Women have never been worse to other women.
It probably has something to do with women never having greater access to other women.
We see more women, we hear more women and we read more from women than at any other moment in history.
So, what are we doing with this new found voice?
Well, it would seem, yelling very loudly at each to “shut the f*ck up”.
*****
This week, we hate Taylor Swift.
“It’s cool to hate Taylor Swift,” The Guardian published this week. “She’s a social media pariah, the punchline of every meme… She’s become universally despised to the point where it’s taboo even to admit to feeling sorry for her.”
The Tab published last year, ‘Confession: I hate Taylor Swift,’ written by Alexis Morillo, which cites Gina Florio’s piece for Babe, ‘5 important reasons I can’t love Taylor Swift anymore’.
Junkee writer Matilda Dixon-Smith, tweeted on the day her video clip dropped, “Cheap f*cking shot at Kim KW’s traumatic experience being robbed and tied up in a bath bitch.”
Cheap fucking shot at Kim KW’s traumatic experience being robbed and tied up in a bath bitch. pic.twitter.com/MkOJZkkOFO
— matilda dixon-smith (@mdixonsmith) August 28, 2017
Top Comments
It's probably a mix of things. Clickbait is designed to pull people in and it works. The bigger the outrage or shock, the more clicks.
Second, even if you tried not to, social media algorithms seek out articles and people you seem to agree with. Your YouTube feed is quickly full of agreeing perspectives, automatic echo chamber that warps everyone to believe more they are right and in the majority.
Third, no battle so viscious as that over nothing. The less the difference, the less middle ground to be found, the more acute the minor points of difference. If your partner leaves their cup in the sink, that can become a more emotive issue than deciding to buy a new house together.
Don't disagree with any of those points.
My own personal beef is with the over saturation of these women, who actually aren't that extraordinary. I am tired of being bombarded by news and stories pertaining to these women, who don't speak for me, who don't represent me, and who, moreover, often are utterly anti-feminist and/or hypocritical in the platforms they choose to inhabit.
I'm fed up with being told to "scroll on if I don't like it", or having any intelligent discourse being shut down with accusations of being a "hater" or "shaming" other women (because we're all meant to "raise other women up", apparently). I'm jaded by the fact that truly amazing women aren't being given the same oxygen as light-weight, privileged, uneducated celebrities who are given more political and social power than they deserve, or know how to intelligently use.
Be it Dixie Chicks or Lena Dunham, I don't know how much celebrity opinions change much. Clinton surrounded herself with celebs and it to some at least got more scorn than support for it.
Personally, I'm as enthralled by Robert DeNiros political stance as I am interested in hearing Bindi Irwins thoughts on reserve fractional banking and neither is likely to change my mind on either unless they do so on the power of their arguments rather than their celebrity status.
Ultimately, celebs do damage themselves by weighing in on other matters, I assume they do it for the same reason as journos tend to hang to the left, for the acceptance and acclimation of their professional peers.
Well analysed Guest. Most women don't hate other women. I love my women friends, they are the backbone of my life. I love my husband and family, but it's with my female friends that I can really let my hair down.
I particularly agree with your last paragraph, you've said it all so well and reflected my sentiments so exactly, there is nothing for me to add to it.
I think the platforms given to celebrities is much greater in power and paradoxically set much lower in standard to achieve, thanks both to the reach of the internet and social media. The rise of the influence and bankability of bloggers, reality TV "stars" and "influencers" is proof of that: thoroughly mediocre writing, describing ordinary stuff done by ordinary people, but laughing all the way to the bank nonetheless, all the while being availed of the opportunity to be heard and acknowledged by the community. These folk would never have got a gig pre-internet.
I too are not influenced by these people, but I fear many are. But when I express these thoughts, I'm just a "hater on the internet" who "hates other women". It's so frustrating.
The dislike between women hasn't increased. It's just the same as it always has been and always will be. Women also dislike tonnes of men btw. In fact for every person in the world there is probably a person or two who greatly dislike them. This is a non-event argument in my opinion.