Nor do I believe that viewing things from a particular perspective, and therefore giving less consideration to perspectives other than one's own, is some sort of grievous sin. I think it is, in fact, a thing that everyone does.
Unless you're saying you simply don't think of things from other people's perspectives, what I'm reading here is you value people's opinions different based on their perspective.
...I have apparently expressed myself poorly, because I mean neither of those things. >_<
Let me try again.
I think everyone has a particular perspective, and everyone's perspective is different. Your perspective is shaped by your experiences, and those experiences are affected by things like your race and gender. And by many other things, to be clear! Any given individual's perspective is unique, even as it also has certain commonalities with other people's perspectives.
So, of course, I never said anything like 'I think all straight white cis males believe X.' (I'm not convinced there would be
any possible value for X in that statement.)
What I said was: 'I think people who believe X are likely to be straight white cis males.' (Where X = "the present is no different than the past." To put it concisely.)
What I was
attempting to imply, was that those
particular straight white cis males, who believed X, had perhaps failed to consider the perspectives of people outside their particular demographic.
My implication was not, as some people seemed to feel, 'straight white cis males are jerks who should shut up.'
I did, however, indirectly accuse Berka and Drak of not really considering perspectives besides their own, in making the argument(s) that they made.
So, I wanted to highlight the fact that I thought this was a
pretty normal thing to do, and not some
terrible sin that they needed to somehow atone for. Because I think that it can be difficult to properly consider someone else's perspective, or to even realize that it's
something you need to stop and think about. (See also: This thread.)
But why did it matter to you if Drak's opinion was based on his whiteness or maleness? You only would have brought it up if you felt it was relevant, and since you were arguing against him, those natural conclusion is that you felt it lowered the value of his opinion.
Thank you for asking. Very sincerely: Thank you for
asking, and not assuming. Because yes, I brought it up because I felt it was relevant... but your hypothetical 'natural conclusion' is definitely not what I meant.
So, thank you for giving me a second chance to try to explain my perspective, because I seem to be
very bad at that lately, and I'd really like to try again.
So. I would summarize what Berka and Drak seemed to be saying as something like this:
"Culturally, we have not actually improved. The present is not better than the past."
(I do not think they were making the same exact point as each other in the first place, to be clear. But this seems to me to be a fairly good approximation of the commonalities in their opinions. They may very well disagree, and I would be happy to hear their clarification on their beliefs with respect to cultural progress, or the lack thereof.)
In response, I should have said something more like this:
I think we are considering this subject from very different perspectives.
As someone who is straight, your sexuality was never considered a mental illness, to be treated with aversion therapy. So it probably doesn't mean as much to you, that these days a gay couple can actually get married... and that most people in our culture approve of this state of affairs.
As someone who is white, your ancestors were never considered to be less than fully human, in the eyes of the law and of their legal owners. So it probably doesn't mean as much to you, that our culture has abolished slavery.
As someone who is cis, you've never had to deal with people insisting that your anatomy defines you, while dealing with your own dysphoria with regards to that anatomy. So it may not mean
as much anything to you, that we living in a time when being trans is increasingly understood, scientifically and culturally.
As someone who is male, people like you have been able to vote for as long as there's been democracy. So it probably doesn't mean as much to you, that women can vote now too. Or that women can work in virtually any field, and that our culture actively encourages this equality.
Perhaps from your perspective, it seems like our culture has not actually changed that much.
From my perspective, and from
many people's perspectives: Things have changed. Things have changed
profoundly.
I'm not sure you can imagine my profound
gratitude, for lack of a better word, for being born where and especially
when I was. I don't actually ascribe the timing of my birth to anything but chance. But I don't know how else to talk about my feeling about the fact that
my life could have been terrible, and, in fact,
my life is actually awesome.And when you talk about history being equivalent to the present, I can't help but think about what things were like, for many people.
Imagine being gay, and not knowing it, until the moment in which you first feel attracted to someone... and you realize that you will
never lead a normal life. And your choices are celibacy, or a furtive pursuit of a desire you know to be wrong, and punishable by damnation.
Imagine being a woman, with no real options in life, besides 'marry someone you have little in common with, have sex you may or may not enjoy, get pregnant,
hopefully don't die in agonizing childbirth, and then take care of the child... who may or may not survive to adulthood.' Repeat steps 2 through 5, perhaps as many as a dozen times.
Imagine being a slave. Imagine knowing that you are property, and that your children will be property. Imagine that the daily injustice and misery of your life, and the lives of everyone you love, is perfectly legal, and that you have no recourse of any kind.
Speaking for myself, I don't think I can truly understand what any of these things would have actually been like. But I do think I've probably spent more time contemplating the first two than you have, for obvious reasons.
Now, to be clear, I do realize that there were
many ways in which
many people, and
specifically people who were straight, white, and male, were
also miserable, throughout human history. I don't actually think that history was a very nice place for
anyone, generally speaking.
And I am also aware that there are
still a great many ways in which a great many people are miserable, in the present day.
But I think it is actually somewhat unprecedented, that so many people are
not miserable. That we have made so many changes, so quickly, and that things are continuing to change. I may be an optimist, but I think that things are actually starting to get better for
people in general. I know we have a long way to go, and I'm not trying to ignore that... but I think you do humanity a disservice, if you ignore our collective progress.
...and if you read all of this, thank you for your time and attention, regardless of whether you end up agreeing with any of it. Sorry I couldn't be more concise. And I apologize for any typos, or, gods forbid, any
epic-level failure in communicating my point. Hopefully spending some actual time on it will turn out to have helped on that front. Regardless... I need to go to bed more than I need to proofread this yet again. Thanks again for hearing me out.
TL;DR:
History was a crappy place to live. The world is a now better place, for a lot of people. Let's keep making it better.