PhilMickelsonTigerWoods

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 10 June 2013

Cluelessness is next to godliness

Posted on 21:17 by Unknown
One of the interesting trends over the last generation is toward willful ignorance. In the past, newspaper columnists got paid in large part because they could put on a knowing manner. But obliviousness is the new saintliness. Thus, New York Times op-ed columnist Frank Bruni isn't embarrassed to admit he doesn't have a clue:
Sexism’s Puzzling Stamina 
By FRANK BRUNI 
... It’s gender — and all the recent reminders of how often women are still victimized, how potently they’re still resented and how tenaciously a musty male chauvinism endures. On this front even more than the others, I somehow thought we’d be further along by now. 
I can’t get past that widely noted image from a week ago, of the Senate hearing into the epidemic of sexual assault in the military. It showed an initial panel of witnesses: 11 men, one woman. It also showed the backs of some of the senators listening to them: five men and one woman, from a Senate committee encompassing 19 men and seven women in all. Under discussion was the violation of women and how to stop it. And men, once again, were getting more say. 
I keep flashing back more than two decades, to 1991. That was the year of the Tailhook incident, in which some 100 Navy and Marine aviators were accused of sexually assaulting scores of women.

All those poor women who traveled across the country annually to party in a Las Vegas hotel with fighter pilots ... How could those innocent women possibly have known that a convention entitled "Tailhook" might not be solely devoted to the discussion of naval aviation landing tackle?
It was the year of Susan Faludi’s runaway best seller, “Backlash,” on the “war against American women,” as the subtitle said. It was when the issue of sexual harassment took center stage in Clarence Thomas’s confirmation hearings. 
All in all it was a festival of teachable moments, raising our consciousness into the stratosphere. So where are we, fully 22 years later? 
... But what about movies? It was all the way back in 1986 that Sigourney Weaver trounced “Aliens” and landed on the cover of Time, supposedly presaging an era of action heroines. But there haven’t been so many: Angelina Jolie in the “Tomb Raider” adventures, “Salt” and a few other hectic flicks; Jennifer Lawrence in the unfolding “Hunger Games” serial. Last summer Kristen Stewart’s “Snow White” needed a “Huntsman” at her side, and this summer? I see an “Iron Man,” a “Man of Steel” and Will Smith, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon and Channing Tatum all shouldering the weight of civilization’s future. I see no comparable crew of warrior goddesses. 
Heroines fare better on TV, but even there I’m struck by the persistent stereotype of a woman whose career devotion is both seed and flower of a tortured private life. Claire Danes in “Homeland,” Mireille Enos in “The Killing,” Dana Delany in “Body of Proof” and even Mariska Hargitay in “Law & Order: SVU” all fit this bill. 
The idea that professional and domestic concerns can’t be balanced isn’t confined to the tube. A recent Pew Research Center report showing that women had become the primary providers in 40 percent of American households with at least one child under 18 prompted the conservative commentators Lou Dobbs and Erick Erickson to fret, respectively, over the dissolution of society and the endangerment of children. When Megyn Kelly challenged them on Fox News, they responded in a patronizing manner that they’d never use with a male news anchor. 
Title IX, enacted in 1972, hasn’t led to an impressive advancement of women in pro sports. The country is now on its third attempt at a commercially viable women’s soccer league. The Women’s National Basketball Association lags far behind the men’s N.B.A. in visibility and revenue. ...
But about the larger picture, I’m mystified. Our racial bigotry has often been tied to the ignorance abetted by unfamiliarity, our homophobia to a failure to realize how many gay people we know and respect. 
Well, women are in the next cubicle, across the dinner table, on the other side of the bed. Almost every man has a mother he has known and probably cared about; most also have a wife, daughter, sister, aunt or niece as well. Our stubborn sexisms harms and holds back them, not strangers. Still it survives.

It's almost as if the conventional wisdom does more to obscure than to enlighten about something as basic as male and female.

My recollection is that gay men once took a particular pride in being clever and perceptive about sex differences, while lesbians tended to be obtuse.

What happened? Can you imagine Bruni's essay being written by, say, Oscar Wilde? Noel Coward? Cole Porter? George Cukor? Lorenz Hart?

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Finally, a gay male athlete comes out and he is ...
    There has been much anticipation in the press that Real Soon Now an active major team sport jock would finally come out of the closet. But I...
  • Noticing patterns
    From the AP : A person familiar with the negotiations tells The Associated Press that all players targeted for drug suspensions other than A...
  • "This Is the End"
    The Los Angeles Apocalypse , when the Lotus Eaters of L.A. finally get what's coming to them, is a popular topic worldwide, and is a par...
  • Zimmerman, Martin, Yglesias, and false stereotypes
    By the way, regarding Matthew Yglesias's admission today in Slate that the two criminals who knocked him down with punches as he walke...
  • Michael Hastings' death: I'm glad that's all cleared up
    From the Los Angeles Times : No foul play suspected in Michael Hastings' death, LAPD says I watched a lot of the  Mannix  detective seri...
  • Latinos don't fail school, school fails Latinos!
    Have you ever noticed how the Cult of Diversity turns respectable public discourse into one big 1980s Yakov Smirnoff routine ? From the San ...
  • Obama confesses to racially profiling black youths
    Richard Cohen writes in his Washington Post column: In the meantime, the least we can do is talk honestly about the problem. It does no one...
  • Tsarnaev-Todashev story has immigration fraud written all over it
    From the Boston Globe : In 2008, the US government granted Todashev asylum, a protection granted to foreigners with a credible fear for thei...
  • The culture that is Mexico
    From the Los Angeles Times : Driver's ed in Mexico City: White knuckles all the way Mexico City doesn't require adults to pass an ex...
  • U! S! A! -- We're Number Two!
    But Schumer and Rubio have a plan to fix that. The Awesomest Newspaper on Earth reports: Mexico takes over from the U.S. as the fattest nati...

Categories

  • Beyond parody (1)
  • crime (1)
  • Flight from White (2)
  • Idiocracy (1)
  • movies (1)
  • music (1)
  • Nirvana (1)
  • Open Borders (16)
  • panhandling (8)
  • television (1)
  • The Eight Banditos (7)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  August (61)
    • ►  July (105)
    • ▼  June (133)
      • The 2016 Undernews
      • 150th Anniversary of Gettysburg
      • Google Reader going away
      • Understanding the postwar era
      • Who wrinkles fastest?
      • What 70 IQ looks like
      • National News: Eva Longoria gets Chicano Studies M...
      • Hobbes: Bloomberg has been a great mayor
      • Good point
      • Google Dopedar
      • Trayvon trial showcases future of America
      • Google Reader going away this weekend
      • Xanax for Gay Summer Weddings
      • Bloomberg: "We disproportionately stop whites too ...
      • Did Trayvon gaybash Zimmerman?
      • Chechens acting Checheny
      • "This Is the End"
      • New Republic: "Why Liberals Should Oppose the Immi...
      • "World War Z"
      • Slate: "Racism produced the NBA’s most notorious d...
      • Better late than never, I guess
      • Jewish Daily Forward: "Jews Unite Behind Push for ...
      • Aaron Hernandez: Witness-murderer?
      • Marc Rich and the Rape of Russia
      • The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Surveillance
      • Affirmative action and immigration
      • Supreme Court rules Time moves in forward direction
      • "Man of Steel"
      • Peter Schaeffer: The history of immigration and as...
      • FBI: Rodney King was right: Angelenos can all just...
      • "How Immigration Can Hurt a Country" in theory, no...
      • Supreme Court upholds college affirmative action, ...
      • Surveillance or Megaphone: Which is more important?
      • Front Page News!
      • The Obama Campaign and Big Data
      • Trende: "The Case of the Missing White Voters, Rev...
      • Visas as civil rights for foreigners
      • Haaretz: "In U.S. snooping affair, Israeli firms a...
      • Gang of Eight backer forms Gang of One, robs 19 banks
      • Tiger Parents riot: "No fairness if you do not let...
      • Rasmussen on CBO
      • In which I leave the house
      • Border "Surge"
      • Zimmerman jury: All women, no blacks (?)
      • Michael Hastings' death: I'm glad that's all clear...
      • Borjas: The Slowdown in the Economic Assimilation ...
      • Coulter: The Immigration-Domestic Snooping Nexus
      • What to call Republicans who support Schumer's bill?
      • Crime, Big Data, and real estate investing
      • The stand-up comics' cartel
      • Obama foreign v. domestic policy
      • Protesting Carlos Slim's exploitation of poor Mexi...
      • Young Turks, Salonikan Freemasons, and Crypto-Jews
      • "Differential Fertility, Human Capital, and Develo...
      • Kaus: Make a video against Schumer-Rubio
      • VDH: "The elite charm of comprehensive immigration...
      • Stifling whistleblowers
      • Snowden: Don't mention the I-Word!
      • A microcosm of what's wrong with the way we think
      • Front Page News! 7-11s caught employing 50+ illega...
      • Women's basketball and The Narrative.
      • Middle class blacks v. underclass blacks in suburb...
      • Ask a Swede
      • "Stockholm rioters could be a labour asset"
      • Phil Mickelson v. Tiger Woods on paying California...
      • To GOP Brain Trust, demography is density
      • Why is Carlos Slim the world's richest man?
      • Rubio's Schumer's Schumer
      • Schumer's Schumer
      • The Singularity of Stupidity
      • A Marxist view of U.S. foundations
      • Mysterious attack leaves Washington Post baffled
      • The culture that is Mexico, Part II
      • Mexico v. America: Which has better real estate?
      • Winston Smith loved Big Brother.
      • The culture that is Mexico
      • Cesar Chavez movie: La Raza instead of La Causa
      • Coulter: Hispanic vote overstated
      • Merion Golf Club and the decline of WASPs
      • The Vatican's Gay Caballeros
      • Twins galore in Wilmette, Illinois
      • Kaus: Set aside Team Red v. Team Blue follies and ...
      • Hasn't somebody else been spying on American telep...
      • Big Data versus Dominique Strauss-Kahn
      • Here we go again: SoCal home prices up 25% in 1 year
      • Google neuters Google Gaydar
      • Google unpersons Mangan's blog
      • Cluelessness is next to godliness
      • Roland G. Fryer, Jr.'s Great Moments in Social Sci...
      • Chinese conspiracy theorizing
      • Education fads: What goes around comes around
      • NYT Self-Parody Watch: Gypsies, Tramps, and Thieve...
      • The point and sputter state
      • Gang of Eight to import more stoop laborers becaus...
      • Top 10 standard of living metro areas in the U.S.
      • Bill Gates praises nearly all-white class: "Every ...
      • Santa Monica shooter perhaps named Zawahri
      • Is H1-B visa boost a payoff for PRISM?
      • "American Pravda:" Sibel Edmonds
      • Turkey is Byzantine, Part XXXVII
    • ►  May (169)
    • ►  April (32)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile