By Carrie Lukas
Wednesday, November 14, 2018
Some progressives have decided that rather than
convincing women that their candidates and policy proposals are better than
those of conservatives, they will shame women who fail to vote for the Left by
defining them all as racist and self-loathing tools of the patriarchy.
Think I’m exaggerating?
See this from the Guardian’s
op-ed entitled “Half of White Women Continue to Vote Republican. What’s Wrong
with Them?”
What is wrong with white women? Why
do half of them so consistently vote for Republicans, even as the Republican
party morphs into a monstrously ugly organization that is increasingly
indistinguishable from a hate group? The most likely answer seems to be that
white women vote for Republicans for the same reason that white men do: because
they are racist.
This article echoed Vogue’s
post-midterm-election lament, “Why Do White Women Keep Voting for the GOP and
Against Their Own Interests?”
Are they so invested in their own
white privilege that they simply don’t care about other women? Are they
parroting their Republican husbands and/or brainwashed by Fox & Friends?
Maybe and maybe.
Brainwashed. Unsisterly. Traitors. Racist.
These are the labels being pushed on Republican women not
just by leftist party activists, but by supposedly nonpartisan entertainment
outlets. People don’t turn to Vogue
for political commentary, just as they don’t turn on the latest television
crime drama for a lecture about gun control. But that’s what’s served up. This
subtle societal backdrop, caricaturing conservative women not just as wrong,
but as inherently vile and cruel, encourages Democrats to feel just in shaming,
silencing, and marginalizing them. So much for the Left’s mantra of “Make YOUR
voice heard.”
Waiting for back-to-school night to begin, while
exchanging names and pleasantries with parents of my daughters’ new classmates,
I would never have brought up politics, and I carefully neutered descriptions
of my employment to avoid revealing any ideological leanings. Yet the woman
next to me felt no similar limitations and quickly offered a profanity-laced
opinion of the president. A few laughed agreeably, offering their own digs not
just about Trump, but about conservatives more broadly. I simply disengaged.
I suspect many right-of-center women have had similar
experiences. This is a problem, not just because it silences people, but
because increasingly women on the left seem to have no actual contact with
women outside of their own ideological bubbles. They can’t fathom why, other
than racism and sexism, some women reach different conclusions about politics
and policy issues.
In this, conservative women have an advantage, since we
have been steeped in a culture that showcases the world from the perspective of
the Left. I know why my progressive friends vote Left. I know that they hope
that greater redistribution and more government oversight of everything from
guns to education and health care will lead to fairer outcomes. If you attended
a public school, chances are your teachers were liberal and shared their political
opinions frequently. If you went to college, it’s a near certainty that your
professors were almost uniformly liberal and exposed you to the liberal
worldview. If you open a women’s magazine or watch essentially any TV drama,
the liberal worldview will dominate.
The conservative worldview is harder to find unless you
specifically hunt for it in explicitly political vehicles or religious-themed
programming. This has allowed much of the Left to assume that everyone who
votes Republican supports the most extreme fringe perspective offered by anyone
on the right or fits the cartoonish stereotypes of conservatives presented on
liberal programming.
Progressives need to have more opportunities to walk in
conservatives’ shoes. Just as conservatives give liberal women the benefit of
the doubt that they are against the violent, racist, misogynistic elements of
their party, progressives should consider that women who vote Republican may
actually believe that their policy platform is the best path forward for the
country. Republican women may have concluded that unnecessary and ineffective
government regulations and programs often backfire on the very people they are
meant to help. They really believe that lower taxes and a small government lead
to better jobs, prosperity, and opportunities for all Americans. They want
parents to have more control over where their children go to school and what
kind of health insurance they buy. Furthermore, they may object to what seems
the Left’s dehumanizing hostility to straight white men, Christians, and other
women who hold contrary opinions. We think that animus toward these groups is
as wrong as it would be to any other group, and we want all people treated
respectfully, as individuals.
It’s become a cliché to say that we need more civility in
politics. That doesn’t mean it isn’t true. Certainly, there is plenty of blame
to go around for how we have gotten to where we are. But the Left should
consider how the shaming and demeaning of women who don’t agree with them is
making our country worse, and exhibiting the same prejudice that they purport
to abhor.
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