Feminist rabble rouser Amanda Marcotte has encouraged young
women to take naked selfies. It’s good clean fun, don’t you know.
Marcotte wrote:
It’s
the nude photo leak version of blaming a sexual assault victim for a short
skirt. It isn’t just that it shifts blame away from where it belongs, on the
perpetrators. It’s not just because it’s the typical misogynist tendency to
assume a woman is to blame for attacks on her. It’s because this attitude is
anti-creativity, anti-fun, anti-sex and, in many cases, anti-love.
According to a leading feminist, love is sending naked
pictures of yourself to … whomever.
By her lights, if anyone passes the pictures around in the
locker room, if you suffer humiliation, you can console yourself with the idea
that you are not to blame.
As though anyone ever believed such a thing. It is fair to mention
that attorneys defending rapists sometimes try to exculpate their clients by
saying that the woman’s attire was provocative, but you do better not to live
your life preparing to testify against someone who assaulted you.
As every mother knows and as every mother tells her
daughter, it is best to ensure that it not happen at all.
Marcotte, however, advises women to be reckless, irresponsible, incautious… because if anything bad happens to you, feminism will
console you by saying that it wasn’t your fault.
Marcotte exemplifies a mindless feminism in which older
feminists are willing to sacrifice, if not pimp out young women for the cause.
To counter this message, feminist firebrand and notable anti-prude Camille Paglia
has offered a few words of sage advice for young women.
Beginning her Time column with a reflection on Hannah Graham--
the University of Virginia student who vanished a couple of weeks ago and who
was presumably abducted, raped and murdered—Paglia responds that young people
have been coddled into thinking that sex is just good clean fun.
They have not learned that sex comports serious risks and dangers,
especially when you go out and have a drink with a stranger you met on the
street in the middle of the night.
No one is saying or thinking that Graham is responsible for
what happened to her, but it is worth pointing out that she seems to have
behaved recklessly. There is no consolation is knowing that she was not to
blame.
Paglia has no patience with the feminists who are railing
about the rape culture on college campus:
Wildly
overblown claims about an epidemic of sexual assaults on American campuses are
obscuring the true danger to young women, too often distracted by cellphones or
iPods in public places: the ancient sex crime of abduction and murder. Despite
hysterical propaganda about our “rape culture,” the majority of campus
incidents being carelessly described as sexual assault are not felonious rape
(involving force or drugs) but oafish hookup melodramas, arising from mixed
signals and imprudence on both sides.
Feminists who denounce the campus rape culture are failing
to inform young women of the dangers that exist off campus. And they are
lulling young women into believing that they can go where they want, when they
want, with whom they want… without fearing any consequences.
Apparently, people believe that if everyone keeps saying
that women are “strong” and “empowered” then women will become strong and
empowered. In fact, women who buy into the incantations become deluded about
their true strength and forget that they are vulnerable.
Paglia continues:
Too
many young middleclass women, raised far from the urban streets, seem to expect
adult life to be an extension of their comfortable, overprotected homes. But
the world remains a wilderness. The price of women’s modern freedoms is
personal responsibility for vigilance and self-defense.
If it’s all a social construct, evil exists only within the
hearts and minds of those who belong to the ruling class. The oppressed of the
planet will behave well if only we feel sufficiently guilty for their
condition and show them sufficient empathy.
It’s reminds one of the Obama administration notion that if
we reach out to Muslims with an open hand of friendship, terrorism will
disappear. After all, terrorism is merely a just reaction to Western
oppression.
Paglia writes:
The
horrors and atrocities of history have been edited out of primary and secondary
education except where they can be blamed on racism, sexism, and imperialism —
toxins embedded in oppressive outside structures that must be smashed and
remade. But the real problem resides in human nature, which religion as well as
great art sees as eternally torn by a war between the forces of darkness and
light.
She adds:
Misled
by the naive optimism and “You go, girl!” boosterism of their upbringing, young
women do not see the animal eyes glowing at them in the dark. They assume that
bared flesh and sexy clothes are just a fashion statement containing no
messages that might be misread and twisted by a psychotic. They do not
understand the fragility of civilization and the constant nearness of savage
nature.
Young girls are told that they can do what they want, that
they can become whatever they want and that nothing can hold them back. They never
learn that their attire, for example, is sending messages and that these
messages might be misread by sociopaths. If Paglia is correct, many young women
do not even understand what it is to be a sociopath.
Clearly, a woman is not to blame if she is assaulted by a
sociopath, but how much of a consolation is that, really.
Today’s young intellectuals no longer believe in God.
Perhaps that is why, as Paglia suggests, they fail to grasp the reality of an evil that is not a social construct:
Liberalism
lacks a profound sense of evil — but so does conservatism these days, when evil
is facilely projected onto a foreign host of rising political forces united
only in their rejection of Western values. Nothing is more simplistic than the
now rote use by politicians and pundits of the cartoonish label “bad guys” for
jihadists, as if American foreign policy is a slapdash script for a cowboy
movie.
The
gender ideology dominating academe denies that sex differences are rooted in
biology and sees them instead as malleable fictions that can be revised at
will. The assumption is that complaints and protests, enforced by sympathetic
campus bureaucrats and government regulators, can and will fundamentally alter
all men.
And today’s therapy culture, as I would call it, is not
doing any better.
In Paglia’s words:
But
today’s therapy has morphed into happy talk, attitude adjustments, and
pharmaceutical shortcuts.