serene: mailbox (Default)
serene ([personal profile] serene) wrote2008-04-21 04:56 pm

(no subject)

So I followed a link in a locked post to the Open-source Boob Project, and here's how my thinking went:

1) Wonder if I should post to my friendslist "Yes, you may".

2) Well, but should I friends-lock it?

3) Well, but then I should really remove anyone from my friendslist that I don't want touching my boobs.

4) Well, no, because I can say no to them. But wouldn't it be funny to just post an open post saying "If I drop you from my friendslist in the next day or so, it's because I don't want you touching my boobs"?

Anyway, Yes, you can. Ask, that is. I'm likely to say "You can touch my boobs; it's no big deal."

[identity profile] sistercoyote.livejournal.com 2008-04-22 04:45 pm (UTC)(link)
It's "The Open-Source Boob Project"

Is "boob" somehow less derogatory than "cock"?

And now, to prove my own, I don't know, hypocrisy?, I present my "boobie" icon.

[identity profile] maestrodog.livejournal.com 2008-04-22 04:54 pm (UTC)(link)
That's actually a really good question. I don't personally think so, but I can see other women might. Similarly, I don't think "balls" is any more derogatory than "testicles." But I think the "grab" part is really what makes it derogatory, rather than boob or breast. "Can I grab your penis?" isn't much better for me than "Can I grab your cock?" Does "May I touch your lovely boobs?" sound any more derogatory to you than "May I touch your lovely breasts?"

[identity profile] sistercoyote.livejournal.com 2008-04-22 04:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Does "May I touch your lovely boobs?" sound any more derogatory to you than "May I touch your lovely breasts?"

No, although my answer to the latter would undoubtedly be "no" (barring context) and my answer to the former would probably be to point at my friends and say, "I don't know, you'll have to ask them."

(And I agree that the word "grab" is the problematic one in that sentence.)