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Femi-nazi hunter: Kate O'Beirne targets the excesses of the women's movement--30 years too late.


Women Who Make the World Worse By Kate O'Beirne Kate O'Beirne is the Washington editor of National Review. Her column, "Bread and Circuses," covers Congress, politics, and U.S. domestic policy.

O’Beirne was a regular contributor on CNN's Saturday night political roundtable program, The Capital Gang
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You know you're in for a long, hard day of book reviewing when you open Kate O'Beirnes Women Who Make the World Worse and find an introduction that begins--(make yourself comfortable, we're going to quote at length here)--"On March 11, 2005, Brian Nichols Brian Gene Nichols (born December 10, 1971 in Baltimore, Maryland) is accused of shooting and killing Judge Rowland W. Barnes, court reporter Julie Brandau, and deputy sheriff Sgt.  overpowered o·ver·pow·er  
tr.v. o·ver·pow·ered, o·ver·pow·er·ing, o·ver·pow·ers
1. To overcome or vanquish by superior force; subdue.

2. To affect so strongly as to make helpless or ineffective; overwhelm.

3.
 Deputy Sheriff Cynthia Hall Cynthia Hall (born 1 April 1951 in Hinsdale, Illinois) is an American model. She is best known as Playboy magazine's Playmate of the Month for its March 1971 issue. Her centerfold was photographed by David Chan.  in the Atlanta courthouse where she worked, and killed four people before surrendering the following day. We weren't supposed to notice the insanity of a petite fifty-one year-old grandmother guarding a former college football linebacker who had been caught with two sharpened door hinges in his socks earlier in the week. The local sheriff's office had adopted the politically correct politically correct Politically sensitive adjective Referring to language reflecting awareness and sensitivity to another person's physical, mental, cultural, or other disadvantages or deviations from a norm; a person is not mentally retarded, but  premise that men and women are interchangeable and only misogynist mi·sog·y·nist  
n.
One who hates women.

adj.
Of or characterized by a hatred of women.

Noun 1. misogynist - a misanthrope who dislikes women in particular
woman hater
 males would deny a willing woman any job she sought. The four deaths in Atlanta are just a recent concrete example of what feminism has wrought."

Yes, that's right--blame feminism. We're not going to ascribe this one to the lack of Jesus in Brian's life, or the lack of values in the public school system, or to -the tax-and-spend liberals who are a minority in Congress, or to soft-headed judges who believe in holding accused criminals for trial instead of summarily executing them. No, pour all this blood onto Betty Friedan's hands.

But in order to do that, of course, we're going to have to ignore the fact that Brian Nichols was not handcuffed, a condition which, whether resulting from Deputy Sheriff Hall's brain freeze or someone else's, would seem to have more to do with a lack of common sense than her proprietorship of ovaries Ovaries
The female sex organs that make eggs and female hormones.

Mentioned in: Choriocarcinoma

ovaries (ō´v
. Let alone her size. Ms. Hall may have been much smaller than her attacker, but given that the average height of the American male is 5'9", so would most men; as nearly anybody who's watched football can tell you, to block a linebacker, you're going to need a tight end or a guard. Moreover, we're also going to have to ignore the fact that the person who eventually calmed Brian Nichols and led to his peaceful surrender just happened to be a woman, the slightly built methamphetamine user Ashley Smith For the Welsh rugby player see Ashley Smith (rugby player)

Ashley Smith was a hostage held by Brian Nichols in her apartment complex located in Duluth, Georgia, over the night of March 11-12, 2005.
.

So maybe it wasn't being a woman that sits at the heart of Ms. Hall's failure; maybe it's that she didn't snort enough crank.

Whatever. Such subtleties are lost on author O'Beirne, who is the Washington editor of National Review and who for years could be counted on to appear on "Capital Gang" and denounce all things liberal in the archly miffed miff  
n.
1. A petulant, bad-tempered mood; a huff.

2. A petty quarrel or argument; a tiff.

tr.v. miffed, miff·ing, miffs
To cause to become offended or annoyed.
 tone typically employed by mothers at PTA PTA or parent-teacher association: see parent education.  meetings who aren't happy that Elaine and Jackie am always in charge of Pizza Day. The whole book is filled with examples of O'Beirne extrapolating generalities from specifics and explaining specifics with generalities and generally leaving nuance, context, and inconvenient facts out in the street.

O'Beirne's beef is with "radical feminists" who "are ruining our schools, families, military, and sports." What this translates into is "I have book envy, and I need a target that I can easily drop -kick all over conservative radio." With the Bush administration having made such a hash of things ("Uh, let's see--can't pick on big spending liberals. Can't pick on liberal interventionists. Can't pick on anti-war liberals. Can't pick on the corrupt Democratic Congress. That pretty much leaves gays and feminists."), O'Beirne has had to turn the dial of the Wayback Machine A Web site from the Internet Archive (www.archive.org) that records the content of most Web sites for each year of their existence since 1996. All of the pages in the site are generally included unless the site is password protected or is coded to explicitly refuse to be archived (see  all the way to the mid-1970s, when such a species as a radical feminist did actually walk on her unshaven legs across this land. And while there are surely a few radical feminists still in existence, none has anywhere near the political or cultural influence that her ancestors once did, and none has a smidgen of the pernicious power to ruin our schools, families, military, and country that radical Christian fundamentalists and radical tax-cutters currently possess.

Of course, the reason that there are so few radical feminists around nowadays is that the movement they created has been so enormously successful. There may not be so many radical feminists, but by the standards of The Feminine Mystique' s era, almost everybody is now a mainstream feminist. Women are everywhere they want to be, though perhaps not in the proportion that they desire, but that time will come. Women's rights The effort to secure equal rights for women and to remove gender discrimination from laws, institutions, and behavioral patterns.

The women's rights movement began in the nineteenth century with the demand by some women reformers for the right to vote, known as suffrage, and
 are so fundamental that George W. Bush included the liberation of women from the Taliban among his reasons for going to war in Afghanistan. Women's rights are so fundamental that no one who aspires to be considered a serious person would suggest that a woman couldn't possibly be a president or run a corporation or golf in a PGA (1) (Professional Graphics Adapter) An early IBM PC display standard for 3D processing with 640x480x256 resolution. It was not widely used.

(2) (Programmable Gate Array) See gate array and FPGA.
 tournament. Indeed, women's rights are so fundamental that someone like O'Beirne can forget that she grew up in a world where the person who'd spout the kind of mush (MultiUser Shared Hallucination) See MUD.

1. (games) MUSH - Multi-User Shared Hallucination.
2. (messaging) MUSH - Mail Users' Shell.
 and twaddle she produces on TV would almost certainly have been a man.

Unwilling to take on the sea change, O'Beirne attacks the excesses at the margins. This is ridiculously easy work, not because Bella Abzug Bella Savitsky Abzug (July 24, 1920 – March 31, 1998) was a well-known American political figure and a leader of the women's movement. She famously said, "This woman's place is in the House — the House of Representatives," in her successful 1970 campaign to join that  and Gloria Steinem Noun 1. Gloria Steinem - United States feminist (born in 1934)
Steinem
 and Betty Friedan Noun 1. Betty Friedan - United States feminist who founded a national organization for women (born in 1921)
Betty Naomi Friedan, Betty Naomi Goldstein Friedan, Friedan
 are ridiculous people, but because in the course of overthrowing an entrenched en·trench   also in·trench
v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es

v.tr.
1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending.

2.
 power structure, some crazy ideas will be embraced and some rhetorical excess will be committed. The funniest howler O'Beirne catches here comes from Gloria Steinem, who, in trying to justify hiring female firefighters History
Historically, firefighting has been regarded as primarily a male activity. Nonetheless, there have been numerous women who actively fought fire alongside their male counterparts.
 who would be more likely to be weaker than male firefighters and less able to throw on their backs and carry to safety, say, a big fat guy like me, apparently said, "It's better to drag them out, because there's less smoke down there [on the floor]. I mean, we're probably killing people by carrying them out at that height." Nice try.

But if Gloria Steinem didn't always know what she was talking about, O'Beirne is hardly one to take her to school. Her discussion of Title IX lacks all nuance. Yes, it's true that some men's programs are being dropped, and that's sad, and it's also true that along with being a piece of legislation that led to a flowering of athletic opportunities for young women, Title IX is a bit of a blunt instrument Blunt instrument is a legal description of a weapon used to hit someone, which does not have a sharp or penetrating point or edge. Their effect is usually blunt force trauma, to stun, or to break bones. They sometimes kill.  for helping to decide what to cut and what to fund when dollars are scarce. But the biggest problem in creating equal opportunities lies at schools that have big-time football programs, meaning that a disproportionate amount of the scholarships and other funds that go to men are locked into one sport, creating shortfalls when divers and wrestlers hold out their palms. O'Beirne doesn't even discuss football.

There are points in her discussion when O'Beirne reveals that what bothers her is not radical feminism Radical feminism is a "current"[1] within feminism that focuses on patriarchy as a system of power that organizes society into a complex of relationships producing a "male supremacy"[1] that oppresses women.  but mainstream equality. She is really bugged by the idea of women participating in the military to any degree beyond Army nurse. She describes in detail the attack in which Pvt. Jessica Lynch Jessica Dawn Lynch (born April 26, 1983 in Palestine, West Virginia) is a former Quartermaster Corps Private First Class (PFC) in the United States Army. Lynch became famous after her widely publicized recovery by U.S. special operations forces.  was captured and finds the wounds she suffered and the depredations that were committed upon her appalling. Well, hell yeah, of course they were. Whom shall we blame for that? George W. Bush? Saddam Hussein Saddam Hussein

(born April 28, 1937, Tikrit, Iraq—died Dec. 30, 2006, Baghdad) President of Iraq (1979–2003). He joined the Ba'th Party in 1957. Following participation in a failed attempt to assassinate Iraqi Pres.
? Donald Rumsfeld? The adult person who volunteers for the Army without considering that she might be exposed to combat? O'Beirne chooses to blame those who believe that in an open society, withholding opportunity, however perilous, from qualified people who seek that opportunity is unacceptable. "A woman being brutally killed alongside men is a long-awaited feminist dream of equality," writes O'Beirne, in a staggeringly ugly bit of rhetoric that approaches blood libel.

(Of course, ugly rhetoric seems to be O'Beirne's specialty. "There were no feminist protests when there wasn't a pleasing gender balance among the 343 brave firemen who died on 9/11," she writes. Well, no, there were no protests, and I doubt anyone thought of protests except O'Beirne, who in this line exposes herself as possessing the sort of supremely cynical mind that can look upon a national tragedy and figure out how to twist it into narrow political argument. It's true no women were among the FDNY'S fallen, but what does O'Beirne say to Captain Kathy Mazza, a Port Authority police officer who on 9/11 left the safety of her office in Jersey City and went to the towers, who helped people evacuate and who, witnesses say, shot out windows to create new escape routes, and who died with a group of firemen when the south tower collapsed? Does O'Beirne say to this hero "you are but a radical feminist's dream"?)

O'Beirne cites the work of a lot of social scientists in discussing her points. These social scientists seem to fall into two groups: those who support O'Beirne's theses, whom she admires, and radical feminist social scientists, whose work O'Beirne finds dangerous. O'Beirne quotes--selectively--from a lot of feminist researchers, making them seem ridiculous. And she's isn't always wrong. But the average reader might feel like he is witnessing a savage battle that is being waged way on the periphery of ordinary people's lives. Most people, if they're acquainted with this research at all, use it as an echo chamber that emphasizes their own fears, anxieties, and goals. Either way, these findings, many of which am interesting, are basically irrelevant. As even the former school board of Dover, Pa., can tell you, we don't run our society based on scientific findings. We run it according to a belief system or an ideology or a theory that puts equality and freedom at the center of the human experience. Our glory is when we take that theory seriously, and our shame is when we don't. It's not always easy to live up to our ideals and we often make mistakes in trying to figure out the best way to achieve what we think is good. In this book, O'Beirne may offer some food for thought and may identify some zealous excess, but basically she's just heckling people who have written a proud page in our history.

Jamie Malanowski is the managing editor of Playboy
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Title Annotation:On Political Books; Women Who Make the World Worse
Author:Malanowski, Jamie
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Mar 1, 2006
Words:1669
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