By MIA FREEDMAN
Take a deep breath because there’s a small, yet loud handful of women who are angry with anyone who thinks feminism could benefit from the support of men.
Last month, while the world was enthusiastically taking Emma Watson‘s brilliant UN speech on this topic viral, these same women were rushing to castigate her.
And this week, Wendy Squires has been copping it for writing a terrific column praising the men who call themselves feminists and who give their time, their money, their power and their influence to help advance women.
The response has been as predictable as it’s been maddening. And it’s prompted me to write about something I’ve been thinking for a long time now.
There is a type of feminist who is doing – in my opinion – more damage than good for the cause. And because they are so loud on social media, the volume at which their argument rages around the internet is disproportionate to how many agree with it.
Here’s one way of looking at feminism: it’s an exclusive club convened in a small room. A very small room. On the street outside, there are bouncers holding a phonebook-sized book called The Rules of Feminism. The book is authored by some women on Twitter. If you wish to enter the room, you must first answer dozens of questions about your qualifications and credentials. You must not have ever ‘broken’ any one of The Rules Of Feminism at any time in your adult life.
Top Comments
How can women be angry when men stand up for feminism? Perhaps it is because of the deep biases against men that feminism instils in young women?
I mean, if you tell well off, well educated young women that they are in a state of oppression and it is the boys fault, how could they not hate them?
Of course, it is not true, women have always been extremely well respected in western culture. In fact, the most powerful individual human to have ever lived is a woman. Queen Victoria ruled over Britain during it's largest days, when it controlled over 1/4th of the human population. In 1897, 1/4 of planet earth had a holiday to celebrate her.
http://genderallies.org/201...
Love this piece. I recently dared to say on twitter "I'm a feminist but you can't blame everything on patriarchy." Oh lordy, the replies. YES YOU CAN! Was the most common response and I was all, hey guys, of course theres a fucking patriarchy I never said there wasn't. Then I tweeted that since my beautiful, young, alpha-male white privileged brother suicided I have a lot of questions about patriarchy. And then, other people chimed in and we had a conversation about how "the patriarchy" damages men like it does women. Of course I had to be careful and say "YES NOT AS MUCH AS IT DAMAGES WOMEN" but the conversation blew my mind. I'm not an academic. I was too broke and fucked up to go to uni so I didn't learn this shit and I'm so sick of being scared to air a view on social media when I know it will probably be ridiculed and pulled apart. We moved past feminism onto humanism. It was one of the best conversations on twitter I've ever had.
If only humanism meant what everyone in the "feminist isn't the right term" conversation thinks it means.