Unlike equalists, feminists do not want men to share their oppression
How many feminists believe they are working towards equality? How many men self-define as equalists over feminists? Equality is almost universally accepted as the definition of feminism. But the term equality has never been questioned.
I am a feminist and I do not strive for equality. I support liberation. The defenders of equality espouse moderate feminist principles: equal pay for equal work, equal opportunity with no special considerations i.e. positive discrimination, failure is down to the individual, and above all, women must embrace hierarchal work structures where the job always comes first. Equality takes the male status quo as the standard to which women aspire.
To be equal, women have to show they are strong enough to live up to men’s standards in a man’s world. Backers of equality cheer as women enlist in institutionally discriminatory police forces, join the military in invading other countries and committing war crimes, train for the roughest of men’s sports whether its dangerous and cruel horse racing, or life-threatening cage fighting.
Once women have joined male dominated areas of work, nobody asks why anybody regardless of gender would work in these repressive institutions. The crux of the matter is that men live and work in a brutal society, which is maintained through stratified social order based on ritual humiliation, gentleman’s clubs, fights, rites of passage, sexism, and banter.
When women enter the male realm whether law, politics, or a construction site, they find themselves in a repugnant world in which their only means of survival is by undergoing a fundamental transformation leaving them with little opportunity to make any change. We see this manifested in descriptions of women professionals as harsher than men. Assertive women are seen as aggressive bitches.
It is impossible to alter male spheres, which are resistant to outside interference, because women are a minority that could be cut out at anytime, and men have vested interests in preserving the status quo.
The Equality Act 2010, which replaced the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, was designed to give the false impression that women’s subjugation had been legally acknowledged. Political support was gathered because politicians knew no great changes would ensue. Equality legislation exists throughout Europe but nowhere is there equality.
The attitude of the legal profession to equality is best shown by the number of women Attorney Generals over the years: one women in contrast to 202 men. The Act is barely enforceable due to extortionate legal costs and severe costs to time. Of 89 per cent of women health care workers who experience sexual harassment, barely 1 per cent initiate legal actions because they know that regardless of whether they win or lose they will be branded a troublemaker and all hopes of a promotion will be dashed.
The Act is a handmaiden to equality as it strikes down attempts at positive discrimination. Equalists refuse to support positive discrimination; instead they believe in equal treatment and equal outcomes. Here, a contradiction emerges, equalists support 50: 50 men and women in institutions but women will not be recruited in large numbers because ‘equality’ laws have made quotas illegal.
Other unequal situations arise from the equalist debate. A right to maternity leave or an abortion is not an equal right, women are requesting discrimination because of their gendered differences. A woman will never be equal to a man because she can never be the same, and gendered distinctiveness is not valued by equalists.
Arguing about equality or difference results in a debate that drains the life out of the feminist movement. Men plead both equality and difference when it is to their benefit. They argue equality when they want paternity leave, and difference when they want to be paid more prize money for sports.
The equality and difference argument is banal. Equality would be cruel to men if they were treated equal to women: men’s genitals would be sliced up, annual rape of men would increase from 9,000 to 69,000, male prostitution would soar, men’s penises would be sprawled across page 3, men would stroll down the catwalk with their penises hanging out, and the Labour Party would roll out pink vans to attract women voters and blue vans to entice male voters.
Unlike equalists, feminists do not want men to share their oppression.
The equalist debate is one way of preserving patriarchy, whereas feminism seeks to give power to women on their own terms – not mens. This is why I am a feminist, not an equalist. Equality is harmful to women and most men, as they are required to replicate behaviours that are degrading and dehumanising. Once women buy into the masculine terms of society, our civilization will become crueler than ever expected.
Men hold the balance of power. Power is granted in the wrong ways, and used for the wrong ends. Change can come about by redefining and redistributing power, breaking down hierarchal structures, and reevaluating the criteria designed by men.
*This piece was inspired by two of the greatest feminist thinkers of our time, Germaine Greer and Catherine MacKinnon
Charlotte Rachael Proudman is a barrister in human rights law and a PhD candidate in law and sociology researching FGM at the University of Cambridge
243 Responses to “Why I want feminism and not equality (and why they are not the same thing)”
sallyanne
No Mason Dixon, Autistic, the equivalent would be a man’s glans totally cut off or even the entire penis hacked off to the root. I don’t agree with male circumcision except for medical reasons but it cannot be compared with the barbarity of FGM.
Christopher Allman
Anti Equal pay? It’s like, you aren’t actually reading what I am saying or posting, just assuming what you think I believe and responding to it.
My first post was in regards to how human resource departments are primarily female. That is not a criticism, but an observation. You said I was making it up, so I posted a link to an article with statistics about the gender breakdown of human resource departments.
Then you brought up the pay gap, so I posted an article, from a reputable left leaning source, (written by a black man btw), analyzing the pay gap myth. By no means is it “anti equal pay”, rather, it is showing that the “pay gap” is largely a myth. That the differences between the earnings of men and women is overwhelmingly due to choices men and women make, not discrimination.
Christopher Allman
Facts? What facts? That I am anti-jewish? That is not a fact, because it is not true. That I am Christian? That is also not a fact, because it is not true. I am however a white male. That is true! However, it doesn’t much relate to the points I was trying to make.
Christopher Allman
I am indeed white and I am male, but I am not Christian. I’m sorry if I come across as smug.
What majority am i part of? My whiteness makes me part of the racial majority. But as a male, that makes me part of one half of the human race. As an atheist/agnostic, I’m a minority in terms of belief. But none of those things really matter to this particular discussion, except as a side note.
Why don’t you respond to the points I’m actually making, instead of just mocking me? To be honest, when you don’t respond to my points, but just call me names, it tells me that you have no legitimate responses and further cements the correctness of what I am saying.
If you do have any responses to what I’m saying (other than name calling), I’d be more than happy to discuss these things with you.
Christopher Allman
I too am curious how so. I see a lot of well reasoned, thoughtful critiques. How does that justify the need for feminism? When people make thoughtful, well reasoned critiques of Christianity or Republicans, does that justify the need for for Christianity and Republicans? If not, why does this standard only apply when it comes to feminism?