Canadian
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is a perfect example of the problem with men's
self-proclaimed feminism.
Meghan
Murphy by Meghan Murphy: Calling yourself a feminist is easy these days. All
you have to do is declare it so. "If you stand for equality, then you're a
feminist," actor Emma Watson insisted in 2015. "Sorry to tell you,
you're a feminist."
In recent
years, anyone and everyone has been encouraged to take up the label - men
included. Indeed, it is often men who are awarded the most accolades for doing
so. When Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced not only that he was a
feminist, but that he was going to keep calling himself a feminist until it was
"met with a shrug", his
audience cheered.
During a conversation with
Melinda Gates last year, he elaborated, saying: "It is so important that
we all understand … it's not only that men can be feminists, it is that men
should be feminists, as well."
It might
sound like progress, but there is a problem with men's proclaimed feminism, and
Trudeau exemplifies it.
The #MeToo
movement has not only opened up the conversation about the ubiquity of sexual
harassment and assault, but it has successfully held men accountable for
behaviour that, for too long, had been ignored or kept secret. It also
encouraged men to start speaking out publicly, in solidarity with women.
But what men
say in public often contradicts their personal and political actions. It is a
convenient time for men to claim they oppose things like rape and groping -
this is a simple way to demonstrate the feminist credentials we have been told
are effortless to adopt (few, today, would argue against something as
innocuous-sounding as "equality").
It is also
an opportune moment for men to point the finger at others, and away from
themselves, all the while enjoying praise for coming out in defence of women.
Trudeau has, in some ways, walked
the talk, calling out other men for sexual misconduct. In 2014, he suspended
MPs Scott Andrews and Massimo Pacetti from the Liberal caucus on account of harassment complaints made
by two female New Democratic Party MPs.
But now, Trudeau is subject to a
scandal of his own, as a story about him "groping" a female
reporter during a 2000 music festival has resurfaced. At the time,
Trudeau apologised for his behaviour (in a rather unapologetic way), saying,
"I'm sorry. If I had known you were reporting for a national paper, I
never would have been so forward." Today, his response is different.
First, he claimed not to
"remember any negative interactions", then, just days later, said:
"I'm responsible for my side of
the interaction, which certainly I don't feel was in any way untoward. But at
the same time, this lesson that we are learning is, and I'll be blunt about it,
often a man experiences an interaction as being benign or not inappropriate,
and a woman, particularly in a professional context, can experience it
differently, and we have to respect that and reflect on it."
He's not wrong. Men and women do
very clearly experience "interactions" differently. While many
incidences reported as part of #MeToo are clear abuses of power and acts of
violence - the assaults committed by Harvey Weinstein being an obvious example - others
demonstrate that it is the way men learn to behave around and engage with women
that is a problem.
We have grown so accustomed to power
imbalances between men and women, that we not only have normalised them, but
romanticised and sexualised them. What women experience as intimidating, many
men read as harmless, not least in part because women are socialised to avoid
conflict and respond politely, even when offended or uncomfortable.
When sexual harassment and
flirtation are treated as one and the same, and when young men learn to be the
sexual aggressors - that to coerce and pressure young women into sex is an
acceptable means to a desired end - women are bound to wake up feeling
uncomfortable, exploited, disturbed, or even traumatised.
In many cases it isn't until days,
months, or even years later that women look back on an interaction or sexual
situation and realise there was a legitimate reason they felt angry or queasy
about it the next day.
The truth is that, in all
likelihood, most men - if not all men - have engaged in behaviour that was
inappropriate, made a woman feel uncomfortable, or was even abusive. This is
the lesson we should have learned from #MeToo: that the problem of male
entitlement and misogynist attitudes towards women is a social one, not a
personal one, and certainly not one that will be resolved by more men insisting
they are feminists.
WATCH
25:02
It is very
easy to say, as Trudeau and so many others have, that you "believe in
equality between men and women". It's even easier to simply announce you
are a feminist and reap the political and social rewards.
It's much
more difficult to make feminism a political practice and to commit to working
towards the liberation of women, no matter the repercussions. And when it comes
to the tough issues, Trudeau and far too many other men, are suddenly and
conveniently silent.
Back in
2014, before he was prime minister, Trudeau stated emphatically that
"prostitution itself is a form of violence against women." There was
less at stake in those days, so it was likely easier for him to make such a
clear, radical statement.
Now that he
has a more significant position of power, his unapologetic feminist approach to
this issue has waned. In April, delegates from Trudeau's Liberal Party voted to include
the decriminalisation of pimps, johns, and brothel owners on their 2019
platform, which would mean repealing Canada's current prostitution laws, which
decriminalise those who sell sex and criminalise those who exploit and abuse
them.
For a party
with a leader who considers himself feminist, this is incredibly troubling.
Prostitution is an industry that sees thousands of girls and women abused,
exploited and killed, all around the world. It is an industry that explicitly
says: women are things that exist for men's use - whose lives don't matter, and
that can be bought and sold, traded among men for pleasure and profit.
A new Ipsos
poll conducted on behalf of the London Abused Women's Centre (Ontario, Canada),
Equality Now, and the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (CATW) shows that 75 percent of
Ontarians agree with Trudeau's initial statement, and view prostitution as
harmful to women and girls, and that six in ten are opposed to the full
decriminalisation of the industry.
Of all
times, it is now that Trudeau should be leading his party towards supporting
Canada's current, feminist law, but instead, he is saying nothing in an attempt
to avoid controversy.
There are
several questions I'd like to ask every man who has publicly proclaimed his
feminist credentials or who has chastised other men as part of #MeToo, posting
sombre or critical sermons on social media about their shock and disappointment
at the men around them: Have you ever watched pornography? Have you ever paid
for sex? Have you ever pestered a woman into sex - your girlfriend or wife,
perhaps - when she was less than enthusiastic?
If the
answers to any of these questions are "yes", understand that you,
too, are culpable. Both pornography and prostitution are areas wherein sexual
harassment and abuse are part of the job description, and the idea epitomised
in the sex industry - that sex is a right - is very much something men bring
into the bedroom.
I don't expect perfection from any
man. How can we, in a patriarchal world, be surprised when man after man turns
out to have behaved in, well, exactly the ways they have been taught and
encouraged to? We can't.
And so I have little interest in
celebrating - or even believing - men who proudly announce their feminism.
We'll believe it when we see it. And until then, Trudeau and his other
"feminist" allies should meet as much scepticism as a man who refuses
the label.
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