There are two exceptional elements to the 2016
presidential race. The first, and the
one most commented on, is the surprising popularity of Donald Trump. Trump is not your typical Republican
candidate. He espouses positions that
are the exact opposite of traditional Republican policies, he is not shy about
making racist, misogynist, and xenophobic remarks, and he seems to create new
realities whenever convenient. The
explanation for why Trump has been so successful seems to be that Republican
voters share Trump’s racism, misogyny, and xenophobia, and they don’t care much
about traditional Republican policies, or even whether Trump tells lies or
not. There really is no mystery here.
The second intriguing aspect of this election is the
degree of hatred shown for Hillary Clinton.
She seems to basically be a typical politician. She doesn’t propose outrageous policies, she
has not been found guilty of any serious crime, and she comports herself in a
manner not too different than that of numerous other politicians. Yet, ever since she arrived in Washington
over two decades ago she has been under continual personal attack. What is going on here?
Peter Beinart, one of the more astute observers of the
political landscape, tries to shed some light on this issue in Fear of a Female President, an article
that appeared in The Atlantic. Beinart begins with this lede:
“Hillary Clinton’s candidacy has
provoked a wave of misogyny—one that may roil American life for years to come.”
Beinart makes it clear that this response to Hillary has
gone way beyond the bounds of normal political rivalry.
“At the Republican National Convention, this fervent hostility was hard to
miss. Inside the hall, delegates repeatedly broke into chants of ‘Lock her up.’
Outside the hall, vendors sold campaign paraphernalia. As I walked around, I
recorded the merchandise on display. Here’s a sampling:”
“Black pin reading Don’t be a pussy.
vote for Trump in 2016. Black-and-red pin reading trump 2016: finally someone with balls.
White T-shirt reading trump that bitch.
White T‑shirt reading hillary sucks but
not like monica. Red pin reading life’s
a bitch: don’t vote for one. White pin depicting a boy urinating on the
word Hillary. Black T-shirt depicting Trump as a biker and Clinton
falling off the motorcycle’s back alongside the words if you can read this, the bitch fell off. Black T-shirt
depicting Trump as a boxer having just knocked Clinton to the floor of the
ring, where she lies faceup in a clingy tank top. White pin advertising kfc hillary special. 2 fat thighs. 2 small
breasts … left wing.”
Clinton was
not being attacked because she was a Democrat—she was being attacked because
she was a woman. Beinart has the data to
support that contention.
“The percentage of Americans who
hold a “strongly unfavorable” view of her substantially exceeds the percentage
for any other Democratic nominee since 1980, when pollsters began asking the
question. Antipathy to her among white men is even more unprecedented. According
to the Public Religion Research Institute, 52 percent of white men hold a “very
unfavorable” view of Clinton. That’s a whopping 20 points higher than the
percentage who viewed Barack Obama very unfavorably in 2012, 32 points higher
than the percentage who viewed Obama very unfavorably in 2008, and 28 points
higher than the percentage who viewed John Kerry very unfavorably in 2004.”
Given the racist history of the majority of the
Republican-leaning states, one might have expected Barack Obama to have been
the most reviled of opposing candidates.
It would seem that misogyny trumps racism: white men fear a dominant
white woman more than they fear a dominant black man.
Particularly troubling are the passions that arise when
white male dominance is threatened.
“Over the past few years,
political scientists have suggested that, counterintuitively, Barack Obama’s
election may have led to greater acceptance by whites of racist rhetoric.
Something similar is now happening with gender. Hillary Clinton’s candidacy is
sparking the kind of sexist backlash that decades of research would predict. If
she becomes president, that backlash could convulse American politics for years
to come.”
To explain the power of this gender-based response Beinart
points to “precarious manhood” theory.
“The theory posits that while womanhood is typically viewed as natural and
permanent, manhood must be “earned and maintained.” Because it is won, it can
also be lost. Scholars at the University of South Florida and the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign reported that when asked how someone might lose
his manhood, college students rattled off social failures like ‘losing a job.’
When asked how someone might lose her womanhood, by contrast, they mostly came
up with physical examples like ‘a sex-change operation’ or ‘having a
hysterectomy’.”
“Among the emasculations men most fear is subordination to women. (Some
women who prize traditional gender roles find male subordination threatening
too.)”
How might one
expect these findings to apply to Hillary Clinton who arrived in Washington proud
of her capabilities and unafraid of letting people know that she was someone to
be reckoned with?
“Given the anxieties that
powerful women provoke, it’s not surprising that both men and women judge them
more harshly than they judge powerful men. A 2010 study by Victoria L. Brescoll
and Tyler G. Okimoto found that people’s views of a fictional male state
senator did not change when they were told he was ambitious. When told that a
fictional female state senator was ambitious, however, men and women alike ‘experienced
feelings of moral outrage,’ such as contempt, anger, and disgust.”
And where is fear of emasculation the greatest?—in
the Republican Party of course.
“In 2015, more Republicans told
the Public Religion Research Institute that “there is a lot of discrimination”
against white men than said “there is a lot of discrimination” against women.”
“….Americans who dislike her
[Hillary Clinton] most are those who most fear emasculation. According to the
Public Religion Research Institute, Americans who ‘completely agree’ that
society is becoming ‘too soft and feminine’ were more than four times as likely
to have a ‘very unfavorable’ view of Clinton as those who ‘completely
disagree.’ And the presidential-primary candidate whose supporters were most
likely to believe that America is becoming feminized—more likely by double
digits than supporters of Ted Cruz—was Donald Trump.”
Most commentators view Trump’s anti-women statements as a
weakness, but it is possible that his misogyny is what won him the nomination
as the strongest counter to a female Democratic nominee.
Beinart fears that, just as racism was stirred up by
election of a black president, sexism will become more prominent with the
election of a female president.
“Even without Clinton,
resentment against female empowerment would be a potent force….This spring, 42
percent of Americans said they believed the United States has become “too soft
and feminine.” Imagine how these already unnerved Americans will react once
there’s a female president. Forty-two percent isn’t enough to win the
presidency. But it’s enough to create a lot of political and cultural turmoil.
What I saw on the streets of Cleveland, I fear, may be just the beginning.”
The election of Barack Obama as president did not turn
out to be the turning point in race relations that many hoped it would be. But it was an inflection point at least as it
indicated that it was possible for the best candidate to be elected even if
that candidate was a black man.
Similarly, gender equality will not be attained by electing a woman
president. But it will be a sign of
progress if the most competent candidate can be elected even if she is a woman.
What kind of message would we be sending to ourselves—and
to the world—if we elect the most incompetent candidate for the presidency that
we have ever had—merely because he was a man running against a woman?
Re Peter Beinart op-ed and Haaretz saying July-14-2020 he doesn't go far enough.
ReplyDeleteIt's a club where whoever screams louder the A. slur, thinks is more special.
Don't be fooled by phrasing it as suggestions. The term "liberal Zionists" has become more and more of an empty title.
What all these "thinkers" won't divulge, is pragmatism. Since it doesn't make bumber-stickers. Or headline grabbing.
There are many Israelis , who are--ready for this cliche?--concerned about life, survival. And don't put much thought or concerned into Zionism as ideology.
This is not to say they deny historic ties to the land.
Do these writers deny legitimate worry of entities (moderate or radical Apartheid Arab Palestine) that incite for, justify even glorify killing of Jews in Israel? Are they totally blind to genocidal Islamic Republic that doesn't even share any border, yet has its bloody hands full at the border and inside Israel?
Want real pragmatic suggestions?
Begin reforming 'Palestinian' education, as a start.