Friday, March 04, 2016
Trumpeting One's Own Horn. Where Echidne Explains US Republican Politics to An Alien.
As I mentioned below, it is tough to write about the US politics with sarcasm and irony, when politicians themselves go on dick measuring competitions in public debates. After all, exaggeration is one of the tricks in the sarcasm-and-irony bag, and Donald Trump stole my thunder the other night when he assured the Murkan Peeple that he, indeed, is humongously endowed down there.
Imagine trying to explain what happened in that debate to an alien from outer space, one with great intelligence and understanding of interplanetary ethics differences, but who doesn't have much knowledge about our earthly cultures and customs.
It would go something like this. Echidne The Professor in the process of explaining:
"Here is one representation of a male human naked. What Trump talks about is the vertical tube between the legs of the statue, the bit that floats on top of the two spherical objects:
Mr. Trump wants to reassure his voters that his vertical tube is longer (and/or wider?) than some of his critics have argued*. This makes him well qualified as a world leader."
The alien will then ask what the functions of that tube are: "Is it used to think deep thoughts? Can it toss out radiation or shoot nuclear bombs? Can it smite the enemies?"
I answer: "No. It is used by male humans to release liquid waste matter from the body after the liquids have gone through the digestive process which extracts what the body needs from them. The tube is also used as an insemination device in two-sex reproduction. The male seed comes out of that tube and enters the female human's reproductive channel."
The alien will turn thoughtful, think for several minutes, sigh deeply (I assume oxygen-use by this alien). Then it will ask: " Is the amount of liquid waste matter proportional to the size of the tube? Is it a flammable, acid or otherwise noxious substance which can be sprayed on potential foes? Of military use in that sense?"
My answer: "As far as I know, the size of the tube has no correlation with the functions it has. Small tubes and large tubes work with the same efficacy. Possessors of large tubes do not produce more liquid waste matter or more semen."
The alien throws up what goes for its arms and shakes what can be assumed to be its head. It asks why the size of the tube would matter at all, given that it doesn't appear to be functionally related to the job of running a powerful country.
Here Echidne gives a longer speech which is deleted here. But the gist of it is that the length and/or girth comparisons of the tubes among male humans are linked to their competitive drive**, and that the tube, in its more stiffened form when ready for insemination, is a synecdoche for the whole man. The bigger the tube, the bigger the man.
But, the alien notes: "Isn't there a female human running for the leadership of your country? She lacks a tube. How will she compete?"
And there you have it.
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* I'm told by reputable sources that he uses a wheelbarrow to trundle it around. Were he to win the presidency, the wheelbarrow would have this insignia on it:
** An example from another large country and its gung-ho leader. Note the Moby Dick part:
How Do You Write Political Sarcasm When Reality Is Like This?
CNN, about Thursday's Republican presidential primary debate:
Donald Trump assured American voters Thursday night that despite what Marco Rubio had suggested, there was "no problem" with the size of his hands -- or anything else.If you are as innocent as I sometimes am, Trump is referring to a hypothetical correlation between the size of a man's hands and his penis.
"Look at those hands, are they small hands?" the front-runner for the GOP presidential nomination said, raising them for viewers to see. "And, he referred to my hands -- 'if they're small, something else must be small.' I guarantee you there's no problem. I guarantee."
Yes, he went there.
The Republican primary debate is now about the size of the candidates' penes (most likely the correct plural, not that any one candidate would have more than one of those).
What am I to write about this? That should there be another debate all the candidates should whip theirs out because the voters need to know?
Thursday, March 03, 2016
This Is Beautiful, Just Beautiful. On The Women Of The Supreme Court And Whole Woman’s Health v Hellerstedt
The US Supreme Court is currently hearing oral arguments about Whole Woman's Health v Hellerstedt, a Texas abortion case. Dahlia Lithwick at Slate has written an excellent piece about those arguments and, in particular, the role of the three female Justices in interrogating the arguments.
This is a case where gender matters, where life experiences matter, where the personal indeed IS political and also vice versa.*
The Texas abortion case is actually two cases:
The case involves a crucial constitutional challenge to two provisions in Texas’ HB 2, the state’s omnibus abortion bill from 2013. The first requires doctors to obtain admitting privileges from a hospital 30 miles from the clinic where they perform abortions; the second requires abortion clinics to be elaborately retrofitted to comply with building regulations that would make them “ambulatory surgical centers.” If these provisions go into full effect, Texas would see a 75 percent reduction in the number of clinics serving 5.4 million women of childbearing age.
Lithwick's Slate article revels in the questions of Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Kagan, questions which really are about the medical risks of abortion, as compared to other medical treatments. Do read the whole piece. To whet your appetite, notice how the following exchange nails the party-political nature of these types of cases:
Then it’s Kagan who moves in. Calmly, poker-faced, she asks Keller: “You said that as the law is now … Texas is allowed to set much, much higher medical standards, whether it has to do with the personnel or procedures or the facilities themselves, higher medical standards … for abortion facilities than for facilities that do any other kind of medical work, even much more risky medical work? Am I right?”
Keller agrees. Then Kagan asks: “And I guess I just want to know, why would Texas do that?” The room erupts. Keller says complications. Kagan says that liposuction actually has greater complications. Keller says Kermit Gosnell. Kagan says nothing that happened in the Gosnell case could have occurred under Texas’ pre-existing regulations. Sotomayor says colonoscopies have more complications. Finally, Keller says, “But legislatures react to topics that are of public concern.” And that is what matters. Not women’s health. Politics.
Bolds are mine.
The bolded concluding sentences may be obvious in this context. But I've met similar political motivations in my extensive reading of women's health studies, parenting studies and evolutionary psychology explorations into gender and sexuality. What gets studied, by whom, and what gets popularized, and by whom: all those aspects appear strongly motivated by traditional gender views and gender politics.
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* "Political is personal" follows if the Texas regulations remain in place. The resulting unavailability of abortions in many parts of the state will directly impinge on the lives of poor women with unintended pregnancies.
Wednesday, March 02, 2016
Meet Robert Morrow, the Newly Elected Chair of Travis County GOP
The newly elected chair of Travis County Republican Party in Texas tweets:
Robert Morrow has written a book about Hillary Clinton with Roger Stone. The book is called The Clintons' War on Women, but based on those tweets it's probably an investigation into the weird pornographic dreams of two weird Republican extremists.
I was absolutely certain that this was a hoax, but if it is, then wiser minds have been taken by it. It's real! Can we be so lucky? Take out the popcorn and the nectar, put your feet up and prepare to watch the spectacle: Trump has already had some political coattails!
What on earth is happening to the Republican Party?*
Maybe it is like the story about the man who somehow ended up riding a tiger, wondering how to get off its back before the tiger got hungry. After many fruitless attempts to solve that dilemma the man finally fell off and -- lo and behold! -- the tiger indeed was a bit peckish by then.
A translation: A party with the real platform of cutting the taxes of the wealthy and of loosening the regulations for large firms doesn't have a very vast voter base, because most people are not wealthy or the owners of large firms. Rather, most people are going to be fleeced by those age-old Republican goals. So how can such a party get enough votes to rule?
The answer: Saddle a tiger! That tiger is the rest of the Republican platform: The appeal to fundamentalist theocracy-lovers, racists, sexists, xenophobes, homophobes and war-lovers. Or, to put more politely, the support of traditional social hierarchies both at home and abroad.
And that tiger, when expertly ridden by the Republican establishment, indeed brought the necessary votes for several decades, even though the Republicans never quite fed the tiger with the bloody meat it desired.
It was fed sparsely, to keep the votes coming in the next election and the one after it (abortion is always almost illegal), while the true goals of the Republican Party were mostly achieved. Hence the increasing incomes of the wealthiest, the loss of jobs to outsourcing, the collapse of the housing markets and the financial markets, the loosening of environmental and occupational safety regulations and the minimal taxes on non-labor sources of income.
Well, the tiger has managed to scrape off its rider, and the tiger is hunnnngggry for something, anything, to eat.
The Tea Party phenomenon should have told us that Feeding The Tiger had begun, the support of Donald Trump tells us that we are past the First Course. What will the Main Course be? It could even be some of those policies which favor the rich and well-heeled!
What a wild ride. A fierce battle for the heart-and-soul of the Republican Party must be taking place, but I can't predict its likely outcome, though I seriously doubt that we will see any moderation in the social conservatism of that party.
One Robert Morrow doesn't make a new morning in America (couldn't resist). He is a blip in the screen and most likely gone soon. But the Trump phenomenon will make bigger waves in both domestic and international politics. And even if I might feel some Schadenfreude while watching the Republican establishment get their comeuppance, the resulting politicaq chaos isn't healthy for anyone.
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* And to the Texas Republican Party, in particular.
Monday, February 29, 2016
An Armed Society is a Polite Society
Like this:
A Prince William County police officer was shot and killed Saturday evening on her first day on the street when she responded to a call about a possible domestic matter, authorities said.
Two other officers were shot and wounded.
The slain officer was identified by police as Ashley Guindon
And like this:
The standoff began after David Wayne Campbell called a sheriff's office supervisor Friday morning to say he had done something bad and was suicidal. After hours of negotiations, police tried to flush Campbell out using tear gas. They say that's when he stepped outside and killed himself.
Reed was a neighbor of Campbell. Also killed in the standoff were Campbell's wife of six years, 49-year-old Lana J. Carlson, and her two teenage sons, Quinn and Tory Carlson. Authorities said Monday she adopted the boys from Kazakhstan before she met Campbell.
Campbell had an extensive criminal history, including felony charges.
And like this:
A gunman killed three people in a workplace shooting in Hesston, Kansas on Thursday afternoon, before being shot dead by an officer at the factory where the shooter worked.
The shooter also injured 14 people, 10 critically, until his rampage across several locations ended at Excel Industries, a manufacturer of turf-care products in Harvey County, 35 miles north of Wichita, Sheriff T Walton told reporters at news conferences on Thursday and Friday.
Walton said the shooter was an employee of Excel but declined to identify him or say how long he had worked for the company. The suspect was served with a protection of abuse order about 90 minutes before the attack, Walton said, adding that he believed the order was the trigger for the shooter to attack 90 minutes later.
And like this:
A 14-year-old boy pulled out a gun in a school cafeteria Monday and opened fire, hitting two students, and then ran from the school, threw the weapon down and was apprehended nearby with the help of a police dog, authorities said.
Friday, February 26, 2016
Bullying. The Republican Political Tactic Which Backfired.
It backfired in the form of one Donald Trump. He is a master bully, fun and vicious, getting all the others to root for him against the victims, making all the others too frightened to stand up to him.
The school bullies can be controlled by the teachers, but what happens when nobody will or can control a political bully?
The answer: Last night's Republican primary debate, that's what happens.
And get this: The other Republican candidates appear not have started their opposition research on Trump early enough to have bags of dirt ready to toss back at his face when he throws his dirt.
But how weak is even that new research? I found in five minutes of Googling that Trump is currently sued for financial fraud. Why isn't that on all the political pages of all US newspapers? It is pretty relevant for voters to know about.
But then nobody inside the establishment believed that Trump would go this far in the process, nobody ever thought that the Republican presidential candidate might, indeed, be the outsider, the multi-billionaire, the man who turned his bankruptcies into victories inside his own mind, the Donald (who doesn't know how the US Constitution works).
Does that remind you of Berlusconi and his Italy?
But back to the topic of this post: Bullying has been a Republican political tactic for a long time, so long, that the media simply accepts bullying as politics, but only when it comes from the political right.
To see how political bullying works, consider these examples*:
A Republican married family values politician who is caught visiting prostitutes for sex in diapers? A public apology suffices.
A Democratic politician whose spouse has been guilty of sexual philandering and possibly worse? Probably her fault (dieuppitybitchdie)
A Republican Supreme Court Justice who spends time with powerful people whose cases are likely to come up in the Supreme Court, and those powerful people belong to an ancient religious men-only organizations? Well, he perhaps wasn't a member himself.
A Democratic Supreme Court Justice who suggests that Latinas can be wise? Must keep ethnicity and gender considerations off the court! (dieracistbitchdie)
We are used to Republican bullying. We don't see it as anything but an acceptable political tactic, but only for the Republicans. When Democrats bully they get attacked for it.
Trump went one better than the system, successfully bullying the bully-boys themselves. That would be hilarious if we were watching a reality television show, not a Republican presidential primary debate.
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* Comments in the parentheses are my shorthand interpretations and do not necessarily reflect anyone else's reactions. It's nevertheless true that Democratic women get extra doses of bullying from the Republicans.
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
The Mars Hill: The Church of Misogyny and Homophobia Which Will Not Die.
Ten years ago I wrote* about Mark Driscoll, a Christian preacher with a new cool thing: To combine the subjugation of women and the hatred of gays and Lesbians with tattoos and popular music and stuff while going otherwise all Christian. I then revisited the Mars Hill church two years ago, and wrote:
I sometimes suspect (fairly often, actually) that one big draw of extremist literal interpretations of Islam, Christianity and Judaism is the very literal permissions the holy books give to hate on women and to control women and to state that gods want women subjugated. That is, I think some people, especially misogynists, are drawn to those interpretations because they sanctify their unpleasant bundles of feelings about women and sex and give permission to hate on women. All this could work in the reverse direction, naturally, so that someone who finds the literal God or Allah then just realizes that now he or she must hate on women and build them tiny little corrals in which they can breed for the purposes of one sire. The reverse direction seems more likely to me.Well, time moves on and with it Driscoll's fortunes. His old megachurch is now history, but he is starting again in Arizona:
That reminds me of the old Finnish saw: What would kill an evil one? God doesn't want him/her** and the Devil is in no hurry.But as Driscoll’s star rose, he was dogged by allegations from church members and pastors as well as from outsiders—of bullying and spiritual abuse, misogyny and homophobia, plagiarism, and misuse of church funds, just to name a few. In 2014, after being asked to submit to a reconciliation plan proposed by the church board he organized, Driscoll quit.Now, barely a year later and 1,000 miles away, Driscoll is back.
Mmm. So I went there. It seems quite likely to me that the devil would appear in preacher's garb. If you believe in gods and devils and such. And the Devil would have good laugh after reading about yet another megachurch of that type.
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* My direct quotes indeed are too long. I shall repent and try to do better from now on.
** Finnish doesn't distinguish gender in the third person singular, so I have to add that clunky bit in my translation.
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
I Wanna Punch You In The Face. The Semiotics of Donald Trump.
Donald Trump is a Republican candidate for the presidency of the most powerful country on earth. And he wants to punch protesters in the face:
Donald Trump said he wanted to punch a protester “in the face” after the man disrupted a campaign rally in Las Vegas on Monday night.
“Here’s a guy, throwing punches, nasty as hell, screaming at everything else, when we’re talking,” Trump told the crowd, although CNN reported the man did not appear to be fighting with security officers.
“The guards are very gentle with him. He’s walking out, like, big high-fives, smiling, laughing,” Trump continued, before saying to loud cheers: “I’d like to punch him in the face, I tell ya.”
The incident was the latest in a string of controversial comments by Trump regarding protesters at his rallies. In November, after a Black Lives Matter protester was beaten and choked after disrupting a rally, Trump appeared to condone the rough treatment.
“Maybe he should have been roughed up, because it was absolutely disgusting what he was doing,” he said on Fox News at the time.
He also wants to meet fire with fire when it comes to ISIS/Daesh:
“It brings up something,” Trump said. “Two debates ago, they hit Ted Cruz with a question. … They hit him with a question on waterboarding. They said: ‘What do you think of waterboarding? Is it good?’ And he got all messed up. He couldn’t answer the question. He was a mess, because he didn’t want to say waterboarding was good.
“Now, waterboarding — nothing is pretty –but they are chopping off heads, they are drowning people in steel cages … and they are saying to themselves, ‘Can you believe how weak, how weak and pathetic the Americans are?'” Trump said in a reference to the Islamic State, which has released videos showing the group’s beheading and drowning of prisoners.
The Trump phenomenon is going to be fascinating for some future historians to study, assuming that there will be a future. A textbook case of the way people vote with their emotions*, and another textbook case of the way celebrities are manufactured and created through the media.
Many Americans believe that they know Donald Trump, because of "The Apprentice," his reality television show. Many Americans are accustomed to his rude comments, arrogance and lack of manners, because of that same reality television show. And many in the media simply give him the space to be an arrogant a***ole, "because that's just how Trump is."
Can you imagine what would happen if, say, Hillary Clinton had expressed the desire to punch someone in the face? Indeed, can you think of any other presidential contestant who would be taken seriously after saying something like that?
Here is a man who recycles his wives (no, it doesn't make him an environmentalist), who brags how good he is at bankrupting firms, and who is currently accused of financial fraud. It is not that these aspects of his life aren't covered at all; it is just that they would be covered at a very different intensity if the candidate was anyone else but Trump.
What drives all that? Probably Trump's bombastic demeanor. He's good for the media, produces lots of clicks and some still hope that he might fade away as a serious contender or perhaps just grow tired of the game.
And he IS good television! Almost like a reality show... He seems to be "a man of the people," despite being nothing of the sort, he seems to be "a plain speaker," uttering all those things that the ordinary guy in the street (well, the kind which votes for Republicans) emotionally feels (nuke them to the stone age, make America great again) and thinks (that politicking can't be very hard, just kick all those furriners in the butt and close the borders).**
Then the blustering! Once again, imagine another politician, say, Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders acting like Trump acts. We would hear a lot about the female hormones if it was Clinton***, a lot about communism and grumpy grandpa if it was Sanders. But in the case of Trump? Well, he is just Trump.
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* For his actual policies, check this site.
** And, to be fair to Trump, some of his comments have truth in them. Globalization has not been good for the American working class, as opposed to the top one percent of the wealthy. It has killed many previously well-paying industries and jobs and in return offered lots of cheap crap from China. But Trump is on the very top of the one percent, not a man of the people, and what he proposes to do about all this sounds impractical and/or vague.
*** What would the reversal for female hysteria be? Male testiness? There's no good term for how Trump behaves, but it usually amounts to that fist-waving and belligerence and arrogance.
Monday, February 22, 2016
On John Kasich, Kitchens And Frying Pans
Did I ever write here that John Kasich stood out among the Republican Beauty Contest (aka presidential primaries) participants by actually showing some knowledge in a few areas? The kind of knowledge that presidential candidates are supposed to have. Where Iran might be found on the map and other super-important high-level foreign policy knowledge.
That might have made him more dangerous in some alternative reality where people don't vote with their gonads, but it's a real negative for Kasich in our reality. On the other hand, he scores lots of points with the religious extremists of his party by standing firm for forced-birth everywhere.
That is not new, of course. In 2014 governor Kasich signed a bill which prohibits rape counselors from telling rape victims in Ohio that abortion is available for them. And now he has signed a bill which defunds Planned Parenthood in Ohio:
Ohio Gov. John Kasich signed a bill Sunday prohibiting the state from contracting for health services with any organization that performs or promotes abortions, blocking government funds to Planned Parenthood.
Planned Parenthood isn't explicitly named in the legislation, but the law will prevent more than $1 million in funding from the state health department from going to the nonprofit to fund programs such as HIV testing, health screenings and prevention of violence against women.
That's our John.
And this, too, is our John:
The guy who signed a bill defunding Planned Parenthood this weekend was full of himself today.
Speaking at a town hall in Fairfax, VA about his first election at age 26, Kasich said, "We just got an army of people, and many women who left their kitchens to go out and go door to door and to put yard signs up for me all over."
That was in 1978, of course. The Kasich campaign has responded (link via Wonkette) to those who see Kasich hopping about with one well-shod foot in his mouth by pointing out that in those days the world was different:
So. It was the stay-at-home mothers or wives Kasich talks about in that quote, and, indeed, the labor market participation rate for women aged 25-54 was lower in 1978, somewhere between 55% (1975) and 64% (1980), probably closer to the latter figure, while the 2014 figure for the same age group of women is 73.9%.
Draw your own conclusions from that. I concluded that Kasich's 1978 campaign didn't seem to appeal to the majority of women who were then already in the labor market. And then I point out that Kasich said "women," not "stay-at-home-mothers" or "stay-at-home-wives". And he said "their kitchens." Mr. Kasich's foot remains sternly lodged behind his snappers.
Because he is as tone-deaf as almost all Republican politicians.
That took care of the kitchens-part in the title of this post. What about the frying pans? Well, this post is a gentle tap from an imaginary frying pan, and Kasich just jumped out of his political frying pan into the fire.
Friday, February 19, 2016
How A Star Is Born. A Study On Gender in How Biology Undergrads Rate Their Classmates' Knowledge
You can read the whole study here*. It's an investigation into one type of possible gender discrimination: Do our colleagues (either at work or at school) take gender into account when evaluating our performance?
The answer, from this study, is intriguing. The Washington Post summarizes it like this:
Anthropologist Dan Grunspan was studying the habits of undergraduates when he noticed a persistent trend: Male students assumed their male classmates knew more about course material than female students — even if the young women earned better grades.
“The pattern just screamed at me,” he said.
So, Grunspan and his colleagues at the University of Washington and elsewhere decided to quantify the degree of this gender bias in the classroom.
After surveying roughly 1,700 students across three biology courses, they found young men consistently gave each other more credit than they awarded to their just-as-savvy female classmates.
Men over-ranked their peers by three-quarters of a GPA point, according to the study, published this month in the journal PLOS ONE. In other words, if Johnny and Susie both had A's, they’d receive equal applause from female students — but Susie would register as a B student in the eyes of her male peers, and Johnny would look like a rock star.
The researchers used data from three different classes of a fairly introductory biology course with large numbers of students. In each class, students were asked to pick those of their fellow students (from class rosters) who seemed to show the greatest command of the material that was being taught. These picks were repeated several times during each lecture series, and constitute the data the rest of the study analyzes.
As one might expect, not every student in those large classes got picked equally often as showing great command of the material. Certain individuals got many more votes. The researchers call them "the celebrities."
How does one become such a celebrity?
The objective basis in this context is actually having an extraordinary grasp of the material being taught. But that is insufficient (and sometimes not even necessary) on its own.
Others also need to learn about that extraordinary grasp, either by observing the class participation of those celebrities, by observing them in the attached lab sessions or by learning about that grasp through friendships and other informal channels. Perhaps some students tell others that they scored As in their exams? Perhaps some students are much more vocal during the classes?
The crucial question here is how an impression of someone's excellence is created. Is it based on just objective facts or is it also affected by various cultural prejudices? Do students tell each other the grades they are earning? Is the impression of excellence based solely on class participation, or does it matter who your friends are? Does it matter if the potential celebrity is female or male? Does it matter if the student doing the evaluating is female or male?
The study uses two fairly objective measures of someone's actual competence. They are the student's exam grades and an evaluation of the students' class participation by the professors who taught the three courses.** Note that the latter variable also measures one of the likely channels through which other students form their opinions. Someone expressing smart opinions in the class will be assumed to have good command of the material, even if that person's examination grades are private information.
After controlling for those variables, the study finds a residual gender effect:
Results reveal that males are more likely than females to be named by peers as being knowledgeable about the course content. This effect increases as the term progresses, and persists even after controlling for class performance and outspokenness. The bias in nominations is specifically due to males over-nominating their male peers relative to their performance. The over-nomination of male peers is commensurate with an overestimation of male grades by 0.57 points on a 4 point grade scale, indicating a strong male bias among males when assessing their classmates. Females, in contrast, nominated equitably based on student performance rather than gender, suggesting they lacked gender biases in filling out these surveys. These trends persist across eleven surveys taken in three different iterations of the same Biology course. In every class, the most renowned students are always male. This favoring of males by peers could influence student self-confidence, and thus persistence in this STEM discipline.
In ordinary language, guys give other guys extra celebrity points for just guyness. Gals, on the other hand, don't seem to be*** affected by the gender of the person they are evaluating.
How do we explain this?
The researchers explain their findings as implicit biases:
The finding that a gender bias impacts the perception of millennial students may at first seem surprising, but is supported by work on implicit biases. Implicit biases are unconscious associations that people hold related to certain groups. Across many cultures, STEM is associated with males and not females [26]. Interestingly, male STEM majors in the US hold the strongest associations between maleness and science, while female STEM majors show some of the weakest implicit biases between gender and science [27]. These differences in the gender-STEM stereotypes held may explain why male undergraduate STEM majors nominate more males, but females do not demonstrate this bias. It also helps explain why male faculty demonstrate biases in hiring and mentoring, but many female STEM faculty do not [28].
Bolds are mine.
That explanation makes sense on one level, but it introduces a deeper question: Why would young men be more likely to hold these implicit biases than young women? After all, most male and female students in US universities share roughly the same cultural background and should have the same average implicit biases.****
I pondered this question for some time. All I came up were these two theorettes (my name for baby theories), assuming that the results of the study hold after scrutiny by those more methodologically aware:
First, all this may have something to do with gender differences in circles of friendship. Suppose that the way the "celebrities" are determined is in a wider circle of friends. Suppose, moreover, that men tend to have mostly male friends and women both male and female friends. If both of those suppositions were true, then the results of this study could follow, because more men than women simply wouldn't know high-performing women in the classes.
Second, it may have the same roots as women's inaudibility in meetings or women's invisibility as potential experts. I have read about these phenomena and even experienced them myself.
The usual scenario goes like this: A woman says something in a meeting at work. Her comment drops like a stone into still water. Then, later in the same meeting, a man makes the same comment and it is eagerly discussed or debated.
This is an actual pattern, but I don't know if it would apply in situations where women are not a small minority of those present. Neither do I know how that odd invisibility/inaudibility is theoretically accounted for.
I'd love to see this study replicated and also carried out in other academic disciplines. What the researchers write about may not be a STEM-problem but a more general one.
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* I have read the study pretty carefully, but should note that the method it uses is not one I am capable of criticizing in any detail. So caveat emptor.
** Two of the courses had only male professors, the third had one female professor and two male professors. That most of the "experts" in these courses were men could have had a subconscious male-favoring effect on the student evaluations. But that effect should have worked equally for both male and female students.
The class participation measure is about outspokenness, not about outspokenness-combined-with-smartness. This could matter, though I can't figure out how. Also, the professors' evaluations of students' class participation levels could themselves be biased. For these reasons the actual grades are probably a better measure of excellence.
*** The exception is the last survey in the course which had three professors, one of them female. Its results show a small and non-significant bias for women to nominate other women. But the larger bias of men towards nominating men still persists. As the researchers note, the solution to potential bias probably isn't to introduce opposite bias, however.
**** Indeed, most other theories I can think of slam into that same hurdle. Take statistical discrimination. It's a theory which applies to, say, evaluating job applicants when knowledge of their true potential is only partially known. The evaluators may then use more general evidence (either true evidence or just prejudice) about the group the applicant belongs to. If that group, on average, does better than other groups in the job under consideration, the particular applicant may be given extra points for that group membership. If that group does worse, on average, then the particular applicant will have points deducted from his or her final assessment.
Statistical discrimination hurts top performers who belong to a group which has lower average scores, because it pulls down their overall assessment. As the average female grades in the courses the current study analyzed are slightly lower than the average male grades, a statistical discriminator might give top performing men extra points. But that assumes the students knew the overall average grades in the courses. I doubt that was the case, and even if those grades were known, the theory doesn't explain why men would adjust their assessment of men's performance upwards but women would not.
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Last Saturday's Republican Debate. A Review.
I finally watched a Republican primary debate! The one held last Saturday, though I watched it from videos and read it from transcripts after the date.
It's some time since I've visited Wingnuttia and the necessary adjustment to cultural differences* took some time. Until I was properly adjusted I rolled on the floor, laughing.
After all, Trump IS funny. He is like that mythological crazy great-uncle in the attic who is let out only for Thanksgiving. Or like the child who mostly speaks gibberish but once in a while states an embarrassing fact in a loud, clear voice.
But let's scroll the primary debate video to the start. Into the room and onto the stage walk six men, all in identical suits, four wearing red ties and two wearing blue ties.
I cannot discuss wardrobe mishaps, sigh, because there are no female candidates and because men in politics wear a uniform. I wish someone had affected a yellow tie so journalists could have written about the advisability of doing that and what it really means about the inner sluttiness of the man.
All the candidates in the race received applause from the audience in the room. How was that audience picked? This matters, because they booed later. A lot, and mostly whenever Trump blurted out one of those "the emperor has no clothes" statement, such as the fact that 911 happened on Jeb Bush's brother's patch. If the audience was picked randomly among fervent Republicans, the booing of facts makes me more worried than I already am.
Anyway, Ben Carson got the most muted applause, and Donald Trump the next most muted. I think the establishment candidates got louder cheers, but it could be that in a small audience a few loud voices nominate.
Supreme Irony: On The Empty Seat of Justice Scalia.
The US Supreme Court has an empty seat after the death of Justice Scalia. Who is going to sit there? How can that person be found?
The US Constitution tells us:
The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States; he may require the Opinion, in writing, of the principal Officer in each of the executive Departments, upon any Subject relating to the Duties of their respective Offices, and he shall have Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offences against the United States, except in Cases of Impeachment.
He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur; and he shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States, whose Appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by Law: but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.
The President shall have Power to fill up all Vacancies that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session.
Bolds are mine. Get it? The president shall nominate and then the Senate will vote on that nomination.
But the Republicans have a different take on what should happen.
It's fun and instructive to see what the six remaining Republican presidential candidates had to say about the nomination of Scalia's successor in the last primary debate. Here are their opinions on whether president Obama should nominate someone for the bench!
Trump:
I think he’s [Obama] going to do it whether or I’m O.K. with it or not. I think it’s up to Mitch McConnell and everybody else to stop it. It’s called delay, delay, delay.
Kasich:
Here’s my concern about this. The country is so divided right now, and now we’re going to see another partisan fight take place. I really wish the president would think about not nominating somebody.
Carson:
Well, the current Constitution actually doesn’t address that particular situation,..
Rubio:
No. 2, I do not believe the president should appoint someone. And it’s not unprecedented. In fact, it has been over 80 years since a lame duck president has appointed a Supreme Court justice.
Bush:
Of course, the president, by the way, has every right to nominate Supreme Court justices. I’m an Article II guy in the Constitution. We’re running for the president of the United States. We want a strong executive for sure. But in return for that, there should be a consensus orientation on that nomination, and there’s no doubt in my mind that Barack Obama will not have a consensus pick when he submits that person to the Senate.
Cruz:
Well, we have 80 years of precedent of not confirming Supreme Court justices in an election year. And let me say, Justice Scalia...
Get it? It would be in poor taste and probably against legal precedent for Obama to nominate anyone. But should he make that horrible mistake, at least the Republicans can simply delay, delay and delay. Indeed, it is their honorable duty to delay! It doesn't matter that no single person has actually been named. ANY candidate by a Democratic president is simply unacceptable. Beforehand.
As an aside, I had such fun watching that debate! I watched it several times, in fact, because I needed the laughs (more about that in a later post). But isn't it wonderful to learn that there's all sorts of reasons why this particular president shouldn't follow the rules of the Constitution?
It is not just the Republican presidential candidates who are of the opinion that it is acceptable to block the consideration of any nominee president Obama might send to the Senate for confirmation:
Senate Republicans on Monday began to close ranks behind a vow by Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, to block consideration of any nominee to replace Justice Antonin Scalia, who died over the weekend, for the remainder of President Obama’s term.
Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio, who faces re-election this year, said in a statement that the Senate should follow what he called “common practice” to stop acting on lifetime appointments during the last year of a presidential term. Senator Patrick J. Toomey, Republican of Pennsylvania, agreed, leaving nearly every vulnerable Republican incumbent backing Mr. McConnell’s pledge.
There ya go! This is such a fascinating example of the yearned-for compromises in Washington, D.C., of getting things done in politics, of the willingness of Republicans to work with president Obama, and other related crap.
I cannot get over McConnell's statement: Only Mr. or Ms. Nobody would be an acceptable candidate for the Republicans in the Senate. Perversely, it is as if McConnell is doing the nomination here.
It's the Game of Thrones.
Thursday, February 11, 2016
The Zika Virus and Microcephaly: A Republican Opportunity To Work Against Abortions!
Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.) and Chris Smith (R-N.J.) are two politicians who act like religious patriarchs. They see their special flocks as consisting of all those wayward women who just don't make the right choices about abortion:
Pregnant women in South and Latin America who contract Zika, a rapidly spreading mosquito-borne virus linked to severe birth defects and deformities in babies, should not have access to abortion, Republican House leaders said Wednesday.
"This push for more abortion access is heartbreaking, especially since there are different degrees of microcephaly," Rep. Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, said at a hearing about the virus.
....
House Republicans running the Zika virus hearing avoided the issue of contraception and family planning access for women in endemic countries and instead urged women to welcome babies born with microcephaly. Duncan acknowledged that "many women do not have the luxury of simply choosing to wait" to get pregnant, but added that abortion access is not the answer, because many babies born with microcephaly "go on to lead very normal lives."
"Each child is made in the image of God and has inherent worth," he said.
Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) said the U.S. needs to work harder to "ensure that any child born with with disabilities from this or any other infection is welcomed, loved and gets the care that he or she needs." To back up his point, he highlighted the headline of a BBC article published earlier this month: "Microcephaly: 'It's not the end of the world.'"
Talk is cheap, and at rock-bottom prices when it is about something neither of these gentlemen will ever have to contemplate facing. They cannot get pregnant, and neither are they poor women probably living in a country where getting the care a child with severe microcephaly needs is very unlikely.
That lack of care is not the case with the woman who wrote the BBC article Chris Smith (R-Forced-Birth) mentions.
There are varying extremes of the condition - Laney is towards the end where her brain has a lot more problems, but doesn't make her value any less.
She doesn't walk or talk, and she can't feed herself.
She has a g-button or gastrostomy button directed into her stomach. She is nourished through a feeding machine or a pump we use by hand and she gets all her medications that way too.
Laney's mother has found spiritual rewards and lessons in the care of her very-much-loved daughter, and that is wonderful. But Rep. Smith appears to use the case as a general ethics lesson, equally applicable to all women, wherever they live and whatever resources they might be able to harness.
This smacks a lot of the stories the Catholic Church uses to praise women who it deems sufficiently saintly, women who refuse a life-saving abortion for the sake of the fetus and then die, leaving their other children motherless and possibly taking the fetus with them to the land of death. But at least they were saintly.
I always found those stories frightening, because they seemed to tell me what that church expected of "good women." Connect those images with the ban on women in any position of power in the Catholic Church, and it's hard to avoid thinking that all this is based on an ulterior motive not that far removed from misogyny. Or at least the complete control of women's fertility.
I smell something similar in the statements of those two Republican gentlemen. It may well be that many babies with microcephaly go on to lead fairly normal lives, but many will not. And the people whose own lives will drastically change with the birth of a child with microcephaly are the women who give birth to them, not Mr. Duncan or Mr. Smith.
Primary Screams
Know what is very funny? The personality changes which happen in some of the most avid supporters during the US Democratic presidential primaries.
I recall the same phenomenon from 2008:
Suddenly usually thoughtful people who enjoy debating stuff become intolerant of anyone who is not of the body. Suddenly, only evidence tilting one way is packed into the debating bags. Suddenly, previously politically agnostic individuals develop that red-hot religious fervor, that intolerance to anyone thinking differently or even suggesting nuances or complications in the tale of the Hero's Ascension. Disagreement becomes impossible, because it is interpreted as proof that one is not of the body, as proof that one is (gasp!) the enemy.
So does any of that matter? After all, it's just people advocating for their chosen candidate.
I believe it does, because non-stop advocacy introduces bias into the conversations and because advocacy makes planning for the general elections and the possible responses from the Republicans that much harder.
For an advocate the goal is that missionary one: to convert others. For an "analyst"* the goal is to understand both the positives and negatives of the candidates and to try to predict what might happen in the general elections. The latter includes being prepared for the potential Republican attacks. Advocacy hinders that preparation.
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*An "analyst" here is not some objective entity, of course, but someone who would prefer a Democratic victory in November. I couldn't come up with a better term.
Tuesday, February 09, 2016
The New Koch Plan
The New Koch Plan! It's a re-branded, better-tasting version of the Old Koch Plan which included the following goals:
To shrink the government to its three pro-billionaire functions:
a) to protect the billionaires against foreign invaders (allow the military to exist),
b) to protect the billionaires against domestic robbers and thieves (allow the police to exist)
and
c) to protect the billionaires against legal attempts to get at their money (allow the courts to exist).
To kill all other government functions
a) because they must be financed by taxes and the Kochs do not want to pay those, and/or
b) because they hamper the wild and lawless ("free") pursuit of ever greater profits (so kill environmental protection, health inspections, worker safety rules and so on), and/or
c) because they are unnecessary for billionaires. Billionaires don't need mass public transportation, public schools, old age pensions, unemployment benefits or government subsidized health care, what with being billionaires.
The problem with that old plan is its poor "optics." It's hard to get non-billionaires to support these billionaire-class identity politics. So the New Koch Plan has added extra nutrients: Empathy! Fighting for a fairer criminal sentencing system! Keeping poor teenagers from gangs! Offering translation services and help to Latinos who wish to pull themselves up by their bootlaces by starting enterprises!
Jane Mayer writes about the new flavors of Koch. I recommend that you read the whole piece. Here's a taste to get you interested:
The Kochs received equally positive press that fall, when, in the wake of the killing of Michael Brown, in Ferguson, Missouri, they began speaking publicly about the need for criminal-justice reform. In February, 2015, when Koch Industries joined a bipartisan umbrella group for sentencing reform, the Coalition for Public Safety, the news made the Times. The Kochs were coming together with such avowedly liberal groups as the American Civil Liberties Union and the Center for American Progress, a progressive think tank. Among the most surprising of the Kochs’ new allies was Van Jones, a former senior fellow at the think tank, and the head of a criminal-justice-reform group called #cut50. Only months earlier, he had criticized the United Negro College Fund for accepting Koch money, arguing that “few people still alive have done more to promote policies that hurt African-Americans than the Koch brothers.”
....
It is true that, at least as far back as 1980, when Charles Koch enlisted David, then a company executive, to run for Vice-President of the United States on the Libertarian Party ticket, the brothers have publicly supported radical reform of America’s criminal-justice system. The platform of the Libertarian Party in 1980 called for an end to all prosecutions of tax evaders and the abolition of a number of federal agencies whose regulations Koch Industries and other businesses have chafed at, including the E.P.A., the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, and the Federal Election Commission, whose campaign-spending limits the brothers opposed. But the Kochs, as hard-line libertarians, have had goals quite different from those of many of their liberal allies. Their distaste for the American criminal-justice system is bound up in distrust of government and a preference for private enterprise. Until recently, the criminal-justice victims the Kochs focussed on were businessmen who had run afoul of the modern regulatory state—that is, people like them.
The bolds are mine.
Get it? The new plan builds bridges all the way across the political spectrum, finds partners in the most unexpected places (after funding their praiseworthy activities with what for billionaires would be pocket money), and creates new shared goals so that the Koch goals (get rid of punishments for rich white-collar criminals) seem to coincide with certain progressive goals (get rid of racism in the sentencing system and the police).
I love it! I especially love the idea that the Koch Plan needs to be "re-branded," the corporate thinking behind all this ruthlessness, such as this:
It's like putting a picture of a happy cow on the wrapper of a block of margarine when people suddenly want to buy more organic products.Fink was brutally honest about how unpopular the views of his wealthy audience were. “When we focus on decreasing government spending,” he said, and on “over-criminalization and decreasing taxes, it doesn’t do it, O.K.? . . . They’re not responding, and don’t like it.”But he pointed out that if anyone in America knew how to sell something it should be the successful business leaders in the Koch network. “We get business,” he told the audience. “What do we do? We want to find out what the customer wants, right? Not what we want them to buy!”
The Koch Plan is gaining power because of the Citizens United decision of the US Supreme Court, the first step towards one-dollar-one-vote in this country. If you are interested in learning more about dark money in the US politics, get Mayer's book. An excerpt can be found here. Do read it to the very end.
Wednesday, February 03, 2016
Hi, Baby-Making Factories!
1. The USAToday's Summary of New CDC Recommendations
The Big Brother has arrived! According to the USAToday:
Women of childbearing age should avoid alcohol unless they're using contraception, federal health officials said Tuesday, in a move to reduce the number of babies born with fetal alcohol syndrome.
“Alcohol can permanently harm a developing baby before a woman knows she is pregnant,” said Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “About half of all pregnancies in the United States are unplanned, and even if planned, most women won’t know they are pregnant for the first month or so, when they might still be drinking.
"The risk is real. Why take the chance?” Schuchat asked.
The CDC estimates 3.3 million women between ages 15 to 44 are at risk of exposing a developing fetus to alcohol because they drink, are sexually active and not using birth control. Even when women are actively trying to get pregnant, three in four continue drinking after they stop using birth control, according to the CDC report.
There is no known safe level of alcohol at any stage of pregnancy, according to the CDC. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends women abstain completely from alcohol while pregnant.
The bolds are mine. Read the first bolded sentence and then the second bolded sentence. Notice any difference? The hook in the article tells us that all women not using contraception who belong to a usually fertile age group should stop drinking, for the sake of future babies (whether planned or completely imaginary, and even if they will be born to someone else). Even Lesbians, hermits, nuns, other celibate individuals and infertile people should abstain from alcohol! Any woman might accidentally fall upon a penis, I guess.
Now imagine the Pre-Pregnancy Police coming for you if you try to get a drink and don't have enough wrinkles to prove your new legal drinking age! (1) Bartenders and other volunteers might refuse to serve you that glass of wine or at least first demand to know if you are on the pill, and then decide if you are allowed to drink.
The Pre-Pregnancy Police doesn't yet exist. But the Pregnancy Police, in the form of not only actual police but also concerned volunteers is a real thing and a real pest for pregnant women. I guess one advantage of this new recommendation is that now those helpful strangers can pester all younger women equally and not just the ones who are visible pregnant.
After writing that rant about the USAToday summary I read what the CDC actually says:
An estimated 3.3 million women between the ages of 15 and 44 years are at risk of exposing their developing baby to alcohol because they are drinking, sexually active, and not using birth control to prevent pregnancy, according to the latest CDC Vital Signs report released today. The report also found that 3 in 4 women who want to get pregnant as soon as possible do not stop drinking alcohol when they stop using birth control.
Alcohol use during pregnancy, even within the first few weeks and before a woman knows she is pregnant, can cause lasting physical, behavioral, and intellectual disabilities that can last for a child’s lifetime. These disabilities are known as fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs). There is no known safe amount of alcohol – even beer or wine – that is safe for a woman to drink at any stage of pregnancy.
Bolds are mine.
That is not the same as the first sentence in the USAToday story. I wish newspapers didn't promote shitty journalism.
2. The CDC Recommendations. On Statistics And Medical Studies.
But even more I wish that the people at CDC had a better understanding of statistics, more transparency about what medical research actually shows and doesn't show. I also wish that they had hired someone who would have edited the writing in this sentence:
An estimated 3.3 million women between the ages of 15 and 44 years are at risk of exposing their developing baby to alcohol because they are drinking, sexually active, and not using birth control to prevent pregnancy.
Those 3.3 million women don't all have "a developing baby". They are potentially at risk for becoming pregnant. Those two are very different things, and what is developing during any resulting pregnancy is not called a baby until it is born.
For the statistical problems, consider this quote that was used in the USAToday article as well as in the original CDC report:
About half of all pregnancies in the United States are unplanned, and even if planned, most women won’t know they are pregnant for the first month or so, when they might still be drinking.
That half of all pregnancies in the United States are unplanned does NOT mean that every woman has a 50% chance of having an unintended pregnancy! Yet all public health announcements aimed at fertile women seem to assume that the 50% frequency difference applies to every single fertile woman, even those who don't have heterosexual intercourse.
The actual situation is quite different, as this Guttmacher Institute graph shows:
I quote from the graph: The two thirds of US women at risk of unintended pregnancy who practice contraception consistently and correctly account for only 5% of unintended pregnancies.
I suspect that the CDC researchers who wrote the recommendation did take that Guttmacher information into account, because the recommendation doesn't extend to women who use reliable contraception. But the USAToday made a hash of it all and the CDC still parrots the statement without giving that sentence I bolded.
Even the more moderate statement from the CDC is not moderate when it comes to certain hidden assumptions about what various groups of women can be asked to sacrifice and for what types of reasons. To see why that is the case, let's talk about the medical evidence on fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS).
Tuesday, February 02, 2016
The Iowa Primaries. Lessons on Gender Politics and Gender in Politics.
Did you know that 2016 is the first year when a woman has won the Iowa caucus?
I learned in 2008 how extremely unpleasant it is to write about women in politics during the presidential campaigns when there's only one woman running and all the other candidates are men. Almost everything I said was interpreted to apply to that one woman (and her policies), Hillary Clinton, and not to women in general. And the very same thing is likely to happen this time, too.
Those reactions are somewhat understandable, for a bizarre reason: There are few women in US politics (80% of the US Congress is male, 44 of the 50 state governors are men). But those few women get the limelight much more often than their sparse numbers would suggest. Hillary Clinton, in particular, has lived in the limelight for a quarter century. She is everywhere! She hogs the limelight! She leaves no air for any other female politician!*
She belongs to the political elite. She is married to the political elite. Her name recognition is global. She has already spent eight years in the White House, albeit as the spouse of a president, a role which has always been completely open to women. She has had a political career of her own.
The media and the Republicans have analyzed every move she makes, we all (if old enough) have assessed whether she should have left her womanizing husband or not. We all (if old enough) have read enough about her incredible ambition, her incredible egotism and her incredible coldness. We all (if old enough) can list several policies she has supported which we detest. And of course some of us attribute to her even those policies of her husband she didn't work on.
All samples of size one create tremendous problems of interpretation. Is Hillary treated the way she is because of her own personality or at least partly, because she is a woman in politics? Would an otherwise identical man be treated the same way? There is no way of knowing. We need a bigger sample of women in politics to tease apart the effects of a person's politics and personality from the effects of sexism, whether subconscious or overt.
That's my dilemma. How do I interpret the way Hillary Clinton is treated from a wider feminist angle? What are the lessons we can draw about the treatment of women from watching her experiences?
I'm not sure. But there is one message which is becoming increasingly clear:
Monday, February 01, 2016
From Betty Friedan to Beyoncé. Or Making Waves in The Pond Of Feminist Thought.
"Betty Friedan to Beyoncé: Today’s generation embraces feminism on its own terms." is an interesting recent piece in the Washington Post. It belongs to the general genre of articles which analyze generational change in feminism, usually only within the United States, and almost always with a focus on young women.
This version is a nice one. It asks several great questions, offers nuanced answers to many of them and also gives survey evidence on the beliefs and values of some in the "today's generation" of feminists. Its treatment of the role of popular culture and the Internet in feminism is worth reading and so are the juxtapositions it makes between the second wave of the 1960s and 1970s and what is happening today.
So I enjoyed reading the piece. Still, most of me finished that reading with a strong desire to interrogate* bits and pieces it mentions, including the comments of many of the interviewed individuals, and to use the article as a springboard for diving into some deeper feminist waters. To make more waves. And that's what the rest of this post attempts.
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Revolutionary Women: Get Your Brooms And Sweep! The Kitchen Floor, That Is.
Have you followed the Oregon protests by a group of anti-government activists? The group, lead by Ammon Bundy, registers as right-wing and, at least to me, as pretty fundamentalist. But revolution they want.
Today's rebellions have a right-wing and fundamentalist religious flavor. They are also very, very, male-dominated. The role of women in the Oregon group is described in one article:
SLIDESHOW: Much of the attention surrounding the armed occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge has focused on the self-styled militiamen. But there are women occupiers, too. In the shadow of the the cowboy hats at the press briefings and the patrolmen styled with camouflage and rifles, women cook pots of chili, do laundry, and lead Bible study.
And
Many of the initial crew of women began drifting away by the end of week three, leaving Bass, Cooper and another woman who goes by “Mama Bear” to cook for a crowd of male militants that seems to increase daily. Where there were at first fewer than 20 militants at the refuge, there now seems to be closer to 50. Cooper and Bass look increasingly fatigued.
For her part, Bass feels like the occupation could end if law enforcement and government officials negotiate successfully. She doesn’t want to soften on the occupiers’ demands about federal lands or their view on clemency for the Hammonds. Still, she wishes she could convince the men leaders to get together and talk, calmly.
“But I’m a nobody,” she said. She said she will stay at the refuge as a cook, “for as long as it takes. We women, we are helpers,” said Bass. “That’s how we are created, and that’s what we do here.”
Both bolds are mine.
Compare the views Bass expresses to the views of the Western women who have joined ISIS/Daesh in Syria*. Indeed, compare the overall views about women's proper places in the two extremist conservative revolutionary movements. Those proper places for women are kitchens.
Strictly speaking women, as women, get nothing good from joining those movements, and in the case of Daesh they get all their freedoms removed.
Yet that is an acceptable bargain for many. We have fundamentalist religious interpretations and years of educational brain-washing to thank for that.
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* I'm asking you to compare the opinions of the female participants in these revolutionary movements, not the movements itself. Daesh legally approves the use of violence, rape, slavery and sadism, and I'm not trying to draw parallels between that and the fumbling efforts of the Oregon protesters. Daesh also legally wants to eradicate all rights for women. But the conservative view of what women are for (kitchen, bedroom, under male supervision) is shared by all conservative religious movements, all over this poor globe.
Is This Ageism?
I belong to several Internet groups on various issues. Some of them allow job announcements and announcements about scholarships and prizes. Many of those specify that the applicant must be young.
Now compare that common practice today to the 1960s custom of listing available jobs separately for men and women.
The differences are obvious, of course.
There really aren't scholarships or jobs which require people to be older. There are some which require educational qualifications or experience that would exclude, say, an eighteen-year-old, just because those qualifications take so long to acquire. But in principle a qualified teenager could apply for those jobs.
That's not the case for a forty-year-old starting again (after, say, divorce and years of having been a stay-at-home parent) who would like to apply for one of those Jugend Arbeit posts.
Another difference is that the sex segregated job announcements of the 1960s reserved the best jobs for men and put a fence around those.
The current age-segregated announcements offer one group of people (the young) jobs which we all assume the older applicants wouldn't want, because we tend to think that they are already far along a successful career path, earning much higher salaries than those the young are now offered.
But in reality many middle aged people have crashed careers, none or work in dead-end jobs. Some have gone back to college and would now be qualified for jobs which define the desired applicant as someone at most three years from college graduation. But they are not qualified for jobs which require one to be under twenty-five, say.
So is this practice ageist? Interestingly, I haven't noticed progressive or feminists think so!
I think that we simply don't see anything odd in the fact that some jobs and awards are offered only to people in certain age categories, because the age categories that are selected appear obviously the ones where people still need help and support to get launched. Still, requiring age as a qualification in this context rules out all applicants who are not young enough, but need a relaunch or the first launch of their careers or education.
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Picture from my archives.
Monday, January 25, 2016
Lightning Posts, 1/25/16: On the Politeness of an Armed Society, Zika Virus and Women, and Kansas Senate Dress Codes for Women
1. From the "armed society is a polite society" files: A good Samaritan was shot dead by an inebriated driver. That horrible story points out some troubling aspects of the politeness that an armed society could create, such as simply avoiding all other people, just in case. Including your own mother.
2. The rapid spread of the Zika virus which can cause the child of a woman who was infected while pregnant to be born with microcephaly has led the government of El Salvador to recommend that Salvadorian women just not get pregnant until 2018.
Abortion is illegal in El Salvador, even in the case where the mother's life is at stake, and the linked NYT article argues that most pregnancies there are unplanned. The Catholic Church is very strong and not especially fond of contraception. But never mind! At least the government cannot now be blamed when a wave of microcephalic babies are born.
The point, of course, is that it's the women to whom they are born who bear the brunt of both the blame and the burden of care and the suffering. Gender politics link to other politics.
3. We are still in Kansas, Dorothy (a silly reference to the Wizard of Oz):
A dress code imposed by a Kansas Senate committee chairman that prohibits women testifying on bills from wearing low-cut necklines and miniskirts is drawing bipartisan ridicule from female legislators.
This is where I start salivating! The whole wonderful topic of how to police women's dress, whether women should be covered or revealed, whether women who do the former are chaste and modest, while the women who do the latter are sluts and whores! I so want to write a book about it but life is short.Sen. Mitch Holmes' 11-point code of conduct does not include any restrictions on men, who he said needed no instruction on how to look professional, The Topeka Capital-Journal reported.
Historically, the dress of women has always been a burning political issue, and it still is a burning political and religious issue in Islam and among US fundamentalist Christians, and, it seems, among some Kansas Senators.
Historically, how women dress has always been used as an indicator of their sexual modesty and sexual availability or lack of it. And historically, too (check the Bible), it has always been very important that women do not "cross-dress," because that makes the messages their clothes send much harder to interpret, beginning with the importance of being able to assign someone to a gender wherever men and women are treated differently.
But the last hundred years in the industrialized West have changed that policing. The changes are still fluid and some final kind of assessment is impossible. What I see are several different patterns emerging, including the pattern where men and women dress more alike and the pattern where women are allowed to dress more comfortably than in the past.
But I also see a very different pattern: One, in which women are in some sense expected to dress in the very ways the conservative codes ban, to be viewed as desirable and admired, to be viewed as fashionable and "in." All choices about our dress take place within cultures, and no choice is ultimately completely "free." As I see it, the cultural signals about proper dress for women in the West are now many, often contradictory, and difficult to tease apart in their final impact*.
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*Take the bit in the above quote about men knowing how to look professional. That's partly, because men have a rigid uniform for political work, women do not, and that leaves the question of professional dress for women wide open.
From one angle the expected male uniform in places of power is discrimination against men. Why can't men dress as they wish in the Kansas Senate hearings?
But what if dressing as you "wish" (see the above discussion about what might drive our ideas) means that people will then use your clothes to judge your sluttiness or the desirability of your body? What if some people would like you to bare a bit more leg before they are willing to listen to you (Fox News)? What if people will respond to your choice of more relaxed clothing like this:
"It's one of those things that's hard to define," Holmes said. "Put it out there and let people know we're really looking for you to be addressing the issue rather than trying to distract or bring eyes to yourself."That quote from the article about dress codes for women crystallizes the problem for me: Holmes uses the traditional angle in which women's dress is seen as having sexual implications, whether it is meant to do that or not. But the topic is more complicated than that, and that's why I wrote that it would take a book.
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