Nah. I think it could stay in a bit longer. I've said my piece too but I object to having it closed because of opposing points of view.Stick a fork in it. This thread is done.
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Nah. I think it could stay in a bit longer. I've said my piece too but I object to having it closed because of opposing points of view.Stick a fork in it. This thread is done.
The OP invited us to debate Hef, his life's work's influence, positive or negative, afterall.
I feel some really just want to hear the positive.
Had to look that one up!And you, by the way, are playing the role of muckraker, which is not helping one bit.
It was how you framed your opinion - for me - there was subconscious objectification in saying that ones' attitude toward women doesn't have any impact on business or other major decisions of responsibility. As if we're a side issue, a little thing, not part of the whole of issues affecting people. As if we're not voters or consumers or innovators or part of the workforce, or even human beings, but things. That is part of the debate, about Hef. How he treated women was part of his legacy. Women were ornaments and toys for him and tools to get rich. And the issue is whether he is deserving in today's age of being revered.Which can't happen when you and Waterfall call other opinions "stupid" and compare Hefner to Pol Pot.
As chansen said, this thread is done.
Actually, I mentioned the negative multiple times. But we need to hear both and it is quite clear that Kimmio and Waterfall consider any attempt to put a positive spin on Hef "stupid". They are the one sided ones.
And you, by the way, are playing the role of muckraker, which is not helping one bit.
My first impression was one step forward, two steps sideways and four steps backwards. The one step forward was for what was said about somewhat opening mentalities compared to what they were in the 1940s. But the more I think, the more I come to the conclusion that what little positive input he had on evolution of society wasn't done willingly but was rather a necessary byproduct of his work endeavours.
Maybe he wanted to start a sexual revolution, but he stopped after the first three letters.
The women that worked in his empire were paid, I read, but was the pay adequate? And can we buy or should we buy anything? And he wanted so much to improve our society like some writers have suggested, why didn't he used most of his money to subsidize the working poor or women shelters for example?
It's stupid because how one's attitude toward women and how one runs a business are not somehow mutually exclusive. It's not like saying his favourite flavour of ice cream has nothing to do with how he can run a business (which would've therefore make him a better president). Women are human beings and half of the voting population, and more than just pretty play-things to be held in seperate regard from other decisions in civic life and society - if he were to have been POTUS. It's like saying someone who built a business out of exploiting minorities would make a level headed POTUS. That's why it's stupid. Anyhooo...
He was certainly described by a few playmates as a tyrant. And his business empire was built on exploiting women.
I was thinking it's more like admiring Pol Pot or Stalin for their leadership abilities over Trump.
My first impression was one step forward, two steps sideways and four steps backwards. The one step forward was for what was said about somewhat opening mentalities compared to what they were in the 1940s. But the more I think, the more I come to the conclusion that what little positive input he had on evolution of society wasn't done willingly but was rather a necessary byproduct of his work endeavours.
Maybe he wanted to start a sexual revolution, but he stopped after the first three letters.
The women that worked in his empire were paid, I read, but was the pay adequate? And can we buy or should we buy anything? And he wanted so much to improve our society like some writers have suggested, why didn't he used most of his money to subsidize the working poor or women shelters for example?
That's not what he wroteAs if being a good business man should negate his negative impact on women being treated like objects and commodities and what an ideal woman looks like.
When Osama Laden was still a concern
Please don't speak for all women as if women are all the sameIt was how you framed your opinion - for me - there was subconscious objectification in saying that ones' attitude toward women doesn't have any impact on business or other major decisions of responsibility. As if we're a side issue, a little thing, not part of the whole of issues affecting people. As if we're not voters or consumers or innovators or part of the workforce, or even human beings, but things. That is part of the debate, about Hef. How he treated women was part of his legacy. Women were ornaments and toys for him and tools to get rich. And the issue is whether he is deserving in today's age of being revered.
Pardon me, sir?Please don't speak for all women as if women are all the same
That's sexist