this post was submitted on 15 Jan 2025
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I'm sorry, but dealbreakers are dealbreakers for a reason. And dealbreakers aren't stuff that should be treated like it can be changed easily. Dealbreakers are things like political alignments, interest in having children, marriage and other stuff.
And asking women to give a guy they don't like "just a chance" has not done anything ever for anyone, seriously. The amount of times I hear about women giving the "weird guy" a second chance has always ended in the guy either seriously overstepping boundaries or taking the later rejection even worse. I have yet to meet a "weird guy" who hasn't done something seriously heinous later down the line.
And I am certain you didn't mean it that way, but saying "It's ok for you to help your dates avoid these" makes it sound like you're advocating for invalidating womens opinions, as if they can't make decisions for themselves and need help from a man to make the "right" one.
It sounds like you know what I was getting at. I recognize the danger women are up against and ultimately, even for trivial things, dating is a “free market” where everyone is allowed to ditch on a dime. I’ll defend that more strongly than my point above.
I do object to the accusation I’m advocating for men making decisions on behalf of women. I meant my comment to apply for any combination of sexes/genders.
The armchair theory I’m working from here is that the quantity of potential dates provided by online dating has changed the landscape in a way where people are less incentivized to give second chances. That helps some in some situations, hurts others in others. I just wanted to put a thought out there to not stray too far to one extreme of “anything that might correlate with them being a bad date is an immediate dealbreaker, because there are ten thousand other swipes waiting for me”.