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I am a V-Man

April 26, 2010 By: Ken Nicholson Category: Health, Human Rights, Society

Being a V-Man is recognizing that we men are privileged. This means that we men often claim the privilege of being the head of our households – that we men sometimes claim the privilege of making financial decisions at home.  We are aware that men can claim a higher status than women. We are aware that if we are white, we can claim undeserved privilege over other races.

As a V-Man, I know that we were raised this way.  Our fathers and even our mothers passed this on to us by modeling what their parents had modeled to them. We see it in movies and on the TV and in our daily lives – everywhere.  As boys we are raised with the Four Basic Rules of Masculinity:1

1. No Sissy Stuff!  Reject all things feminine.

2. Be a Big Wheel!  A bumper sticker put it this way: ‘He who has the most toys when he dies – wins.’

3. Be as sturdy as an oak tree!  What makes a man a man is that he is reliable in a crisis. And what makes him reliable in a crisis is that he resembles an inanimate object – a rock, a pillar, a tree.

4. Give ‘em Hell!  Give off the aura of daring and aggression. Take risks; live life on the edge.

The single greatest obstacle to women’s equality [and safety] is our behavior resulting from our sense of privilege.

You are a V-Man if you are a man who believes that women and men are created equal, that your role in a relationship is to help each other grow mentally and spiritually and to protect the women in your life from harm, that you understand your own gender and recognize and honor the feminine within you, that you recognize that power and status is not everything, and that being a man does not mean we have to resemble an inanimate object such as a rock, a pillar, or a tree.

We recognize that the differences between men and women are fewer than the differences within each of our respective genders.

A V-Man recognizes that most domestic violence involves male anger directed against their women partners.  Boys are not born to be violent, or to be superior to girls. These attitudes and behaviors are learned through stereotypes of what our society thinks it means to act and behave like a man.  V-Men know this and want to break that cycle.  Thank you!


Want to know more about gender issues? Interested in V-Man workshops?  Contact Peace and Justice of La Luz at pajoll@zianet.com — Visit our website at http://pajoll.org

1 Gendered Society by Michael Kimmel

Peace

September 23, 2009 By: Ken Nicholson Category: Community

Ukraine

Political Bifurcation

August 20, 2009 By: Ken Nicholson Category: Surrealism

dem vs repub

Man – freed from the traditional bonds… afraid of the new freedom which transformed him into an isolated atom – escaped into (a state) of which nationalism and racism are the two most evident expressions… Along with the progressive development… went the development of the negative aspects of both principles: the worship of the state, blended with the idolatry of the race or nation. Fascism, Nazism and Stalinism are the most drastic manifestations of this blend of state and clan worship, both principles embodied in the figure of a “Fuehrer”.

Nationalism is our … idolatry, our insanity. “Patriotism” is its cult. It should
hardly be necessary to say, that by “patriotism” I mean that attitude which puts the own nation above humanity, above the principles of truth and justice; not the loving interest in one’s own nation…
(Erich Fromm wrote “The Sane Society” in 1955)

Treatment vs Incarceration

August 09, 2009 By: Ken Nicholson Category: Community

Drug, alcohol treatment vital in solving problem

Health Happenings

Alamogordo Daily News
By Ken Nicholson,  For the Daily News

In spite of the nationwide prohibition of street drugs, New Mexico and Otero County, as well as the rest of the United States, has a persistently growing drug problem with increasing numbers of younger students using drugs and alcohol.

With that is the typically disastrous results of addiction, incarceration, unintended pregnancies, failing grades and school drop-outs. While education and law enforcement are making strides in stopping the illegal drug trade while educating our youth about the consequences of drug use, drug and alcohol use continues to be a devastating problem, suggesting once again that peer-pressure can be a stronger force than education. Read the rest of this entry →

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