Fed up as I am with the consistent refusal to take seriously the danger of white women like Marjorie Taylor Greene, I suggest you forget the Bechdel Test & follow my If so-and-so was a Muslim Test: If Marjorie Taylor Greene was a Muslim she'd be in Gitmo feministgiant.com/p/if-marjorie-…
If the white women who stormed the Capitol were Muslim, they would have been called “fanatics” and “extremists,” and vilified for the violence they committed, not constantly remembered by loved ones as the best version of themselves. feministgiant.com/p/white-women-…
If Amy Coney Barrett was a Muslim, her zealotry would have been pathologized, not earn her a lifetime post on the highest court in the land. feministgiant.com/p/if-amy-coney…
If Lauren Boebert was a Muslim and tried to take her Glock into the Capitol, she would be expelled and put on trial as a terrorist feministgiant.com/p/a-white-supr…
Even when they join an insurrection, even as they pummel their way through the doors of the Capitol, white women are still remembered for the best versions of themselves.
Women who joined ISIS were never afforded such an audacious innocence.
But those comparisons must be made. As I read that the relatives of female insurrectionists argued with them not to go, or that QAnon had created a wedge within families, it reminds me of the backstories of armed Islamists I reported when I was a Reuters correspondent in Cairo.
When U.S. media have taken deep dives into QAnon, it is stunning how much fuckery white women get away with. This is how Elle magazine described Marjorie Taylor Greene in Oct. 2020
Even as calls for her expulsion from Congress grow, Axios sees fit to create a false equivalence. On January 28, the publication included her among “The Mischief Makers”, who Axios says are “troublemakers within their parties and political thorns for their leadership.”
MTG is a reminder that while the U.S. has obsessively focused its “War on Terror” on brown Muslim men both outside and inside its borders, this white, blonde, Christian woman inside its Capitol is the face of terror at home.
I’m a massive fan of profanity. We must recognize that the ubiquitous ways patriarchy socializes women to shrink themselves - physically and intellectually - extend also into language, into what we can and cannot say. feministgiant.com/p/essay-why-i-…#WhyISayFuck
At the heart of that policing, standing guard over our language like a baton ready to strike, is civility. Patriarchy reserves for itself the power to offend, the power to be obscene. (This Australian TV episode was banned from rebroadcast)
Patriarchy wastes no time in policing women’s mouths as vehemently as it does the genitals of anyone who not a cisgender heterosexual man. Profanity is an essential tool in disrupting patriarchy and its rules.
This is what happened between me and @SethAbramson on Saturday. I don’t follow him but when he claimed he’d written the first look at women of the insurrection several people tagged me and alerted him that I’d written an article on women of insurrection on January 10
He tweeted this to me and I thanked him and expected he would delete and rewrite his inaccurate tweet.
He did not delete claim to have written the “first” look. If it wasn’t important, he wouldn’t have claimed it.Some of his fans wrote to me saying I was being “silly” to insist on saying I was first. Note they did not call his use of “first” silly. I and many asked him to delete
"First detailed look at the women of Trump's insurrection?" That would be my article on January 10 RETWEET and SUBSCRIBE to FEMINIST GIANT feministgiant.com/p/white-women-…
"First detailed look at the women of Trump's insurrection?" That would be my article on January 10 RETWEET and SUBSCRIBE to FEMINIST GIANT feministgiant.com/p/white-women-…
The ancient Egyptian word for "makeup artist" derives from the word for "to write/engrave."
And the word for "makeup palette" derives from the word meaning "to protect."
I'm having fun with this essay on eyeliner, perimenopause, and the pandemic. artsy.net/article/artsy-…
I am especially interested in connecting “write/engrave/protect” of make up to tattoos. I’ve spoken of how my tattoos helped me heal and my essay on eyeliner will explore that more.
In this essay, I wrote about why I had bright red hair for so long. In the forthcoming one on eyeliner, I'll write about the significance of the tattoos I have feministgiant.com/p/essay-fallin…