Category Archives: Undead sexist cliches

Undead sexist cliche: 1950s housewives were so very, very happy

As I pointed out in a recent Atomic Junk Shop post, it was a lot harder for people several decades back to conceive of women needing equality as much as people of color. In the 1950s the injustice of segregation was becoming obvious but women? They had an awesome life! Their husband had to work but chicks got to stay home with the kids, living life on the easiest possible mode. The man supported them, protected them, gave them love and sex, what could possibly be better than that?

When Phyliss Schlafly began her political activist career fighting against rights for (other) women, that was her standard argument: the husband buys his wife a house! How can anyone say she’s not pampered beyond measure! Of course the man’s buying the house for himself, too — it’s not like he doesn’t need somewhere to stay — but Schlafly ignored such niggling details.

Even a lot of women had a hard time conceiving there was a problem (I’m sure the tranquilizers they were encouraged to down didn’t make it easier). As Celeste Davis says, for many of them it took reading The Feminine Mystique and realizing their discomfort wasn’t just in their heads before they could say yes, they had a problem; no, they weren’t happy. No, they were not pampered house pets

Stephanie Coontz’s A Strange Stirring, on the impact of Betty Friedan’s book, drives home some of the reasons women were frustrated. Some states gave husbands the legal right to forbid their wives from working or going to school or reading books they didn’t approve of. Some states gave women no say in how her husband spent his money. If the husband wanted to move and the wife refused, she could be charged for abandoning her family. And more.

Plus, of course, working at home was often a full-time job, especially if you had kids (Davis has discussed that too). Dad gets home from work, kicks back; Mom makes dinner, fetches his drink, manages the kids, puts them to bed. In return, he changes the oil in the car every so often and mows the lawn on weekends — stuff which doesn’t have to be done anywhere near as constantly.

(IIRC, relationship guru John Gray once said that while men see “change the oil and the tires” as a big deal that should count for multiple points on the balance sheet, women see it as one point. Given the imbalance in the time commitment, I’m with the women).

But of course the nature of Undead Sexist Cliches is that they don’t, you know, die. So anti-feminists have been trying to retcon facts for decades: women were happy, feminists used their Sith Lord mind control to fool them. To force women out of the home and into the workplace, to suffer as exploited drones — obviously they were happier under patriarchy. Curiously, nobody making this argument (JD Vance, Paul Deneen) ever explains why it’s okay for corporation to exploit men or suggests that how employers treat workers is the problem.

As Adrienne Matei writes in the Guardian, the Nazis spread the same lies too. Matei points out it’s not just misogyny, society — in Germany, in Italy, today — relies on women’s unpaid labor to keep working. It’s much easier for a man to put in long, exhausting hours at work if he can turn the kids over to his wife (regardless of how her career suffers). It’s much easier to cut benefits if you convince moms it’s their responsibility to pick up the slack.

“This nostalgia that conservatives are trying to sell us? Generations fought like hell to escape it,” Jessica Valenti says. “But for younger women—those who can’t imagine a world where they can’t get a credit card or a divorce—conservatives are offering up something seductive, even if false. After all, who isn’t disheartened by the state of the world right now? Who doesn’t feel despairing or exhausted? Who among us wouldn’t rather check the fuck out and bake some cookies?”

True, some women are happy staying at home and that’s cool. But not all women. Nor are all women good at it. Being a mom or a homemaker is like any other job: it fits some people, not all people (much as “learn to code” is terrible advice as a universal career path).

And for women it comes with costs. The late Charlie Kirk complained not long before his murder that young men are prioritizing marriage and family (I have no idea if this is so) where as young women are postponing them until they get their careers under way. He ignores that for men, as Anna Kendrick says, that decision is relatively easy: they can assume their wife will handle the childcare so their career won’t be interrupted. Women can’t be confident of that (I’m sure Kirk was aware of this but doesn’t care — he’s not suggesting men postpone their career climb for family).

That’s the thing, patriarchy is unhealthy. It forces both men and women into roles they’re “supposed” to fit, whether they fit or not. It’s a better deal for a lot of men, but not for all men. It requires turning off part of your brain to tell yourself that no, no, the voice inside your head is wrong, you’re perfectly happy. Or that yes, you really deserve to be the absolute monarch of the household with someone to cook and clean up after you, even if there’s no obvious reason you deserve this.

Ah, but! One standard argument that men deserve this is that they’re protectors, defenders of the women. Misogynist preacher John Piper, for instance, asserts it’s the man’s duty to defend his woman, even if she’s a stronger fighter than he is (though protecting her doesn’t mean he can’t hit her or verbally abuse her). And that willingness to lay down his life for her justifies male dominance, even if he’s hitting her (is it possible Piper is full of shit? Could be). Much like changing the oil, this arrangement requires constant, daily duty from the woman; the man plays the hero once in a blue moon, or possibly never.

For Christian male supremacists the “never” doesn’t matter. As Kristen Kobes du Mez and Jay Mallow explain, “In [Eric] Metaxas’ world you should be able to demand that “unconditional submission” not because you actually have sacrificed anything but because of a stated willingness to do so. This is where many will fall back to symbolic or even “covenantal” language concerning Jesus. What they’ll say is men are supposed to “enter into” the “role” of leadership and sacrifice being “like Jesus”, but what will always be twisted is that them having that “role” and stating a supposed “genuine” willingness to be like Jesus means they should be treated like him regardless of whether they are acting like Jesus/sacrificing or not.”

The 1950s were not a utopia for women. Real-life housewives were not as happy as 1950s sitcom tradwives. Nobody should be fooled.

Leave a comment

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

It seems the Felon of the United States has nothing to hide about Jeffrey Epstein (sarcasm font)

(I wrote this before the release of the Epstein birthday letter so I added that discussion at the bottom)

“In a video posted online on Thursday, Schnitt is recorded telling the woman that the department would “redact every Republican or conservative person in those files, leave all the liberal, Democratic people in those files, and have a very slanted version of it come out.” He also told his date that the decision to move Ghislaine Maxwell to a lower security prison went against Board of Prisons policy because she was a convicted sex offender, “which means they’re offering her something to keep her mouth shut.” “

“The White House has warned Republican rebels in Congress that pushing for the full release of the Jeffrey Epstein pedophile abuse files would be seen as “a very hostile act.” Speaker Mike Johnson is on the Felon’s side, though, insisting the president really, really cares about the horrible things Epstein did to those girls.

“They’re trying to get people to talk about something that’s totally irrelevant to the success that we’ve had as a nation since I’ve been president,” — the necrotic toddler himself, followed by the usual lies about how he’s performed miracles since getting elected. And ignoring that it was his administration that announced it would release the files. And that there’s been no success, only monstrous decline and deterioration.

The Felon seems very upset that he can’t control things and that he’s actually enduring criticism over alleged sexual assaults on some girls he thinks nobody should care about (he certainly didn’t). Some in the media are on board: misogynist homophobe pundit Michael Knowles insists Epstein’s victims were really sex workers so no big (that’s how Alex Acosta and some of the other sellouts in the 2008 Florida case preferred portraying them — and once again I recommend Julie Brown’s Perversion of Justice about Epstein and his enablers). I won’t be surprised if someone adopts Epstein’s own argument that laws against child sex are irrational — I’ve seen that argument before, though I don’t have a handy link. And we have Greg Kelly on Newsmax declaring that maybe Epstein’s right hand, Ghislane Maxwell, is an innocent victim.

But the brag by the DOJ staffer mentioned in the first paragraph? That was released by the Project Veritas right-wing group. It seems some people on the right really do care about busting rapists who prey on kids (I am pleased). Fox News on the other hand, cut away from a press conference where Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene was calling for the truth to come out. And Rep. Thomas Massie says the Felon is covering for rich and powerful Republicans in the files (whom he suggests are siding with rival candidates for his seat).

While I’m delighted to see the Felon suffer, I’m also willing to see everyone named in the files pay a price. If Bill Clinton or Obama or anyone on my side of the aisle is documented as a statutory rapist, they should go down alongside the Felon. And so should anyone who covered it up. As Donna Ladd says in the Mississippi Free Press, this isn’t a game of “gotcha.” What happened to Epstein’s victims was monstrous and it’s not unique. Few men were as horrific as Epstein but every rape, every cover-up is just as awful for the victims. That shouldn’t be complicated.

Ladd: “I mean, where is the debate? These are child rapists—probably raping adults, as well, as Trump is already adjudicated to have done—or their protectors (the same thing, once removed). Why the hell would we want any of them walking the streets free, coming into contact with children, serving in political office, running media companies, giving motivational speeches at conventions, whatever? I’ve asked myself many times over the years: What kind of person wants to cover for these monsters who get their kicks from stalking and trapping prey?”

Rebecca Solnit likewise reminds us not to lose sight of the bigger picture: “in another sense the whole society is hiding something: that this violence is everywhere and it deeply shapes – or misshapes – our society. The statistics I cited above address the victims of specific crimes. But all girls and women are impacted by the reality that so many men want to harm us and these crimes could happen to any one of us. This violence affects the choices we make about where to go and when, what jobs to take, when to speak up, what to wear.

“The threat of violence and actual violence by some men against some women and girls establishes female vulnerability and fear and disempowerment far more broadly. Society has largely required us to alter our lives to avoid this, rather than society being altered to make us free and equal. This violence is an engine of inequality that benefits all men, insofar as being “more equal than others” in this respect is a benefit. The piecemeal stories – “here is this one bad man we need to do something about” – don’t address the reality that the problem is systemic and the solution isn’t police and prison.”

No argument here.

Then there’s the recently released birthday book (I believe this is an accurate copy), which is stuffed with jokes and tributes from many of Epstein’s friends besides the Felon (“One friend compared him to the main character in Ernest Hemingway’s “The Old Man and the Sea,” except instead of fish, Jeffrey Epstein caught women, “blonde, red or brunette.”). As Scott Lemieux says at the link, it’s full of so many nudge-nudge, wink-wink jokes about Epstein’s lechery, it’s impossible to believe they didn’t know — they just didn’t care.

That would include the Felon. Unsurprisingly Speaker Mike Johnson, having briefly tried to claim the Felon had been an FBI informant on Epstein, now says the book is fake. So does Kremlin-financed podcaster (allegedly he had no idea where the money came from) Benny Johnson.

But it is real. And that’s chilling. As Cheryl Rofer puts it, “When that many people know, someone who only rode on his plane and didn’t fuck children had to know. But that camaraderie certainly would have urged men to join in the fun.”

That’s a horrifying thought because it means accepting that so many prominent, influential, intelligent people knew and not only did nothing — they applauded. Even if they didn’t take advantage of what Epstein was offering, they weren’t troubled enough to report it.

I think a big part of the problem is what Celeste Davis blogged about a while ago, that some men simply don’t like women: when push comes to shove, “bros before hos” becomes what passes for a moral guideline. Why harsh the party buzz and point out that the other guys are cracking jokes about statutory rape? Why call out people you respect over a bunch of teenage runaways and illegal immigrants who are doing it for the money (note: if you pay an underage girl for sex, it’s rape)? It’s my old 80 percent argument: the majority of men aren’t predators but they aren’t heroes either; in practice they can go either way depending on the people around them.

In this case they went the wrong way. All of them broke bad.

Leave a comment

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

The power of the powerless, Zohram Mamdani and Bari Weiss

It’s quite possible that if Zohram Mamdani wins election and becomes Mayor of New York, his plans — government run grocery stores in food deserts, free mass transit, free daycare — won’t come to fruition. Running New York is hard and delivering on promises is tough. I’d still vote for him, though. And I love that his response to a debate challenge from opponent (and sex harasser) Andrew Cuomo was “Why should I debate Donald Trump’s puppet when I could debate Donald Trump himself?”

The opposition and outrage he generates, not only from Republicans, but some Democrats, makes me think of Vaclav Havel’s essay about The Power of the Powerless. As Havel explains it, tyrants who claim to rule because they have the right ideology cannot tolerate even small dissents: it’s not that the dissenter has any power, it’s that saying “No, I disagree with your beliefs” is the same as saying “you do not, in fact, have the right to rule.” They cannot accept that.

Mamdani saying government can help people contradicts one of the basic Republican “truths,” that government can’t help people. He’s also contradicting Democratic centrists who think they know what wins elections; if Mamdani proves them wrong, that’s going to upset them — OMG, what if people stop believing centrists have the one true path to winning! Sure, Mamdani’s doing what they say Democrats should do — talk about economy and “kitchen table issues” — but he’s doing it the wrong way!

As Oliver Willis says (quoted at the link), “the Mamdani thing is showing you how limited the range of acceptable opinions actually is in America. republicans can be a stone’s throw away from endorsing genocide and thats fine but one guy goes slightly to the left of dem party orthodoxy and we’re right in the middle of Soviet Russia.” It’s likewise telling that some people would sooner see former governor Cuomo — a Trump-friendly sexual harasser who botched the state’s pandemic response big time — in the mayor’s office than Mamdani.

Which leads me to this law-school journal article by Mary Anne Franks about how limited our concept of defending unpopular speech — free speech rights include the speech we hate! — have become. That it’s more likely to apply to angry white men (e.g., Tucker Carlson and other right-wingers arguing Hitler was the good guy), corporations and people in positions of power than the dispossessed, the marginalized and the oppressed. The speech rights of white men take precedence (just as white male grievances and achievements must be taken seriously).

Christine Blasey Ford got death threats for speaking out about Brett Kavanaugh assaulting her; she was not described as a free speech martyr but as a partisan attacking him. When accused sexual assailant/minister Johnny Hunt sued the people who’d identified him as such (he lost!), it wasn’t presented (as far as I’m aware) as a free speech issue (nor in general when rapists and harassers sue the victims who spoke out). “there has been no attempt by the ACLU [I should mention I donate to the ACLU and believe it does vital work, though I think this criticism is still valid] or prominent civil libertarians to champion the women of the #MeToo movement as free speech heroes or to denounce the aggressive attempts to censor them. There was no similar national handwringing over the free speech crisis created by the threats, harassment, and lawsuits against women who spoke out about male sexual abuse as there was over the supposed free speech crisis on college campuses when students protested appearances by white male supremacists.”

Which leads me to Bari Weiss. For years she’s built her brand as the advocate of edgy free speech and repressed ideas, never mind that she’s a textbook example of what Franks is talking about: Weiss’ support for free speech invariably sides with the status quo. She’s had zero sympathy for free speech when anyone takes the side of Palestinians, for instance.

Weiss coined the term intellectual dark web to refer to beliefs and speakers she claimed were shut out of the mainstream. You know, beliefs like “there are fundamental biological differences between men and women” and “identity politics are bad” — nobody ever dares say that kind of thing in public. Mark Lilla, for instance, has called for an end to identity politics, and look how he was silenced: interviews with Vox, articles in The New Yorker, books … (see here and here for a couple of my past blog posts on this topic). Pundit Lee Siegel talked about how he’d be shouted down and silenced for his views on rapists … and said it in an op-ed in the New York Times. Suzanne Venker sometimes declares her misogynist views are the truths the mainstream media won’t tell you — and she says this on Fox News, which is mainstream media.

Common or not, it appears this brand of bullshit has paid off for Weiss: the probable new owner of CBS is talking about putting her in charge of the news division (even if it doesn’t happen, being considered boosts her status). She’ll be anti-woke! She has a “shit-kicking, anti-establishment disposition” — if you assume that CBS News, the New York Times and the Republican Party are anti-establishment and that college kids who protest against Israel or right wing speakers are the powers that be.

No conclusion, really, just noting a pattern I think is real.

1 Comment

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

Another round of misogyny links

The idea husbands are entitled to spousal sex even if the wife’s not in the mood is a longstanding one. Right-wing babbler Michael Knowles is all in: “Ladies, you owe your husband sex. You owe it to him. It’s called the marital debt.” No, it isn’t.

Another day, another forced-birth advocate who gets his mistress an abortion.

Pro Publica finds Texas doctors withholding treatment for miscarriages for fear of being charged with abortion. Texas has one novel solution to the conflict over its laws: banning lawsuits against forced-birth bills. They’re quite happy to have people file lawsuits over abortion pills, though.

Louisiana’s after out-of-state doctors, even though their actions are legal in their state. Missouri’s suing Planned Parenthood. Planned Parenthood is suing the Felon Administration.

“Women are the kind of people that people come out of.” — deep thoughts from Pete Hegseth and his spiritual mentor.

“His view of women in the U.S. military would be beneath serious comment were he not, through the malpractice of the Republican majority in the U.S. Senate, the sitting secretary of defense.”

Elon Musk went hard to deliver Wisconsin’s Supreme Court judicial election this year to a Republican. The Dem won which led to the court striking down Wisconsin’s near-total abortion ban.

Neil Gaiman goes to court to sue the woman who accused him of assault.

“Don’t concern about the environment and advocacy of “clean energy” sound kind of, well, feminine? Real men burn stuff and don’t worry if the process is dirty.” — Paul Krugman on how warped masculinity warps the fight against climate change.

Russell Vought, lying fascist homophobe forced birther.

“A Minnesota teen filed a charge of discrimination against a Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant on Tuesday after she alleged that a server followed her into the women’s restroom and demanded she “prove” she was a girl.

I’m sure some of our right-wingers look at Argentina rolling back women’s protection and think “Yummy!”

“The State Department is poised to burn millions of dollars—quite literally, in a French incinerator—paying $167,000 to set ablaze a $9.7 million stockpile of U.S. taxpayer-funded contraceptives.”

An Uber driver reports a passenger who “joked” he was going to set ICE on his Latina date because she didn’t put out.

The Felon promised support for IVF if he won. Unsurprisingly he lied.

Leave a comment

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

Assorted misogyny

The Jezebel spirit has just infected an entire generation of young ladies, and they need to — this is one of the reasons why I talk about why Mary, the mother of Jesus, is so important to crush feminism. Feminism has done such damage to these young ladies.” — misogynist bullshitter Charlie Kirk, who apparently defines “damage” as women not accepting his status as a superior being. He also claims liberal men have low testosterone. Even if we did, everything Kirk has ever said would be crap and lies.

Self-proclaimed alpha male Nick Adams is another one troubled about the Jezebel spirit. At the risk of stating the obvious, if you have to say you’re an alpha male, you ain’t.

Another day, another rape victim unfairly treated.

Another day, another twerp ecstatic that it’s okay to be white in Hollywood — which they pretend wasn’t the case until recently. And the op-ed gets space in the New York Times — which, I should note, published sexist op-eds well before the Felon got elected.

It’s easy to be a guy and not be creepy. But some men seem to find it soooo hard.

An idiot explains that because women were constantly traded out to husbands in other cultures, they’re programmed to “conform to the dominant culture.” Evidence? None, just a rationalization for why men should be in charge. But Elon Musk retweets it because it’s a variation of the women are sheeple undead sexist cliche he’s already propagated.

Misogynists also claim it’s men who do all the inventing and develop all the cool medical ideas. Wrong again.

New York taxpayers are still paying for the sexual harassment lawsuits against former governor Andrew Cuomo, to the tune of millions.

Abortion bans kill women. And get women arrested for miscarriage. And get doctors sued even out of state.

Right-wingers are attacking Representative Delia Ramirez because she supposedly said she’s a Guatemalan first — but that’s not an accurate translation. This is primarily an anti-immigrant, anti-POC attack rather than misogyny, but I’m adding it here anyway.

Throwing dildoes at the WNBA? Definitely sexist.

“When Tennessee first passed its abortion ban, it didn’t have an exception for women’s lives. Instead, doctors had to break the law in order to provide life-saving abortions and then defend that decision after the fact.” The law has changed but women’s options haven’t improved any.

Republicans still lie about things like abortion pills in tap water sterilizing people.

“It really shouldn’t take an abortion provider being murdered for the federal government to enforce a law that has been effective at keeping providers safe and helping people access care.”

To end on an upnote, Chicago’s abortion fund just received $2 million in funding

Leave a comment

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

“Compassion is a weakness” is a line said by no fictional hero ever

If you’ve watched any specfic films, you’ve probably seen the moment. The hero’s trying to protect the helpless from the bad guys at which point the arch-villain sneers that “You have compassion for these pathetic weaklings. That is a vulnerability.” It is — life is a lot easier if you don’t care who gets hurt — but it’s also a strength. And it’s right — Jesus, you may recall, was much more about doing the right thing than winning.

As I pointed out a few months ago, the position of Christians such as J.D. Vance and pundit Megan Basham is to lie and say Jesus doesn’t want us caring. Other religious leaders have shrieked about how it’s bad to feel empathy because it might not advance the white, male, Christian dictatorship they want if you care about victims (that’s not quite how they phrased it). Here’s a look at some of the ugly cruelty the right wing and the Felon Administration engage in:

The everyday interrogation of Americans who aren’t suitably white and Anglo-Saxon.

“President Trump will sign an executive order Thursday calling on states and cities to “remove vagrant individuals” from the streets — and rehouse homeless people, drug addicts, and those suffering from mental problems in “treatment centers.”” yes, I’m sure they’ll get treatment for their problems, he said sarcastically.

It’s safe to say none of them care about the pain caused by groomers, pedophiles or statutory rapists — heck some of them think 12 years old isn’t too young to marry. See here. And here. And here.

I’ve known people dealing with depression. The Department of Health turning against anti-depressants is also a form of cruelty.

“ICE ordered staff to place ankle monitors on all people enrolled in the agency’s Alternatives to Detention program “whenever possible.” About 183,000 adult migrants are enrolled in ATD and had previously consented to some form of tracking or mandatory check-ins while they waited for their immigration cases to be resolved.” Unsurprisingly the Felon’s desire to cut costs doesn’t extend to the contractor providing the monitors.

The presidential pardon power is blanket but they’d love to cancel Biden’s pardons and punish the Felon’s enemies.

“In a stunning new lawsuit, a woman says she trusted her former church leaders with personal information, only to have them blab everything to the congregation when she didn’t agree with their advice.”

Deportation appeals fees have soared from $110 to $1,010.

Tennesee will no longer accept doctor’s notes as a grounds for excused school absences. And a Fow News jackass suggests we replace immigrant farm labor with children.

“U.S.-funded contraceptives worth nearly $10 million are being sent to France from Belgium to be incinerated, after Washington rejected offers from the United Nations and family planning organisations to buy or ship the supplies to poor nations, two sources told Reuters.” It costs an extra $160,000 to destroy them.

I’d say asking the man who shot Breonna Taylor receive one day in prison is cruel (so much for caring about victims and families). Three years isn’t much but it’s better.

Their obvious lack of interest in running FEMA to help people. Or spending money even on disaster victims who qualify.

The anticipated 75 percent increase in ACA premiums.

Demands to end cashless bail (by the Felon, who’s used it repeatedly).

I know the media seem reluctant/terrified to criticize Republicans right now but Dems should be doing their best to get the word out. Like these billboard ads.

Paul Campos at Lawyers, Guns and Money has often quoted Orwell’s line that where democracies offered a better life, Hitler offered struggle, war and death and his people loved it (I discuss the quote here). Over time, I’ve become skeptical: when has the Felon ever offered struggle and glorious battle? He’s told his voters prices will come down, wars will stop, he’ll give them better health coverage than the ACA, good-paying jobs will return, etc.

This time out, he hasn’t even made a pretense of making their lives better, except in the sense that white men will be exalted over everyone else. Will that matter when businesses flounder and everyone who’s not a rich Repub donor gets screwed over? I guess we’ll find out.

Leave a comment

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

The cramped American vision of JD Vance

As someone said a while back (I don’t have the link handy), J.D. Vance’s career has been built on carefully deciding who to sell out to and when. He has few limits on how badly he’ll sell out. Last year he said he wouldn’t have certified Biden’s win (admittedly the lie the election was stolen is now a baseline Republican belief).

After Tucker Carlson gave an admiring interview to a “Nazis were the good guys in WW II” Holocaust denier, Vance refused to back off from his ties with Carlson, while insisting Of Course he didn’t share the guest’s beliefs.

As a law student he expressed outrage over Republican anti-immigrant policies. As vice president, he happily lies about Haitian immigrants eating pets.

He hates universities because teaching facts and critical thinking is antithetical to Republican policy and makes it too easy for nonwhites and women to succeed in life (he phrases it somewhat differently)

(Side note: right-wing bullshit artist Bari Weiss recently claimed it’s impossible to get into college if you’re white or Asian, which is a complete lie. CBS, which just fired Colbert for daring to criticize the Felon, is now looking at giving Weiss a news position of some sort).

After the Wall Street Journal ran its story about the Felon’s letter to Jeffrey Epstein, Vance complained the White House never saw the letter … which completely contradicts his boss’s take (these are not coordinated, well-organized liars).

Then, at a recent speech to the far-right Claremont Institute, he expressed the view that Real Americans are the ones whose families have been here for generations: ““dentifying America just with agreeing with the principles, let’s say, of the Declaration of Independence — that’s a definition that is way over-inclusive and under-inclusive at the same time,:

Overinclusive because it would include “hundreds of millions, maybe billions of foreign citizens who agree” with the principles of the Declaration of Independence. That’s “the logic of America as a purely creedal nation.” Underinclusive because it would reject lots of extremists who presumably don’t believe in things like all men being created equal, “even though those very Americans had their ancestors fight in the Revolutionary War and the Civil War.”

This is some impressive strawman bullshit. Nobody claims that simply because someone in Bhutan or the United Kingdom (or wherever) agrees with the sentiments in the Declaration, they’re American citizens. The premise of America as a “creedal” nation is that if you want to be a citizen, your race, sex, national origin and religion don’t stand in the way of that. The old sentiments that if you play by the rules, you’re welcome here. Not as a tolerated immigrant, but as a fellow American. As noted at the link above about Vance’s speech, that used to be accepted even by a lot of conservatives (even if it wasn’t always how things played out in practice).

Vance’s alternative view is not new. As Richard Slotkin chronicles in Lost Battalions, immigrants, Jews and black Americans hoped fighting for their country in WW I would prove they were real Americans; instead the country veered into heavy anti-immigrant sentiment over the following decade. Former president Teddy Roosevelt said it flat out: to be a real American you have to be Anglo-Saxon. Everyone else is here on sufferance.

It’s a view (as Slotkin shows) impossible to separate from racism, anti-immigration and misogyny. As Kevin Levin says, “Notice that Vance makes no distinction between whether your ancestor fought for the United States or the Confederacy. He doesn’t care. What matters is that they were white and that they were here.

This would be the perfect time for the Confederate heritage community to trot out their stories about Black Confederates and their view of the Confederacy as a multi-racial/cultural experiment. Don’t hold your breadth, folks. Vance also doesn’t want you to remember the roughly 200,000 African Americans who fought for the United States during the Civil War. Just under 80 percent of free born African American men of military age in northern states volunteered to fight for the United States during the Civil War. In ignoring these men, Vance appears to believe that white men, who fought to destroy the United States and create an independent slaveholding republic, are more worthy of inclusion.”

I will also mention we know a number of women fought disguised as men; many women contributed to the war in various ways. Vance would rather we not think about that, either. He loves the pronatalist fiew that women should be breeders. Misogyny seems to be one of the few principles he truly believes in, even though that makes him a bad father. And it aligns well with the old view that white American women need to breed more babies for the Reich — er, the Republican Party, to the extent there’s a difference. More on that view here.

As I wrote five years back, women are not means to an end, whether that end be maintaining the white population or taking care of the kids for J.D. Vance. Women are ends in themselves; all people are. To the extent of their abilities they should be free to choose their own path (with obvious exclusions like becoming an assassin, a rapist, or a Klansman) and figure out what having a meaningful life means to them.

I suspect Vance, and the techbros who’ve supported him, don’t see it that way. That freedom is for the elites like them. Giving it to other people would imply others really are created equal … and the subtext of Vance’s views is that he doesn’t think they are.

Leave a comment

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

The Felon’s right for once: Jeffrey Epstein is dead

It was just this year that AG Pam Bondi announced the Big Reveal of all kinds of deep, dark secrets from the Epstein files. Only it never happened. And now the MAGA world wants to know why. Who is the Felon administration protecting? What are they hiding?

The Felon’s response is to insist it’s no big deal: “I don’t understand it — why they would be so interested. He’s dead for a long time. He was never a big factor in terms of life. I don’t understand what the interest or what the fascination is. I really don’t and the credible information has been given.” (the media would be screaming about senility if Biden had said anything that incomprehensible).

Unusually, his supporters are outraged at him and not buying it. As No More Mr. Nice Blog says, “Trump and his propagandists have sold the base on a narrative that’s at odds with the facts. The Epstein narrative is that there’s a global pedophile network that includes everyone MAGA hates, that’s much bigger than just the dozens of elitists on Epstein’s flight logs, and that’s central to the liberal/commie/globalist actions of the Deep State.” So far rather than give up the paranoia, they’re criticizing their glorious god-king.

Contrary to FOTUS, Epstein is a serious issue. As David Dayen says, he’s a textbook example of how the rich and the powerful live outside the law. For years he engaged in sex with underage girls (and of course, arranging the same for others) without repercussions; when he was busted and charged, Alex Acosta gave him a sweetheart deal, though one the Justice Department later decided was above board. Given how insanely generous it was, I’m not sure if this translates into “DOJ covers up for a fellow prosecutor” or “the outrageous thing is, DOJ thinks failing victims like this is acceptable.” It isn’t acceptable: as Fred Clark says, “It’s a perversion of justice — and such a perversion of justice is infuriating. “The dozens of teenage girls (that we know of) who were treated unjustly by Jeffrey Epstein were then denied legal justice by Acosta, Dershowitz, Starr, et. al. Their voices were silenced by the very legal system that was supposed to be acting on their behalf.”

For the record, the deal included state prostitution charges instead of federal, a 13 month sentence (he could have gotten life on federal charges), freedom to spend half the day at his office, no further investigation into Epstein’s alleged sex trafficking, and immunity for any co-conspirators. There was no attempt to notify the victims despite Florida law mandating victims hear when their case gets a plea bargain (county jail also didn’t allow work-release for sex offenders). The prosecutor on the case has denounced Acosta’s decisions and his account of events and so have others. Acosta’s defense is that he was really, really concerned about the hardship of forcing the girls to testify … but he didn’t give them the choice.

Did Acosta get a payment under the table? Or was it simply that he decided a long hard legal fight he might lose was not good for his career — er, an efficient use of resources, how did I get that wrong? Did some of Epstein’s co-conspirators have enough clout to shut things down? I’m sure it didn’t help that the victims were nobodies and that our justice system has a long history of ignoring rape victims.

Either way, it’s a horror story. One of the hardest things to do is to hold the rich and the powerful accountable for actions that would get a nobody jailed — to make wickedness unsafe in any station, in the words of Cato’s Letter. Epstein’s crimes and his hundreds of victims show why.

4 Comments

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

Assorted old links about gender

Old in that some of them date back to 2024. Still relevant though. For example, Charlie Kirk was a sniveling misogynist dick then, and he hasn’t changed.

A moderately optimistic article in how men cope with having partners who out-earn them.

New Mexico made childcare free. The results were awesome.

I don’t know if Olivia Rodrigo still does it, but last year she gave out emergency contraception for free at her concerts.

No, marriage is not a cheat code for life.

If police believed more women, more lives might be saved. In abuse and stalking cases, it seems it’s easier for the public to believe men.

Gambia last year took back a ban on female genital mutilation.

Good for Maine!

Meet the Black Manosphere.

“The report details one case, for example, where a woman’s water broke 20 weeks into her pregnancy—far too early for a fetus to survive. In order to “preserve the appearance of not doing an abortion,” the doctor performed a c-section.”

Why rape victims sometimes stay in touch with their attackers.

I’ve written often enough about the Southern Baptist Conference covering up for predators in pulpits. I’m not shocked it goes back to the roots of their right-wing turn in the 1980s, though the details are shocking enough. And no, it hasn’t improved any as the right-wing keeps trying to choke out any dissent.

There are predators in judicial robes, too.

Yet another pundit, Ben Zeisloft, who thinks women shouldn’t have the right not to get pregnant.

Parenting books of the 1980s — no, not awful.

“we’ve been raised to view suffering as an integral part of womanhood. In short, we have normalized suffering. We have incorporated the language”

Last year Ohio finally killed a role that protected spousal rapists.

Why is child marriage still a thing?

JD Vance thinks the only purpose of women beyond childbearing years is raising grandkids. Jill Filipovic: “The things Vance has prioritized in his own life include escaping a tough upbringing through going into the military and then pursuing higher education; working for (a lot of) pay in what sound like pretty demanding jobs; writing a memoir that catapulted him to national fame; running for political office; and eventually, once he was ready — which wasn’t until he was in his 30s — having children. He very much demeans women who make similar choices.”

A look back at Jane the pre-Roe underground abortion network.

“An analysis revealed that evaluations of male professors remain consistent over time, while women experience a quick decline from their initial peak in their 30s and hit rock bottom around age 47.”

“Success, according to all these men, is God at the top designing a tower below that is structured through male authority over women and children, walled in by fear of violent punishment, cemented through a forgiveness that benefits the powerful, beaten into shape by identities of ownership and a redefinition of freedom as slavery, and mass produced by copying its blueprint in every home, church and government.” — from an article looking at the patriarchalist response to the Shiny Happy People documentary.

Leave a comment

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

Undead Sexist Cliches: Feminists want to castrate men and make all humans androgynous

Wow, I don’t think I’ve ever blogged about this cliche even though it’s been a staple for years: women’s liberation will turn women into men and men into women. Feminists will transform humanity into a hideous beige species where one gender looks and does the same as the other and then nobody will be in charge and nobody will have sex and we’ll all die out.

Mona Charen, in her 2018 anti-feminist book Sex Matters, says, for instance, that men and women should “accept our natures” rather than changing society to “meet an androgynous ideal.” Tucker Carlson rants that “gender roles are the building blocks of society” and we mustn’t mess with them. Maureen Dowd complained that the college feminists she knew in 1969 were “imitating men” by “smoking, drinking, wanting to earn money and thinking they had the right to be sexual” (I will note here that by 1969, cigarettes hadn’t been seen as a male prerogative in more than 30 years). More recently Vice President JD Vance declared our society is trying to turn everyone, “whether male or female, into androgynous idiots who think the same, talk the same and act the same.”

For long before I was born people have obsessed over the idea that not only are men and women different, the differences are absolute and immutable. A woman can’t be a man, which is to say (depending on the speaker) she can’t be as tough, as smart, as good a leader, as competent at Skill X. A man doesn’t have the skills to clean house or take care of kids. A woman who crosses these boundaries is no longer a woman. A standard fictional plot is a woman with a successful career realizing it means nothing because she’s not a wife and mother! A man who stays home with the kids might as well wear a dress and a frilly apron because he’s no longer a Real Man.

In this worldview, changing gender relations is, as Charen puts it, a Sisyphean task. And for what? To go against our natures. Which assumes that we all have a fixed, limited nature, determined by our gender, and that it’s not natural, perhaps not possible, to exceed that.

Which is bullshit. The range of male and female ability is huge — there are women who can fight, women who can crunch numbers (I have several female mathematician friends), men who can be primary caregivers. Statements that a woman can never do X have been disproven by women doing X. And the overlap between male and female skillsets, abilities, intelligence and emotional drives is massive. Nothing on Earth resembles a human male as much as a human female, and vice versa.

I think the fear of androgyny stems from multiple reasons. Lots of people hate ambiguity and think anything that crosses the lines they’ve drawn for Where Things Go is destroying the fragile house of cards that constitutes civilization. The idea of people defining the good life for themselves — including their role in the world — horrifies many. For many men, manhood is defined as Stuff Women Don’t Do; if women get to do the same things, then the guys are doing women’s work, women’s hobbies, and their penis shrivels.

And, of course, the clear boundary lines we have in America today posit women as subordinate. When women question that nonsense, when they step outside their supposed fixed roles, it becomes obvious there’s no reason for men to have all the perks of patriarchy while women get stuck with cleaning up after them. And contrary to Vance, a large part of American society is cool with this.

It’s bullshit. A woman who does what some people think is guy stuff — be that smoking cigars, fighting in combat, working in neurosurgery or advanced calculus — does not become a man. A man who becomes primary caregiver, or who’s spouse outearns him, is not a woman. This should be obvious. Part of the reason we’re such a mess is that it isn’t.

2 Comments

Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches