By Georgi Boorman
Friday, December 29, 2017
Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton took a wrong turn on
social media this Christmas by publicly criticizing his toddler nephew for
wearing a princess dress, complete with a pink wand, on Christmas.
“I’m so sad right now — look at my nephew,” he said
flippantly in an Instagram story that has since been deleted. “Why are you
wearing a princess dress?” he asked the toddler, who smiled at his uncle and
nodded, then continued giggling and waving his wand. “Is this what you got for
Christmas?”
As the U.K. Daily
Mail reported, he raised his voice at the young child, still sounding quite
tongue-in-cheek, “Boys don’t wear princess dresses!” The tyke covered his ears
and turned away.
This social media post invited an avalanche of strong
opinions from randos, bloggers, and activists who are doubtless eminently
qualified to pronounce this flippant interaction as oppressive
heteronormativity. Feeling the heat of the torches and sharp jab of pitchforks
between his ribs, Lewis issued an apology to the social media mob:
Yesterday I was playing around with
my nephew and realised that my words were inappropriate so I removed the post.
I meant no harm and did not mean to offend anyone at all. I love that my nephew
feels free to express himself the
way we all should…’My deepest apologies for my behavior as I realise it is
really not acceptable in the world today
for anyone, no matter where you are from, to marginalise or stereotype anyone.
I have always been in support of anyone living
their life exactly how they wish and I hope I can be forgiven for this
lapse in judgement. (emphasis added).
Pride in London Twitter wasted no time in exploiting the
family drama made public: ‘‘Many of our community have experienced this kind of
shaming when we were younger…” British spoken word artist Travis Alabanza (who
bases his performance on being “black and trans and queer”) also tried to guilt
(dare I say shame) Hamilton into
donating to “a LGBT youth charity”: “Thinks about why it is so horrible, and
considers donating to a charity which supports LGBT youth. That video is a
video so many of us have experienced. Gross. It sticks with you.”
Another blogger tweeted that “Boys wear whatever they
want…Boys can be princesses. Dresses aren’t shameful. Go stick your toxic
masculinity up your arse.”
Telling Kids the
Truth Isn’t Bad
Let’s be clear. Despite what Hamilton has been pressured
into stating, perhaps into believing, telling his nephew that “Boys don’t wear
princess dresses” is not “gender-shaming.” The tyke doesn’t even know what
gender is. His existence is full of play and discovering the world in probably
a loving home with loving parents. I highly doubt he has paused his Christmas
enthusiasm to ponder what sex he is or form any sort of opinion about his
gender identity. Nor is his princess
outfit likely to be a deliberate “expression” of some inner feeling of
femaleness.
“Boys don’t wear princess dresses” is not “stereotyping”
or “marginalizing,” it’s simply an assertion of plain differences between the
sexes, which we communicate socially in the way we dress. As his nephew
matures, he is overwhelmingly likely to feel comfortable being who he is, a boy, and expressing that by wearing boy
clothes and doing things that boys tend to do.
Yes, as a general rule, boys don’t wear princess dresses, or dresses of any sort in everyday
life. But toddlers like to play dress-up. They aren’t trying on “gender
identities,” or expressing some deeply held belief that they are actually
girls; they’re trying on clothes and playing make-believe. That’s a critical
distinction between normal child’s play and the delusions of adolescents and
adults who assert that wearing dresses and makeup, taking hormone blockers, and
maybe even getting surgery makes a person a “woman” and defines one’s identity.
But this is make-believe.
It’s not going to hurt or confuse a toddler to don a pink
and purple dress on Christmas. As more sane Twitter users wrote, “Maybe boys
don’t wear princess dresses but you’ve worn silly outfits as well. It is what
it is. Be happy, it’s Christmas.” Nabeela tweeted, “You can’t publicly put down
a CHILD for innocently liking what they like or wanting what they want,
especially when you’re an icon and someone who kids look up to, respect and
admire.”
The Real Problem
Is Taking Private Family Matters Public
That user goes on to promote false notions about
transgenderism, but that tweet has it exactly right. Airing family
disagreements on social media and exposing a small boy’s face to millions in a
context of chastisement, albeit jokingly, is foolish and potentially harmful.
It is sure to call down the wrath of every gender studies major and LGBTQ+++
activist who would exploit the make-believe of an innocent toddler to further a
political agenda.
Further, what was child’s play is now defcon III family
drama. Hamilton’s nephew may not be able to read social media comments, but
it’s hard to believe tensions in the household didn’t escalate over the
controversy, and children are definitely affected by that.
Moreover, people who know the boy and saw the video might
decide to impress their beliefs about gender fluidity on a toddler who cannot
appropriately process these abstract concepts, but might get the impression
that people want him to dress and act more like a girl. What was once simple
play is now a confusing jumble of others’ wishes for how he should behave.
Children need and crave stability, normalcy, rules and
clear examples to follow. Of course, the freedom to play make-believe, to
pretend for an hour or so that one is a girl, and try on various outfits without
having adults confuse toddlers about their sex is important. Yet that freedom
and comfort can only exist in a heteronormative regime, not one that tries to
raise children outside of reality-based sexual norms. The rules are what allow
children to play make-believe, and to separate the fantasy from reality.
Despite claims from advocates of the New Sexual
Revolution that they “just want everyone to be themselves,” lying that boys can
be girls and vice versa creates yet
another vulnerability in impressionable children. Under the guise of gender
freedom, older children especially can experience pressures where otherwise
they would be allowed to simply grow out of a phase and go on to lead normal,
healthy heterosexual lives. Social media only exacerbates the threat. So let
toddlers play dress-up, but let them do it privately in the safety and normalcy
of their own homes.
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