On Feminism Today

Before the topic of BJ’s completely falls off the radar, I’d like to note that the whole kerfluffle over what goes on in the bedroom of two consenting adults generated orders of magnitude more heat and light this weekend than the fact that Louisiana now has an anti-abortion law that’s nearly as stringent as the one in South Dakota. And I didn’t post about it either, which makes me just as bad, I know. But then, I’ve never set up to be an officially ‘feminist’ weblog.

And as I was mulling over what I might say in a post about why, 20 years after first enthusiastically reading Betty Friedan and Adrienne Rich I don’t always feel comfortable calling myself a feminist, Echinde put up a long post about the Working Mommy Wars and related issues. It gave me some clarity.

It’s been 40+ years since the First Wave and we’re still stuck on basic issues like the right of a woman to decide her own path in life without being shamed? Women still struggle with discrimination in the workplace, don’t get paid as much as men do, and generally have a much harder time achieving economic security. Why are we worrying about who does what to whom in the bedroom when these much more important issues are still nowhere close to being resolved?

Why do I consider economic issues to be a primary focus for feminism? Because as so many women have discovered, if you don’t have the ability to earn wages sufficient to keep a roof over your head and food on your table, then you don’t have the autonomy to make your own life choices. And to me, that is the essence of feminism — the belief that women should be just as able to set and steer their own life’s course as men are. Without that freedom, the rest is meaningless.

If the Great BJ War has taught us anything, it’s that even the most intelligent and self-aware women are not going to make the same choices in their lives. The problem lies when people, for whatever reason, think that not only are they are better able to decide what another person should or should not do, but that they have a better understanding of the underlying emotions and motivations that go into the choice. And what’s worse is that much of the shaming comes not from “The Patriarchy” but from other women.

I won’t argue with the fact that it’s possible for a disinterested party to make a ‘better’ decision than someone caught up in the middle of a given situation, but when you start saying that a person is not feeling what they say they are feeling, then I draw a line. When last I checked, telepathy didn’t work very well. Even psychotherapy isn’t totally effective. To assert that an outsider better knows what is going on in a person’s mind from a cursory examination of their words or actions goes directly against my belief that personal autonomy is what feminism is about.

To get around this little issue, some feminists have employed Engels’ concept of “false consciousness,” whereby the person is told that she is unaware of her real motives and is therefore incapable of correctly understanding the situation. (Many of them, I suspect, are not aware of the Marxist roots of this concept.) It’s a great tool when you’re trying to impose your beliefs onto someone else, because it creates a no-win situation for the person being accused of false consciousness.

I’ve wandered a bit far afield from my original topic, which was supposed to be about why I’m not comfortable calling myself a feminist these days. Perhaps it’s more accurate to say that I don’t feel very simpatico with many of today’s feminist bloggers. I’m a happily married heterosexual with a ketubah hanging over my bed, after all. True, I didn’t change my name when I married and I don’t have children, but overall I’ve made pretty conventional life choices, and I don’t regret having done so. I care more about the problems that women as a whole face than I do about the possible impact of patriarchy on my own life.

Call it false consciousness or tell me I’m a tool of the patriarchy for not thinking radically enough, and I and say with all due respect, piss off.

9/11 Contractor Theft Unpunished

Everyone knows the saying, ‘Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.’ Maybe we ought to change it to include something about the special corruptive powers of government contracts? Or is this simply another proof that the saying is true as is?

As firefighters searched for survivors after the Sept. 11 attacks, heat from the World Trade Center’s smoldering ruins burned the soles off their boots. They needed new ones every few hours, and Chris Christopherson made sure they got them. The moment that crushed Christopherson’s faith was when his employer dispatched the trucks to the warehouse for those supplies, donated by Americans.

Kieger Enterprises of Lino Lakes, Minn., dispatched trucks to a Long Island warehouse and loaded hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of donated bottled water, clothes, tools and generators to be moved to Minnesota in a plot to sell some for profit, according to government records and interviews.

Dan L’Allier said he witnessed 45 tons of the New York loot being unloaded in Minnesota at his company’s headquarters. He and disaster specialist Christopherson complained to a company executive, but were ordered to keep quiet. They persisted, going instead to the FBI.

The two whistleblowers eventually lost their jobs, received death threats and were blackballed in the disaster relief industry. But they remained convinced their sacrifice was worth seeing justice done.

They were wrong.

The lead investigators for the FBI and the Federal Emergency Management Agency told AP that the plan to prosecute KEI for those thefts stopped as soon as it became clear in late summer 2002 that an FBI agent in Minnesota had stolen a crystal globe from ground zero.

That prompted a broader review that ultimately found 16 government employees, including a top FBI executive and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, had such artifacts from New York or the Pentagon.

“How could you secure an indictment?” FEMA investigator Kirk Beauchamp asked. “It would be a conflict.”

So… some agent keeps a desk ornament as a memento; that means you cannot prosecute the theft of tons of material for resale? Give me a freaking break!

That this current administration is so wrong in so many ways is no surprise, but even when I think theat I’ve lost the capacity to be surprised or upset by what they do, they still manage to find new ways to piss me off.

Worst. Administration. Ever.

This Sounds Like a Good Plan To Me

Ah Digby, how well you put it:

Here’s the plan. First, the Democratic terrorists are going to kick Lieberman’s ass. After that, they are going to kick the Republican party’s ass. And finally they will kick bin Laden’s ass. We didn’t create this hard core political environment, the Republicans did, with the help of self-serving Dems like Lieberman. Now somebody has to clean up all these messes. The crazed Democratic terrorists who are willing to cast aside all morality by ruthlessly supporting a primary challenger (who is not a travelling Deadhead, but rather a middle of the road self made millionaire) seem to be the only ones who are willing to do it.

I just hope you’re right.

“Linux = Evil” — A Joke or Not?

Ran across this assessment of Linux as Un-American today:

Unlike Windows, which is a mature commercial product which is normally included with every new computer, Linux is given away. Now it may not sound like much of a problem, after all there is very little profit in merely giving a product away.

This would be certainly true were in not for the Linux project’s seductive Marxist ideology and the effect that it has on ‘Blue-State’ liberals. Indeed, Linux is so pervasive amongst the blue states and many liberal universities that a leading computer expert Steve Balmer [SIC] (from Microsoft) described Linux as cancer.

The American software industry is worth more than $7 Billion; Introducing a foreign product like Linux which is often copied for free could threaten that entire industry. A generation of computer users might get use to accepting foreign software hand-outs rather than paying for a superior American products. If only the danger were just to our economy:

These days computers control everything from TV stations to battleships; Our crucial information and defense infrastructure is built on computer technology. If we allow this cancer into our networks, there is no knowing what the effect might be on our infrastructure, but that is just what liberals are trying to do.

Imagine if the State of the Union address were hacked because the TV station decided to save money by using Linux? Imagine if a stealth-bomber crashed because its software was written by anonymous Chinese or European hackers. It would make as much sense as inviting the French to come over and take over the White-House.

And guess what software Osama Bin Laden uses on his laptop?

If you guessed it was Linux you would be 100% right.

Frankly, I can’t decide if this is somebody’s idea of a joke or if these people are for real, but either way it’s amusing enough to be worth a read.

Heh

Iraq Lobster

Seen on LiveJournal today. Very clever.

I’m not feeling so hot, though; it might have been what I ate for lunch (not a lobster!).