemforamerica8432 8 лет назад

      LOL

    • @IAmHoTSHoTzz
      @IAmHoTSHoTzz 8 лет назад +3

      We're animals, any form of danger is defined in our natural abilities, such as our fight, flight or avoidance system. Like our reflexes.
      When your hands are cold, but your legs are warm, that's when your body is telling you to run for the hills. Because when we're afraid, blood will flow from everywhere towards your legs, so that you can start running.
      Expression and body language is universal.

  • @zukodude487987
    @zukodude487987 8 лет назад +434

    And when guys get catcalled then its a privilege.

    • @eduardoquinonez2929
      @eduardoquinonez2929 8 лет назад +29

      Because we live in a society where men are not often called beautiful. Only if they are born with the genetic markers that give them good looks, but that's about it.. We don't wear makeup. Women are catcalled if they look beautiful, whether they have make up on or they are born with good looks. It's a blessing and a curse either way on both sides. Just like the Target boy (Alex, I think his name was.) His picture was taken an posted on the internet without his consent and it went viral. Beautiful people faced both compliments to their beautiful looks and harassment from people that don't really have anything better to do. Like Factual Feminist said, the people doing the catcalling are those that are homeless and living on the street.

    • @zukodude487987
      @zukodude487987 8 лет назад +9

      Eduardo Quinonez
      I don't think that even if we wore make up it would make a difference, women are just naturally the attractive gender.

    • @SpencerWho22
      @SpencerWho22 8 лет назад

      +Asuka best waifu ✌🏼️

    • @jackhousman6637
      @jackhousman6637 8 лет назад +2

      You ever BEEN catcalled, genius?

    • @lizzylagoon
      @lizzylagoon 8 лет назад +1

      +Jack Housman I'm fairly certain she has been catcalled I mean she's been a young woman before

  • @PlanetJohnny
    @PlanetJohnny 10 лет назад +199

    4:38 "The women in this park? Well, they're mostly professionals in Manolo Blahniks who work in nearby law firms or government offices. The harassing men? They're homeless. They sleep outside on building stoops. I don't think it's the cat-callers who need to check their privilege. I think it's the women on Hollaback who need to check their facts".
    You see, this is why #GamerGate loves Based Mom. She doesn't buy into radical feminist hype, and she checks her facts.
    Also, let's be real here: whipping out your smartphone in Harlem to "record harassment" is gonna get you mugged far faster than it'll "prevent cat-calling". So good luck with that.

    • @mauszx
      @mauszx 10 лет назад +25

      Don't make this about gamergate man.

    • @liesdamnlies3372
      @liesdamnlies3372 10 лет назад +29

      This is why the likes of AVFM, CAFE, and the MRM also like Based Mom. They might not agree with everything she has to say, but she's someone you could actually have a constructive debate with. She really does give a damn about equality of opportunity for all, instead of just asserting she does.

    • @cryptexify
      @cryptexify 10 лет назад +7

      Love it.
      "Check your facts, feminist!"
      Use their own words against them.

    • @alsoknownas875
      @alsoknownas875 10 лет назад +3

      ImTheDruggernaut Sorry, but I actually LIVE in Harlem, and that's an ignorant fucking statement, and it makes me angry that you would generalize that area and that population in that manner. There's shitty parts of Harlem, but most of it is fine.
      Go fuck yourself, with your ignorance.

    • @PlanetJohnny
      @PlanetJohnny 10 лет назад

      Also Known As Well then I apologize. I meant the shitty part(s) of Harlem.

  • @coweatsman
    @coweatsman 9 лет назад +291

    Traffic lights make unearned claims to my attention. Bastards!

    • @jesusnthedaisychain
      @jesusnthedaisychain 9 лет назад +12

      +coweatsman But when you run a red light, you're doing so without the light's consent.
      And when you speed through a yellow light, that's really iffy ground.

    • @Arodec
      @Arodec 9 лет назад +13

      +jesusnthedaisychain The current age of feminists would argue that if you drive past a green light, which obviously later turns into a red light, it's rape.

    • @Saucy_Beans
      @Saucy_Beans 9 лет назад +12

      +coweatsman Yeah I feel your pain. I personally take offense to give way signs they inhibit my life choices by stopping me from moving freely. Damn you oppressive Yield signs! They're obviously part of the patriarchy...

    • @curt6285
      @curt6285 9 лет назад

      +Aernir it must be right lmao

    • @Bookworm51485
      @Bookworm51485 7 лет назад

      😂😂😂😂

  • @calipto4605
    @calipto4605 9 лет назад +319

    Christina, you give me hope for genuine feminism.

    • @copssuck7491
      @copssuck7491 7 лет назад +10

      Calipto, Feminism = special privileges for women ONLY. "Genuine feminism" would be women fighting to be drafted, equally sentenced for crimes, and to work dangerous jobs to take their share of the 95/94% of job deaths/serious injuries. Doesn't exist and never has.

    • @ComeAlongKay
      @ComeAlongKay 2 года назад

      There is no such thing as genuine feminism. Feminism from its very roots started as a militant offshoot of Marxism, they were bombing buildings and attacking other x feminists who pointed out that women were equally violent to men. Women are also actually more emtouankky abusive and probably more physically abusive now with all the campaigns against men.

    • @scottcebulski4350
      @scottcebulski4350 2 года назад

      I don't see any "genuine feminism" at all. I do see inappropriate assumptions that wealthy men don't do this sort of thing and that women should just accept SEXUALLY suggestive comments on the same level as Greenpeace surveyers. She checked off "victim blaming" suggesting that women who get these comments are prostitutes. She accepted the fact that police will misuse the intention of a potential law to harass men of color without any negative comment about the police. I've been waiting to see her engage with actual feminist ideas instead of fringe and radical ones, but I've watched several (and intend to watch more) and have yet to see her "feminism" at all.

  • @Eltercero
    @Eltercero 8 лет назад +166

    Please. Why are you ruining an ideological narrative with facts?

    • @bradleyruest6863
      @bradleyruest6863 8 лет назад +17

      At first I thought you were actually upset. Then I recognized the sarcasm and had myself a little giggle 😅

    • @requiemforamerica8432
      @requiemforamerica8432 8 лет назад +19

      facts are kryptonite to feminists :p

    • @IceDragon978
      @IceDragon978 8 лет назад +5

      You say that, but someone identifying as a feminist just laid out all the facts lol

    • @AndrooUK
      @AndrooUK 8 лет назад +3

      IceDragon978 Christina is an oldschool feminist, not a new age, third wave, libtarded, fascist feminist.

    • @IceDragon978
      @IceDragon978 8 лет назад +4

      I know that.

  • @bude8234
    @bude8234 9 лет назад +307

    "unearned claim for a woman's attention".
    Someone please tell me what the hell this means? I have to "earn" a "claim" for a woman's attention????? How on earth does one do that???? What would one do to earn this claim??

    • @oldmoviemusic
      @oldmoviemusic 9 лет назад +78

      +Bud E Apparently women's attention is now equivalent to gold mining in the Yukon...

    • @fv2977
      @fv2977 9 лет назад +6

      +Bud E It sounds like someones excuse for using ad block.

    • @ROGUEJOURNALIST
      @ROGUEJOURNALIST 9 лет назад +33

      Slay a couple dragons

    • @blueskythinking4745
      @blueskythinking4745 9 лет назад +21

      Tip your fedora..

    • @Clavitz1
      @Clavitz1 9 лет назад +17

      +Bud E i get this feeling it's about they don't want your attention unless they are the ones that initiate it first, so saying all men should shut up and only be able to talk to another women once she's spoken to them first.

  • @mjarbo
    @mjarbo 10 лет назад +466

    The woman that runs Cards Against Harassment has a similar set of videos. And most of them are in lower-income areas, and from Black males. I think there is a similarity between Hollaback and Cards Against Harassment's shooting locations.

    • @TheOrion2728
      @TheOrion2728 10 лет назад +27

      All I see is a group wanting to elevate the rights and privileges of one group over another based on the sex... Just as the Obama administration is trying to elevate the rights and privileges of one group of people over the other groups based on race.

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад +14

      Rob Smith Obama administration is trying to elevate the rights and privileges of one group of people over the other groups based on sex far far more then anything based on race. Evidence for privileges of one group of people over the other groups based on race?

    • @sobereyes4986
      @sobereyes4986 10 лет назад +16

      *****
      "This video wouldn't be possible in higher income areas because of the nature of those areas. Rich people choose to live in areas where there is very little through traffic"
      Currently living in a rich neighborhood, I can tell you that there is plenty of through traffic, but you're right that the video wouldn't be possible in that kind of neighborhood, by dint of the fact that people tend not to say anything at all to one another, let alone catcall, and thus no usable footage.
      "I guarantee you that if this video took place in a low income white neighborhood the results would be the same"
      Just so you know, your guarantee =/= evidence. Provide evidence for your claim, or bullshit will be called.
      "The point of the video isn't about who is doing the catcalling."
      It's not about catcalling at all, as much of it isn't classifiable as catcalling in the first place. It's about street harassment, that comes in the form of ANYTHING said to a woman, that wasn't desired, and thus labeled as harassment. This was all covered in the above video btw.

    • @sobereyes4986
      @sobereyes4986 10 лет назад +18

      *****
      Yeah see, if you say silly unsubstantiated things on the interwebs, sometimes people call you on it. Who knew.

    • @sobereyes4986
      @sobereyes4986 10 лет назад +10

      *****
      Correction: When you talk about things that you don't understand, and assert things that aren't true, some generous people (like myself) will seek correct you.

  • @sensationaldenny
    @sensationaldenny 9 лет назад +318

    Christina Hoff Sommers is an incredible women doing incredible work.

    • @khaorix2667
      @khaorix2667 9 лет назад +13

      +Denny Sensation Yeah, she has to be multiple to do that.
      Sorry. Your incorrect grammar triggered me. Couldn't resist.

    • @LecherousLizard
      @LecherousLizard 7 лет назад

      Payne M
      Using words without knowing their actual meaning, eh?

    • @Angell_Lee
      @Angell_Lee 6 лет назад

      SHE'S A TRAITOR TO US WOMEN!!!!!!!

    • @zally8183
      @zally8183 6 лет назад

      You only consider her to be great because she's the only feminist who isn't a crazy, narcassistic bitch.

  • @whybag
    @whybag 10 лет назад +84

    "How are you this morning?" THAT'S harassment now? What's galling to me is that they have an entire day of footage, straight through to night, did they not have enough actual harassing comments that they had to resort to "How are you" as somehow harassing?

    • @Technodreamer
      @Technodreamer 10 лет назад +4

      Walking around in a big city like Manhattan, it is not polite to just start talking at a random passer-by. It's different from walking around in a suburb or smaller town.

    • @joetrent9070
      @joetrent9070 10 лет назад +21

      Technodreamer
      Come on, that's disingenuous at best.
      And seriously, who get's to decide that greeting someone passing by isn't polite?

    • @whybag
      @whybag 10 лет назад +14

      Technodreamer What you're talking about is annoying. So the fuck what? I'd rather the dude at the grocery not start some stupid chit chat and just ring up my stuff , but that's not harassment.

    • @TheSwamper
      @TheSwamper 10 лет назад +7

      Technodreamer If that's true, that's sad. I think the definition of polite needs to be revisited in those areas. Where I live, and it is more rural, it's perfectly common to wave, smile, say hello or good morning to total strangers. And I don't see how that's a bad thing.

    • @Technodreamer
      @Technodreamer 10 лет назад

      TheSwamper What's the population density like where you live?

  • @SpectacularName
    @SpectacularName 9 лет назад +45

    Way to go internet feminism! You have equated a mildly annoying comment made on the street to actual sexual harassment! Thanks for not being insane.

  • @Despara5T
    @Despara5T 9 лет назад +118

    The women in the video doesn't look particularly attractive to me, she just looks like an average women walking down a street in a bad mood.

    • @GoddoDoggo
      @GoddoDoggo 9 лет назад +24

      +Des para
      You don't have to be good looking to get catcalled.
      I am an average looking woman who often walks down the street in a bad mood, and I've been catcalled a lot, actually. I think the people who do it are usually just drunk or really lonely. Depending on the things they say, my responses vary from silence to "good day" to "piss off," but I wouldn't want them arrested unless they, like, actually threatened me or something.

    • @Despara5T
      @Despara5T 9 лет назад

      Lynne the Trendy Tetraodontiforme Do you live in the UK?

    • @GoddoDoggo
      @GoddoDoggo 9 лет назад

      *****
      Uh, no? I live in the U.S. Why?

    • @GoddoDoggo
      @GoddoDoggo 9 лет назад +1

      Thomas Paglione
      I learned "piss off" from my dad's family and "good day" from my mom's family.
      My dad's is from the east coast and my mom's is from the midwest, if that makes any difference.

    • @GoddoDoggo
      @GoddoDoggo 9 лет назад

      *****
      Oookaaaaaay theeeeen.

  • @DoomRulz
    @DoomRulz 10 лет назад +64

    "Some women might be flattered or complimented."
    No, Christina. Those women are mere fools who have internalised this pervasive patriarchy which infects our culture. Quit being a harassment-apologizer.
    Sarcasm aside, another great video, as always. 4:56, BURN!!!!

    • @connorsmith713
      @connorsmith713 10 лет назад +22

      That was very realistic. I almost gave it a thumbs down before reading the last sentence. Good job. sir.

    • @yoonity9188
      @yoonity9188 10 лет назад +3

      Connor Smith Same hahaa.

    • @Sodasaman
      @Sodasaman 10 лет назад +6

      same here lol,i was about to go trigger happy with the thumbs down (even though you can only do it once and they don't even matter now).

    • @isento2952
      @isento2952 10 лет назад +7

      You pissed me off, then made me smile. Stop fucking with my emotions man!

    • @DoomRulz
      @DoomRulz 10 лет назад

      mec loc you forgot "virgin fucker" 8-)

  • @Arkantos117
    @Arkantos117 10 лет назад +111

    They must've walked past tens of thousands of men to get footage of that precious 0.0001%

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад +25

      Arkantos117 I did a ballpark of 6000, but I am not really sure of the average per block in NY, I used 20 people or 10 men per block, 1 block per min and 600 mins in 10 hrs. I also counted around 20 comments that I would call questionable. Things more then Hi, or good morning. And 5 that I would think are totally not OK. But 0.0001% would be 1 in 1 million. She clearly did not pass 1 million men, that would be ~28 men per second and only one harassed her. It is closer to 1 in 1000 or 0.1%.

    • @kr1spness
      @kr1spness 10 лет назад +22

      Loathomar
      You're on your way to being a factual feminist.

    • @Arkantos117
      @Arkantos117 10 лет назад +7

      Twas hyperbole mon ami.

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад +18

      Arkantos117 Twas, but I did the numbers and thought I might share the real (ballpark) statics.

    • @Arkantos117
      @Arkantos117 10 лет назад +14

      Loathomar Yes, please do keep doing that. Most of us are too apathetic/lazy to ^.^
      I used to be the bringer of truth, now i'm just a measly shitposter.

  • @EisforEvil
    @EisforEvil 10 лет назад +10

    This is street annoyance, not harassment.

  • @HeliRy
    @HeliRy 10 лет назад +146

    What then to do about female catcallers?
    Oh wait, I just remembered..... it's only sexual harassment when men do it.

    • @teliagarner
      @teliagarner 10 лет назад +6

      Film me some female catcallers and we'll talk about it. Until then keep your trap shut and your "MENS RIGHTZ" tears to yourself.

    • @HeliRy
      @HeliRy 10 лет назад +22

      Lol, well ain't you a gem.

    • @teliagarner
      @teliagarner 10 лет назад

      thank u

    • @TheEVNH
      @TheEVNH 10 лет назад +23

      Telia Garner True, it's not as frequent, but it happens a hell of a lot more than you think.

    • @teliagarner
      @teliagarner 10 лет назад +1

      ***** But not so often that you feel legitimately threatened on the street, frequently. I know it happens. I get it. But its really a non-issue when compared to how often it happens to women.

  • @get2rog
    @get2rog 8 лет назад +29

    Many years ago when I was in my early twenties I was working nights in an exclusive London nightclub to support myself through college. I was waiting tables. One night was particularly chaotic as we had a female celebrity who was celebrating her successful court case after being accused of tax evasion. I say successful but what that really meant was that she was found guilty and heavily fined but escaped going to jail for a long time. While I was working my way through the crowed with a tray in each hand this celebrity grabbed my crotch and didn't let go, saying, "what are you going to do now". I was twenty one, she was in her fifties. I was shocked by it and yes I felt violated but I could tell by her her expression and the sound of her voice she meant no ill or sexual intent and it was obvious alcohol played a significant part. My point is that although it was very wrong and extremely bad judgement on her partl, which left me feeling violated and humiliated, it didn't warrant such an extreme reaction as to accuse someone of something as serious as rape. In today's society it wouldn't be tolerated and indeed if the victim felt the need, they should report it, but rape is very explicit and by exaggerating every minor incident to the level of rape only serves to demonise those who are real victims of rape and make it all the more difficult for genuine victims to come forward and seek help.

    • @joobletmaster5000
      @joobletmaster5000 5 лет назад +15

      Yeah, no my dude, that's an older woman exploiting her status as a celebrity to sexually harass a younger guy. What was in this video wasn't a problem, but what you're describing very much is a problem.

    • @iforgot87872
      @iforgot87872 4 года назад +1

      I’ve had drunk women in bars grope me out of the blue on a few different occasions as well. Can you please please tell me who this was I am sooo curious lmao

  • @roscoedash6673
    @roscoedash6673 10 лет назад +32

    So these feminists basically want a world where they're only approached by people THEY want to approach them. If a random poor guy tries to talk to you, it's harassment, but if some celebrity like Ryan Gosling approaches you, then he just made your day. I wish these feminists would just be honest and say that they hate being hit on by guys they aren't attracted to, because that's all this video boils down to.

    • @Sodasaman
      @Sodasaman 10 лет назад +1

      ***** you can always give free word banks instead of more thumbs up.

  • @cdsworkshop2855
    @cdsworkshop2855 10 лет назад +16

    Stalking *is* serious. Someone passing you by and saying "Hey, beautiful," is *not*. As Christina says, we should not conflate them.

  • @TheTundraTerror
    @TheTundraTerror 10 лет назад +69

    Harassment is *repeated* unwanted attention by a single entity. Yes, words actually mean things.

    • @ZedrikVonKatmahl
      @ZedrikVonKatmahl 10 лет назад +73

      Words mean what feminists want them to mean.

    • @N00BSYBORG
      @N00BSYBORG 10 лет назад +14

      Hardly any of the guys in the video were repeatedly trying to talk to her. And no just talking to a person isn't harassment.

    • @kh2yknow
      @kh2yknow 10 лет назад +13

      Saying good morning isn't harassment, that's like calling rape if someone bumps into you.

    • @AngeloArcana
      @AngeloArcana 10 лет назад +3

      old account
      You haven't seen the article about "fart rape" have you?
      Warning: It may cause your IQ to drop a few points.

    • @TheTundraTerror
      @TheTundraTerror 10 лет назад

      Angelo Arcana Fart rape? Is that what happens when you're the first person to pass out drunk at a party?

  • @depenthene
    @depenthene 10 лет назад +32

    I get harrasment in stores constantly. They say good day to me and then try to force feed me product samples.

  • @thehrchannel8983
    @thehrchannel8983 8 лет назад +39

    I agree that catcalling is stupid but getting the government involved is worst. Just don't give them any attention.

  • @alex-vs4jv
    @alex-vs4jv 10 лет назад +24

    This woman uses tools many modern feminists don't: logic and reason. Very, very, very impressed.

    • @Phyiogambit
      @Phyiogambit 10 лет назад +1

      im not sure ur impressed enough, 1 more 'very' should do it :)

    • @alex-vs4jv
      @alex-vs4jv 10 лет назад +3

      Phyiogambit This woman uses tools many modern feminists don't: logic and reason. Very, very, very, VER, VERY, VERY, VERYVERYVERYVERYVERYVERYVEBNGJB VFJKBNKLBGTMFKLBGKLGFTMBKL; impressed.

    • @saraaboulafia6752
      @saraaboulafia6752 10 лет назад +1

      yeah most women are so emotional. they just think with their vaginas, and are always becoming so hysterical over little nothings like feeling physically intimidated and imposed upon and harassed. they're just so darn irrational, amirite? lolz, women.

  • @fwwaller
    @fwwaller 10 лет назад +70

    "an unearned claim on women's attention" what a load of BS. If a person is nice and cordial to you, they have earned the right for you to be respectful back towards them. Yeah they haven't earned the right for you to sleep with them, but thought that she would know the difference. Seriously this girl has some fucking major social problems.

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад +5

      fwwaller While I agree that it is BS, it is BS for a different reason. Saying "damn baby, you are so fine" does not "claim on women's attention", it is every woman's (and man's) right to give or not give that person comments attention. Attention is given and not claimed, outside of the use for force. I mean, you grab a women and you have "an unearned claim on women's attention", but you have also committed assault. The whole video is a women giving no attention to the "100+ men who 'street harassed' her"

    • @fwwaller
      @fwwaller 10 лет назад +11

      Loathomar You are right, women do have the right to not give attention, but it's only decent to actually give attention to things that are actually WORTH your attention. The way the girl shrugged off all legitimately nice comments with apathy was really unacceptable. I get that she deals with real harassment constantly, but that's not an excuse to treat people who are just trying to be polite like shit.

    • @procedura55
      @procedura55 10 лет назад +5

      fwwaller It's funny that third wave feminists like to talk about safe spaces, but seem oblivious about the places where they go. Parks could be seen as "safe spaces" for the homeless that ordinary folks should be respectful of. People who are unemployed and sit out by the street for social contact, of course they're going to be chatty, they're bored.
      It's almost like they expect to be able to walk into a club and ask them to turn down the music because it's making them uncomfortable.

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад

      fwwaller I do not feel that I have moral responsibility to decide if how people react to what other people say, either good or bad is acceptable or unacceptable. If you wish to bare that moral cross, more power to you, but I do not judge either way, so long as people are free to choose in there speech and actions.

    • @montycantsin8861
      @montycantsin8861 10 лет назад +6

      I would go one step further and say that the word "earned" and the idea of getting or giving attention shouldn't be in the same sentence, unless you get paid for receiving attention, like celebrities, news anchors, strippers, comedians, etc.
      Using the phrase "unearned claim on a woman's attention" is such a fucked up statement in all the subtle implications, I don't know where to begin. What it boils down to is paranoid rad-fem lingo for the idea that men feel entitled to women's attention, but that their attention is some commodity.
      I would laugh my ass off if there was a bloopers reel from this ad showing the girl walking into people, tripping on obvious obstacles, etc. It would tell me that she doesn't even feel that inanimate objects have earned her attention.
      Fascist patriarchal inanimate objects in the street!

  • @MrJobocan
    @MrJobocan 10 лет назад +5

    Being called beautiful is SUCH a bad thing. I hate it when people give me compliments.

    • @jajo9548
      @jajo9548 10 лет назад +3

      it's just the worst isn't it?

  • @Big-Papa-Smurf
    @Big-Papa-Smurf 8 лет назад +19

    I used to take catcalling seriously until one day a women called me a pig for "catcalling" her *DOG*, when I called it a "good looking puppy". 100% true story.

    • @Niqoleh
      @Niqoleh 8 лет назад +1

      Medicine Man oh men are you sure she wasnt kidding?

    • @Big-Papa-Smurf
      @Big-Papa-Smurf 8 лет назад +3

      I'm sure she wasn't, but my theory is she may have thought I was talking about her and not her dog.

    • @pinkgal206
      @pinkgal206 7 лет назад

      Medicine Man lol

  • @rainopdewilde509
    @rainopdewilde509 5 лет назад +1

    My friend has men asking if they can stay at her apartment and that they’re pay rent. She and her sister have been followed by several men in a van. She is screamed at by homeless people at night for hours. Tell me harassment isn’t a problem

  • @Graoutchmeuh
    @Graoutchmeuh 10 лет назад +11

    I watched your video, and you call yourself a feminist, and for a moment it startled me. Something felt wrong.
    At the end of the video I understood what it was : we hear so much about "gender feminists", feminists who think not in term of equality of opportunity but in term of equality of outcome, that someone like you, someone reasonable, intelligent, not afraid to use critical thinking, calling yourself a feminist didn't quite fit in the feminist mold the french mainstream media made me believe in.
    Thanks.

    • @AlexZorach
      @AlexZorach 10 лет назад +2

      Feminism is really diverse...I think it's easy to let people mischaracterize feminists by claiming to speak for all feminists or claiming to have a monopoly on the definition of feminism, whether it's people or organizations who self-identify as feminists, or people attacking the feminist movement from the outside.
      I definitely agree that, as I see things, feminism is more about equality of opportunity than equality of outcome. Sometimes it's hard to know where to draw this line though.
      I tend to think about consent as a slightly more objective guiding value than equality. Sometimes it's so hard to compare people's circumstances, that it's hard to know what equality looks like. I think consent works better as a guiding value, because if there's some sort of inequality, but everyone involved is consenting to this inequality, then there's no problem.

    • @Graoutchmeuh
      @Graoutchmeuh 10 лет назад +1

      Alex Zorach The point is : we don't hear enough feminists and too much crazy

    • @PSandNintendFreak
      @PSandNintendFreak 10 лет назад +1

      Graoutchmeuh But sadly the crazy is what goes through reason. It´s the same story for a person who never made a mistake in their life and one day makes a mistake - the thing that people will remember is the mistake, not the part about never making a mistake before.
      Same goes for serial killers - most people remember the name of the killers, but how many do you know that can name you even 3 of the vitcims names?
      It´s the same here.
      Reasonable intelligent comments and statements get shoved under unreasonable outrageous ones, because those are the ones that create the buzz, that garner attention - no one wants to read about the boring years of someone who is perfect, no one wants to read about perfectly normal people who got murdered - we want to see why he made that mistake and what it was, we want to see the one who goes around killing people while evading the police, how he killed them, especially from a psychological viewpoint, they are more interesting - I too, sadly, am often mislead by that. So I clicked on the "10 hours video" as well. Without "know your memes" I wouldn´t have stumbled upon this video. I hope it gets more attention, because this video is one of the few that made me agree with the commentor, unlike a lot of "extremist feminists" that hide under reasonable pretexts.

  • @skirtonbear1
    @skirtonbear1 4 года назад +17

    I really hate cat-calling. It makes one feel targeted. However, making a law against unwanted speech is ridiculous and dangerous. Parents must teach their kids to be respectful.

  • @EsotericOccultist
    @EsotericOccultist 9 лет назад +5

    After hundreds of hours in the trenches battling misandrist feminists, to finally hear one say the things i do is..i dont know, i cant even describe it. Im in shock right now. I almost want to cry. You have a new fan

  • @BlueSky-qv7cd
    @BlueSky-qv7cd 9 лет назад +35

    Women only think catcalling is offensive, when its done by men they don't find attractive.

    • @joobletmaster5000
      @joobletmaster5000 5 лет назад +2

      I mean...personally, I would find it offensive no matter what if a man started shouting profane or sexual things at me, whether he looked like Quasimodo or a god. The things they shouted in this video weren't offensive, and were actually flattering in most cases. I really hope you've learned more about women in the past three years.

  • @julesfreis6813
    @julesfreis6813 9 лет назад +13

    It might not be PC to say it, but most men doing the cat calling in the street do not look like part of the 'white' power structure. Unless 'white' has become some sort of metaphysical term nowadays.

    • @edmilsoneletrica
      @edmilsoneletrica 6 лет назад +1

      Hahahhaa Loved the "metaphysical term". It's a poorer neighborhood. That's the real reason.

    • @Music_Lover0612
      @Music_Lover0612 5 лет назад +1

      This was filmed in Harlem. Duh

  • @RedDevilJohnson
    @RedDevilJohnson 10 лет назад +9

    Great video, and that "check their privilege" bit at the end was a real KO punch.

  • @sopleasedtomeetU
    @sopleasedtomeetU 8 лет назад +4

    The viral video she's talking about actually improved my quality of life. The men on my street saw it and overnight stopped begging for attention. The were able to see it from the woman's perspective. They had no idea they sounded like that. That's what was missing. Any legislation would be stupid and wrong obviously. But to be able to see the situation from the other side means people can be less at odds. Now when the guys address me to say good morning or whatever they just mean good morning- the sexual overtones are gone and I can say hey back without feeling like I'm bringing their negativity on myself. Or I can initiate the interaction without being afraid they're going to think it's a sexual invitation. For me this is good, I like a friendly neighborhood.

  • @xo_cherri
    @xo_cherri 3 года назад +2

    Out of every other form of harassment in the world catcalling is the biggest problem? I though child abuse and trafficking was the biggest problem in the world!

  • @Zoe-qu7nq
    @Zoe-qu7nq 8 лет назад +1

    "Good morning" and "Hey baby, can we hang out later?" is very different ESPECIALLY if you are a minor and the catcaller is old enough to be your father. If you think yelling out of your car at a girl and scaring her is an act of affection, you're not only making yourself look unrespectable but you're making that girl feel like trash. If you think a guy whistling at you is flattering, you don't know your worth.

  • @CyborgWolf
    @CyborgWolf 10 лет назад +6

    As a disabled person a lot of people say hello to me in the street, ask if I need help and are a little "pressing" like trying to speak with me even if I don't really have time and everything. Like, it happens at least 2/3 time every time I go in the street (big city).
    They don't mean harm, they don't wanna hurt me or anything. They are just... I don't know, not very good at interacting ?
    I get that sure, its not "cool" to hear those thing a lot of time but hey, people notices me its better than being invisible x)
    But if I take the logic of the feminist video then, it mean that i'm harassed since it happens a lot of time ? Well, I'm a man, so no I guess but if I was a woman ?
    This logic is dangerous.

  • @jennybrown5302
    @jennybrown5302 8 лет назад +100

    These people cannot be serious... I weep for humanity when people are investing this much time, energy, and money into the "offense" of being greeted and complimented?! These people know there are REAL problems they could be addressing instead, right? It's POLITE AND MANNERLY to say things like "good morning, you look nice today" and "hey, how you doin". I say these sorts things, and when they are said to me -- even if i can tell by the tone that it wasn't intended nicely -- it's not hard to have a smidge of class and smile and say "I'm fine, how are you?" I mean shit, are we so anti-social already that we can't handle interacting with other humans? And computers+cell phones have only been around for what, a couple generations? We don't do these sorts of things ENOUGH anymore (genuine greetings and actually LOOKING at one another and ACKNOWLEDGING each other's existence) and so often we just view the other humans around us as annoying obstacles in our way that we have to navigate to get to where we're going. It's sad, and people who live this way will have a hard time appreciating the value of others. Not that I'm perfect about it by any means (I get frustrated in traffic jams and crowds), but damn.
    And don't get me wrong, I don't like rude or lewd comments, but unless it's the same person more than once, or following you and being rude and/or lewd so as to make you feel threatened, then it's just another rude person on the street. Like the bitches that flip you off cuz you bump them cuz they're walking while staring at cell phones. People need to calm themselves.

    • @domydishes
      @domydishes 8 лет назад +12

      I hope you have a nice day.
      uh oh, prison here I come.

    • @RaiosSephi
      @RaiosSephi 8 лет назад +3

      Exactly but for some reason they can't get it into their thick skull!! Humans are social beings and should be mingling at times. And for some reason if people read your message... they will assume you're defending catcalling... WTF

    • @charlesdarwin9830
      @charlesdarwin9830 8 лет назад +5

      Especially when they greet her with a statement as sexist and demeaning to women as "good morning".

    • @mikunt1
      @mikunt1 8 лет назад +2

      addressing and fixing REAL problems requires REAL work. women like her get degrees in women's studies to avoid REAL work.

    • @wtch9913
      @wtch9913 8 лет назад +2

      Jenny Brown totally agree. the most irrational is when someone tells a feminist to smile and they go "OH THE PATRIARCHY THATS WHY WE NEED FEMINISM. WOMEN ARE ALWAYS EXPECTED TO BE HAPPY BLA BLA BLA" like jesus christ if you dont wanna smile no ones forcing you to but you cant go super sayan on others just because they want to see others happy. You know whats slightly more oppressive than being told to smile? Being obliged to be willing to give your life to protect women and children or you wont have voting rights (and a whole slew of other legal problems)

  • @nilo469
    @nilo469 10 лет назад +6

    "Good morning, beautiful."
    I need guys like that on my way to work.

    • @Phyiogambit
      @Phyiogambit 10 лет назад +4

      Tell me where u work, and ill come over beautiful :)

    • @JustNoAmbition
      @JustNoAmbition 10 лет назад +6

      Phyiogambit
      smooth....

  • @VidkunQL
    @VidkunQL 9 лет назад +31

    Let us not forget that that woman was paid to get catcalled. She went out walking with that purpose. *The catcalling was neither unwanted nor uninvited.*

    • @cayucossurfer
      @cayucossurfer 8 лет назад +3

      +VidkunQL Ahahahaaha. Really good point.

    • @meekmeads
      @meekmeads 6 лет назад +2

      @@cayucossurfer Let's also not forget that Rob Bliss made this video. Those catcallers are paid actors.
      Hence this BS video is totally staged.

  • @lambd01d
    @lambd01d 9 лет назад +34

    I get loads of people who come up to me saying things about being tall. "Do you play basketball?" etc. It's also unwelcome. I don't make videos about it. I just ignore it and get on with it, unlike certain feminists. No-one is writing articles about my experiences, nor should they.

    • @cayucossurfer
      @cayucossurfer 8 лет назад

      +lambd01d THIS. so much. omg. its like youre in my mind

  • @Loathomar
    @Loathomar 10 лет назад +63

    I re-watched the video and counted how many I thought was at least questionable street harassment (those that are more then "hello" or "have a nice day") and found that there was about 20 and I am guessing the video showed the worst of the worst in 10 hours. I would also say there was about 5 that where clearly not ok. But how many men would this women passed in 10 hours of walking? With a walking rate of 1 block per min and 10 men per block that would be 6,000 men meaning 1/300 did a questionable street harassment act and less that 1 in 1,000 did a street harassment act that was clearly not ok.

    • @steveaustin4118
      @steveaustin4118 10 лет назад +30

      Considering it's an agency you could conceive that some of them are actors

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад +22

      Steve Austin Yes, I was working off the idea that it was real. I mean there was not much over the top. Not one blatant request for a sex act and most where so tame that it bugs most people that it is being called harassment. Most of the "harassment" where people saying hi or "have a nice day" or things of that nature. I think it is far to say if you think that is harassment, you live an extremely privileged life.

    • @Xfullboost
      @Xfullboost 10 лет назад

      well hello Steve Austin

    • @steveaustin4118
      @steveaustin4118 10 лет назад

      Loathomar
      Considering in the article it says there were whistles yet none in the video, what would you put a hi or someone whistling at you?
      Also it says that she didn't hear all the comments it was the microphones that picked them up

    • @steveaustin4118
      @steveaustin4118 10 лет назад

      Steve Austin
      well hello

  • @ZURATAMA1324
    @ZURATAMA1324 10 лет назад +15

    Let's make "Check your facts." a new trend on the internet!
    It is certainly a healthier trend than "Check your privilege."

    • @stegomasaurus6737
      @stegomasaurus6737 10 лет назад

      Yes, the standard retort to the privilege line methinks.

    • @roelani
      @roelani 10 лет назад

      I'm totally using that next time I wander over to tumblr.

    • @ZURATAMA1324
      @ZURATAMA1324 10 лет назад +4

      roelani kadmon
      Now that I think about it, 'Check your facts.' is a good comeback to 'Check your privilege.'
      "Check your privilege you white-cis-homophobic-ableist-culture appropriating-male!"
      "No, you check your facts."

  • @selenophile410
    @selenophile410 3 года назад +3

    Men imagine a 30 pound heavier ,muscled gay dude comes up to you with hey sexy and follows you. Would you be happy with that?

  • @sararo15
    @sararo15 4 года назад +1

    I went out yesterday,I was catcalled and even touched on the street,I couldn't have a normal conversation with my friend because it kept me distracted,and it did bother me a lot.
    Maybe the video does not live up to your credibility standards,but it sure reflected what I lived yesterday,which is not a commercial but a reality.

  • @SugarHighHeather
    @SugarHighHeather 8 лет назад +48

    Wish someone would catcall me. Make my day.

    • @DrSpooglemon
      @DrSpooglemon 8 лет назад +17

      Hey gorgeous! How you doin?
      ;)

    • @SugarHighHeather
      @SugarHighHeather 8 лет назад +10

      +DrSpooglemon 'smile' feels good. Not bad. Enough people killing One another. I'll take a compliment anyday. some people don't know how good they've got it. some people are actually suffering in the world.

    • @EstherTheNicey
      @EstherTheNicey 8 лет назад +1

      Don't even bring it up. 20 years old here, never been catcalled :(

    • @angelaviary444
      @angelaviary444 8 лет назад +3

      ey yo bitch lemme buy you food and shit!!

    • @AndrooUK
      @AndrooUK 8 лет назад +4

      pete cruickshank Hey, hotstuff. How's your day going?

  • @saltyginger3481
    @saltyginger3481 10 лет назад +8

    at 3:35 you can see that at the website they tried to compare their advertisement to Rodney King! What!?! Rodney King was mercilessly beaten down with batons and that is supposed to compare to someone talking to you on the street without your permission? hmmmm

  • @fishi4296
    @fishi4296 8 лет назад +8

    A man did the same thing for less than 4 hours and didnt even go into sketchy neighborhoods.. He got more footage than the one with the woman

    • @hw7202
      @hw7202 6 лет назад

      Prove your claim!

  • @Siaynoq8
    @Siaynoq8 10 лет назад +8

    I don't know....I mean, getting gang raped to death on a bus in India is one thing, but being hollered at on the street...That's just flat out unacceptable.

  • @MrsKamper
    @MrsKamper 10 лет назад +1

    Thank you ever so much for posting this video. I am no stranger to the catcalling of New York City. As at matter of fact, I live in East Halem and I work downtown. On pleasant days, as a form of exercise, I would walk from work to my home (roughly a span of 85 city blocks.) Within those 85 blocks, I do get the wolf whistles and the "Hey baby, let me get your number." But out of the hundreds or possibly even thousands of men I walk pass, I get about 5-7 comments of what i deem inappropriate. "Hey, you got a fat ass," or "Let me smash" are quite inappropriate no matter which way you turn it. However, I don't see how a stranger wishing you a good day or saying hello is deemed harassment. They are trying to start a conversation like any other human being. If you show you're not interested, the majority of them will just carry on with their day. Is no one allowed to talk to anyone anymore? I totally believe in equal rights for all humans. I also applaud those feminist that fought for our rights to vote and have the same equal opportunities as or male counterparts, but laws against having men say "Hello beautiful??" That is quite questionable. That means men can also create laws forbidding woman from saying "Hello, handsome" because they find it as a form of harassment. I just think these new feminists need to know where to fight and how to do so.

  • @sarahcayer2817
    @sarahcayer2817 7 лет назад +2

    Just because you would prefer to be whistled at rather then have someone stop you to ask if you have time to talk about the environment doesn't mean everyone should feel that way. One person is treating you like a human being and genuinely trying to have an educated conversation and the other is treating you like a sexual object. You have a right to decline both. But let's be clear, only one of them is actually being harrassing.

  • @MaeriTheAlien
    @MaeriTheAlien 10 лет назад +3

    I had an older person (probably over 70) apologize for staring at me on the bus because they "thought my eyes were beautiful" and that "I should get someone to paint me." I thought it was the sweetest thing ever and I don't think I've blushed that hard ever.

  • @MikeBarbarossa
    @MikeBarbarossa 8 лет назад +30

    "Most cat calls were from harlem (black) " . 'Intersectional feminism' Does not compute! Does not compute! (fembot blows up)

    • @WordsofHarmony
      @WordsofHarmony 6 лет назад

      Mike Barbarossa Spanish, Irish, and Italian do it a lot too

  • @nickbalis9181
    @nickbalis9181 9 лет назад +12

    I want to give this woman a hug.

  • @SpiritualAlien
    @SpiritualAlien 4 года назад +2

    The other day when walking down the street a lady passing by smiled at me and said good-morning. And what was my response to this? I smiled and "Hello" and carried on my way. What a fool I was! How could I have missed that what this woman did by addressing that way was obviously a clear perpetration of verbal harassment - bordering on assault? I will be on my guard next time - the authorities will be notified immediately!

  • @bradleyruest6863
    @bradleyruest6863 8 лет назад +4

    Just when I thought no feminists were intelligent. This woman is awesome. Recognizes that it could make some women uncomfortable, but upholds the first amendment and basically says that it's NOT a big deal at all if a guy says, "hey what's up beautiful," every now and then.

    • @AndrooUK
      @AndrooUK 8 лет назад

      Bradley Ruest She's an oldschool feminist, not a new age, third wave, libtarded, fascist feminist.

  • @GamergateCaGroup
    @GamergateCaGroup 10 лет назад +15

    Based mom gets out the BOOM STICK!

  • @MindsAblaze
    @MindsAblaze 10 лет назад +6

    Basically guys the message is don't talk to women! Do not pursue them! Do not pay them any attention. Focus on improving yourself instead and let them chase you.

    • @SonoTom
      @SonoTom 10 лет назад

      very good - not the lesson they wanted, but the one they need.

    • @PassportGang
      @PassportGang 10 лет назад

      That's really the mindset you should have to begin with.

  • @agreendc
    @agreendc 9 лет назад +4

    I can't believe that I've agreed with everything this lady has said in 3 videos straight I have watched.
    Part of what exacerbated many of the interactions that turned into more than "Hey, beautiful!" was at least in part to the woman not even having the common courtesy to make eye contact, wave, or say hi. Not that I am defending some of the assholes who followed her around, but almost every single "catcall" in that entire video was essentially saying "Hi" followed by a compliment. A completely benign interaction.

    • @No0bT4rD
      @No0bT4rD 9 лет назад

      +Andrew G I love this one video where a girl walked past a guy, he turned around and said something like "Wow, beautiful!" when she was several meters away from him. He wasn't even catcalling her! He was just so taken aback by how attracted he was to her, and had to stop to take it in.

  • @RaiosSephi
    @RaiosSephi 8 лет назад +2

    If "Catcalling" turn into crime, everyone will be afraid to greet anyone. They could be sentenced to imprisonment for just plainly greeting somebody

  • @alexandrebeaudry1038
    @alexandrebeaudry1038 7 лет назад +1

    I'm a men i have i been "catcalled" once. I was really sad on that day after a breakup and a women just told me i look beautiful. This made my day. This is why the first time i saw that video i was amaze by the topic of calling "criminal" a good morning. I felt exactly the opposite of that. Some part of that video could have been titled "strangers are amazing."
    And i know everything is not all sunshine. I have been threatened on the street just because i was smilling. It's not a case of gender equality.

  • @kever905
    @kever905 10 лет назад +8

    WHY CAN'T WE HAVE YOU AS THE FACE OF WOMEN RIGHTS OF THE MODERN AGE?!

  • @aaron4820
    @aaron4820 9 лет назад +4

    I was walking around in London with a friend at one point and some black woman loudly announced "I LOVE THAT GUY", which we paid zero attention to initially, and the next moment the same woman put her arm around my arm and starting walking with us, asking me what I'm doing and let's go and have some fun, I made a few jokes to try to shake it off, the whole thing was sort of hilarious to begin with, but she hung on for a good few minutes, which felt like a really long time until she eventually left us alone... this was 2pm on a Sunday afternoon...

  • @Genenat
    @Genenat 10 лет назад +20

    The issue is not about making laws here. Of course you cannot curb free speech. But the mere fact that so many men commenting on the internet actually defend the cat-callers in the video is very disappointing. If not that, they blame women in general for being oversensitive.
    At the very least, cat-calling is unacceptable behaviour which needs to be recognized as such. If straight men encountered such comments from gay men as frequently as this, they would also dislike this behaviour. Now also imagine if most gay men were physically stronger than the straight men and then they touched them inappropriately or stalked them. This behaviour is disgusting and intimidating at the same time. When something like that happens often, any well-meaning gay man saying 'Hi handsome' would trigger anger and would be considered as harassing. Men need to try to put themselves in women's shoes and try to understand them instead of instantly attacking them for being over-sensitive.

    • @donnaharris0207
      @donnaharris0207 10 лет назад +27

      +Genenat I am a woman, and you are being oversensitive. Greetings from passers by is not harassment. The women being so rude about it are an embarrassment to womankind.

    • @PolarBear21
      @PolarBear21 10 лет назад +22

      Genenat I'm a guy and I have been catcalled by a gay guy. I replied thanks and then took a selfie so I would remember the outfit, cuz if it's works for a gay guy, it should work for the ladies too...

    • @Genenat
      @Genenat 10 лет назад +3

      Nikolas Michael I am not saying that every verbal comment should be branded as harassment. I only tried to explain women's perspective as to why they don't appreciate it. Perhaps it's over-reaction but there is a reason behind it. When you try to understand the reason perhaps you won't be so angry at women not appreciating attention on the street. That was my only aim for the comment. Also, I wasn't talking about violent crime victims. I was talking about street harassment victims such as lewd remarks and molestation and women are afraid of that. Men are more often victims of violent crimes because they are not afraid of retaliating whereas most likely if a woman is touched she is too intimidated by the fact that the man is stronger to do anything about it.

    • @Genenat
      @Genenat 10 лет назад +3

      Donna Harris Perhaps because you come from the west and it doesn't happen so often there. I come from India and street harassment is a big problem. If every time you go out you get commented upon every 10 min then even a simple 'hi lovely' is bothersome. Perhaps you haven't experienced so much harassment so you don't understand others who have. Better not to brand me as 'oversensitive' when you have no idea of my personal experiences and also the personal experiences of other women.

    • @Genenat
      @Genenat 10 лет назад +3

      Dzonatan Gavert If you are suggesting that men get harassed on the street as often as women do then you are ignorant. Also, just because you are 'dealing with it' does not make you super cool. If you don't like it, then complain about it. If it doesn't bother you personally then fine. But don't stop others from complaining about something they don't like.

  • @jeanvandenberg8986
    @jeanvandenberg8986 4 года назад +1

    I have never witnessed catcalling, ever. I have never done it, I don't see any reason why I should do it.

  • @Keith0384
    @Keith0384 5 лет назад

    I second NateTalksToYou. I've commented on a few of your videos, ma'am, and it just makes me so gratified there are women like you who have the integrity to speak out for what you believe in. It's so hard, as a man, to be told "Women like confidence; go up and talk to her" and you know that you can't since it's "harassment". Sure there are men who are completely inappropriate but at the same time we have to remember that "inappropriate" is not objective. If a woman views a comment as "flattering" then it's not inappropriate, however, she picks and chooses what is "flattering". A comic once illustrated this conundrum when a well-dressed, in-shape, handsome man told a female office worker, "Looking good, Susan" and she replies, "Awww you're sweet" juxtaposed against an overweight, unattractive man speaking to her, which earned from her a "I have to call HR". It's what men deal with that never gets talked about, so thank you, ma'am.

  • @Seneca_creek
    @Seneca_creek 8 лет назад +8

    I found some of her videos interesting, but here she lost me. She basically just invalidate all arguments. No, it's not ok that a woman get unwanted calls by strangers. It's not made better that it happens in certain areas. It's not made better than it is homeless people making them, or that the women are privileged. Explanations are not excuses.

    • @spekx
      @spekx 8 лет назад +3

      triggered

    • @Seneca_creek
      @Seneca_creek 8 лет назад +1

      Hope you get over it :)

    • @requiemforamerica8432
      @requiemforamerica8432 8 лет назад +3

      catcalling itself is not big deal (unless it turns to stalking and more menacing stuff) - most of the guys in the video were just saying "have a nice day" You need to go to muslim countries where women are whipped for not covering up properly to see what a real problem looks like.

    • @Seneca_creek
      @Seneca_creek 8 лет назад

      Sorry, but I judge an action for what it is, no need to downplay it or shift attention. This was a problem in it self, even if it's worse other places.

    • @requiemforamerica8432
      @requiemforamerica8432 8 лет назад +4

      Morten Christiansen no downplaying is done - it's you who is freaking out over nothing and overplaying it, buying into the idiotic new "feminist" hype

  • @johnmirra6707
    @johnmirra6707 10 лет назад +5

    The factual feminist, yet again proving that reality is kryptonite to the insane world of third wave feminism and it's mystical boogieman 'The Patriarchy', awesome video keep'em coming.

    • @MrGrey-zc2cy
      @MrGrey-zc2cy 10 лет назад

      Not sure if kryptonite is the right word. That implies that other feminists won't automatically dismiss Ms. Summers arguments because they disagree with their worldview.

    • @johnmirra6707
      @johnmirra6707 10 лет назад +1

      Sorry what?

    • @SteadyxSword
      @SteadyxSword 10 лет назад

      John Mirra He's saying you're implying that other feminists won't just simply automatically the Factual Feminist's arguments.

    • @MrGrey-zc2cy
      @MrGrey-zc2cy 10 лет назад +1

      SteadyxSword
      Funny.
      "dismiss" was supposed to be in there. "That implies that other feminists won't automatically *dismiss* Ms. Summers arguments because they disagree with their worldview."

    • @johnmirra6707
      @johnmirra6707 10 лет назад

      Tony Dạnza
      Oh right yeah of course, they already do, they say she's not a 'real feminist'; because she doesn't agree with them but they do that with everything. But you can't really argue with facts although they often try at that point what differentiates feminists from religious zealots?

  • @AzurianRain
    @AzurianRain 9 лет назад +18

    "Excuse me miss; is this $20 bill yours?"
    :: gets arrested for "catcalling" ::

  • @Vilverna
    @Vilverna 10 лет назад +1

    I think you do a great injustice by not pointing out that annoying people should just be ignored.
    honestly, life would be so much easier for people if they just stop giving attention to the wrong people.

  • @zephyro11
    @zephyro11 10 лет назад +1

    Eloquently said. I found myself nodding through the whole video. Finally, an unbiased opinion that debunks this for what it really is. Subscribed!

  • @valhar2000
    @valhar2000 8 лет назад +4

    Cat-calling is a symptom of gynocentrism, not anything even vaguely resembling misogyny.

  • @caseyrastegar6180
    @caseyrastegar6180 10 лет назад +92

    What is really the point of this garbage video? If it happens even once in 10 hours it is inexcusable. This is not an issue of oversimplification: women feel harassed by this behavior and men should stop it... HOW THE HELL DOES THE TIME OF DAY MATTER? A greenpeace volunteer with a clipboard is not going to appear as a threat as much as someone proclaiming their sexual interest in you. For someone who is so dead-set on declaring that the video in question over-simplifies, your false-equivalency of comparing a street harasser to a person collecting signatures is a heinous lapse in sense.

    • @JAYDUBYAH29
      @JAYDUBYAH29 10 лет назад +2

      Exactly

    • @mcgrewism
      @mcgrewism 10 лет назад +294

      Because its a numbers game; if something happens infrequently to a person it can be labeled as inappropriate behavior. The video she's talking about paints it as an epidemic, which is rather hyperbolic. Further more, it happens in a city with an insane number of people, so just as a result of population numbers, more people means you'll inevitably have more people that act disrespectfully.
      Also, if you find someone declaring their sexual interest in you threatening, you have bigger issues; someone being sexually aggressive or making comments that are actual threats can be threatening; while someone simply stating they find you attractive in hopes that perhaps you'd be interested in their attention isn't harassment, it's clumsy flirting. If you don't like it, make it known and distance yourself from the person. If they won't let you be, then it's an unsafe environment and further action (authorities, ect.) is then warranted.

    • @westwood500
      @westwood500 10 лет назад +234

      You are insane if you think anyone can reasonably do something about assholes existing. You don't get that 99% of people in the video aren't doing anything and that's your problem.
      I can hear your retort already "But we need to do something about that 1%" - we already do and it's called culture. Everyone knows these people are assholes already. Doing anything more than what we already do (shaming) would cross the line into totalitarianism. Kind of the opposite of a free country.

    • @caseyrastegar6180
      @caseyrastegar6180 10 лет назад +3

      mcgrewism First off, this is an epidemic. It happens to my female friends pretty much daily. Hell, I am often mis-gendered and get cat-called in public from time to time. It IS a real epidemic. But okay, let's play your game and say it isn't... this video is still worthless. Let's say it only happens to a person what... once a year... once a lifetime? Just how often is acceptable and nothing to get to worried about for you? Hm? And say it happens to a person ONCE... only once... is this video going to help that woman feel one bit better by saying "well, it's not as common as you think..."
      How about we "make it known" to the men that are causing the problem in the first place? Why make the harassed need to do all the work? It may never totally go away, but the onus is on selfish people like this to make things better... not on the innocent.

    • @caj3306
      @caj3306 10 лет назад +76

      But why is it a heinous lapse in sense. If your answer is because it involves lust and that is qualitatively different, will you apply that across the board and say lust is always wrong or will you pick and choose self servingly?

  • @sarahjaneysgotagun
    @sarahjaneysgotagun 8 лет назад +3

    It's not the same as panhandling. It's a gendered issue that is inherently sexual. Violence against men is just as legitimate not a counter argument.

  • @SpookeyClown
    @SpookeyClown 5 лет назад +1

    How the fuck is catcalling gender based violence?!?!?!!? Last time I checked violence involves physical contact.

  • @Omizuke
    @Omizuke 8 лет назад +1

    Great video as always.
    About "catcalling" in general, I'm a guy and I've been catcalled, in the streets, in collage, at a previous work, and the mall. And I don't even consider myself attractive to began with. As far as harassment go I'm not sure when exactly the line is crossed. Specially according to this people. But I've been touched in public places, my rear end mostly. I've been approached by females and have my sunglasses removed to see my eyes or try to lift my shirt to "check my abs" which are mostly non-existence by the way. That did make me feel very uncomfortable, specially since I'm not a fan of physical contact, even from family. Did I charged those woman with assault or something no. I just made an excuse and stormed off. So harasment can happen to anyone, male or female.
    As for the rest. I can't believe some people can't take a compliment. Or just be nice too. In my home town a "good morning beautiful" its a common thing. Even if the person doesn't even find you pretty. The way I was raise its liking the person have nothing to do. Its about complimenting and wishing a good day. The 'Beautiful' is just there to be nice and help lift the spirit (self esteem as well). A positive comment for a positive day. Just like guys like me receive a "honey, dear or sweetie" or elaborated tank you when we open doors or help reach something high. Yes male to male don't add those lol but are still polite to one another. And I open doors, or hold them open for both, woman and man, nothing to do with sex. But there's this thing, "be nice" and "treat others as you would like to be treated" In many other place I've had problems because this things, even opening a door. Give the wrong impression to some, even think I'm flirting when I'm just been polite. Growing up my grandfather would've scold me for just calling a woman "chick" or "gal" its "lady", "miss" or "ma'am".
    And Harlem, really? >.>

  • @streled5361
    @streled5361 9 лет назад +18

    Where's the 10 hours version?

  • @mikaylaa.k.8376
    @mikaylaa.k.8376 10 лет назад +6

    We should raise our kids to know some manors. There's nothing wrong with words if it stays at words. The moment catcalling becomes actions, you have a problem.

    • @mikaylaa.k.8376
      @mikaylaa.k.8376 10 лет назад +5

      Nah, sorry, I live 20 minutes from that type of area. :/ I don't care who does the catcalling, I care that they leave it at words :( There was one case where a man was catcalling from his car, and when the girl wouldn't respond to him, he hit her with his car. Sometimes this stuff gets messed up. We need to focus on that, not "Hey there, beautiful."

  • @marklandrebe9895
    @marklandrebe9895 5 лет назад +1

    10 years from now, these same girls will be complaining, that they are not noticed !!

    • @StellarAudyssey
      @StellarAudyssey 5 лет назад

      Single, unmarried, childless and depressed.

  • @fwd105
    @fwd105 10 лет назад

    Thank you, it's so refreshing to hear your views. As a man I don't know what it feels like to be cat called but I assume "hello beautiful" would not be harassment if uttered by a man who the woman finds attractive. Secondly, like you said.. it's a compliment, sometimes we need compliments to lift our spirits. If you are beautiful be thankful, because there are others out there who would happily swap with you and not mind the cat calls.

  • @DittyWolf
    @DittyWolf 8 лет назад +4

    Yes great idea let's distract our police with women complain about catcalling when there are serious crimes being committed and let's flood our jail system more with meaningless things like catcalling.

  • @Pushinkanzu
    @Pushinkanzu 10 лет назад +13

    I don't get it, I get a G'day from passers by when I'm walking in the morning all the time. I don't think it's harassment and I personally never initiate these interactions, but I always reply. It's just people being people I always assumed. Everyone's different I guess.

    • @roelani
      @roelani 10 лет назад +11

      The US is gonna host the Oppression Olympics in 2016, haven't you heard? Gold medal will eventually go to the group who has suffered/been harassed most/is most unjustly treated by society.
      The feminists are really raring to win it this year. So they're practicing a lot.

    • @JoinedSouls
      @JoinedSouls 10 лет назад +4

      same here, saying hello on the street is... just a thing that gets done here, if you make even a passing glance towards eye contact your going to get a hello or the weathers shit isnt it from the other person.

  • @FreeFreezy
    @FreeFreezy 8 лет назад +20

    Im a male and I've been cat called multiple times...

    • @unshapenedpython8974
      @unshapenedpython8974 8 лет назад +3

      i'm a dude that works at 7-11 and i get a lot as well

    • @unshapenedpython8974
      @unshapenedpython8974 8 лет назад

      everyone

    • @unshapenedpython8974
      @unshapenedpython8974 8 лет назад

      A bit of both in all honesty. Depends on my mood and if i have patience for it. I like to Work at my work place and if i'm behind i don't like being interrupted, however if I'm ahead i do like to take in what i can get. Most of it, I find, is harmless. Had a few people who come off strong, but if you stop and reason for just a moment things will be cool afterwards, turning it into an inside joke.
      Only had one person who'd get to the point where it was harassment. I'm a passive person and i just ignored it. Sooner or later she just gave up, she didn't like that i rejected her and was very... nasty about it, putting it politely. However still she just gave up.

    • @AndrooUK
      @AndrooUK 8 лет назад

      Lyon Jealous over here. More people catcall me, please! Grope my bum, titillate my senses! It's only harassment if you keep on doing it after I say no.

  • @silentArtist00
    @silentArtist00 8 лет назад +1

    She's probably one of the only speakers that can change my opinion on something with one video. I like how she objectively states things instead of trying to insult or joke about the people she disagrees with.

  • @rockchalkmarie
    @rockchalkmarie 5 лет назад

    Street harassment is something that has deeply frustrated me and has often made me feel unsafe and degraded. But you speak a lot of truth here and it’s good to hear. Freedom of speech should remain. Men will be men

  • @alsoknownas875
    @alsoknownas875 10 лет назад +19

    Maybe Anita Sarkeesian will one day follow Sommers' model of presenting these things called "facts" and maybe bolstering her arguments with things like "data" and "research".
    ...maybe.

    • @jonathanjanzen3109
      @jonathanjanzen3109 10 лет назад +7

      Hey, Anita has done loads of research. She stared in the mirror for hours on end until her ideas popped in her head and she became the brilliant researcher she is. Then she compiled the data in the form of big sounding words that sounded impressive when combined.
      So yeah, "data" and "research."

    • @alsoknownas875
      @alsoknownas875 10 лет назад +3

      Jonathan Janzen lol pretty much.

    • @GrandElemental
      @GrandElemental 10 лет назад

      Maybe...
      But in the real world, she probably just sticks with stealing content from Let's players about games she has probably never played and then makes this "evidence" to project the pre-determined results. A true woman of science, clearly.

    • @rendarsmith
      @rendarsmith 10 лет назад

      I wouldn't hold my breath on that.

  • @sortedtales
    @sortedtales 9 лет назад +3

    Awesome. Loved the ending: High heeled (well heeled) women lawyers being catcalled by homeless men. Who is privileged?

  • @archstanton3430
    @archstanton3430 8 лет назад +5

    I describe myself as anti-feminist, but come on, we don't have to pretend street harassment isn't a real problem. It's mainly a problem because it makes women feel unsafe. If a guy were to get "catcalled" by a woman, he wouldn't have to be afraid of her following him around or trying to rape him. That's the difference.

    • @thehamburgler6561
      @thehamburgler6561 8 лет назад

      What's the difference between a guy catcalling a girl and a girl catcalling a guy. In the end, it's just words. The man who acted as the most recent superman (forgot his name lazy) was catcalled all the time by women, even in front of his wife. Does it make it any better that he's being catcalled by women? In the end, he didn't respond to their idiocy. He brushed off the words said to him, and continued his life

    • @edmilsoneletrica
      @edmilsoneletrica 6 лет назад

      Well, I have been catcalled (using your definition) by men and women. There were weird and annoying guys among those. I was certainly cautious about it since I didn't know them or what they would do. What did I do? I said: NO. Than moved on with my life.
      I have been actually harassed on the streets. Random guys shouting out insults at me. There were guys (whom I've never seen before) who started to provoke by bumping and/or insulting me, trying to make me start a fight. One of those guys was huge. Way bigger than me.
      Also, here where I live men suffer the vast majority of violent crimes, and are killed in a proportion of 10:1 compared to women.
      Also, the vast majority of rapes (about 70%) happens to children, teenagers and the elderly, and are generally perpetrated by people close to the victim (foster parent, uncle, grandfather...). So, adult women are not at a high risk of rape. That's just an statistical bulls**t.
      "Adult women" is the safest demographic group in western countries.
      They are just big whiners and you're just falling for their bulls**t.

  • @shannynmartin3157
    @shannynmartin3157 5 лет назад +1

    My goodness! Dare i say that I actually LIKE IT when random men compliment me and tell me I'm beautiful. As long as they aren't threatening me, I'm usually very flattered. Honestly, would the people from Hollaback prefer that the guys shout insults?

  • @thegirthquake8574
    @thegirthquake8574 9 лет назад

    I'm a massive anti third wave feminist. And I cannot get enough of Mrs. summers' content. It's educated, it's non agenda pushing, and it sits on an actually equal fence with cases for both genders. Keep rocking on!

  • @CssHDmonster
    @CssHDmonster 10 лет назад +21

    they also only included black men in video,they editted out the white men

    • @Loathomar
      @Loathomar 10 лет назад +20

      KelloPudgerro Other then the word of the people who made the video, do we have any evidence that white men where edited out? I am not suggesting white men never do street harassment, but I am not willing to simply take the word if the people who made the video.

    • @cdsworkshop2855
      @cdsworkshop2855 10 лет назад

      Even if that's true, that would mean the people who made the video approved of, if not personally made, the decision to cut them out. Which still makes them just as big of con artists.

    • @CssHDmonster
      @CssHDmonster 10 лет назад +2

      ***** do abit of research before trying to shitpost me

    • @ninjaone1
      @ninjaone1 10 лет назад +1

      KelloPudgerro stop shitposting his shitpost, shitpost.

    • @CssHDmonster
      @CssHDmonster 10 лет назад +1

      ninjaone1 i shitposted before u knew what shit is

  • @FW7737
    @FW7737 8 лет назад +4

    Wait, "You are beautiful!" is not a harassment. It a compliment. Something to be felt good about. (and yeah, some guys are just bad at making compliments, but this wont get any better afterall :) )

    • @FW7737
      @FW7737 8 лет назад

      ***** LOL, it never hurts to have more beautiful objects.

  • @Burned-Legate
    @Burned-Legate 9 лет назад +3

    You are a gift, Christina. The truth is ridiculously hard to find today.

  • @bradleyjames1379
    @bradleyjames1379 9 лет назад +2

    Watching this youtube channel is pretty refreshing. I will not a lie, a lot of this extreme 3rd wave feminist propaganda has really caused me to rethink my interaction with women that I do not know. I am usually a pretty pleasant guy when I am out and about and if I happen to make eye contact with anybody, I will greet them with a hello, good morning, and so on. After seeing that original 10 hours of cat calling video, I was amazed that saying good morning to someone could be considered cat calling. So now instead of greeting random women, I try not to make eye contact and just walk by. The last thing I want to be accused of is street harassment.

  • @wuttbruh
    @wuttbruh 8 лет назад +2

    I moved from a city to a small town a few years back, and the hardest thing for me to adjust to was the fact that people in my town say hi and interact with you when you're out in public. People of all ages, all races, starting conversations with strangers scared me, because I was used to being in the city where everyone avoids eye contact at all costs. I think if people in small towns remade tha video of themselves walking down the street, it would show that it's more likely to do with where you are, rather than who you are.

  • @Renovartio
    @Renovartio 10 лет назад +4

    Remember those movies where they show the future as being boring, segregated and just grey? Kinda like those early Apple commercials. Well it seems these people WANT that kind of future.

  • @Bleedingskiesmusic
    @Bleedingskiesmusic 10 лет назад +8

    Based mom strikes again!