Tuesday, 25 January 2011

Dominic Raab, surprise feminist

Dear Dominc Raab,

Thank you. Seriously. Towards the end of New Labour's time in government, I was starting to think that it would be good for them to be out of office for a while, to think about what they'd done, and hopefully decide that being more Tory than the Tories was not a super-effective long-term plan. Central to this was the question, "How much worse can a Conservative government be?"

So thank you for answering that with such aplomb. Because even after Iraq, tuition fees, and a childhood spent blinded by Tony Blair's gleaming grin, all it takes is something like this to remind me - yes, the Tories really are worse.

And now to specifics: three, two, one, go!
While we have some of the toughest anti-discrimination laws in the world, we are blind to some of the most flagrant discrimination – against men. From the cradle to the grave, men are getting a raw deal. Men work longer hours, die earlier, but retire later than women.
Isn't it conceivable, though, that this is due to the dying-but-still-with-us idea that men should go out to win bread while women stay home to bake bread? Which is a "sexist" idea - the old fashioned kind, where women are discriminated against, not this fancy new-fangled "reverse sexism", which I recommend you have a good hard think about - so really, this "discrimination against men" is a direct result of "discrimination against women". And feminists are against it, by the way.

Also, earlier in your article you attribute the gender pay gap (whereby women working full-time earn 15.5% less than men) to individual "choice" - women choosing less well-paid careers. Surely, then, this "raw deal" men are saddled with is primarily their own fault? Why aren't they choosing less demanding jobs? Or opting to  take a career-break to care for children? (Which is never stressful.) No one's forcing you to be an MP, for example.

You then rail against (amongst other things) "anti-male discrimination in rights of maternity/paternity leave",  and the way in which you say "divorced or separated fathers are systematically ignored by the courts". Again, this is symptomatic of the separate spheres model which insists that women should do virtually all child-rearing. And again, feminists aren't in favour of this - we're actively campaigning against it. Making parental leave transferable, as you advocate, is one of the feminist movement's central demands
Then there is the more subtle sexism. Men caused the banking crisis. Men earn more because they are more assertive in pay negotiations. One FT commentator recently complained that: ‘High-flying women are programmed to go for high-flying men. Most men aren’t attracted to women who are more successful than they are.’
I'm with you on this. It's annoying as hell.
Feminists are now amongst the most obnoxious bigots.
Hold on, what? How did you get from "people express prejudiced attitudes" to "feminism itself is the cause of prejudiced attitudes"? We're against that! Honestly! I rant about it all the time!
You can’t have it both ways. Either you believe in equality or you don’t. If you buy into the whole Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus theory of gender difference – with all its pseudo science - you can’t then complain about inequalities of outcome that flow both ways from those essentially sexist distinctions. 
Okay, you've now seriously lost all contact with reality. You're blaming feminists for John Gray now? Men Are From Mars is a feminist text since when? Since we all got zapped into Bizarro-World? Hey, Dom, guess what my very first blog post was: a tirade about how ascribing discrete and opposing traits to men and women is (a) balls, and (b) never taken to its logical conclusion. This kind of thinking is described by a (feminist!) concept known as "oppositional sexism", and - I feel I'm repeating myself here, but still, it needs to be said - WE. ARE. AGAINST. IT.

You then move on to your ideas for practical solutions to address inequality. Firstly, as discussed above, you advocate for transferable parental leave, which - I've said it before, I'll say it again; go on, Dom, say it with me - is a feminist goal, supported by and campaigned for by feminists.

The other is the married person's tax allowance, which you lament was "mocked" by those who saw it as "socially regressive". Well, yeah, because it is: why do you get to decide what kind of relationships are worth subsidising? You claim that the policy "would support women who choose to stay home, when their children are young, while helping them save for childcare, if and when they choose return to work" - firstly, I thought you were complaining about having to work for a living? Won't this just increase the burden on the long-suffering manployee? And secondly, I have to ask -  if this is primarily meant to help people raising kids, why is it reserved for married people?


You seem to subscribe to a surprising number of feminist views, Dom, from what I can gather from your article on how feminism is inherently bigoted. It's as if you've come across a lot of phenomena that wind you up - gender stereotyping, prescriptive gender roles, the culture of overwork - and decided that feminism is to blame for all of them. I'm really not sure how you got there, but I invite you to take this as a learning opportunity: take a look around. Find out what we actually believe, rail against, fight for. I think we'd agree on a lot of things.


Your article was kind of arsey, but hey, feminists can be arseholes too. It's a big tent.


Welcome to the team.


Yours,


A Feminist Bigot

5 comments:

  1. "Men Are From Mars is a feminist text since when? Since we all got zapped into Bizarro-World? Hey, Dom, guess what my very first blog post was: a tirade about how ascribing discrete and opposing traits to men and women is (a) balls, and (b) never taken to its logical conclusion. This kind of thinking is described by a (feminist!) concept known as "oppositional sexism", and - I feel I'm repeating myself here, but still, it needs to be said - WE. ARE. AGAINST. IT."
    You've misunderstood what Feminism is entirely. The term 'Feminism' does not refer to some lah-di-da nonsense about sexual equality and erasing gender essentialism. Feminism, in the original sense of the word, means "terrifying modernity where stuff about women happens and I'm confused". I'm surprised a bright girl like you didn't know that.

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  2. Shit. Does this mean I'm actually a Tory?

    (Hello!)

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  3. Great blog, and prompted me to go and read Dominic Raab's piece on Politics Home.

    I can't understand what he was trying to achieve with this piece - better working conditions for men?! He shows a lack of ability to grasp the subject, shows no experience or personal relevance in discussing it, and barely answers the strange questions he poses.

    What's clear is that this is a vain and clumsy attempt from him to join the blogosphere: a big "come and notice me!" to Conservative Central Office.

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  4. I read Raab's piece when it came out, and decided that I couldn't bring myself to write about something so ridiculous. I'm really glad I didn't now, because you did a better job than I ever could. Nicely done.

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  5. I know! This kind of stuff turns up on blogs all the time, and usually I don't have the energy to take them by the hand and say "water is wet, and the sky is above your head, and sexism is bad", but the fact that it was an actual MP in our actual Parliament with actual power to legislate scared the shit out of me.

    Also, thanks!

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