social assumptions

Harry Potter, Ron Weasely, Hermione Granger, and Nick Kristof: Time for *Affirmative* Affirmative Action for Boys

Lindsay Beyerstein of Big Think says

In his latest op/ed Nick Kristof is lamenting the fact that girls are outperforming boys at school. Kristoff is as ardent a defender of women’s rights as anyone in the established media, so he gets a proverbial clitoral ‘hood pass. Yet Kristof seems oblivious to the fact that many self-appointed advocates for boys in the school system are trying to address educational disparities by further institutionalizing male privilege. Instead of demanding more resources to help boys succeed within the system, they want to overhaul the system to cater to male developmental quirks. Boys are just that special.

Read the quote in context here.

Kristof handles the most conventional “yes but” explanations, for instance the “yes but” that performance by local-minority children drags down national averages (the declines are mapped across most demographics), but buys into the possibly-correct notion that increased and earlier academic focus plus disciplinary screw-downs tend to disproportionately alienate boys. So that’s all ok.

And while he points at residual privilege as an even more-likely source for boy’s underperformance he earns more gender-neutrality points, at least from me, in his concluding paragraph (emphasis mine)

At a time when men are still hugely overrepresented in Congress, on executive boards, and in the corridors of power, does it matter that boys are struggling in schools? Of course it does: our future depends on making the best use of human capital we can, whether it belongs to girls or boys.

He said it here.

It’s true! Making the best use of human capital really is the clearest path towards a brighter future! And so I’m strongly inclined to split the difference between Kristof and Bayerstein. As long as boys and their parents could count on a vast series of structural institutions they could also count on being able to lump along on privilege plus Harry Potter / Ron Weasley style luck, pluck, and “girls suck.” Meanwhile over the last 40 years girls, and their parents, have been rather critically aware that if they were going to get anywhere they were going to have to work their asses off Hermione Granger style. Parents have been taking their daughters to work since the 1980s… a period roughly coinciding with strong movement in the workforce away from the kinds of jobs sons were previously brought lump-along style into.

In other words while for the last couple of generations social intertia has continued raising boys in the traditions of casual, lump-along privilege society has also tended to be expressly intentional a.k.a. affirmative about raising girls.

It’s for this reason that I’m more sanguine about us becoming more intentionally affirmative about how we raise boys — the old techniques of greasing the skids so they can coast (into Congress, CEO offices, or other corridors of power) isn’t just unfair, and isn’t just increasingly ineffective (while Harry and Ron could skate without exerting themselves in the the pseudo-1940 or 1950s universe Rowling created for them, Hermione would become CEO and/or Prime Minister and… would be unlikely to hire either of the boys into positions of responsibility) it’s also gets back to the waste of human capital Kristof mentions. Given affirmative, intentional, non-negligent educations boys can grow up to be as productive as girls. It might not happen overnight (old traditions seem to die very hard) but if we choose to put as much effort into boys as the old status quo forced us to put into girls it might take less than 40 years for boys to catch up.


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Getting Herpes Is Tough Enough Without Making Yourself Bad or Wrong About It Too

Very good advice from Professor Foxy of Feministing, for a sexually active young queer woman who was diagnosed with herpes she associates (perhaps correctly) with a particular one-night stand.

What comes through in your letter is how much you blame yourself, how dirty you think you are, and how sad you feel. Such strong language putting yourself down “you’re the one people need protecting from.” They don’t need protection from you, they need protection from the disease you have. This disease does not define you, it does not change who you are. And somehow you need to get to a place where you can believe that.

It is really hard to sustain being a sex-positive queer. Everything around you tells you that you should be ashamed and when something happens – someone calling you a slut (when you are not owning the word), a sex partner saying something mean, catching an STD- that throws you off your self-confidence and all those judgments that you have successfully shucked off come rushing back in.

You are not a bad person. STDs are overwhelming the luck of the draw and you could have slept with just one person and gotten it. In all of this, keep in mind you are not [alone], herpes is one of the most common STDs, the stats go from 1 in 4 people having herpes [to] 1 in 6. As cheesy as it sounds, you are not alone.

She said it here.

It’s wonderful advice. And not because illnesses like herpes are “major” or “minor” but because (as one of the excellent commentors on the thread put it) absent the sexual stigma it’s just another communicable skin disease.

Imagine the furor if chicken pox, another member of the herpes family, had sexual connotation. Imagine further the opposition to research into vaccines. Imagine further still how preachers and pundits would fulminate on shingles (a very serious and almost always excruciatingly painful later-in-life re-eruption of chicken pox) as the “wages of sin and youthful folly.”

Herpes is a disease alright. And because it’s painful and unsightly, and because it can lead to secondary infection, it’s very worth making the effort to avoid and even more worth the responsibility not to pass along. But any more than “you’re the flu” when you’ve got the flu, or “you’re cancer” should you have cancer, neither are you herpes if you happen to have it or get it.

And finally, yes, really, you don’t have to be promiscuous to get it. In fact, because it’s transmitted through skin-to-skin contact you don’t have to be sexual at all.


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Icon of Modern Skepticism James Randi Comes Out

Phil Plait of Discover Magazine’s Bad Astronomy blog says

James Randi — one of the founders of the modern skeptical movement, a leading rationalist, thinker, and fighter of antiscience — has made a big announcement: he’s gay.

He said it here.

Now the actual sexual orientation of James Randi is in one sense about as relevant as that of J.K. Rowling’s Professor Dumbledore. But as John Wilkins of Evolving Thoughts said of Rowling’s off-hand remark that her Dumbledore was gay

It is very relevant that Dumbedore is gay, although I suspect that Rowling might have been what we Australians call “stirring the possum”. What is not important about the fact that the person who has nothing but concern for the well-being of his charges, who sacrifices himself in a fight against total evil, and who sees clearly what the issues are when the “mainstream” fails to, is gay? It’s a major blow for normalisation of homosexuality.

It evades and revises the stereotypes against gays – they are not child abusers, they are socially aware and concerned and, hey, they are as brave as anyone can be in the face of evil. I say, good on Rowling.

He said it here.

And I say good on Randi for all the same reasons.


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A. Serwer on the Significance of Obama and Pelosi's Leadership on HCR

A. Serwer of TAPPED rings the bell with this beautiful passage beginning with an anecdote about his brother’s first experience in summer camp.

When it came time to go swimming, my brother was promptly informed by one of the other kids that black people couldn’t swim.

Of course, bougie as we are, my brother had been taking swim lessons for years, and he swam circles around this kid just to prove the point. It was a formative experience for my brother, who realized his personal excellence would speak louder than anything anyone could say about the color of his skin.

Since Nancy Pelosi became speaker of the House, and shortly after Barack Obama started running for president, we started hearing some identity-specific variations of what that obnoxious kid told my brother before he got a mouthful of chlorine wake. As an incessant reminder that women don’t belong in positions of authority, Pelosi was attacked as a “man“ or peppered with criticisms of her looks or suggestions that she needed to be home doing domestic work. Obama’s intelligence provoked an existential crisis for some conservatives, who insisted he didn’t write his autobiography or legal work or he got into Harvard or even was elected president because of affirmative action.

The passage of yesterday’s health care bill isn’t due to the efforts of just one person. But it’s fair to say that the health care reform bill could not have passed the House without the political skills of the first female speaker of the house and the first black president of the United States. Conservatives won’t abandon the use of tribalist and sexist attacks against them, but these will recede into the fog of history, in which the relative diversity of the Democratic leadership at this moment speaks louder than words can say about the stubborn leftover myths from America’s past.

He said it here.

It’s not that sexism or homophobia or racism is dead (um, for instance no.) Nor is it the case that society’s gone all color- and gender-blind. (Also no.) And I expect I’ll be long after my time before anyone can say honestly and accurately say “nothing more need be done.”

But just as it would be foolish for anyone to rest on their laurels it would also be a huge mistake to deny that laurels have been deservedly won. The first and either second or third* most powerful politicians in government right now are not now and never will be dead white males. And in the face of amazing and incredibly procedural conservative opposition on the one hand, and unbelievable progressive timidity on the other, they’ve pulled together vote after vote on bill after bill.

If you’re not old enough to remember, say, the Johnson or Nixon administrations, when civil rights and women’s rights were entire novelties last night’s HCR vote, and tomorrow’s signing ceremony, might feel somewhere between water under the bridge and/or a major disappointment. That in itself is a measure of how far it’s possible to go in just a handful of decades!

I’ll repeat, while it’s important not to rest on one’s laurels it’s also bloody important to acknowledge when laurels have been won. And not so you can say “whew, I’m just sooooo grateful.” Not at all, at all. But so we can look for the next big hill, grin like a little kid, and say “again, again!”

* Depending on whether you consider Speaker of the House or Senate Majority Leader most significant.


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Speaking of Fulfillment, Enjoyment, and Casual Sex

This might sound weird at first but I’ve had more disappointing sexual encounters with long-term partners than with casual friends-with-privileges and/or one-night-stand partners. Chances are actually reasonably good that you have too. Here’s how.

With first-time sex even with casual partners, even when one or both don’t come, you’re both generally highly attentive of each other, highly excited, and pretty darned interested. (If you weren’t both interested and excited one or both of you will tend to put it off till you were enthusiastic about it.) So the odds of dull, off, unpleasant, or just bad hookup/casual sex are relatively low.

In long-term relationships you tend to have sex way more often, and generally under more varied circumstances. And while, especially as you grow familiar with each other’s wants and needs the sex can get better, you’re also going to have more times when one or both of you aren’t in sync, aren’t comfortable, you and/or they are just going through the motions, or otherwise you’re just not so attentive.

Percentage-wise I’d expect sex in non-casual relationships to be better, and percentage-wise it is. But terms of absolute numbers I’ve had fewer overall bad encounters with casual partners than with non-casual ones.

I wouldn’t have expected that.

Obligatory but I hope obvious caveat: I’m obviously talking adult or at least peer partners making competent mutual, and mutually respected, decisions to be sexual with each other. This may not be the case for everyone, whether in long-term or casual relationships and I think it would be a bad idea to try and extrapolate my observation to their situations.

Update See also Amanda Hess and Sady Doyle.


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Guess What Else? Sometimes Drunk Students Commit Rape and Then Claim They Aren't Rapists In the Morning

Matthew Yglesias has a serious, legitimate beef with an NPR piece on campus rape researcher David Lisak. Yglesias says the piece (which I haven’t heard) first covers men who admit having sex with women against their will and then… maybe out of some perverse j-school “to be sure” reflex… brought up another professor, Stetson University law professor Peter Lake, who says naah, a lot of college students just drink too much, engage in risky behavior, and then regret it later.

The two concepts are not a good combination in a single piece. Says Matt, emphasis his:

It’s seems incredibly pernicious to me to be running these things together. Lisak’s question specifically posits that the victim “did not want to” have sex, but was “too intoxicated … to resist.” What Lake is talking about conjured up an imagine of a young woman with impaired judgment doing something while drunk that she later regrets. Obviously, that does happen. But it’s quite a different situation from an encounter where even the perpetrator acknowledges that the victim was unwilling.

He said it here.

That sounds right.

You wanna know something else about the mentality that brings us the bogus Two Rules of Desire? If you’re convinced it’s simultaneously intolerable and inconceivable for women to have sexual desire then of course you’re going to believe they’re going to claim rape ever time they have a drunken hookup.

In fact most people who have drunken hookups just say “oh well, that was dumb.” You know who tends to claim rape instead? People who were actually raped.

Just a thought.


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Progressive Economic and Social Policy Supports Marriage Better Than Conservative Policy

Monica Potts of TAPPED mulls a new, more optimistic study on the non-death of marriage in America. (Emphasis mine.)

Lately, there have been a number of articles on marriage and women, particularly black women, as if the behavior of the American couple were fodder for a Discovery-channel nature show. But people don’t get married because they’re enacting some sort of population plan. They get married and stay married when they’re happy, mature, and meet someone with whom they have something in common. To the extent that policy is aimed at marriage, maybe we should worry about improving everyone’s quality of life first.

She said it here.

Funny about that. It’s also highly contrary to the traditional/conservative (and, I think, traditionally male) notion that marriage ought to be a burden or imposition — something forced on women, say, by economic necessity, forced on men by, say, desire for sex, forced on everybody by unplanned, unwanted pregnancy, etc.

Of course by the same progressive expansive opportunity-enhancing standards, and contrary to conservative coercive opportunity-limiting ones, marriage rights should be accessible and accepted for all relationships.

The bottom line, though, is that marriage is part of a social infrastructure not separate from it. The better the infrastructure the better the prospects for marriage.

Note: Speaking of which, read TAPPED’s A. Sewer on Washington D.C.‘s recently passed and so far not blocked marriage equality act.


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Scott Adams and Em and Lo Mashup on the Question of Curiosity, Attraction, Romance, and Booty Calls

If someone wanted to answer this week’s Em & Lo Wise Guy’s column question (“If a guy’s in a booty call relationship with a woman, is there a chance he’d ever want to actually date her, could it ever blossom into something more?”) they could do a lot worse than read cartoonist Scott Adams of Dilbert.com Blog this morning. It’s about the relationship between curiosity and attraction in general terms, but it opens with a highly-relevant bang.

Curiosity is one of the most underrated phenomena in the world. It’s ironic that people aren’t more curious about curiosity. It’s a powerful thing.

For example, if you ever wondered if someone is attracted to you, the answer lies in curiosity. If someone asks personal questions about your past, your plans, your likes and dislikes, that is an unambiguous sign of attraction. If someone tries to steer you into the bedroom without some conspicuous data gathering, that is a sign of simple horniness.

Read the quote in context here.

That sounds about right though doesn’t it? Adams goes on to connect the same principle to friendship, job interviews, sales calls, and product idea. It’s definitely worth a read.

Here’s my own take on the Wise Guy question (full disclosure – I’m in Em & Lo’s wise-guy rotation but not this week.) A genuinely curiosity-free booty-call relationship might never “blossom” into long-term romance. But before you consider that a problem consider also that most genuine friendships never evolve into romance either.

But here’s a tip: booty-call relationships can can blossom into lifelong friendships. If you allow yourselves to get to actually know each other. Even decades later I’m still very good friends with quite a few of my old flings, flames, and one-night-stands.


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Reflections on Feministe Repost of Rachel Hill's and Pluralist's Post About Women and Sexual Asault

Cool discussion related one of my earlier posts, On Learning to Recognize “Gray Area” Sexual Pressure Where You Least Expect It, going on over at Feministe

I’ve been posting a lot of comments over there. I may sort them out into a proper post here but for now here are some rough notes. The references of the form “Chava #181” are to other (numbered) comments in the thread.

—- #110 —-

What Natalie #93 said a couple of comments back!

If we didn’t tell ourselves that men always want sex and are always ready for it, and if he’s not it’s a judgment on his partner, then men would feel free to say no and women would be able hear no without feeling judged. If we didn’t tell ourselves that women always want sex less often than male partners and that sex is always a bargaining chip to get something else then women wouldn’t feel humiliated for wanting sex at a time when a man doesn’t want it.

Yes! Those two scripts seriously distort the hows and even whethers of consent. Because in that construction a man “can’t be raped” because if he doesn’t want it all the time our transactional ideology of heterosexuality breaks down. Similarly straight-up sexual aggression is invisible in women because sexual expression is culturally defined as predicated on men’s initiative.

That’s what’s so cool about Pluralist and Rachel Hills posts, and why Jill and others are reposting them: they confront those assumptions from a direction the usual scripts aren’t at all prepared for. With the result that [rote] apologetics and absolutism sound reflexive rather than reflective.

When you dig a little deeper into the question of consent you stop looking at its nature (was it enthusiastic, grudging, resigned, gradually warmed-up-to) and reach the more fundamental question of whether the person making the decision is being respected. There’s clearly quite a bit of room for thoughtful people to debate whether Pluralist’s acquaintance’s overtures to her long-term partner were coercive. (I say yes she was, for instance even, though he eventually consented. But for their own nearly opposite reasons S.L. or Olo might credibly disagree.)

There’s no question, though, that she failed to respect his decision when, whatever her reasons, she decided to continue pressuring him.

Sexual consent is bogglingly important. But it’s also only a legally-definable and -determinable proxy for a much more complex human decision-making interactions. Recognizing this expands rather than refutes what we know about who can rape and be raped.

—- #137 —-

Chava and ThankGoddess [see #128.] I think a good way to resolve your current impasse would be to say that while everyone needs to be equally attentive we also need to be particularly wary of the gendered scripts our respective sexes are exposed to.

For instance because of scripting women are inclined to assume rejection implies personal inadequacy. (See for instance Marle’s assumption it must be ugliness in comment #1) with the result that something about them must be especially bad about them, if they fail. The alternative, which I think may have fueled Pluralist’s friend, is the assumption that if a woman is rejected there must be something wrong with the man. Obviously neither of these things need to be true.

Meanwhile men’s scripting assumes rejection is universal and therefore something has to be really special about them if they succeed. (The telling line there is men call it “getting lucky.”) Or else something has to be really wrong with the woman (“fallen,” “crazy,” or “wild.” Or else “easy,” as if that was a bad thing.) None of this needs to be true either.

The result for both men and women can be identical failures to respect a partner’s decision to decline that nevertheless come from very different social conditioning.

Point being that Chava’s right that straight men need to be particularly careful, but ThankGoddess is right that so does everyone else.

Quick note to ThankGoddess — I really, seriously admire your willingness to identify and rewrite scripting. I’m skeptical that they can be rewritten as easily as you make it sound in part because social scripts sort of by-definition can’t be changed unilaterally. One of the things I like about posts like this, though, is that the reconsideration of roles it forces creates openings for new, more realistic narratives about gender to emerge.

—- #176 —-

Butch Fatale #157

Many people who have non-standard rape experiences have difficulty identifying what happened to them as rape – including people whose experience was actually pretty common, because what we hear about how it has to happen to “count” is a pretty limited set of circumstances.

If you also add “any people who have non-standard rape experiences have difficulty identifying what they did as rape” then you’ve got the crux of this post — of why Pluralist, and Rachel Hills, and Jill, and I think this is such a crucial topic.

We’re all aware… some of us tragically so… that there are individuals who are conflicted about, or even oblivious to, rape because it wasn’t a “jump out of the bushes with a knife” scenario. There are people who think it didn’t happen to them, and people who think what they did couldn’t have been.

This might sound like a slight digression but earlier this year we had an incident of girls beating up another girl in a local Metro transit center. Just the other day I overheard, I think, Rachel Simmons on a local public radio show talking about assumptions what were made about what defines bullying. She made the point that “as usual” researchers initially focused only on bullying by socialized boys-to-boys, which tends towards direct physical violence, with the result that socialized girls-to-girls bullying, which tends towards emotional and social rather than physical violence was ignored or disregarded.

The point being that just as it was an error to make assumptions about bullying it’s almost certainly as large a mistake to assume that everyone will commit rape using the same methods stereotypically used by the most stereotypical perpetrators. Date- and domestic-partner rapists got away with that for generations.

With that in mind what’s important about Plurality’s friend’s action isn’t whether the degree of what she did was actionable — even though that seems to be the focus of a lot of the discussion here and elsewhere. Instead it’s interesting for indicating one corner a whole domain of coercion that has been overlooked because it didn’t conform to our (highly gendered!) assumptions about what rape, and rapists, and rape victims look like.

A corollary of that, by the way, which really shows up in Plurality’s story and which I saw as the point of Butch Fatale’s comment, is that we also have incomplete assumptions about what non-consent looks like, and therefore of what victims look like.

The man in Plurality’s story felt conflicted enough to have not gotten over what happened even months later. That’s a big clue that non-consent was involved. I’m reluctant to go further into that because this really has nothing to do with “what about the men.” Instead I’ll point out that the woman in Plurality’s story also felt conflicted enough about it to tell Plurality about it, instead of, say, to blow it off. That’s another big clue.

There’s a lot of 2nd- and 3rd-person conversation in this thread, for instance, along the lines of “well if this man…” or “well a cis-person might…” And there’s (probably for obvious reasons when you think about it) an awful lot of comments by people who are confident about having been victims. There have even been digressions into what constitutes privilege. All of which are of course perfectly relevant.

What Pluralist’s story suggests is that what we’re not hearing are whole classes of comments that would be even more relevant: the cis persons, the trans persons, the straight persons, the genderqueer persons… the women or men who like Pluralist’s friend can and may have been perpetrators — and who therefore might be able to contribute cautionary perspectives — are silent.

Though not, I ardently hope, silenced. Because this very large, very important bottle wouldn’t have been uncorked in the first place had Pluralist’s friend not disclosed her own conflicted feelings about her own assumptions that led to her own inability to respect her partner’s decision when he declined her overtures.

Bottom line is that addressing Butch Fatale’s broader point about identifying who can be victims and perpetrators undermines the two-sphere model of gender. Even if, as, say, Bond of Dear Diaspora argues, we should have tolerance for some degree of gender construction, the exclusivity of the two-sphere model, and the denial and lies needed to maintain it, leaves everyone vulnerable.

—- #196 —-

Following up on [my previous comment, #176] I really want to add that rather than absolving men with some kind of “but women do it too” shenanigans (as if two wrongs had ever made a right), breaking down gendered notions of what constitutes coercion and/or consent leaves less “gray area” for men to hide it. For instance no matter who you are it really is questionable at best do to one’s partner what Pluralist’s friend did to hers. Understanding that takes away cancels any form of “it must be ok because women do that too” defenses.

Richard Jeffrey Newman #178: I can’t speak at all to cultural Korean values so I can’t assess whether that’s really how couples in that situation are expected to save face. Instead I’ll just emphasize again that the critical distinction between role-playing and reality is recognition and respect for each player’s decision to participate or to decline.

Chava #181. Similar to #178 the measure is whether we recognize and respect each player’s decision. For better or worse, we probably can’t unilaterally make the assessment of our effect on others or how far over the line we’ve crossed. That’s not an indictment, by the way. It’s great that you stepped up. Grounding dialogue in how we have acted and how we act now makes dialogue about how we could act more practical and a lot more powerful.

Sailorman #184: I’ll keep stressing that the objective isn’t to create ever wider definitions of rape and assault. But neither is it to engage in further hairsplitting at the margins. In your “can I get you interested” scenario the question would be whether your partner was respecting your decision and, in particular, whether she was seeking to clarify it (ok, especially in a trusting relationship) or to disregard and override it (not at all ok.)

And for Natalie #175 and Faith #188: Yes, absolutely. I grew up believing women and girls couldn’t commit sexual assault. I believed it so thoroughly that I even said it to the director of a local Rape Relief program when I interviewed her for a college newspaper story. When she gently but with considerable authority corrected me I had an almost cinematic sense of perspective shift. It resolved a coercive sexual childhood experience when I was very young that I grew up thinking shouldn’t have bothered me, and that I’d thought I maybe even should have felt lucky for (one of the dads who was in on the rescue said something to another adult about me “getting an early start”) that had nevertheless affected me. Victimized? No, social scripting about male gender might have, for once, possibly unfairly, helped mitigate some of that. Traumatized? Any consequences were nothing compared to the consequences ruthless, sustained, but non-sexual bullying I experienced later. But just those few words from the shelter director were exactly what I’d needed to get resolution.


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