Whataboutery: Difference between revisions

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Whataboutery (or whataboutism) is a term often used by feminists to shutdown arguments made by MRAs.
[[Whataboutery]] (or ''whataboutism'') is a term often used by feminists to shutdown arguments made by [[MRA]]s. This usually involves a feminist is claiming that an MRA is ''derailing'' a conversation by bringing up relevant issues that effect men. The definition provided in the Cambridge Dictionary uses just such an example:<ref>https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/whataboutism</ref><ref>https://archive.is/muUKD</ref>


<blockquote>
He's the kind of person who responds to an attempt to protect women from domestic violence with whataboutery: "What about male victims of domestic violence?"
</blockquote>


A Wikipedia article on the topic asserts that it is an informal fallacy but shows significant ideological bias and fails to establish the concept as part of modern philosophy.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whataboutism</ref>


== References ==


[[Category: Featured Articles]]
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/whataboutism
[[Category: Feminism]]

[[Category:Glossary]]
[[Category: Glossary]]

Latest revision as of 01:45, 16 January 2025

Whataboutery (or whataboutism) is a term often used by feminists to shutdown arguments made by MRAs. This usually involves a feminist is claiming that an MRA is derailing a conversation by bringing up relevant issues that effect men. The definition provided in the Cambridge Dictionary uses just such an example:[1][2]

He's the kind of person who responds to an attempt to protect women from domestic violence with whataboutery: "What about male victims of domestic violence?"

A Wikipedia article on the topic asserts that it is an informal fallacy but shows significant ideological bias and fails to establish the concept as part of modern philosophy.[3]

References