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Feminists
Claim Motherhood as Liberal Cause
May 21, 2002
by Wendy McElroy
The average woman feels no connection
with elite feminists who analyze her life in terms of "deconstructing
gender," and politically correct feminists know it. That's why they are
now scrambling to play the "mommy card."
The "mommy card" is MOTHER,
an organization being created by three PC feminists whom Women's
eNews describe as "top-selling political authors."
MOTHER — Mothers Ought
To Have Equal Rights — plans to "rally mothers to become the nation's
most powerful lobbying group." In other words, the feminists of MOTHER
want to thoroughly politicize the last bastion of personal life in our
society: families. They want to wrest motherhood from its traditional
right-wing associations and make it a left/liberal issue, with "Mothers
Are Victims" writ-large on its banner.
As Washington Post columnist
Suzanne Fields recently
asked, "Where does the New York Times find these women?"
And who are the "top-selling
political authors" now bravely speaking out for the average mom?
Naomi Wolf — who recently
published Misconceptions: Truth, Lies and the Unexpected on the Journey
to Motherhood. In this self-indulgent diatribe, Wolf's pregnancy
became an indictment of hospitals, male society and capitalism, all interwoven
with public soul-searching about whether children would destroy her identity.
Ann Crittenden — a former
reporter for the New York Times — who authored The Price
of Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job in the World Is Still the Least
Valued. Crittenden indicts not feminism, but capitalism, and argues
for government to "economically recognize" motherhood so that women will
not be dependent upon husbands.
Barbara Seaman —who stated
in her book Free and Female: The Sex Life of the Contemporary Woman:
"Some of the women I know are so pathetic. They run around looking for
a man, any man, just because they don't know how to masturbate."
These "pro-family" women
wish to "harness" what Wolf calls the "pissed-offedness"
of mothers in order to play "hardball politics." This motivation explains
their abrupt announcement that full-time motherhood is a choice that deserves
left/liberal support.
For decades, PC feminists
have led a full-frontal attack on the traditional family. They have rejected
stay-at-home motherhood as unliberating and celebrated career women instead.
This rejection has come back to haunt them because motherhood, in all
its forms, has become politically chic. For example, the "babies versus
career" debate has been rekindled by Sylvia Ann Hewlett's new book,
Creating a Life: Professional Women and the Quest for Children.
The recent resignation of White House counselor Karen Hughes, who wants
to spend more time with her family, is also a sign of the times.
PC feminists are now jumping
in front of the motherhood parade to lead the way. Clutching a baton and
gesturing wildly to the tuba, they rush to proclaim what other women already
know: You can't have it all. Mothers who leave the workforce incur financial
losses, these feminists solemnly declare. Mothers do not receive sufficient
respect from society, they explain (as if feminism weren't largely to
blame).
Where have these three
women been for the last few decades? Most of the women I know are not
shocked to hear that life has trade-offs. They work hard, in offices or
at home. Most of them work nights as well — being mothers, wives and caregivers.
They cook, clean, nurse elderly parents and sick infants, and race the
clock to make sure everyone is on schedule and fed. Very few have the
privileges of Wolf, who earned $15,000-a-month as a paid consultant to
the Gore 2000 campaign.
When Crittenden speaks
of the "mommy tax," she explains that mothers usually can't work overtime
or travel on business, which excludes them from higher-paying jobs. Thus,
it has "been estimated that if you have one child and you're a college
graduate, your lifetime earnings will be about a million dollars lower
than a woman who does not have a child. That is what I call a mommy tax."
(Oddly, the admission that motherhood is a large factor in pay differentials
is absent from most feminist discussions of the "wage gap.")
Crittenden and MOTHER
have a solution for the "the mommy tax." More government. In The Price
of Motherhood, Crittenden suggests a year's paid leave for women
after the birth of each child, access to part-time work with full benefits,
Social Security credit for the time women devote to the family, free preschool
for children three years of age and older, and either a government salary
for full-time parenting or a subsidy for child care.
In short, Crittenden wishes
to solve motherhood by establishing a welfare state, by instituting government
control of "the family." Because that is what accepting tax money and
legal privilege means: government control over your life.
Motherhood was on safer
ground when the left and liberals viewed it with suspicion.
Wendy McElroy
Published by permission of the author.
Wendy McElroy is the editor of
ifeminists.com. She is the author
and editor of many books and articles, including her new anthology Liberty
for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her husband in
Canada.
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