[Women told me they had flashbacks to hideous episodes in their past
after the second presidential debate on 9 October, or couldn’t sleep, or
had nightmares. The words in that debate mattered, as did their
delivery. Donald Trump interrupted Hillary Clinton 18 times (compared to
51 interruptions in the first debate). His reply to the moderator
Anderson Cooper’s question about his videotaped boasts of grabbing women
by the pussy, which had been released a few days earlier, was: ‘But it’s
locker room talk, and it’s one of those things. I will knock the hell
out of Isis … And we should get on to much more important things and
much bigger things.’ Then he promised to ‘make America safe again’ – but
not from him. That week, women and Isis were informally paired as things
Trump promised to assault.]

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Date: Sun, 15 Jan 2017 11:18:07 +0530
Subject: Trump- from lying to leering


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  *


   From Lying to Leering


    Rebecca Solnit on Donald Trump’s fear of women

***Women told me they had flashbacks to hideous episodes in their past
after the second presidential debate on 9 October, or couldn’t sleep, or
had nightmares. The words in that debate mattered, as did their
delivery. Donald Trump interrupted Hillary Clinton 18 times (compared to
51 interruptions in the first debate). His reply to the moderator
Anderson Cooper’s question about his videotaped boasts of grabbing women
by the pussy, which had been released a few days earlier, was: ‘But it’s
locker room talk, and it’s one of those things. I will knock the hell
out of Isis … And we should get on to much more important things and
much bigger things.’ Then he promised to ‘make America safe again’ – but
not from him. That week, women and Isis were informally paired as things
Trump promised to assault.*** [Emphasis added by Sukla.]

But words were secondary to actions. Trump roamed, loomed, glowered,
snarled and appeared to copulate with his podium, grasping it with both
hands and swaying his hips, seeming briefly lost in reverie. The menace
was so dramatic, so Hitchcockian, that the Hollywood composer Danny
Elfman wrote a soundtrack for a video edit playing up all the most
ominous moments. ‘Watching Trump lurching behind Hillary during the
debate felt a bit like a zombie movie,’ Elfman said. ‘Like at any moment
he was going to attack her, rip off her head, and eat her brains.’
Friends told me they thought he might assault her; I thought it possible
myself as I watched him roam and rage. He was, as we sometimes say, in
her space, and her ability to remain calm and on message seemed heroic.
Like many men throughout the election, he appeared to be outraged that
she was in it. The election, that is. And her space.

In the ninety-minute debate, Trump lurched around the stage gaslighting,
discrediting, constantly interrupting, often to insist that she was
lying or just to drown out her words and her voice, sexually shaming
(this was the debate in which he tried to find room in his family box
for three women who had accused Bill Clinton of sexual harassment or
assault), and threatening to throw her in prison. Earlier in the
campaign he’d urged his supporters to shoot her. ‘Hillary wants to
abolish, essentially abolish the Second Amendment,’ he rumbled at one of
his rage-inciting rallies, following a patent untruth with a casual
threat: ‘By the way, if she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do,
folks. Although the Second Amendment people, maybe there is, I don’t
know.’ At the Republican Convention Chris Christie led chants of ‘Lock
her up!’ In the spring, Trump retweeted a supporter who asked: ‘If
Hillary Clinton can’t satisfy her husband what makes her think she can
satisfy America?’ Perhaps the president is married to the nation in some
mystical way; if so America is about to become a battered woman,
badgered, lied to, threatened, gaslighted, betrayed and robbed by a
grifter with attention-deficit disorder.

Trump is patriarchy unbuttoned, paunchy, in a baggy suit, with his hair
oozing and his lips flapping and his face squinching into clownish
expressions of mockery and rage and self-congratulation. He picked as a
running mate buttoned-up patriarchy, the lean, crop-haired, perpetually
tense Mike Pence, who actually has experience in government, signing
eight anti-abortion bills in his four years as governor of Indiana, and
going after Planned Parenthood the way Trump went after hapless beauty
queens. The Republican platform was, as usual, keen to gut reproductive
rights and pretty much any rights that appertained to people who weren’t
straight, or male, or white.

Misogyny was everywhere. It came from the right and the left, and
Clinton was its bull’s-eye, but it spilled over to women across the
political spectrum. Early on some of Trump’s fury focused on the Fox
presenter Megyn Kelly, who had questioned him about his derogatory
comments about other women’s appearance. He made the bizarre statement
on CNN that ‘you could see there was blood coming out of her eyes. Blood
coming out of her wherever.’ He also denigrated his opponents’ wives and
the businesswoman Carly Fiorina’s face; he obligingly attacked Alicia
Machado, the former Miss Universe, in a flurry of middle-of-the-night
tweets after Clinton baited him about his treatment of her; he attacked
the women who accused him of assaulting them after the
grab-them-by-the-pussy tape was released.

Trump’s surrogates and key supporters constituted a sort of misogyny
army – or as Star Jones, the former host of the talk show the /View/ put
it, ‘Newt Gingrich, Giuliani and Chris Christie: they’ve got like the
trifecta of misogyny.’ The army included Steve Bannon, who as head of
the alt-right site Breitbart News hired Milo Yiannopoulos and helped
merge the misogynistic fury of the men’s-rights movement with white
supremacy and anti-Semitism to form a new cabal of far-right fury. After
being dismissed from Fox News in July, when more than two dozen women
testified about his decades-long sexual harassment, degradation and
exploitation of his female employees, Roger Ailes became Trump’s debate
coach, though they soon fell out – some reports said Ailes was
frustrated by Trump’s inability to concentrate. The Fox anchor Andrea
Tantaros claimed that under Ailes, Fox was ‘a sex-fuelled, Playboy
Mansion-like cult, steeped in intimidation, indecency and misogyny’. It
seems telling that the rise of the far right and the fall of truthful
news were to a meaningful extent engineered by a television network that
was also a miserable one-man brothel. But that old right-wing men are
misogynists is about as surprising as that alligators bite.

Clinton was constantly berated for qualities rarely mentioned in male
politicians, including ambition – something, it’s safe to assume, she
has in common with everyone who ever ran for elected office. It’s
possible, according to /Psychology Today/’s headline, that she is
‘pathologically ambitious’. She was criticised for having a voice. While
Bernie Sanders railed and Trump screamed and snickered, the Fox
commentator Brit Hume complained about Clinton’s ‘sharp, lecturing
tone’, which, he said, was ‘not so attractive’, while MSNBC’s Lawrence
O’Donnell gave her public instructions on how to use a microphone, Bob
Woodward bitched that she was ‘screaming’ and Bob Cusack, the editor of
the political newspaper the /Hill/, said: ‘When Hillary Clinton raises
her voice, she loses.’ One could get the impression that a woman should
campaign in a sultry whisper, but of course if she did that she would
not project power. But if she did project power she would fail as a
woman, since power, in this framework, is a male prerogative, which is
to say that the set-up was not intended to include women.

As Sady Doyle noted, ‘she can’t be sad or angry, but she /also/ can’t be
happy or amused, and she also /can’t refrain from expressing any of
those emotions/. There is literally no way out of this one. Anything she
does is wrong.’ One merely had to imagine a woman candidate doing what
Trump did, from lying to leering, to understand what latitude
masculinity possesses. ‘No advanced step taken by women has been so
bitterly contested as that of speaking in public,’ Susan B. Anthony said
in 1900. ‘For nothing which they have attempted, not even to secure the
suffrage, have they been so abused, condemned and antagonised.’ Or as
Mary Beard put it last year, ‘We have never escaped a certain male
cultural desire for women’s silence.’

Trump harped on the theme that Clinton had been in power for thirty
years, seeming to equate her with feminism or liberalism or some other
inchoate force that he intended to defeat, and in these narratives her
power seemed huge and transcendent, looming over the nation the way he’d
loomed over her in the second debate. By figures on both the right and
the left, Clinton was held to be more responsible for her husband’s
policies than he was, more responsible for the war in Iraq than the
rarely mentioned Bush administration, responsible for Obama’s policies
as though he had carried out her agenda rather than she his. The
narratives cast her as a demoness with unlimited powers, or as a wicked
woman, because she had had power and aspired to have power again. One
got the impression that any power a woman had was too much, and that a
lot of men found women very scary.

The very existence of Clinton seemed to infuriate a lot of people, as it
has since at least 1992. It’s complicated to talk about misogyny and
Clinton, because she is a complex figure who has been many things over
the decades. There are certainly reasons to disagree with and dislike
things she has said and done, but that doesn’t explain the overwrought
emotionality that swirls around her. Raised as a conservative (and hated
on the left during this campaign for having been a ‘Goldwater Girl’,
though she stumped for him as a non-voting high-school student), she
soon became a radical who campaigned for the most left-leaning
Democratic candidates in 1968 and 1972, registered Latino voters in
Texas in the latter election, wrote a thesis on Saul Alinsky, who
afterwards offered her a job, advocated for rights for women and
children, and shifted right in the 1980s, perhaps to adapt to her
husband’s home state of Arkansas or to the Reagan era.

You could pick out a lot of feminist high points and corporate and
neoliberal low points in her career, but for anyone more interested in
the future of the US and the world her 2016 platform seemed most
relevant, though no one seemed to know anything about it. The main
networks devoted 32 minutes to the candidates’ platforms in their
hundreds of hours of election coverage. Lots of politicians have been
disliked for their policies and positions, but Clinton’s were often
close to Sanders’s, and similar to or to the left of every high-profile
male Democrat in recent years, including her husband, Obama, Biden,
Kerry and Dean. But what was accepted or disliked in them was an outrage
in her, and whatever resentment they elicited was faint compared to the
hysterical rage that confronted her as, miraculously, she continued to
march forward.

Trump’s slogan ‘make America great again’ seemed to invoke a return to a
never-never land of white male supremacy where coal was an awesome fuel,
blue-collar manufacturing jobs were what they had been in 1956, women
belonged in the home, and the needs of white men were paramount. After
the election, many on the left joined in the chorus, assuring us that
Clinton lost because she hadn’t paid enough attention to the so-called
white working class, which, given that she wasn’t being berated for
ignoring women, seemed to be a euphemism for ‘white men’. These men were
more responsible than any group for Trump’s victory (63 per cent of them
voted for him; 31 per cent for Clinton).

One might argue she lost because of the disenfranchisement of millions
of people of colour through long-plotted Republican strategies: cutting
the number of polling stations; limiting voting hours; harassing and
threatening would-be voters; introducing voter-ID laws such as the
Crosscheck programme, which made it a lot harder for people of colour to
register to vote. Or because of the FBI’s intervention in the election;
or because of years of negative media coverage; or because of foreign
intervention designed to sabotage her chances; or because of misogyny.
But instead we heard two stories about why she lost (and almost none
about why, despite everything, she won the popular vote by a margin that
kept growing until by year’s end it reached almost three million).

The We Must Pay More Attention to the White Working Class analysis said
that Clinton lost because she did not pay enough attention to white men
since the revived term ‘white working class’ seemed to be a nostalgic
reference to industrial workers as they once existed. Those wielding it
weren’t interested in the 37 per cent of Americans who aren’t white, or
the 51 per cent who are women. I’ve always had the impression –from TV,
movies, newspapers, sport, books, my education, my personal life, and my
knowledge of who owns most things and holds government office at every
level in my country – that white men get a lot of attention already.

*

The other story was about white women, who voted 43 per cent for Clinton
to 53 per cent for Trump. We were excoriated for voting for Trump, on
the grounds that all women, but only women, should be feminists. That
there are a lot of women in the United States who are not feminists does
not surprise me. To be a feminist you have to believe in your equality
and rights, which can make your life unpleasant and dangerous if you
live in a marriage, a family, a community, a church, a state that does
not agree with you about this. For many women it’s safer not to have
those thoughts in this country where a woman is beaten every eleven
seconds or so and women’s partners are the leading cause of injury to
them. And those thoughts are not so available in a country where
feminism is forever being demonised and distorted. It seems it’s also
worse to vote for a racist if you’re a woman, because while white women
were excoriated, white men were let off the hook (across every racial
category, more men than women voted for Trump; overall 54 per cent of
women supported Clinton; 53 per cent of men voted for Trump).

So women were hated for not having gender loyalty. But here’s the fun
thing about being a woman: we were also hated for having gender loyalty.
Women were accused of voting with their reproductive parts if they
favoured the main female candidate, though most men throughout American
history have favoured male candidates without being accused of voting
with their penises. Penises were only discussed during a Republican
primary debate, when Marco Rubio suggested Trump’s was small and Trump
boasted that it wasn’t. ‘I don’t vote with my vagina,’ the actress Susan
Sarandon announced, and voted for the Green Party candidate, Jill Stein,
who one might think was just as vagina-y a candidate as Clinton but
apparently wasn‘t.

‘One of the many lessons of the recent presidential election campaign
and its repugnant outcome,’ Mark Lilla wrote in the /New York Times/,
‘is that the age of identity liberalism must be brought to an end,’ and
he condemned Clinton for calling out explicitly to African-American,
Latino, LGBT and women voters at every stop. ‘This,’ he said, ‘was a
strategic mistake. If you are going to mention groups in America, you
had better mention all of them.’ Who’s not on that list, though it’s one
that actually covers the majority of Americans? Heterosexual white men,
notably, since it’s hard to imagine Lilla was put out that Clinton
neglected Asians and Native Americans.

‘Identity politics’ is a codeword for talking about race or gender or
sexual orientation, which is very much the way we’ve talked about
liberation over the last 160 years in the US. By that measure Frederick
Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Ida
B. Wells, Rosa Parks, Bella Abzug, Ella Baker, Bayard Rustin, Malcolm X,
Del Martin and Harvey Milk were just lowly practitioners of identity
politics, which we’ve been told to get over. Shortly after the election
Sanders, who’d got on the no-identity-politics bandwagon, explained: ‘It
is not good enough to say, “Hey, I’m a Latina, vote for me.” That is not
good enough. I have to know whether that Latina is going to stand up
with the working class of this country … It is not good enough for
someone to say: “I’m a woman, vote for me.” No, that’s not good enough.’

In fact, Clinton never said this, though one could argue that Trump had
said, incessantly, aggressively, I’m a white man, vote for me, and even
that Sanders implicitly conveyed that message. The Vox journalist David
Roberts did a word-frequency analysis on Clinton’s campaign speeches and
concluded that she mostly talked about workers, jobs, education and the
economy, exactly the things she was berated for neglecting. She
mentioned jobs almost 600 times, racism, women’s rights and abortion a
few dozen times each. But she was assumed to be talking about her gender
all the time, though it was everyone else who couldn’t shut up about it.

How the utopian idealism roused by Sanders’s promises last winter
morphed so quickly into a Manichean hatred of Clinton as the anti-Bernie
is one of the mysteries of this mysteriously horrific election, but it
was so compelling that many people seemed to wake up from the Democratic
primary only when Trump won; they had until then believed Clinton was
still running against Sanders. Or they believed that she was an
inevitable presence, like Mom, and so they could hate her with
confidence, and she would win anyway. Many around me loved Sanders with
what came to seem an unquestioning religious devotion and hated Clinton
even more fervently. The hatred on the right spilled over into actual
violence over and over again at Trump rallies, but the left had its
share of vitriol.

I had seen all around me a mob mentality, an irrational groupthink that
fed on itself, confirmed itself and punished doubt, opposition or
complexity. I thought of the two-minute group hate sessions in /1984/:

    The horrible thing about the Two Minutes Hate was not that one was
    obliged to act a part, but, on the contrary, that it was impossible
    to avoid joining in. Within thirty seconds any pretence was always
    unnecessary. A hideous ecstasy of fear and vindictiveness, a desire
    to kill, to torture, to smash faces in with a sledgehammer, seemed
    to flow through the whole group of people like an electric current,
    turning one even against one’s will into a grimacing, screaming
    lunatic. And yet the rage that one felt was an abstract, undirected
    emotion which could be switched from one object to another like the
    flame of a blowlamp.

That emotion was directed at Clinton, and was ready to swerve towards
anyone who supported her, accompanied by accusations of treason and
other kinds of invective.[*]
<http://www.lrb.co.uk/v39/n02/rebecca-solnit/from-lying-to-leering#fn-asterisk>
Many supporters fell silent or took to supporting her in secret, which
is not the kind of support a candidate needs. A San Franciscan friend
wrote saying that

    every woman I know and almost every journalist or opinion writer who
    planned to vote for her included in every single positive statement
    about her – everything from Facebook posts to lengthy major media
    articles – something to the effect of ‘She is of course not a
    perfect candidate, but …’ or ‘I of course have serious problems with
    some aspects of her record, but …’ It became the boilerplate you had
    to include to forestall the worst of the rage-trolls (inevitably
    eventually someone would pop up anyway to accuse you of trying to
    shove your queen’s coronation down everyone’s throat, but at least
    the boilerplate delayed it).

‘I’ve come to believe,’ Sady Doyle wrote, ‘that, in some ways, saying
nice things about Hillary Clinton is a subversive act.’

*

Mentioning that she’d won the popular vote upset many of the men I am in
contact with, though they would not or could not conceive it that way. I
wrote this at the time: ‘With their deep belief in their own special
monopoly on objectivity, slightly too many men assure me that there is
no misogyny in their subjective assessments or even no subjectivity and
no emotion driving them, and there are no grounds for other opinions
since theirs is not an opinion.’ Then these men went back to talking
about what a loser Clinton was. There was considerable evidence that we
had not had a free and fair election, evidence that might have allowed
us to contest it and to stop Trump. But these men of the left were so
dedicated to Clinton’s status as a loser that they wanted Trump to win,
because it vindicated something that went deeper than their commitment
to almost anything else.

Trump was the candidate so weak that his victory needed the
disenfranchisement of millions of voters of colour, the end of the
Voting Rights Act, a long-running right-wing campaign to make Clinton’s
use of a private email server, surely the dullest and most uneventful
scandal in history, an epic crime and the late intervention, with
apparent intent to sabotage, of the FBI director James Comey. We found
out via Comey’s outrageous gambit that it is more damaging to be a woman
who has an aide who has an estranged husband who is a creep than
actually to be a predator who has been charged by more than a dozen
women with groping and sexual assault.

Hillary Clinton was all that stood between us and a reckless, unstable,
ignorant, inane, infinitely vulgar, climate-change-denying
white-nationalist misogynist with authoritarian ambitions and
kleptocratic plans. A lot of people, particularly white men, could not
bear her, and that is as good a reason as any for Trump’s victory. Over
and over again, I heard men declare that she had failed to make them
vote for her. They saw the loss as hers rather than ours, and they
blamed her for it, as though election was a gift they withheld from her
because she did not deserve it or did not attract them. They did not
blame themselves or the electorate or the system for failing to stop Trump.

[*]
<http://www.lrb.co.uk/v39/n02/rebecca-solnit/from-lying-to-leering#fn-ref-asterisk>
Here’s a post-election specimen, a Sanders supporter in New Mexico
railing against me on /Harper’s/ Facebook page: ‘I am tired of being
reminded of how people like Rebecca Solnit gave us a Donald Trump
presidency and now have the gall to talk about “stopping him”. You
supported Hillary with your silence. You supported Hillary by never
calling her out for what she is. You may not have said it out loud, but
it was clear … you supported Hillary. Btw, the Hillary campaign use of
her sex as a selling point made me sick.’

Vol. 39 No. 2 · 19 January 2017 <http://www.lrb.co.uk/v39/n02/contents>
» Rebecca Solnit <http://www.lrb.co.uk/contributors/rebecca-solnit> »
 From Lying to Leering
<http://www.lrb.co.uk/v39/n02/rebecca-solnit/from-lying-to-leering>
pages 3-7 | 3722 words

ISSN 0260-9592 Copyright <http://www.lrb.co.uk/copyright> © LRB Limited 2017

^ Top
<http://www.lrb.co.uk/v39/n02/rebecca-solnit/from-lying-to-leering#pagetop>


-- 
--

"To those who believe in resistance , who live between hope and
impatience and have learned the perils of being unreasonable.

To those who understand enough to be afraid, and yet retain their fury"



-- 
Peace Is Doable

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