My two cents:
Your assumptions implicit in the above quote seem to be: 1) ALL women's chess programs are degrading to women, and; 2) women's chess programs exist ONLY because women are judged by some men to be inferior chess players. I disagree with both assumptions.
Re 1), I'd like to see some hard evidence (e.g. a statistically relevant survey of female masters, and up, who agree by a clear margin that women's programs are degrading) before I could consider this as anything other than unverifiable personal opinion.
Re 2), there may be places in the world where this is more true than not (Saudi Arabia?) but in any 'enlightened' country there could be a number of reasons for girls'/women's programs. For example, if you are a parent or have teaching experience with smaller children then you know that little girls are sometimes uncomfortable in the company of rambunctious, obnoxious, dorky little boys. So if your objective is to get little girls interested in chess then maybe girls-only classes and tournaments make sense while still providing opportunities for boys and girls to play against each other from time to time.
I disagree. There is nothing wrong (or "hypocritical" or "self-contradictory") with having a tournament for girls only, or men only, or seniors only, or under 12s only, or members of the RA Centre only, etc. Where you should run into a problem is if you run a tournament like this: Toronto Chess Championship (no females allowed).
Re "not enough women complain about it" - this sounds like you're blaming women (the victims according to you) because they're not supporting your view of the world. Sorry but that makes no sense to me.
Re "sexism in this case works to their advantage," I'm not sure what you're getting at but suspect it might have to do with the large prize funds offered in some women-only events in the U.S. and Europe. I say so what? If there are sponsors and patrons who want to support such events then let them do so.
The women's titles aren't FIDE's finest moment. But they're not the big deal you and Neil make them out to be, imo. They're just sign posts along the path to the GM title. I suspect that the opponent of a WIM is more interested in her current rating and recent OTB performance than in her title.
Originally posted by Brad Thomson
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Re 1), I'd like to see some hard evidence (e.g. a statistically relevant survey of female masters, and up, who agree by a clear margin that women's programs are degrading) before I could consider this as anything other than unverifiable personal opinion.
Re 2), there may be places in the world where this is more true than not (Saudi Arabia?) but in any 'enlightened' country there could be a number of reasons for girls'/women's programs. For example, if you are a parent or have teaching experience with smaller children then you know that little girls are sometimes uncomfortable in the company of rambunctious, obnoxious, dorky little boys. So if your objective is to get little girls interested in chess then maybe girls-only classes and tournaments make sense while still providing opportunities for boys and girls to play against each other from time to time.
Originally posted by Brad Thomson
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Originally posted by Brad Thomson
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Re "sexism in this case works to their advantage," I'm not sure what you're getting at but suspect it might have to do with the large prize funds offered in some women-only events in the U.S. and Europe. I say so what? If there are sponsors and patrons who want to support such events then let them do so.
Originally posted by Brad Thomson
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