How  to make feminism great again
 
 
Christina Hoff SommersSpecial to the Washington PostChicago TribuneDecember 
8,  2016
 
 
Hillary Clinton's defeat is wreaking havoc in  the sisterhood. Celebrity 
feminists are especially distraught. "Girls" star  Lena Dunham developed hives 
and fled to Sedona for spiritual renewal. Katy  Perry took to Twitter to 
declare "THE REVOLUTION IS COMING." For feminist  icon Robin Morgan, the 
election is proof that "a diseased patriarchy is in a  battle to the death with 
women." 
But less excitable analysts are drawing more  sober conclusions: Perhaps 
the women's movement is too elitist and out of  touch with ordinary citizens, 
especially working-class women. That seems  right, but I would go one step 
further. Today's feminism is not merely out  of touch with everyday 
Americans; it's out of touch with reality. To  survive, it's going to have to 
come 
back to planet  Earth.
 
 
First of all, it's time to stop calling  the United States a patriarchy. A 
patriarchy is a system where men hold the  power and women do not. Women do 
hold power in the United States — they lead  major universities and giant 
corporations, write influential books, serve as  state and federal judges and 
even manage winning presidential campaigns. American women, especially  
college-educated women, are the freest and most self-determining in  human 
history. Why pretend otherwise?
 
Feminism is drowning in myth-information.  Advocates never tire of telling 
us that women are cheated out of nearly a  quarter of their salary; that one 
in four college women is sexually  assaulted, or that women are facing an 
epidemic of online abuse and  violence. 
Such claims are hugely distorted, but they  have been repeated so often 
that they have taken on the aura of truth.  Workplace discrimination, sexual 
assault and online threats are genuine  problems, but to solve them women need 
sober analysis, not hype and spin.  Exaggerated claims and crying wolf 
discredit good causes and send scarce  resources in the wrong direction.  
Today's women's movement also needs to  reckon with the fact that men 
struggle just as much as women. Modern life is  a complicated mix of burdens 
and 
advantages for each sex. Too often,  feminism focuses on gender inequities 
among elites: CEOs, MIT  astrophysicists, U.S. senators. It is true that 
there are too few women in  those positions, but we need to consider the entire 
workforce for context.  Most backbreaking, lethally dangerous jobs — roofer, 
logger, roustabout and  coal miner, to name a few — are done by men. 
 
_Manly  men need to take on more girly jobs_ 
(http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/commentary/ct-masculine-men-feminine-jobs-20161207-story.html)
 

It is men — especially working-class men —  who are disproportionately 
crushed, mutilated, electrocuted or mangled at  work. Activists lament the 
dearth of women in the Fortune 500, but they fail  to mention the Unfortunate 
4,500 — the approximate number of men killed on  the job every year. 
Men are also the have-nots in education.  Hispanic and Native American 
women are now more likely to attend college  than white men. Unless we find 
ways 
to help them, a large and growing cohort  of young men — white, black, 
Hispanic, you name it — are unlikely to  find a place for themselves in the 
modern economy. When men languish, so do  the women who love them. 
Within living memory, the American women's  movement was a valiant, 
broad-based vehicle for social equality. It achieved  historic victories and 
was 
rightly admired for its determination and  success. But today, Big Feminism is 
a narrow, take-no-prisoners  special-interest group. It sees the world as a 
zero-sum struggle between  Venus and Mars. But most women want equality — 
not  war.  
Men aren't their adversaries — they  are their brothers, sons, husbands and 
friends. As Henry Kissinger  reportedly said, "No one will ever win the 
battle of the sexes. There's too  much fraternizing with the enemy.
 
 
Robin Morgan's death match with the  patriarchy has always had limited 
appeal. Feminism needs to take women as  they are, not as it wishes they would 
be. In a 2013 poll, Pew asked American  mothers about their "ideal" working 
arrangement. Sixty-one percent said they  would prefer to work part-time or 
not at all. Catherine Hakim, a sociologist  at the London School of 
Economics, found similar preferences among Western  European women.  
As journalist Tina Brown said, "There are  more tired wives who want to be 
Melania sitting by the pool ... than there  are women who want to pursue a 
PhD in earnest  self-improvement."  
When women want the "wrong" things,  feminists tend to write it off to 
entrenched sexism and internalized  misogyny. But it's 2016, not 1960. Why not 
credit women with free will and  respect their choices? 
Women's activists are now planning a  Women's March on Washington on Jan. 
21. The organizers want to remind the  new administration that women's rights 
are human rights and for the world to  "HEAR OUR VOICE," in all caps. If I 
may offer some unsolicited advice: If  that voice is calm and judicious 
rather than hyperbolic and harping, people  just might  listen.



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