Sex and the Sissy
She was born in Russia, fled the
pogroms with her family, was raised in Milwaukee, and worked the
counter at her father's general store when she was 8. In early
adulthood she made aliyah to Palestine, where she worked on a
kibbutz, picking almonds and chasing chickens. She rose in politics,
was the first woman in the first Israeli cabinet, soldiered on
through war and rumors of war, became the first and so far only
woman to be prime minister of Israel. And she knew what it is to be
a woman in the world. "At work, you think of the children you've
left at home. At home you think of the work you've left unfinished.
. . . Your heart is rent." This of course was Golda Meir.
Golda Meir never cried 'sexism.'
Another: She was born in a family
at war with itself and the reigning power outside. As a child she
carried word from her important father to his fellow
revolutionaries, smuggling the papers in her school bag. War and
rumors of war, arrests, eight months in jail. A rise in politics --
administering refugee camps, government minister. When war came, she
refused to flee an insecure border area; her stubbornness helped
rally a nation. Her rivals sometimes called her "Dumb Doll," and an
American president is said to have referred to her in private as
"the old witch." But the prime minister of India preferred grounding
her foes to dust to complaining about gender bias. In the end, and
in the way of things, she was ground up too. Proud woman, Indira
Gandhi.
And there is Margaret Hilda
Roberts. A childhood in the besieged Britain of World War II -- she
told me once of listening to the wireless and being roused by
Churchill. "Westward look, the land is bright," she quoted him; she
knew every stanza of the old poem. Her father, too, was a
shopkeeper, and she grew up in the apartment above the store near
the tracks. She went to Oxford on scholarship, worked as a chemist,
entered politics, rose, became another first and only, succeeding
not only in a man's world but in a class system in which they knew
how to take care of ambitious little grocer's daughters from
Grantham. She was to a degree an outsider within her own party, so
she remade it. She lived for ideas as her colleagues lived for
comfort and complaint. The Tories those days managed loss. She
wanted to stop it; she wanted gain. Just before she became prime
minister, the Soviets, thinking they were deftly stigmatizing an
upstart, labeled her the Iron Lady. She seized the insult and wore
it like a hat. This was Thatcher, stupendous Thatcher, now the
baroness.
Great women, all different, but
great in terms of size, of impact on the world and of struggles
overcome. Struggle was not something they read about in a book. They
did not use guilt to win election -- it comes up zero if you Google
"Thatcher" and "You're just picking on me because I'm a woman."
Instead they used the appeals men used: stronger leadership, better
ideas, a superior philosophy.
* * *
You know where I'm going, for you
know where she went. Hillary Clinton complained again this week that
sexism has been a major dynamic in her unsuccessful bid for
political dominance. She is quoted by the Washington Post's Lois
Romano decrying the "sexist" treatment she received during the
campaign, and the "incredible vitriol that has been engendered" by
those who are "nothing but misogynists." The New York Times reported
she told sympathetic bloggers in a conference call that she is
saddened by the "mean-spiritedness and terrible insults" that have
been thrown "at you, for supporting me, and at women in general."
Where to begin? One wants to be
sympathetic to Mrs. Clinton at this point, if for no other reason
than to show one's range. But her last weeks have been, and her next
weeks will likely be, one long exercise in summoning further
denunciations. It is something new in politics, the How Else Can I
Offend You Tour. And I suppose it is aimed not at voters -- you
don't persuade anyone by complaining in this way, you only reinforce
what your supporters already think -- but at history, at the way
history will tell the story of the reasons for her loss.
So, to address the charge that
sexism did her in:
It is insulting, because it
asserts that those who supported someone else this year were driven
by low prejudice and mindless bias.
It is manipulative, because it
asserts that if you want to be understood, both within the community
and in the larger brotherhood of man, to be wholly without bias and
prejudice, you must support Mrs. Clinton.
It is not true. Tough hill-country
men voted for her, men so backward they'd give the lady a chair in
the union hall. Tough Catholic men in the outer suburbs voted for
her, men so backward they'd call a woman a lady. And all of them so
naturally courteous that they'd realize, in offering the chair or
addressing the lady, that they might have given offense, and
awkwardly joke at themselves to take away the sting. These are great
men. And Hillary got her share, more than her share, of their votes.
She should be a guy and say thanks.
It is prissy. Mrs. Clinton's
supporters are now complaining about the Hillary nutcrackers sold at
every airport shop. Boo hoo. If Golda Meir, a woman of not only
proclaimed but actual toughness, heard about Golda nutcrackers, she
would have bought them by the case and given them away as party
favors.
It is sissy. It is blame-gaming,
whining, a way of not taking responsibility, of not seeing your
flaws and addressing them. You want to say "Girl, butch up, you are
playing in the leagues, they get bruised in the leagues, they break
each other's bones, they like to hit you low and hear the crack,
it's like that for the boys and for the girls."
And because the charge of sexism
is all of the above, it is, ultimately, undermining of the position
of women. Or rather it would be if its source were not someone
broadly understood by friend and foe alike to be willing to say
anything to gain advantage.
* * *
It is probably truer that being a
woman helped Mrs. Clinton. She was the front-runner anyway and had
all the money, power, Beltway backers. But the fact that she was a
woman helped give her supporters the special oomph to be gotten from
making history. They were by definition involved in something
historic. And they were on the right side, connected to the one
making the breakthrough, shattering the glass. They were going to be
part of breaking it into a million little pieces that could rain
down softly during the balloon drop at the historic convention, each
of them catching the glow of the lights. Some network reporter was
going to say, "They look like pieces of the glass ceiling that has
finally been shattered."
I know: Barf. But also: Fine.
Politics should be fun.
Meir and Gandhi and Mrs. Thatcher
suffered through the political downside of their sex and made the
most of the upside. Fair enough. As for this week's Clinton
complaints, I imagine Mrs. Thatcher would bop her on the head with
her purse. Mrs. Gandhi would say "That is no way to play it." Mrs.
Meir? "They said I was the only woman in the cabinet and the only
one with -- well, you know. I loved it."
Peggy Noonan