Much anguish has been expressed over the right-wing
populists who have either gained power or threaten to gain power in their
various countries. The usual
explanations for their surge in popularity include anger at lack of economic
advancement and dismay at the threat of multiculturalism that will ensue if immigration
is not severely limited. Peter Beinart suggests
that the explanation is more complicated and another factor is critical to
understanding in an article for The Atlantic titled The New Authoritarians Are Waging War on Women (titled The Global Backlash Against Women in the
paper version). He begins his piece with
this lede.
“Donald Trump’s ideological
cousins around the world want to reverse the feminist gains of recent decades.”
Trump’s “ideological cousins” include the heads of state
of Brazil, the Philippines, Hungary, and Poland.
“When Americans
look abroad these days, they see Donald Trumps everywhere: In
Brazil, whose new president, Jair Bolsonaro, endorses torture, threatens to
pull out of the Paris climate-change agreement, and suggests that his country
was better off under military rule. In the Philippines, where President Rodrigo
Duterte has overseen the extrajudicial killing of thousands of alleged
drug dealers and threatened to impose martial law nationwide. In Hungary, where
Prime Minister Victor Orban has quashed the free press, enriched his cronies,
and stoked fear and hatred of refugees. In Poland, whose Law and Justice Party
has undermined the independence of the supreme court.”
When recorded history began, men had gained dominance. From their positions of power, they created religions
and hierarchical structures in political, economic, and family life that
reinforced their power. Female
empowerment is a threat to these male cultural entitlements.
“To understand global Trumpism,
argues Valerie M. Hudson, a political scientist at Texas A&M, it’s vital to
remember that for most of human history, leaders and their male subjects forged
a social contract: ‘Men agreed to be ruled by other men in return for all men
ruling over women.’ This political hierarchy appeared natural—as natural as
adults ruling children—because it mirrored the hierarchy of the home. Thus, for
millennia, men, and many women, have associated male dominance with political
legitimacy. Women’s empowerment ruptures this order.”
It is relatively easy to illustrate Beinart’s point with
Trump’s campaign.
“He made Hillary Clinton—the
first woman ever nominated for president by a major party—the personification
of America’s corrupt political system. But rather than credibly promise to
cleanse America of corrupting financial interests, he promised his
supporters—the majority of whom told pollsters that America had grown “too soft
and feminine”—a government cleansed of the corruption of one particular
villainess.”
“Outside Trump rallies, vendors
sold T-shirts showing Trump as a bare-chested boxer towering over a
suggestively posed Clinton. TRUMP 2016. "FINALLY SOMEONE WITH BALLS read
one pin." Declared another: "DON’T BE A PUSSY, VOTE FOR TRUMP IN 2016." Inside the rallies, crowds chanted 'Lock her up,' a taunt never directed at
Trump’s male primary rivals. Again and again, Trump responded to women who
challenged him politically—Fox News’s Megyn Kelly, his rival presidential
candidate Carly Fiorina, MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski, Democratic Senator Elizabeth
Warren—by calling them ugly. After his second debate with Clinton, he observed
that she had ‘walked in front of me, and ‘believe me, I wasn’t impressed.’ The
implication was clear: No matter how high a woman ascends, she’s ultimately
just a body whose value is determined by men.”
Probably the best example of a Trump lookalike is Jair
Bolsonaro, the newly elected leader of Brazil.
“Like Trump, Bolsonaro linked
this counterrevolution to a counterrevolution against uppity women. When, as a
legislator, he voted to impeach Brazil’s first female president, Dilma
Rousseff—who had been tortured by Brazil’s military rulers in the early
1970s—he dedicated the vote to one of that regime’s most infamous torturers. In
2015, he told a Brazilian congresswoman, “I would not rape you, because you are
not worthy of it.” Crowds at Bolsonaro rallies chanted that they would feed dog
food to feminists. And, like Trump, Bolsonaro has intense support from his
country’s growing population of evangelicals, who appreciate his fervent
opposition to abortion and gay rights.”
Consideration of Duterte’s rule in the Philippines has
focused on his violent war on drugs, but he makes no secret of his disdain for
women.
“Also like Bolsonaro, Duterte
has threatened violence against women. In 2017, he informed Filipino soldiers
that because he had declared martial law on the island of Mindanao, they could
each rape up to three women with impunity. In 2018, he told soldiers to shoot
female rebels ‘in the vagina,’ because that would render them ‘useless’.”
“Duterte’s antifeminist crusade—like Trump’s and Bolsonaro’s—has also
featured the ritualized humiliation of powerful women. When Senator Leila de
Lima demanded an investigation into Duterte’s drug war, he vowed to ‘make her
cry.’ The government then detained de Lima on drug-trafficking charges and
leaked evidence supposedly proving, in Duterte’s words, that she was ‘screwing
her driver’ like she was ‘screwing the nation’.”
Other autocratic leaders are better known for other
political outrages, but also demonstrate similar desires to counter women’s
social and political gains.
“Not all of the new
authoritarians are this flamboyant. But they all link the new political order
they seek to create to a more subordinate and traditional role for women.
Orbán, who has accused his predecessors of permitting immigrants and Roma to
undermine Hungary’s identity, has proposed ‘a comprehensive agreement with
Hungarian women’ to bear more children. He promotes debt-free education for
women, but only if they have at least three children.”
“For its part, Poland’s
autocratic government has run ads urging Poles to ‘breed like rabbits’ and
banned over-the-counter access to the morning-after pill. In late 2017, after
Polish women protested draconian new restrictions on abortion, the government
raided the offices of women’s groups.”
What does this mean for the future of women? Does greater empowerment merely generate a
greater backlash?
Beinart provides an example of where female empowerment
has become official policy that has been successfully implemented. The Nordic countries of Iceland, Finland,
Sweden Denmark, and Norway all have high representation by women in their
political structures.
“Compare the United States, the
Philippines, Brazil, Hungary, and Poland with the countries of northern Europe,
where women’s political power has become more normal. In 2017, women made up 48
percent of Iceland’s parliament. In Sweden, the share was 44 percent; in
Finland, 42 percent; and in Norway, 40 percent. In the countries that have
recently elected gender-backlash authoritarians, the rates are lower, ranging
from Italy’s 31 percent to Hungary’s 10 percent.”
Beinart associates Nordic rights for females with a tendency
for males to take a more active role in household activities rather than
allowing them to be a burden associated only with females.
“There is a striking correlation
between countries where women and men behave more equally in the home and
countries where women are more equally represented in government. Take Sweden,
44 percent of whose parliamentarians are women. There, the gap between the
amount of housework done by men and that done by women is less than an hour a
day. In the U.S., where women will soon make up roughly 23 percent of Congress,
the housework gender gap is an hour and a half. In Hungary, where women account
for 10 percent of parliament, it is well over two hours.”
This leads him to conclude that it may take generations
for those patterns of behavior to change in the countries he has discussed. He finishes with this comment.
“Women looking to unseat Trump
or Bolsonaro in the next election may find little comfort in the Nordic
example. Family dynamics change not year by year, but generation by generation.
Nonetheless, the new authoritarianism underscores the importance of an old
feminist mantra: The personal is political. Foster women’s equality in the
home, and you may save democracy itself.”
Beinart’s interpretation of the Nordic example leads him
astray. Women in those countries did not
become equal because household customs drifted towards equality. They became equal because policies were implemented that made them equal. Let women continue to acquire
political power and they will create legislation that supports fairness between
genders, and that fairness will seep into the education we provide our children
and even into household activities. It
can happen quite quickly if women—all women—want it to happen. In the United States, women, if they stick
together, could take control of the Democratic Party. And with their numbers of voters, they could
control the political agenda. It could
happen quite rapidly.
The interested reader might find the following articles
informative:
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.