An open response to Jessica Huseman and her charming article Sorry, But A 15-Year Old in Jorts Isn't Going To Tell Me What RapeCulture Is.
Congratulations -- you are now, officially, no longer part
of the solution, you are now part of the problem.
First off, before I go anywhere else with this, I have to
acknowledge that yes, I am a male, and yes, I am going to be talking about
rape-culture. I know I may seem oddly
unqualified for this (the presence of a penis seems to immediately put people
on edge about one's qualifications to talk about it objectively), but I hope
that I am not misunderstood. I am a
staunch ally of the LGBTQ community and also a feminist and I'd like to think
that even if I don't yet fully comprehend the problem, I at least know that
there is one, it is massive, and it is going to take a lot of work from
EVERYBODY (especially those who are genitally-inclined as I am) to correct it.
That being said, I have read the Huseman article several
times now, hoping like hell that this was one of those ironic articles --
something that you'd normally find on The Onion, or even perhaps The Stranger,
on the opinions page (and please, someone correct me if I did just miss the
point). Regrettably, she seems sincere
in her words.
Which, going back to the beginning, has now made her part of
the problem.
For those of you too lazy to read the article (and I don't
blame you if you don't -- it has literally enraged me to the point where I
couldn't stop thinking about it until I wrote this blog post when I should be
actually working), it basically derides the actions of Lindsey Stocker of
Quebec, Canada for having the teenage audacity to post signs around her school
reading "Don't humiliate her because she's wearing shorts. It's hot outside. Instead of shaming girls for their bodies,
teach boys that girls are not sexual objects."
I KNOW, RIGHT!? How
stupidly senseless can a teenage girl BE!?
She's actually speaking OUT about something that MATTERS to her and
could potentially make an IMPACT!? Oh,
ho ho ho... Those wacky
high-schoolers. Don't they know nobody
cares what they think?
At least, that's (only partially) what Jessica Huseman seems
to think, and (again, only some of) what she says in her article.
First off, I don't think any grown woman attacking a
teenaged girl for standing up for herself deserves to be taken seriously. Period.
According to your bio you're a fellow of investigative journalism at
Columbia Journalism school. In theory,
at least, you're a grown-up. You
probably pay taxes, have bills, have a home of your own in some way, shape, or
form... And you're attacking a 15 year
old girl who stood up for herself.
Over the Internet.
Without even bothering to...
y'know, do the journalistic thing and, I don't know, CALL HER YOURSELF
and TALK TO HER before you make wild assumptions about her and her classmates
based on the banality of Twitter and the 160 character asininity contained
therein.
So right there, we have a problem. You're openly cyber-bullying a girl you don't
know, and you're doing it through a fairly major publication like The Daily
Banter. Congratulations, you're a
high-class internet troll.
(you're also a grown woman using the term "jorts." Frankly, anybody who uses the term "jorts" should be force-fed several pairs of them until they get their lazy asses in gear and start actually saying "jean shorts" or simply "shorts." "Jort" is not a word. At best it's an onomatopoeic of the sound made when you're trying to squeeze out a fart quietly so nobody notices, and fail)
(you're also a grown woman using the term "jorts." Frankly, anybody who uses the term "jorts" should be force-fed several pairs of them until they get their lazy asses in gear and start actually saying "jean shorts" or simply "shorts." "Jort" is not a word. At best it's an onomatopoeic of the sound made when you're trying to squeeze out a fart quietly so nobody notices, and fail)
Now on to the meaty center of the argument.
See, some time ago it was pointed out/explained to me that
media and modern society/culture intentionally creates antagonistic
relationships between women. There are
several theories behind why this is -- some speculate that "the powers
that be" are trying to keep women at each other's throats, rather than
banding together to fight their true enemies.
Some claim that it's instinctive and that since women outnumber men
globally, they MUST fight each other in order to acquire the alpha males of
their community (short version: it's
biological/anthropological).
But whatever the reason, there's really no hiding the fact
that women are typically aimed at each other when angered. They form cliques and ostracize the girls
that are different, taking cues from a male-dominated media to determine what's
"in" and then excluding the girls who aren't doing what the men in
their lives order them to do or behave the way their "supposed" to
behave (whether the orders are given subliminally or overtly).
Nevertheless, what Huseman does in her article is just that
-- she's attacking a woman who bothered to stand up for herself.
Not even a woman, a girl.
(granted, she's 15,
but I don't really want to get into a whole debate about when girls become
women and the whole child-bearing age vs. societal norms for adulthood etc.
etc. etc. She's 15, she's a girl)
Now I remember how hard it was for me, as a boy, at 15 to
stand up and assert myself at anything.
And I was a boy. A white
boy. A middle-class white boy. Basically, the world was my turnip and I was
still scared shitless of it. So I can
only imagine the terror of what it would be like to be going through that same
experience as a girl.
But she did it.
Lindsey Stocker took a stance against the status quo that told her
"Your shorts are too short, that's inappropriate, you have to change
them."
First off -- I think she's absolutely right in her
stance. Telling a girl she has to
"cover up" or "change" because she's being "too
revealing" is fucking ridiculous.
There are extremes (there always are), but there are plenty of pictures
(even one in Huseman's article) that show what Lindsey was wearing and (to me,
at least) it wasn't a revealing outfit in any way, shape, or form. It's not like she was parading around in a
sheer bodysuit and fishnets -- she was wearing a sweater and shorts.
Whoopdee
Fucking
Do.
And I also agree with the over-arching societal message that
we shouldn't be telling women to cover up, we should be teaching men that women
ARE NOT FUCKING PLAYTHINGS TO BE OGLED AND STARED AT.
Women are not here for you. They are not objects to be won. They are not treasures to be captured. They are human fucking beings. Period.
So rather than teaching women to "cover
themselves," we should really be teaching men, expecially boys (y'know, during that whole developmental
stage when they learn things and shit?), that women are to be respected and
treated as equals. Much like the
topless initiatives that seek to de-sexualize breasts, human bodies are all
composed of the same parts. Everybody's
look different, but they're still the same thing. A dick is a dick. Tits are tits. No matter how big or small they are (that
goes for both of the aforementioned parts).
There's nothing sexual about any body part, inherently, because
literally ANY body part CAN be sexual -- it all depends on how you use it (and
if you have any clue what you're doing with it).
So back to the topic at hand -- Miss Huseman and Miss
Stocker.
I think MORE young girls should be taught to stand up for
themselves and assert their humanity and demand their equality like Miss
Stocker did, because it's going to take a lot of hammering the point home to
get it through society's thick skull. I
think we really do need to change the national talking points -- get
away from asking "what was she wearing" and start asking "what
the fuck was he thinking" when we hear stories of rape, gropings, unwanted
advances, stalking, domestic abuse...
The list is truly, mind-bogglingly, regrettably, endless.
And as important as that, we need to stand together. I'm not saying you have to agree, necessarily,
with everything being said. But rather
than openly and cruelly attacking someone (as Miss Huseman did), talk to that
person, instead, and try to understand more of what they're saying and doing. At least do that before you go out in
the open and decide to viciously unload on some brave girl who did what she
thought was right (and, in my opinion, was right and incredibly brave
for her to do so).
Because now that you've attacked another woman, you're now a part of the problem, Jessica. You're a
tool for the oppressors. Worse yet,
you've done their job for them.
Congratulations. I
hope it was worth it. Because I know I
can never take anything you write seriously ever again. And I'm sure I'm not alone.
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