Melanie Phillips: Feminists are set on making us all victims

A piece in today’s Times:

At a debate last week about the MeToo movement, the human rights lawyer Helena Kennedy observed that after the flood of allegations of male sexual assault and misbehaviour a backlash was always inevitable.

It turned out that I was the backlash. I was seconding the motion that MeToo had “gone too far”. Unfortunately my team-mate who was supposedly proposing the motion, the veteran feminist Germaine Greer, had decided that MeToo had not just not gone too far but hadn’t even got off the starting blocks. So against Germaine, Helena and her seconder, Sophie Walker of the Women’s Equality Party, as well as a majority of the 1,000-strong audience, I made what felt like a lonely case.

In essence, I said that while some powerful men had reportedly behaved shockingly badly and even criminally towards women, the MeToo movement was demonising men in general and had exhibited disproportionality, complicity and hypocrisy. Oh, and vanity, narcissism and arrogance too.

So you can see I held back. For their part, Helena and Sophie made a passionate case that women were victims of men. There was no acknowledgement that both men and women might sometimes be victims of each other. There was no recognition that women might bear a measure of responsibility for some things that happened to them. Instead, women were presented as entirely passive “fodder” for sexual use and abuse.

Yet in Hollywood some women have profited hugely from their sexualised image. Among those who say they were sexually assaulted, some had not only placed themselves in compromising situations, not only kept quiet about the alleged assaults but continued to enjoy stellar careers and friendships over many years with the men they now say attacked them.

In Britain, so many men have now been falsely accused of rape that the Crown Prosecution Service has opened an inquiry into every case of rape or serious sexual assault to find out how many more men it has wrongly put on trial. The MeToo crowd make no mention of this. They complain instead of the injustice done to women by a rape conviction rate that’s too low. By what conceivable measure, though, is this “too low”? Only according to the MeToo mantra that all women claiming rape are telling the truth and all men accused of rape are guilty. This inverts the presumption of innocence and leads directly to gross injustice against men whose lives are destroyed by false allegations. Yet the MeToo crowd can’t see this at all because, to them, women are solely the victims of injustice at the hands of men.

Sophie Walker actually claimed that we were living in a patriarchy. Britain has a woman prime minister, a woman home secretary, a woman director of public prosecutions, a woman head of the Supreme Court, a woman running the Metropolitan Police. Political parties have all-women shortlists. Education has been feminised through collaborative coursework and the denigration of competition.

For many women, men have been reduced to little more than sperm donors and walking wallets. They have been told that all the characteristics or roles they value so highly such as valour, leadership or breadwinning are dangerous, pathetic or demeaning.

All this is apparently irrelevant. Declared Baroness Kennedy of The Shaws, QC — a member of the UK legislature, principal of Mansfield College, Oxford and former chairwoman of the Genetics Commission, the Power Commission and the British Council: “Power is coded male.” Should one laugh or cry?

There are indeed women who really are powerless and institutionally victimised by men. Yet no MeToo movement has sprung up to protest against their oppression. What is the feminist reaction to women victimised by Sharia, subjected to female genital mutilation or “honour” killings or stoned to death for adultery? Silence. What is the feminist reaction to the Iranian women ripping off their headscarves and putting their lives on the line to get rid of the clerical regime that tyrannises them? Silence. What is the feminist reaction to the poor white girls of Telford or Rotherham who have been pimped, raped and enslaved by mostly Pakistani-heritage Muslim gangs? Silence.

Instead, the great protest against their own alleged victimisation and oppression is being mounted by women in the West, the most free, most independent, most educated and most wealthy women in the world today and in the history of the human race.

Back in the Nineties, I had begun to realise that, far from sharing my concern to defend the vulnerable against abuses of power, feminists and other so-called progressives were actually on the other side. This drift into heresy had been noticed. A note was pinned to the noticeboard at The Guardian newspaper where I then worked. “She may be a woman,” a female colleague had written there about me, “but she isn’t a sister.”

At the debate, Baroness Kennedy said it saddened her that women were part of the backlash against MeToo because that made them “part of the hegemony that holds the status quo in place”. I suppose that was me too.

I’m sad that Helena Kennedy was sad about me. I’m much more sad, however, about the injustice, gender-hate and sub-Marxist claptrap that now passes for “feminist” thought — a betrayal of the cause of women everywhere.

You can subscribe to The Times here.

Swedish preschools recast children’s gender in social engineering experiment

Breitbart have just published this. The start of the piece:

Following State regulations to counteract traditional gender roles, a number of Swedish preschools have begun experimenting in innovative ways to blur the differences between boys and girls.

The Swedish government has been committed to the deconstruction of gender for decades, and in 1998, added a requirement to its national curriculum that all preschools “counteract traditional gender roles and gender patterns” and encourage children to explore “outside the limitations of stereotyped gender roles.”

At preschools across the country, toddlers are addressed by gender-neutral pronouns, encouraged to play at games commonly associated with the other sex, and forced to overcome natural tendencies toward aggression or passivity, according to a March 24 article in the New York Times.

The State curriculum “urges teachers and principals to embrace their role as social engineers,” the Times article declares, despite the fact that the effect of this teaching method on children “is still unclear.”

At the Seafarer’s Preschool outside Stockholm, for instance, teachers remove gender-specific toys like cars and dolls and have the boys play kitchen while the girls are made to shout “No!”

In attempts to teach gender fluidity, teachers are told to treat the boys and girls alike in every way, with no exceptions, and even to curb behavior generally associated with their sex.

The school has its own “in-house gender expert,” who periodically reviews progress on “gender objectives” for the students, aimed at breaking down gender stereotypes received from families and society.

The teachers begin with the premise that there is no such thing as something that is “for boys” or “for girls” and they try to inculcate this gender neutrality in every schoolchild.

At the Seafarer’s Preschool, the male children’s natural tendency to boisterousness and physicality is intentionally counteracted and they are encouraged to be more passive and quiet, and to engage in activities such as painting. The girls, on the other hand, are denied their desire to be picked up and held, and are instead made to shout and assert themselves.

“Sweden is really the pioneer,” said Lann Hornscheidt, a professor of gender studies and linguistics at the Humboldt University’s Center for Transdisciplinary Gender Studies. “No other country has made such an effort to break down gender barriers among children.”

The godfather of Swedish gender-neutral preschools was a man named Ingemar Gens, who was hired by the town of Trodje as “equal opportunity expert” in 1996. Gens’ background was not in education, but in journalism, though he “dabbled” in gender theory and sought to break down the norm of Swedish masculinity. [J4MB emphasis]

Please support Anthony T Corniche III – crowdfunder to help him buy equipment for ICMI18. £740 raised towards £1,000 target.

Anthony T Corniche III is the amazing man responsible for the filming and editing of the presentations at ICMI16 and ICMI17. He kindly agreed to do the same again for ICMI18, and started a crowdfunder for £1,000 towards the £2,450 cost of buying some equipment for the event – here. Donations have just reached £740. Please support Anthony if you can. Thanks.

BBC feminazis trash “Top Gear”. Sabine Schmitz (female racing driver) drivers faster than Rory Reid (journalist). Big deal.

BBC feminazis can’t leave anything alone, even Top Gear. And there’s nothing they like more than rigging situations so that women humiliate men. In last night’s episode Sabine Schmitz, a German professional motor racing driver for BMW and Porsche, smugly instructed Rory Reid on how to get better lap times in a Chevrolet “muscle car”, then promptly beat his time without him in the car, which in itself would have improved her lap time.

What exactly did this licence fee funded nonsense demonstrate? That a female racing driver can manage lap times faster than… er… a journalist. Big deal. What next? Maybe the BBC is working on a programme where a top female chess player beats a male traffic warden at the game. But in chess as in motor racing and in all competitions where achievement can be objectively measured women are nowhere to be seen at the top level. Women require performance to be subjectively measured to sustain any pretence of equal performance, and even that generally requires rigging of assessment processes by women, and men determined to curry women’s favour by preferencing women over men.

If you have a BBC licence you can watch the episode of Top Gear here. The section with Rory Reid and Sabine Schmitz is 11:50 – 25:15.