Talk:V-Day
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[edit] Edit attribution
The following edits were me. My session got logged out without my realising it:
- (cur)(last) 02:31, 5 Apr 2005 220.244.224.204 (→See also)
- (cur) (last) 02:27, 5 Apr 2005 220.244.224.204
- (cur) (last) 02:26, 5 Apr 2005 220.244.224.204 (ext links, wikification)
An An 02:40, 5 Apr 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Neutrality
The article seems to imply rather strongly that to advocate V-Day is to advocate peace, safety and human rights, while to want Valentine's Day is to be narrow-minded, shallow, and uncaring. JorgeMacD 04:38, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
I to agree that the article is more of a piece advocating V-Day rather than informing about it.
[edit] random
I'm not sexist, but that seems to be a waste of a day.--66.218.28.46 03:22, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
I always find it funny, but for someone concerned with gender-equality (as feminists claim), Ensler certainly left out anything about violence towards men, which in fact domestic violence in the US is significantly (but not in the majority) against men. Check for stats someplace, I think its like 30% of all domestic violence is the woman beating the man, just men do not report it.Scryer_360 03:32, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not sure what you mean. It's not "Gender Equality Day," it's V-Day... it's to stop violence against women and girls. They're not saying that men being hurt is a good thing, any more than someone raising money for breast cancer is therefore a big fan of colon cancer.--Agbdavis 07:48, 4 December 2006 (UTC)