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The Future of Women on Earth May Be Darker Than You Thought

The Future of Women on Earth May Be Darker Than You ThoughtQExpand
It's easy to get caught up in the internet gender war trainwreck, where we're still arguing over whether women belong in tech or rape victims are liars. But let's set that shit aside and take the long view: Do we have any evidence that the future will bring greater freedom to women, or should we expect more dystopia?
When I say freedom, I don't mean anything fancy. I'm just talking about women's ability to control their destinies, by having things like access to jobs that give them financial independence from anyone else. Just for good measure, let's say that freedom also includes the opportunity to contribute to the political destinies of our communities by voting, holding office, and being given a chance to run important institutions. I'm not saying anything radical here. These are all pretty typical freedoms afforded to women in modern democratic countries, at least technically — and even to some women in non-democratic ones.
I used the word "technically" for a reason. As most people who have ever lived as women will tell you, many of these freedoms are difficult to achieve in practice. Women are not forbidden from having financial independence and leadership roles, but we still struggle to get them.
But that's not really news, and if you want to debate it, there are plenty of message boards that will welcome your thoughts. What I find more interesting is that women have had these freedoms for such an incredibly short period of time. Considering that humans have been creating systems of government for thousands of years, women's suffrage is like a blink of an eye. In the United States, where I live, women couldn't vote a century ago.
I have a picture of my great-grandmother Zadie Lee Rea sitting on my dresser, taken sometime around 1907. I often look into her sepia eyes, taking the measure of her wry grin, trying to figure out what she was thinking that not-so-long ago day in Weatherford, Texas, as she sat on the edge of a well and stared into the lens of a technology that was changing the world. Later in her life, she became one of the first female pharmacists in Texas. But at the time that picture was taken, she couldn't vote. She wouldn't be able to vote until she was 31 years old.
There are two ways I could respond to this piece of information. I could swell with pride at all the progress in women's rights since Zadie Lee's time, celebrating the hard-won freedom that she and her generation secured for us today. Or I could, just as reasonably, look back in numb terror, counting how few generations separate me from women who had the same voting rights that my cats do right now. How easy it would be to take my rights away, turning the last century into a weird tangent in a history that has mostly featured women as what Zora Neale Hurston once called "the mules of the world."
What if democratic freedoms for women are just a strange historical hiccup, and the window of opportunity for women is already closing? I grew up in a pretty conservative area, and yet as a teenager I was taught that abortion was every woman's right, and that "blaming the victim" in rape cases was something that only those terrible people back in the 1950s had done. Now that I'm an adult, the 1950s don't seem so very long ago to me — especially when women who say they've been raped are pilloried and psychologically brutalized on the internet. And abortion rights are eroding in many U.S. states.
In other words, has my life been an historical exception rather than part of a major social change? It seems like these exceptions are the norm in women's history — all our stories of great women are about people who bucked the system and rose up for a time despite their centuries' versions of GamerGate.
Schoolchildren learn about the powerful queens who ruled Egypt and England, their reigns sandwiched between centuries of male leadership. One of our greatest works of literature, the Tale of Genji, was written nearly a millennium ago by lady-in-waiting Murasaki Shikibu; but for the thousand years following her death, we mostly heard from guys. One of the most important mathematicians in classical antiquity, Hypatia, was a woman. Every other ancient mathematician we study today? Male. Hundreds of dangerous pirate captains sailed the high seas in the 16th century. But hey! One of them was a woman! The deep historical vantage point shows us thousands of years of female subjugation and silence, with a few lucky ladies becoming pirates, mathematicians, novelists and queens.
So what does that tell us about the future? As I said earlier, it can be a fairly depressing prospect. We see that women have gained freedom and lost it, over and over again. There is no smooth road from lack of freedom to total freedom. It is, as Le Tigre sang in relation to something related, "One step forward, five steps back."
But today, in the west, democratically-minded people are fond of saying that we'll never go back again. There will be no more millennia of women's silence because we've come too far. Education has brought enlightenment, and the countries that still prevent women from voting or owning property will eventually come around to our way of thinking.
Could that really be? Have three generations of educated women with voting rights in dozens of countries finally cracked the back of history? I suppose it's possible that we really have changed the basic story of gender relationships on Earth. Maybe the twentieth century wasn't an aberration, but instead the culmination of centuries of often-invisible struggles, which finally exploded into political reality. I hope so.
That said, I worry that we are mistaking our experiences during this tiny historical moment for something bigger, making the classic error of imagining that our lucky lives are blueprints for what everyone else will get tomorrow.
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Well, all of history suggests that it would. Women have gained and lost rights throughout recorded history. Voting rights didn't exist for a huge part of that time, but property rights did. And women gained and lost those at different periods.
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Really? Maybe not in NYC but out in the conservative middle of the country they have plenty of laws such as forcing a woman to have a transvaginal ultrasound before getting an abortion, if in fact, she can get an abortion because the Republicans have used their political power to shut down an abortion clinic.
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I understand the fear – I'm a first gen immigrant and in some respects my rights are even newer – I can do things in this country and in the world that even just my father couldn't because of his skin colour and his time.
There are two things though that have changed compared to history – first of all women's rights and access to education. Not in small privileged narrow scope ala in the past but in a huge enshrined in law for an entire country scope.
It's much, much harder to take rights away from an entrenched educated group, especially if the rule of law still holds.
Second is access to and transparency of information. It's more difficult to be sexist and hypocritical in societal sense when it's easy to compare morals, freedoms and data from somewhere half way around the world. These things are being dragged into the light so to speak. And while the fight for women's rights is far from over, I believe the battle will be won (unless we blow ourselves up first or a meteorite hits us).
The realisation that I think you're going through is something we all go through (without belittling your thoughts). It's partly relief that we live in the world now and not even fifty years ago and partly the fear you naturally feel as you grow older and realise from a historical and universal perspective, how precarious our existence is.
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I hope that you are right. But as you note, our existence is in fact precarious. I'm not "going through a stage" when I observe that. People who believe they have all the rights in the world get toppled from their privileged positions all the time. I'm really hoping that the battle will be won, and that we can't be dragged back into silence — but I am not serene in my confidence. And you shouldn't be either.
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Sexism, misogyny, and transmisogyny are still alive and well in our world (Western and otherwise) and while we like to think the future is progressively better there are constant attempts to erode at what we have politically and culturally. It would take a lot to send us back to where we were with little or no rights but there can definitely be a slow devolution of status over time. Taking away a woman's right to control her body sexually, re-productively, or transitionally (don't have better word) is a thing we are constantly fighting over and could easily be lost. I would say here in the U.S. reproductive rights have been successfully fought against by certain elements.
But I am still optimistic!
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I think that "the other" is engrained into the human psyche such that I suspect we will always be fighting it. But I think we can improve through exposure, education, and improving economic opportunities for everyone.
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This is exactly why, as a screenwriter studying at a major film school, most of my stories feature strong women fighting for their rights. We've made amazing progress, but that doesn't mean it's time to stop fighting. It only means that the fight has changed a bit, and we need to wage it on the cultural front.
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I get very angry, then puzzled, when women bristle at the idea of being called a feminist. How has it become such a loaded, trigger word? All it has ever stood for is the idea that women are not inferior to men in any way, nor should they be paid less or given fewer opportunities because they are women. I agree with you, Sarah J., that we are nowhere near the end of the road on equality. I am very afraid that the image of "feminism" that Millenials have grown up with has set the issue back to the point that young women who are actually VERY feminist run from the term and have no interest in helping other women.
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Oppression isnt just some abstract thing that exists independent of human behavior. It's something people do to other people, and social progress ALWAYS comes by opposing those who would restrict the rights of others. In this instance, I think fighting is absolutely appropriate.
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Anne Bonny wasn't the only female pirate, and definitely not the most successful. The most successful pirate – female or male – ever was Ching Shih, who went from working as a prostitute to building and leading one of the largest standing Navies in the 19th Century world, with estimates ranging from 300-1,800 ships manned by upwards of 80,000 pirates.
She was also the inventor of the Pirate Code of Conduct, that included such rules as all female captives must be released, unless a pirate chose to marry her, in which case they had to be faithful to her. If a pirate ever raped a woman, they were immediately put to death.
She even recognized there there is no such thing as "consensual sex" between a captive and captor. And any couple that claimed such, the pirate was beheaded and the woman thrown overboard with cannon balls chained to her ankles.
In addition to being the "Terror of the South China Sea" (as the British Military of the time called her), Ching Shih is also one of the *only* pirate kings (queen?) to have successfully retired from pirating with her considerable fortune intact.
As you can probably tell, I'm a huge fan (and I'm a guy, for whatever that's worth). And I do find it interesting whenever strong female leaders are mentioned, or even pirate leaders, Ching Shih is not included. Sad, as she may very well have been the smartest and most successful of them all.
Here's a Wiki article that sums her career up nicely: http://www.wikiwand.com/en/Ching_Shih
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Thank you for this article, because you expressed a personal fear of mine. Taken as a whole, women have been oppressed and marginalized for all of recorded history. Religion, in the form of the Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, has had a giant hand in that.
With the rise of religious based political groups (evangelical conservatives, Islamic extremists, etc) who proudly embrace their anti-intellectualism and given the challenges we will be facing in the next hundred years from a variety of sources (climate change, overpopulation, resource shortages, antibiotic failure), I am not confident in our ability to keep our hard-won freedoms. Culture has a tendency to back slide during challenging times, and I'm afraid we're already seeing the beginnings of that.
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I've been a bit paranoid myself. The political groups you mention also have a habit of idealizing the past, that all of our modern problems are the result of modern social attitudes, nevermind that the past had plenty of problems of its own. Another issue is people becoming complacent. People think sexism is over, and it becomes so easy to slide back into it.
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I understand your concerns as much as someone like me is capable of understanding them. The difference now is that we are all connected by a global network of communication and knowledge. We are all far more aware than we were in the past. But in the end, women keeping or losing their rights is up to you as women. Are you willing to do anything and everything necessary to keep your rights and expand them? To end the scourge of discrimination and rape once and for all? If you are, you have nothing to worry about. If, however, there are boundaries you would never cross, then worry — because I guarantee the oppressors have no such hesitation.
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To be fair, advancing woman's rights is not just a woman's responsibility, it also requires the involvement of men (we are not getting out of that hook that easily). Because if you boil things down, the end game of any civil rights movement requires those in power (men, whites, heterosexuals, Christians) to willingly hand over power to the disenfranchised*. The advocacy of those already within the power for the powerless is essential in peaceful social change. Otherwise, such power transfer requires the minority to shoot those in power in the face.
* Think back to the suffrage movement, the women can scream themselves hoarse, but at the end of the day, it all boils down to a bunch of MEN voting over whether to extend voting rights. Or the 1992 Apartheid referendum, which only white people were allowed to vote in.
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I don't think anything major will happen, such as removing voting rights. It would take armed revolution that installed an autocratic government, which has happened in a few countries but "the west" has certain attitudes about individual rights and freedoms too entrenched to just do away with them. The big challenge against abortion is people claiming that a foetus has individual rights - although that is recent and mostly driven by powerbrokers seeking a political power base, and that base is aging and eroding. I think that's an historical hiccough more than anything else.
After all, in England - for example - women got the vote almost a hundred years ago, and men got the vote a bit over two hundred years ago. Men haven't had the vote for that much longer than women when you consider that women haven't had it very long in terms of human history. We don't want to lose the vote either.
In many countries there are now more women graduating high school with high test scores than men, and more women entering university and graduating from post graduate degrees than men. Generally speaking there are more women voting than men too... a tipping point has been reached where anything that dramatically goes against the rights of women will destroy the economy and society as a whole.
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As robots eat away more and more opportunities, it will only hurt people who already lack them the most. While progress in leadership IT or Such is being made across the world, it is mostly in countries like India, China, Brazil etc. I predict not that women would lose their rights to men, but rather that women would lose their rights, followed by men losing theirs ending up in an elite economy of few people and their spouses, ruling a kingdom of robots, where humans will merely be paroles. Women arnt gaining much rights and opportunities and an average man is also losing them fast. Unless economies, evolve to support the poor. Feminism would become a pointless cause, because no one would be worried whether they are a slave to a king or a queen, as for a slave a masters gender is least bit relevant.
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