Saturday, April 12, 2014

NOT A FEMINIST? Time for the World’s Smallest Women’s Rights Quiz

I am a proponent of equal pay for equal work regardless of who is doing it.  I believe in equal rights for women; I believe it is long past the time that the Equal Rights Amendment should have been the law of the land.  So why did I buy into not being a feminist? 

I think part of it was the casting of the feminist as one who did not support women who wanted to stay at home.  As a Libertarian I believe people should have choices; however, as time has gone by and I have seen that things have not gone the better way for women’s rights in the ways they have for others, then I have to wonder if I went wrong by not calling myself a feminist. I believe Feminism is like Libertarianism in that if you could take the World’s Smallest Feminist Test then most of us would be accurately described as Feminist on the Women’s Rights map.


One aspect of the conflict was the casting of the image of the feminist as anti-male and anti-family.  Some wanted to keep a special privilege for Moms, forgetting that to dignify the role of mom (parent) is to also dignify Dad’s (parent) role.  It is clear that one of the reasons this has happened in the last twenty years is that the freedom to divorce has relieved moms of some of the parenting responsibilities by forcing Dads to do more of it. 

Blaming women for not being men (and vice versa?)

Women have been to an extent patronized for actively deciding not to commit to the drudgery (extra long work hours, very long commutes, separation from family) required to ‘pay their dues’ to become eligible for many, higher paying jobs.  Women can speak up for the fact that there is a big picture.  In our roles as workers, parents, spouses (whichever ones we choose or may have been thrust upon us), women have had to be more realistic about the cost-benefit of paying short term dues for long term gains which don’t pencil out because they have had to keep many of the same domestic responsibilities at the same time.

To realize that the job isn’t everything, that a balance is required for the health of the individuals and the family, is an improvement for every participant. Many men are happy now to stay home and let women be the principal wage-earners.  Of course, the family leave act helped tremendously to bring these realizations to many men who had the privilege of being insulated from domestic roles beyond the benefit of being its secondary recipients (children being the first).

Also, the movement is partially anti-male in the perceived goal of wresting rights, privileges either away from or requested to be bestowed by men, or male-controlled institutions (are there any other kind?)  While concrete goals will be won in the specific arenas of labor, employment rights, healthcare, schools, etc., there is perhaps a psychological element to the fight that we need to win by engaging hearts and minds as well. I am not trying to discourage those who actively work for feminist goals in the legal, workplace, domestic violence and other arenas because that is arguably the most necessary component (and perhaps the only accurate measure of success). 

However, I think we could affect faster and more meaningful results if we offer significant assistance to the movement by steering the dialogue toward challenging people to correct the corrosive conflict between jobs and families as opposed to concentrating on outdated male vs female and individual vs family false dichotomies.  By being more egalitarian, by offering choices that are equal to either sex (or gender), people are free to choose the roles that best fit their own family and job goals.

I don’t need a test to tell me that I take it back, I am a Feminist.