You make a decent point. However, if I see an empty seat on a boat, and notice no women around me, of course I'd take it. I don't think it will be cowardly or dishonorable to do so, since I didn't shove a woman to get to it. Waiting for a woman (or anyone) to get to the seat is just a preposterous thing to do. I wouldn't call that "brave". Everyone has the right to save themselves.
Controversially, I believe that age matters more than gender. If I'm put in this predicament, I would prefer "rescuing" 21 year old men over 45 year old women. For starters, that man was a child 5 years ago. He probably still has the mind of a child and would react as such in these conditions. The woman would be more considerate and smarter in this situation, despite being "weaker". Your brain matters too, not just your physical body. Not to mention, she has lived long enough, whilst the 21 year old still has a life ahead of him.
Of course, this is a cruel idea (perhaps more inhumane than "women and children only"). But it's just a hypothetical scenario. Despite its acerbic characteristic, I would've used that rule instead of "women and children" first.
My regulation would go like this: Mother and her children first, elderly people, young men and women (16-25) and the rest (middle aged men and women). Is it bad? I don't know. But it's certainly no better than "woman and children only". The cut-off age was 14, I believe. So seriously, a 15 year old child is less "valuable" than a 50 year old woman? Isn't it more cowardly to let a 15 year old child die over an adult? It's rather ironic, no?
Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months.
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