Is this an issue raised too high?
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I heard this report on TWaO yesterday, and was astonished that any employer would imagine that any such "rule" was enforceable, and more than a little disturbed that they would think that gender politics have regressed so much that they could get away with such a policy. Good for the woman who didn't give in to the pressure to conform.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by jean View PostIf by an issue raised too high you mean something really not important enough for the level of interest it's received, I can ony disagree (and presume you aren't a woman)
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Originally posted by jean View PostIf by an issue raised too high you mean something really not important enough for the level of interest it's received, I can ony disagree (and presume you aren't a woman)
A completely unacceptable regulation. Should men all have turn-ups on their trousers? Or should the size of the knot on their ties be regulated? Four buttons on each sleeve?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI thought it was just a pun? That it was the company raising the issue too high?
The news item the OP gives a link to isn't about the original incident (a woman sent home from work because she wasn't wearing high heels and wouldn't go out and buy some), but about the 100,000 signatures on a petition about it. And as I read it, the incident doesn't become an 'issue' until it's discussed.
Back in the 70s, though, when we feminists saw very clearly that high heels were only a modern version of footbinding, I could not have believed that women would still be choosing to wear them in ever more vertiginous guise, forty years on. If they had simply ceased to exist, as we were sure they would, no employer would have the option of requiring them.
.Last edited by jean; 13-05-16, 09:47.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostA completely unacceptable regulation. Should men all have turn-ups on their trousers? Or should the size of the knot on their ties be regulated? Four buttons on each sleeve?
The psychology of high heels is interesting. Women who wear them claim, I think, that they are 'empowering' (a much over- and mis-used word) - I can see that they might be in the workplace, adding some extra height & bringing the wearer nearer the level of men (physically), and the dominatrix overtones could boost confidence. But at the same time they damage the wearer's feet & lower leg, shortening the tendons, emphasise aspects of the wearer's body in a sexual way, & because of the instability (especially on uneven ground, create a real or psychological dependence on someone (usually a man) or something to keep upright.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAt least these things aren't physically damaging in the way that high heels are.
The psychology of high heels is interesting. Women who wear them claim, I think, that they are 'empowering' (a much over- and mis-used word) - I can see that they might be in the workplace, adding some extra height & bringing the wearer nearer the level of men (physically), and the dominatrix overtones could boost confidence. But at the same time they damage the wearer's feet & lower leg, shortening the tendons, emphasise aspects of the wearer's body in a sexual way, & because of the instability (especially on uneven ground, create a real or psychological dependence on someone (usually a man) or something to keep upright.
I find it very hard to believe that women are still buying into this, even with the proviso that they should be allowed to decide for themselves when & where to wear the things - as I said above, back in the 70s we were so sure that pretty soon high heels would have been something quite forgotten by time.
But I do still hear men say 'I know it's terribly un-PC of me, but I can't help it, I just find women so much more attractive in high heels...'
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