February 16, 2007

Marcotte blames sexism for her troubles.

Amanda Marcotte talks about why she had to leave the Edwards campaign. Summary: sexism!
What I ... failed to understand was how much McEwan and I would stick out. I was aware that I didn't exactly fit the image people have of bloggers who join campaigns -- the stereotype being 30-something nerdy young white men who wear khakis and obsess over crafting their Act Blue lists. I wasn't aware that not fitting the image would attract so much negative attention. In fact, I mostly saw this all as a baby step in the direction of diversity, since McEwan and I differed from the stereotype mostly by being female and by being outspoken feminists....

When you've got a mark that you're aiming to humiliate publicly, it helps if she's young and female and doesn't know her place....

One question that's hard to avoid is how much of the venom had to do with the fact that McEwan and I were young women entering into a field (Internet communications) that's viewed as almost monolithically masculine. From my vantage point, it appeared that sexism was one of the primary motivating energies behind the campaign....

Regardless of its motive, the result of the smear campaign was to send a loud, clear signal to young feminist women. It tells them that campaigning for Democratic candidates, and particularly doing so in positions that would help the candidate connect with young feminist communities like the one that thrives in the blogosphere, is a scary, risky prospect.
I think Marcotte goes way too far blaming sexism for her troubles, but there is still some truth to it. I've seen plenty of attacks on me that have the odor of sexism. I think there is a sense out there that the blogosphere belongs to the guys and the women are interlopers. Rationally, most guys will say that's not true, but I think they still have that prejudice, that instinctive reaction: Who does she think she is? Who let her in here? And I readily admit that some of what I think is my own imagination, but I've read enough things about me to believe it.

But the blogosphere is a rough place, and people use whatever tools they can grab to make their arguments and sex is a particularly useful rhetorical device. Marcotte uses it, I use it, and so do a lot of guys. It's one way to write in the blogosphere, and it's often overdone. Sometimes there really is sexism, and when you see it, it's one more thing you can write about. But if you don't write about it well -- if you overdo it, as Marcotte does here -- you're just setting up another wave of attacks.

ADDED: Dr. Helen doesn't really agree with me, but she makes points that I concede are excellent:
Sexism is what got Marcotte hired in the first place -- she and her co-blogger were hired because they were women, and Edwards as well as the bloggers mistakenly believed that because they were women, they could get away with anything. No self-respecting politician would have hired a man who talked and acted like a deranged teen who spouted off at the mouth as if he were a sexually abused borderline using the internet as a weapon against all that angered him....

As for the notion that the blogosphere is full of sexism and men just don't realize it, I think the Professor should take a real look at who some of these sexist comments are made by. I, for one, have noticed that as many sexist and nasty comments on my blog are written by females as by males....
My experience is of blogs written by men who seem to have a regular practice of selecting posts of mine to react to -- usually with almost no substance, but just rank name calling, as if they thought they could chase me out of the blogosphere by making it an intolerably rough place. I do get negative things from women, but much of this is sexist too -- in that special sexist way where women who like to call themselves feminist feel complete outrage toward women who don't tow the line and support the Democratic Party across the board. These women become most vicious when you point out feminist values that run counter to Democratic Party interests.

Anyway, Dr. Helen seems to think I'm condemning a lot more people than I am. I'm not saying everyone is sexist or all men are sexist, just that I think there's a lot of sexism on the web and I've experienced a lot of it personally. I guess, once again, I'm taking the middle position on this. Marcotte sees too much sexism, Dr. Helen too little, and I'm seeing the right amount.

CORRECTION: That's toe the line, not tow the line. It's about standing in the right spot, not pulling anything.

77 comments:

PatHMV said...

Marcotte can dish out the venom, but she sure can't take any back, can she? She went out of her way to emphasize and promote her own sexuality (not her own gender, her own sexuality)... aggressively. Nothing wrong with that, of course, but if some of the criticism that comes back her way has sexual overtones, I don't see where that's illegitimate, given the nature of her writings.

Even your faint almost-defense of Marcotte gives her too much credit, Ann.

PatHMV said...

Also, I've not seen a single admission by Marcotte that any of the criticisms against her may have some validity. She, as far as I can tell, lacks any realization that good, decent people may have been truly offended, with good reason, by the vilest of her slurs and slanders against Catholics and Christians in general.

If she were to acknowledge this, I might be more inclined to waste time parsing through the complaints against her to see which are legitimate and which are based on sexism, but not until then. She is, as she always has, using the improper behavior of a few to slander the many, refusing to admit any distinction between the few and the many.

Her post you cite is just one more example of her pernicious stereotyping.

No-one-12345 said...

So where are all the male campaign bloggers that are getting away with making statements of a similar offensive/bigoted nature?

Absent that, this is just one more excuse.

Jeff with one 'f' said...

Marcotte is incredibly sexist and chauvinistic and goes out of her way in her writings to demean men. She IS a bigot and and uses her sense of victimhood and entitlement as a cudgel with which to beat her enemies, both real and perceived.

bearbee said...

She used her 'potty' mouth to garner attention. Now the heat is too much. Well, boo hoo, woe is me.

This lady has enormous issues entangled around religion and sex. Her desire is for some sort of martyrdom and is, such as it is, in her eyes and those of her 'followers', being fullfilled. She uses her blogging as some sort of therapy tool.

Someone, get her a real job!

MadisonMan said...

Well, you know, it couldn't be her own fault that these things have happened. It must be for some other reason.

If you're going to insult someone so it sticks, you have to know what they're sensitive to. Ms. Marcotte (and Prof. Althouse to some extent) are highly sensitive to sexist commentary. Degrading sexist comments are therefore effective -- they really remember them. Of course, there's always the possibility that your insult will be waved off with a he's just a sexist a-hole; with some people that's a chance I'm willing to take.

I should add that I rarely insult people.

paul a'barge said...

but there is still some truth to it

No, there is not one iota of truth to it, in this case.

Never, in all of the criticism of the two moonbats did I read anything that flamed them over anything other than their self-inflicted wounds, driven by their own bigoted comments.

Your statement is false on its face.

Fen said...

Degrading sexist comments are therefore effective -- they really remember them

Agreed. I think the trolls who attack female bloggers aren't necessarily sexist. I've seen them at work on Althouse, Dr Helen, and Malkin. They only go there b/c they believe its a sensitive spot.

But Marcotte is quickly becoming a joke - unbalanced and lashing out. She appears to have adopted Feminism as a substitute for therapy.

sonicfrog said...

When you've got a mark that you're aiming to humiliate publicly, it helps if she's young and female and doesn't know her place....

Vomit!!!

No, It doesn't. If the attacker makes a point that the "mark" is a woman, especially if the original offense did not touch on gender issues, the attacker just comes off looking foolish.

I'm Full of Soup said...

Ann:
Yoou know I love you and your blog but I fear they ran short of oxygen on your flight and your brain was damaged if you think Marcotte's pointing a finger at sexism has even an ounce of truth.

Henry said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Meade said...

How many 15 minutes does she get?

I'm tired of Amanda Marcotte. Not because she's female. Not because she's a feminist (IF she really is a feminist). I'm tired of Amanda Marcotte because she has nothing new or interesting to say.

I want to know what John Edwards has to say about sexism, bloggers, the netroots, etc.
How did he come to the decision to hire these bloggers in the first place?
how does he feel about their resignations?
Has he spoken about such things?
What is he going to do about them if he's elected president?
Has he any balls at all?

Henry said...

I offered some cover for Marcotte and Mcewan in one of the previous posts on this subject. I thought, and still think, that the response to their rants was disproportionate.

So I'm not surprised that Marcotte is taking away the wrong lessons from her flame-out, though her self-absorption is rather astonishing. She is "outspoken"; her opponents are "aggressive" and "mysogynistic". She writes "satire"; her opponents do "hit jobs".

Of course, when you've got a mark that you're aiming to humiliate publicly, it helps if she's thoughtless with her language, vile to people who disagree with her, and given to misrepresenting their viewpoints...

So in the end I'm torn between having zero sympathy for Marcotte but agreeing with her that the kind of personal onslaught she encountered (I'm thinking of the email onslaught) is bad for blogging and bad for politics. Raucous, frank discussion is better than scripted, empty phrases.

Of course, the takeaway for the political managers is stick with the script.

Tully said...

"Dishes it out, but can't take it" covrs it near-completely. Marcotte is complaining that she's been subjected to the very same vituperation she's spent years dishing out. (But hers was justified, of course!) Feh.

There's an old Trumanism on politics involving heat and kitchens, but even alluding to it would probably make me a sexist male Godarchy pig. Oops, too late!

Anonymous said...

What a nightmare for the Edwards campaign.

She published coments about how a Republican's penis would never get near her vagina, and she commented favorably at length regarding the term "Godbag", a conflation of the words God and douche bag used as shorthand for all Christians (and perhaps Jews and Muslims, too), not just Catholics.

The most astonishing thing about all this is that so many posters can't fathom how outrageous it was for a serious contender for the Presidency to hire such a person.

Would it have been appropriate for Adlai Stevenson to hire Moms Mabley, for Kennedy to hire Lenny Bruce,for Harry Truman to hire Anais Nin, or for LBJ to hire Al Goldstein?

Fen said...

agreeing with her that the kind of personal onslaught she encountered (I'm thinking of the email onslaught) is bad for blogging and bad for politic

Perhaps, but I still think that onslaught was manufactured. It fits her MO.

Anthony said...

Used to be a "smear campaign" was saying things about a person that weren't true. Nowadays, apparently, a "smear campaign" is when you quote someone accurately.

Joe Giles said...

These two landed smack dab right on top of my bias. When women are vulgar and foul-mouthed, I lose all respect. (Not talking about just one word, but serial nastiness.)

I think it's wrong when men do it -- but with women, I feel like "shouldn't they know better?"

When public spheres are saturated with nasty language and salty topics, women (and children) are the first to pay the price.

Now even a blogger who is a lady can draw comments that are beyond the pale...but at least there's a "hey, you're out of line!" response that is clear on its face.

But these two? A lot of the responses (not talking about the threats of violence) are of the same caliber -- nasty, profane, personal. There's no defense left against the eroding discussion. It becomes a verbal street fight, whereby the nastiest thugs use any tactic and then question the motives of their opponents. Would be funny if not so pathetic.

But Marcotte herself has several -isms to answer for. Some women (Duke rape accuser) are worthy, other women (Virgin Mary) are not. One is a victim, the other a tool to be used. Heck, look how she writes about Christian women -- they're not truly women, in her book.

For whatever reason, Marcotte is obsessed with the fear of being controlled by a man, and anything that even whiffs of the 1950's stereotype is worthy of mockery. Fine. Whatever.

But the fact that Bill Donohue (patriarchal stereotype) brought down her gig with John Edwards (new, modern man of a feminine sort) will fuel her anger for years to come.

Sydney said...

A male staffer who blogged about the "sticky, white hot seed of the Holy Ghost" and aborting Jesus would've been terminated too.

A male blogger who wrote like that would never have been hired. And I say that as a woman.

Joe Giles said...

Let me add that I feel really sorry for Marcotte. The level of self-delusion, insulated securely by anger, is sad.

The most recent article in Salon solidifies her victimhood.

It's gotta hurt to gain such a position and then to have it basically snatched away due to the actions of those you feel are the problem in the first place. But Marcotte has created a virtual castle around herself wherein she was the knight on the white charger, leading the fight against the hordes.

She was only a part-time blogger...willing to help the Edwards' campaign...don't people understand Pandagon was a personal blog?...she didn't fit the stereotype of a political staffer...her writings were only satirical...etc.

It's sad. Anger got her into this, and now will be her closest friend.

Fen said...

There are few things like having Bill O'Reilly work himself into a pearl-clutching fit

Were those Marcotte's original words? Because I've seen the pearl-clutching line used on several other blogs by her defenders [ie. appears that her defenders are all circulating the same talking points. Astro-turfing].

The Drill SGT said...

Two comments:

1. Marcotte's venom and bile was seen by many as being more than just anti-religiuous. She also was anti-GOP, anti-white male, anti-, anti-

2. given this quote below, I would be interested in finding out who in the Edwards campaign hired them, where they sat in the org chart and who fired them.

I was aware that I didn't exactly fit the image people have of bloggers who join campaigns -- the stereotype being 30-something nerdy young white men who wear khakis and obsess over crafting their Act Blue lists. I wasn't aware that not fitting the image would attract so much negative attention. In fact, I mostly saw this all as a baby step in the direction of diversity, since McEwan and I differed from the stereotype mostly by being female and by being outspoken feminists....

In my notional camapign org chart, it seems to me that Marcotte could have been in the parts of the organization called:

a. Communications / Media relations. This area is hardly dominated by sexist males, having a large leavening of women and metro-sexuals

b. Infrastructure/internet campaign/etc. This would be the geeky area. the 30ish white male, policy wonk / tech geek area. more sexist, I grant you

c. The Campaign Outreach Staff (e.g. Democratic interest Group Ghetto. 1 hetro feminist, 1 lesbian, 1 gay, 1 black, 1 brown, 1 jew, etc). very PC, but hardly a bastion of male sexism.

so who was her hiring mgr and who fired her? I think you need to find that out to get a feel for how bogus this claim is.

reader_iam said...

Wait a sec, let me get this right:

Marcotte thinks her hiring by the Edwards campaign was a breaking through of barriers by/for women?

Quick--show of hands: How many people can think of at least one or two (I can think of more than that, but let's keep it simple) women intensely involved in political campaigns, even with great authority, going back at least 20 years? How many people think that it's also a breakthrough for "young" people (in their 20s) to be involved in political campaigns? For that matter, in staff positions in D.C.? Heck, even via clerkships at the Supreme Court?

What the hell is she talking about?

Being hired based on blogging credentials--yeah, that's part of a new thing. Being hired despite having views expressed in beyond edgy ways, that's new. But the rest?

History, anyone? Political awareness (in the sense of staffing, etc.), anyone?

Amazing.

rcocean said...

SOP for liberals. When attacked call your attackers:

1) Sexist -If a women

2) Racist - If a minority

3) Anti-semites - If Jewish

4) Homophobic - If gay.

5) Xenophobic - If foreign Born

6) If a straight,white. Christian male call them a Fascist or Nazi.

Needless to say Marcotte is your typical left-wing foul mouthed bitch who can dish it out and can't take it.

Her cry is sexism is just liberal SOP.

OTH, Althouse has been the subject of true Sexist comments. The comments on "boobgate" come to mind. And all those came from the left.

Mellow-Drama said...

Like other commenters here, I don't think that sexism was the driving force behind the attack - I think it was politics and genuine offense, followed by feigned offense for the sake of politics. (Does that make sense?)

But certainly some of the attacks on those gals were sexist. Some of those attacks came from genuinely sexist people; some were just throwing whatever ammunition they had handy; and some of the attacks were seen as sexist by the two bloggers because they are ultrasensitive to perceived sexism. I think that's in part because, as Madison Man said, they couldn't possibly be responsible for screwing up for themselves; it had to have been someone else's fault.

This idea that the blogosphere is sexist bugs me. I've heard it a lot. I think the fact that there aren't as many prominent female political bloggers as males is simply a numbers game - the number of really serious political hounds who are female v. male is probably proportionate to their percentage population in the blogosphere. As for prominence, some of that is luck, some is skill, and some is being on good terms (ideologically or acquaintance-wise) with a big-hitter like Instapundit. Prof. Althouse starting getting most of her attention when Glenn started linking to her. She was putting out a quality product before that; but a lot of people weren't seeing it. I'm sure there are a lot of high-quality female political bloggers who aren't as prominent because they haven't been noticed yet - just as there are lots of males in the same situation. So I think it has to do with percentages and luck, more than sexism.

TMink said...

DMC wrote: "Unless you post a picture of yourself in bikini, sex is unlikely to enter male readers' minds. Period."

Well, I disagree (hot sex.) I think that many of us men (wife in nighty) may occasionally (heels over head) think about sex more often (how long till I get home?)

Seriously, the portion of our brain which responds to sexually stimulating visual information is 2.5 times larger than the same portion of a woman's brain. We are neurologically compelled to think about sex.

But what does that have to do with these two bigots getting fired? To me, their gender is immaterial. It is their bigotry. Men making bigoted responses would have been fired as well, wouldn't they?

Also, I have only noticed one gender comment here, it referred to Marcotte's vulgar posts. Honestly, I think I would have been MORE offended by a guy writing about his penis the way Marcotte did her vagina. But that is just me.

So I am not buying that this is sexist acting out. Well, at least not on the part of these blogger's critics.

Trey

eelpout said...

The righties worst nightmare of women and black people in charge of Congress has manifested into hatred and fear of women and black people in power. Shocking! I think Marcotte should renounce her whiteness. Or something.

The Exalted said...

marcotte is just a sad embarrassment. the quicker she retreats into obscurity the better.

Fen said...

Naked Lunch: The righties worst nightmare of women and black people in charge of Congress has manifested into hatred and fear of women and black people in power.

You forgot Latinos. We REALLY hate them too....

And at the 08 convention, a major plank in our platform will be conversion to Islam. We REALLY on board with their views re women, minorities and homosexuals...

This little spat in the ME is just a diversion to hide our true goals.

The Drill SGT said...

reader_iam said...
Wait a sec, let me get this right:

Marcotte thinks her hiring by the Edwards campaign was a breaking through of barriers by/for women?


RIM, your post is somewhat aligned with mine. I note that you say your career field is communications/media.

Have any knowledge of campaign organizations? where they would have parked Marcotte?

My gut tells me she was hired by a woman. I don't have a clue who made the decision to fire her, but I bet the one who was told to do it was a woman as well.

Joan said...

I'm not sure what planet Marcotte is living on, but it isn't this one. From the last page of the Salon piece (emphasis added):

The right blogosphere is mostly a sideshow act for the Republican Party, providing a cheap source of noise and noncontroversies to help professional shills like the Catholic League and the Heritage Foundation degrade the political discourse in this country...

Because we all know that Republican candidates have bloggers on-staff that routinely spew profanity and anti-religious vitriol on a regular basis, right? And when left-wing bloggers do that, it's not degrading a bit!

This one takes the cake, though:
I think the left blogosphere has a lot more substance to it. ... They helped Jim Webb become a senator and Joe Lieberman become an Independent.


The left blogosphere would've been happy if Lieberman had been hit by a bus, and now she's taking credit for "helping" him "become an Indepedent"? Insane.

Is it true that vestiges of sexism still linger in our society? Of course. But Marcotte's assertion that sexism is the chief motivation for the negative response to her position in the Edwards' campain is absurd. I don't think anyone, reading Marcotte's rants, thought Who does she think she is, this uppity female?

On the contrary, we all thought: Why would Edwards hire such an idiot?

Revenant said...

What a shocker -- a man-hating feminist blames her latest screw-up on sexism.

Next up, a Klan member blames blacks and Jews for costing him his job as a bag boy at Wal-Mart.

Revenant said...

The left blogosphere would've been happy if Lieberman had been hit by a bus, and now she's taking credit for "helping" him "become an Indepedent"? Insane.

I think that was an attempt at clever wordplay on her part -- as in, they helped get Joe out of the Democratic Party.

reader_iam said...

Drill Sgt:

If you're asking if I've had direct campaign experience, the answer is no.

One of the pieces of the puzzle regarding this story that has most fascinated me is the "what did the Edwards campaign know about Marcotte's posts, who might/should have known the history, who wields power in the internet area" etc. etc. I've ruminated on that as an aside on a couple of the posts I did on this flap over at Done With Mirrors. I say--ruminate, and I mean with specific disclaimers that I'm talking sheer speculation, not to be confused with fact, and to be weighted accordingly.

That said: I'm referring to wondering about Elizabeth Edwards' role. The other day, in a comments thread attached to one of those posts, Ruth Anne Adams asked me specifically about why I was thinking and wondering with regard to E.E. I obliged her by providing a series of links in a series of comments.

I don't want to link clutter here, because a) it's not my blog and b) I don't know how many are interested in this line of thinking. So if you are interested, may I suggest you go to this this post and pull up the comments, look for Ruth Anne's query, and scroll down from there.

reader_iam said...

Also, Drill Sgt., Marcotte maintains she resigned, and there has been no evidence provided to prove otherwise.

This is also true with regard to McEwan, who, IMO, is a separate case and whose situation etc. should be analyzed separately. As I said, IMO.

The Drill SGT said...

reader_iam said...
Also, Drill Sgt., Marcotte maintains she resigned, and there has been no evidence provided to prove otherwise.
.

Fine, though your point is taken, she almost can't have it both ways. She wasn't fired by sexist men, but she was made to feel unwelcome, and her Feminist feelings were hurt by 30ish geeks? So she quit? Give me a break :)

This is also true with regard to McEwan, who, IMO, is a separate case and whose situation etc. should be analyzed separately. As I said, IMO. Same sort of thing here. Sexism, would be the application of generic bias based on gender. If you treat separately, it's hard to establish the generic bias. She almost has to pull both cases together in folks mind to make it generic, rather than individual judgments on 2 different sets of facts.

Back on my original topic, from your general experiences, wouldn't you agree however that the communications / media relations / public affairs work areas are perhaps less "sexist" than the average location, with a higher percentage of women in mgt positions?

reader_iam said...

Huh. I'm surprising myself in having a bit of a tough time giving you a blanket "yes" or "no" answer, Drill Sgt. (What's that about, I'm asking myself? Definitions of sexism? Whether management positions are the best benchmark? Well, whatever.)

Anecdotally, given your comparison, the short answer is "probably," and--without looking up some stats about management positions, size of business and the intersection of org charts--trending more so. It's certainly improved since I started out.

Well, and I don't think it's surprising that we'd find women more represented in fields involving communication, such as those to which you refer. Just not sure what I'd extrapolate from that in terms of sexism or not. I've involved in organizations with lots of women, but where the real power (and power positions, whether the job title reflected that or not) lay with a fewer number of men. And I've been involved in organizations with many more men than women, but where there appeared to be low leves of sexism. Maybe this is part of my stumbling block in giving a short, blanket answer. (Also, I'm not sure what you mean by the "average" location.)

In any case, I certainly think things are a lot better for women in the professional world overall, in terms of opportunity and achievement, than they were when I was a kid (I'm almost 46).

FWIW, I don't personally see Marcotte's having to leave the Edwards campaign(whether by resignation or whatever) as stemming from sexism. That strikes me as calling something a nail just because your favorite tool is a hammer.

reader_iam said...

I do think that some of the language used to denounce both women was sexist--and I also think Marcotte, in particular, hasn't hesitated in the past to use sexist language against women she doesn't agree with. Which, I'll agree, puts her in a bit of an awkward place when she then complains. On the other hand, I know a lot of women who would utterly disagree with my premise that women can be sexist when talking about other women (not to mention against men). Not a simple issue, in some respects.

Revenant said...

I do think that some of the language used to denounce both women was sexist

Could you give an example of such language being used by one of the people that Marcotte has blamed for the so-called "smear campaign"? Certainly you could find blog commenters making such remarks, and undoubtedly she, like all public figures with an email address, got lots of email from bigots -- but is there a quote from, say, Malkin or Donohue that uses sexist language?

Still, though, I think Marcotte had a point in one respect. Inasmuch as she clearly thinks that true feminism involves seething hatred of men (particularly the white kind) and traditional religions, her critics were indeed sending a message that "feminists" aren't welcome in the political arena.

Nor should they be.

The Drill SGT said...

Revenant said...
I do think that some of the language used to denounce both women was sexist

Could you give an example of such language being used by one of the people that Marcotte has blamed for the so-called "smear campaign"?


I was about to ask the same thing, then came to the conclusion:

Marcotte would likey self describe herself as an "Angry Feminist" yet complain that calling her an "Angry Feminist" was a sexist attack :)

reader_iam said...

Are you all under the impression that I'm defending Marcotte? Perhaps a better question: Did I give that impression?

Revenant said...

Are you all under the impression that I'm defending Marcotte? Perhaps a better question: Did I give that impression?

You quite explicitly said that sexist language was used against her, which constitutes at least a partial defense of her claim to "victim of sexism" status".

Thus, my request that you cite the language in question.

TMink said...

Naked Lunch (great name by the way)The righties worst nightmare of women and black people in charge of Congress has manifested into hatred and fear of women and black people in power.

It was us righties that Johnson turned to to pass the Voters Rights Act when you lefties were too scarred or racist to do so.

It was us righties that had the first black Sec of State. And the second.

It was you lefties that had a terrorist branch of your party called the KKK in reconstruction. It was a righty, Grant, who chased them down like the dogs they were. He would have ended the organization and avoided much of Jim Crow if the country had not grown tired of chasing terrorists (sound familiar?)

OK, some of this is ancient history, but us righties fear Senator Clinton because she is a socialist, not because of her plumbing.

Trey

reader_iam said...

Sorry, but I think that referring to blog comments or emailers to bloggers as a source of sexist statements is perfectly legitimate, as is including writers of the same as example of "denouncers."

And, respectfully, I feel you're redefining the scope of what I said

I do think that some of the language used to denounce both women was sexist

with the bolded words:

Could you give an example of such language being used by one of the people that Marcotte has blamed for the so-called "smear campaign"?

You're making that part of what I said, which is redefining my comment to make it more particular than I either meant or--more important--wrote it. Had I been specifically accusing, for example, Donohue of that, I would have said so.

That said, it is true that I have no use for Donohue, for reasons that predate this latest brouhaha, and I have acknowledged that at least in comments, if not actually posts, where I blog. HOWEVER--and this is a big HOWEVER--this is an "and", not an "or": I can find both Marcotte and Donohue odious. One opinion doesn't cancel out the other, and the two opinions don't even have to be relevant to the other.

As for examples, OK, I suppose can go back through the many blog posts and associated comments threads from all over the place over the last week and do some culling for you. I'd prefer not to, since, among other things, I'd be re-reading such gems as:

"Problem with women like you, you just need a good fucking from a real man! Living in Texas myself, I know you haven't found that real Texan yet. But once your liberal pro feminist ass gets a real good fucking, you might see the light. Until then, enjoy your battery operated toys b/c most real men wouldn't want to give you the fucking you deserve b/c the shit that would come out of you ears..."

Perhaps you don't find that sort of thing sexist. I do. If we disagree about that, and I realize that there are people who do disagree with that, there's probably not a whole of good to be mined in debating the point. It's probably best to just leave it at disagreeing.

reader_iam said...

You quite explicitly said that sexist language was used against her, which constitutes at least a partial defense of her claim to "victim of sexism" status".

I'm going to have to disagree again with the premise.

reader_iam said...

And I've already said I do not believe Marcotte was a victim of sexism in terms of her being out of the Edwards campaign job.

reader_iam said...

You think I'm making it up?

vbspurs said...

I think Marcotte goes way too far blaming sexism for her troubles, but there is still some truth to it. I've seen plenty of attacks on me that have the odor of sexism.

Sure. The same was true of poor Harriet Miers, and Laura Bush said as much.

But this woman is sexism-phishing.

You can't say this:

the stereotype being 30-something nerdy young white men who wear khakis and obsess over crafting their Act Blue lists.

And expect people to like your manner or opinions.

Edwards, I bet you for all the world, has these very young men as his campaign workers. He's not exactly the type of guy that attracts granola bar Deaniacs around him.

So if she's writing that, for sure she thought about it, and it translated into her behaviour around them.

Cheers,
Victoria

reader_iam said...

Also, before I go around collecting examples for you (which, at least at one place, is going to be a challenge since the site keeps going down; I just checked), I'd like to know if you consider the example I gave to be an example of sexist language.

If it isn't--and truly, with all due respect--there is no point in my spending the time. Again, we should just leave it there.

And if there are no examples -- and I'm betting there aren't --

I did notice that bit, by the way: if I chose, I could interpret that as being a bit insulting (though emphatically not sexist!! Heh). 7 Machos, however much you may disagree with me, surely you've noticed over time that I do not quote or make references lightly, nor do I fail to do homework.

I think that's a fair statement.

reader_iam said...

The example I used was originally posted at Pandagon, which is down again now, so I had to pick it up in block quote from another blog (but I can attest that it's the same as what was posted).

I have a few others ready so far from a single comments section over at Shakespeare's Sister, but seriously, folks--do I hafta???

Fen said...

I have a few others ready so far from a single comments section over at Shakespeare's Sister, but seriously, folks--do I hafta???

Nah, I have no doubt that trolls attacked both bloggers with sexually loaded insults. But its a bit of a stretch the way they link those remarks to some right-wing crowd, without any evidence.

But I'm more interested in the phantom "veiled" threats that they claim forced them to quit. The worst I've seen was an obnoxious regret that they hadn't been in Iraq to experience Saddam's rape rooms firsthand. Horrible, but hardly threatening.

I think both are faking. And wondering if FBI was notified of such threats? I mean, if they took the death "threats" seriously enough to quit their jobs, then surely they took the death "threats" seriously enough to report to law enforcement?

Revenant said...

Sorry, but I think that referring to blog comments or emailers to bloggers as a source of sexist statements is perfectly legitimate, as is including writers of the same as example of "denouncers."

Well, I don't. If that's the best you can come up with then we're done here.

Steve said...

I think Amanda would have been OK if she had apologized upfront for the tone and wording of her comments about sex, the Virgin Mary, and so on. Her failure to do so indicates that she doesn't really fathom that you cannot (yet, anyway) have mainstream political discourse in this country involving individuals who brag about their sexual organs, their sex life, and who taunt others about theirs, or their religious beliefs. I mean, it's really rather simple.

LoafingOaf said...

Althouse's last post on this topic was about the resignation of Shakespeare's Sister's McEwan. In the comments everyone continued talking about Amanada Marcotte's inflammatory posts, not McEwan's.

I don't read either blog, and I'm confused why McEwan is treated as if she's the same person as Marcotte.

I realize they're friends and sort of a team. But as far as I can tell, all McEwan did was refer to Bush's base as "wingnut Christo-fascists" and post this rant about gay adoption.

While it may be poorly written and needlessly vulgar, it's not really that bad a post, and is actually ranting against anti-gay bigotry.

So why is she lumped in as exactly the same as Marcotte? By people who wanna rush to call her a bigot while not seeming to care about anti-gay agendas from the Religious Right.

Like I said, I don't read her blog, and I'm sure if I did I'd find all kinds of stuff that would bug me because she's on the Hard Left and I'm certainly not.

But did she deserve to be forced to resign? Does she deserve to be treated as if she said things that only Marcotte did? Is it because she defends Marcotte? Am I missing something?

Doesn't seem just to me, and she probably was the second to resign because she was hoping that after Marcotte stepped aside that would be the end of it. Maybe one scalp should've been enough. IMHO.

As far as the sexism claim, Althouse has a valid point in general but Marcotte makes a poor example. Marcotte is clearly a hater of white males, so she's the sexist one. And what she posted would've brought heat no matter what her gender was. She knew that when she posted the inflammatory rants.

LoafingOaf said...

Patrick Martin said...
Also, I've not seen a single admission by Marcotte that any of the criticisms against her may have some validity.

Agreed. But I've also seen very little acknowledgement from the Catholics in these comments threads that underlying her vulgar anti-Catholicism cathartic ranting was that a lot of people feel their beliefs, rights, and in some casdes their lives are threatened by Catholic groups that have a lot of influence in politics in America and around the world.

In these threads it has sounded as if Catholics do not wanna pause for one second and think about why it is people might feel fearful of powerful, political elements with Catholicism.

The Catholic Church has much to answer for. Its Popes have had to issue public apologies to the entire world, and will likely have to again. Catholic groups are heavily involved in politics.

Marcotte's style of attack and mockery may make her the worst, and most counterproductive, spokeswoman for those who who wanna push back against some of the things some Catholics are up to. But it would've been nice to see some of the Catholics offended by Marcotte to - on their own, and putting Marcotte's words aside - go further than just calling her a bigot, and to do some self-critical examination about the underlying fears of Catholicism that motivate such rants.

Steve said...

As a Catholic (but not a very devout one) I wasn't offended by her comments, and I didn't call her a bigot. However, you cannot just glide onto the national stage without disowning at least the tone of such attacks. That's a political reality, the rest is just garnish.

At the same time, her references to her own sexuality were so vulgar, and again, I didn't think they were offensive, yet at the same time that kind of vulgarity is just not appropriate without disowning in the public sphere.

I am aware that some Catholic organizer harassed her. But that stuff, and this other stuff, would have come out eventually. She had a chance to transit from being an immature vulgar blogger to a more establishmentarian blogger with, perhaps, more nuanced rhetorical and persuasive skills. To do that would have required distancing her self, at minimum, from some of this other stuff. However she refused to accept responsibility or apologize for anything. And then she quit.

Her choice.

amba said...

Toe.

Unknown said...

Maybe Dr. Helen is getting nasty comments, because she's one of the most prominent psychiatrists who advocates for reparative therapy for gay people.

What a looney.

Unknown said...

http://drhelen.blogspot.com/2006/03/if-youre-gay-you-better-stay-that-way.html

hmmmm. Nevermind that reparative therapy has been proven to lead to increased rates of depression and higher suicide rates. Dr. Helen condemns the American Psychology Association for condemning the psychiatric equivalent of creationism.

Again - Dr. Helen = Looney.

amba said...

I think she was whining.

And, Ann, success is the best revenge. Twinges of envy notwithstanding, whenever one of us gets up there high enough to get shot at, it's . . . yeah.

Unknown said...

I hate to say this, but I think Seven is gay. His infatuation with me and with gay things in general is the only explanation I can come up with.

Sure I talk about gay things, but I'm gay.

What the hell is Seven's excuse?

Joan said...

But I've also seen very little acknowledgement from the Catholics in these comments threads that underlying her vulgar anti-Catholicism cathartic ranting was that a lot of people feel their beliefs, rights, and in some casdes their lives are threatened by Catholic groups that have a lot of influence in politics in America and around the world.

If you can give a single realistic example of how or why anyone should feel their beliefs, rights, or lives (!!!) are threatened by Catholics' involvement in politics in America, I would be very interested to read it. But I am not interesting in wading through a sewer to hear anyone's thoughts on any topic -- much less my religion -- a concept which obviously never occurred to Marcotte.

I believe that Marcotte and McEwan have received vicious emails, many of them blatantly sexist in their choice of language and insults. But can't we distinguish the parasitic commenters and anonymous emailers from the bloggers who are reporting on this situation? Marcotte herself posted excerpts of some of the vile stuff sent to her, and it's beyond the pale to think that she went to the trouble of composing it herself, although in tone and language some of it does resemble her own posts. I'm sure it's real, but the fact that a few dozen or a few hundred lunatics have email accounts doesn't translate to a generally sexist environment in the blogosphere.

I understand that Ann has been targetted by some male bloggers in typically sexist ways, but again, that's just evidence that some bloggers are idiots, not that sexism is rampant. The "how can she be any good at this, she's a woman" argument is ridiculous on its face, and any man stupid enough to make such an argument in public is only embarrassing himself.

Aside to DTL: You're the one who brought up the whole gay thing with your references to Dr. Helen and her views on so-called reparative therapy, then 7Machos calls you on your threadjacking, and then you accuse him of being gay? More evidence of your disconnection from reality.

Mom said...

This is a teeny little minor quibble, but I agree with amba -- it's "toe the line," not "tow the line."

LoafingOaf said...

joan: If you can give a single realistic example of how or why anyone should feel their beliefs, rights, or lives (!!!) are threatened by Catholics' involvement in politics....

An example is in my previous post: A Catholic group painted McEwan as a bigot over her post about gay adoption.

So a Catholic can say homosexuals are so unfit to be parents that a child is better off remaining an orphan? And if someone rants at them over it they can simply say, "You're a bigot; I'm a victim of unprovoked 'hate speech'; end of story"? Happily unconcerned that many perceive the Catholic Church to be offensive and hateful, too?

Here's a news story from Britain, that describes how the Catholic Church threatened to shut down adoption agencies if they have to consider gay couples as worthy parents. More on that at this link.

The second piece makes this point:

So why pick on gays? Is religion really about such selective intolerance and bigotry? It seems so. And who is going to suffer if they carry out the threat to close their adoption services if they aren’t allowed to opt out of the Act when it comes into force in April?

Why, the children, of course.


"It seems so." Is the Catholic Church in any way responsible for why it seems so? Yes.

Should those Catholics and other anti-gay religious groups who support pressuring governments over such matters get to claim they are shocked someone is pissed and says mean things to them? No. Those anti-gay people know they're offending people.

McEwan's post about attempts by religious groups to ban gay adoptions was used - strangely - as evidence she's a bigot. I was linked to that by Malkin, who wanted me to call her a bigot over that specific post, but didn't much care about the homophobic bigotries of certain religious groups that McEwan posted about.

People have asked why these two bloggers can dish it out but can't take it, and I agree. The same can be asked of many of the political religious groups. Or, at the very least, they could've spent two seconds showing concern that others think they, too, are bigots, before lecturing these two women to search their souls to understand why people got upset.

Unknown said...

Joan - Ann posted a point from Dr. Helen about how she gets offensive posts. My point was that maybe she's not getting those because she's female, but she's getting them because she takes positions that her profession considers not only extreme, but dangerous.

LoafingOaf said...

Paul Zrimsek said...
"Catholic groups are heavily involved in politics."

Gosh.


When it involves extremist stuff like pressuring the U.S. and other governments not to use condoms to the full extent to slow down the spread of HIV in Africa, I'd use uglier words than "gosh" for such involvement in politics.

But I'm afraid someone might erroneously call me a "bigot."

Hmmm, maybe a Pope will issue an apology in 60 years....

TMink said...

DTL, I was part of that discussion on Dr. Helen's blog, and you are mischaracterizing it. Dr. Helen's point was that the APA was attempting to tell PATIENTS what they could and could not work for. They were also refusing to consider the DATA regarding repairative therapy by refusing to give credit for ceus at training events that featured the treatment. IT is my understanding that the little data that exists on the "treatment" is not very promising . Color me not at all shocked.

At no time did Dr. Helen advocate "fixing" gays, because she has no agenda in that regard. At least none that I have ever read.

Being told what patients can and cannot ask for is a topic of some concern in our profession. In some states, you are REQUIRED to use a particular type of therapy for certain issues. Nice in theory except for one problem: Patients often have this silly expectation of having a say in the matter.

Whether it is working with uncomfortable gay folks or depression or child sexual abuse survivors, the research shows that sticking with the patient's goals and methods leads to quicker, longer lasting results. That is the data. (Scott Miller has done the metadata analysis on this.)

Personally, I have never been trained in repairative therapy and am highly skeptical about changing one's own (much less someone else's)sexual orientation. But I have had three patients come in asking that I help them do just that. The APA would have me tell them that I cannot work with them.

Instead, I tell them what I wrote here, that I am skeptical that they can change their orientation. But given that, if this is something they are interested in, knowing my skepticism, I would be happy to work with them. In the three cases over 16 years of work one person decided to be celibate, one person decided to forget the whole thing and loosen up, and the other decided that he was not gay but just sexually abused. I never decided this for them.

This issue is about self-determination for patients. Your mischaracterization misses that entirely.

Trey

Joan said...

An example is in my previous post: A Catholic group painted McEwan as a bigot over her post about gay adoption.

That's called free speech. And complaining about Catholics' beliefs is more free speech, and Catholics whining that they're being targeted is even more free speech.

That's not an example of how anyone's "beliefs, rights, or lives are threatened"; it's an example of beliefs being challenged.

Catholic Charities is already out of the adoption business in MA because of the gay adoption issue. Should Catholics be forced to support social policies that are against their beliefs?

Do you understand that it doesn't matter whether or not you agree with the Catholics? Everyone should be free to follow the dictates of his conscience, and everyone is free to work through the political system to try to influence change in the laws and culture of our country.

Do you realize that by asserting that people's "beliefs, rights, and lives are threatened" by Catholics' involvement in politics, you are actually advocating some kind of multi-tier system in which the only people that get to participate in the political system are the ones who agree with you? Fortunately that's not the way it works.

Kirby Olson said...

I read her blog and she almost unthinkingly scapegoats the white, male middle-class. That can be done in English departmetns but when she's working for a white male maybe it's just dumb.

I still rather like Edwards, but this was definitely two flat tires in a four hundred lap race.

Kirby Olson said...

Marcotte went ot a Catholic school called St. Edwards University in Austin and graduated from the English department. That puts her into a context, I think.

Kirby Olson said...

There's a certain kind of English major who when confronted with any kind of problem must put it into the prism of race, gender, or class.

Mostly gender.

And everything can be explained by them using this simple mechanism. Anything that doesn't fall into that mechanism doesn't exist.

As all these brain-damaged people fall off the production line it's hard to know why anyone would hire them to do much of anything. They're a walking time-bomb for any corporation. Perhaps working on a Democrat's candidacy is what they're best trained for, but even there... they are more of a liability than anything else.

LoafingOaf said...

joan: That's called free speech. And complaining about Catholics' beliefs is more free speech, and Catholics whining that they're being targeted is even more free speech.

Yes, it's all free speech. Didn't say it wasn't, nor did I say Catholics can't be involved in politics, so that dismisses most of your post. What I don't buy are religious political conservatives playing CAIR's game of trying to silence their critics by calling them "bigots."

And with respect to The Catholic League and Michelle Malkin, it's not just free speech. It's also a lie. At least with McEwan, the lefties had it right.

(There may be some stuff in the Bible condemning lying? The 9th Commandment?)

I've looked at the stuff on McEwan with fresh eyes and it's manipulation. Malkin throws up the inflammatory stuff from Marcotte, then magically makes McEwan a carbon-copy.

But Malkin's link goes to a McEwan post angry at the anti-gay-rights religious conservatives for wanting to stop gay people from adopting babies. If that's being called "bigotry" to get people fired, it's religious political conservatives who don't want freedom of speech, except for themselves.

No, I don't think I'll go along with that being bigotry. The Catholic League and Malkin played a trick.

Why are people allowing a lefty's post about religious conservative hostility to gay rights to be transformed into "anti-Christian bigotry"?

Look at the Catholic League's thuggishness:

“It is not enough that one foul-mouthed anti-Christian bigot, Amanda Marcotte, has quit. Melissa McEwan must go as well. Either Edwards shows her the door or she bolts on her own. There is no third choice—the Catholic League will see to it that this issue won’t go away.

“The fact that Marcotte had to quit suggests that Edwards doesn’t have the guts to do what is morally right. He has one more chance—fire McEwan now.”


When you know it's a lie, the Catholic League are revealed as scoundrels.

Here was their evidence of "anti-Christian bigotry":

Exhibit A: Melissa McEwan said on AlterNet that ‘some of Christianity’s most prominent leaders—including the Pope—regularly speak out against gay tolerance.’

Not bigotry. Flush it.

Exhibit B: she referred to President Bush’s ‘wingnut Christofascist base’ when lashing out against religious conservatives

McEwan was limiting this to "religious conservatives". It's obviously meant as a harder-hitting version of Andrew Sullivan's term "Christianist," and isn't referring to all Christians. Not bigotry.

Exhibit C: she attacked religious conservatives again, this time saying, ‘What don’t you lousy motherf---ers understand about keeping your noses out of our britches, our beds, and our families?’

Limited to religious conservatives, and it's something millions of people agree with: You can have your religious beliefs but don't force them into my life. Not bigotry.

That's the entirety of the Catholic League's evidence that McEwan is an "anti-Christian bigot." It's B.S.

Unless you believe "bigotry" = disagreeing with religious political conservatives.....

IMO right wing blogs ought to issue McEwan an apology. Then, if they hate bigots, they should vigorously investigate the charges of anti-Semitism against Donahue to see if they should call for his firing from the Catholic League.

As for my previous post, I don't think we're on the same wavelength so it's pointless to restate it, and you read things into it that I didn't say. Yes, everyone should be able to follow their beliefs. If religious conservatives understood that, they'd see fewer offending things said about them. For now, I hope they see more.

Joan said...

I asked for evidence that anyone's rights, beliefs, or lives were threatened by Catholics' involvement in politics -- as you asserted -- and you can't give a single example, and yet you still feel comfortable dismissing my question.

If that's where you want to leave it, fine by me.

Revenant said...

Maybe Dr. Helen is getting nasty comments, because she's one of the most prominent psychiatrists who advocates for reparative therapy for gay people.

Your delusions are boring. From the URL you provided:

Personally, I'm skeptical about turning gay people straight. But shouldn't the client be the one to choose, not the APA? The APA has decided that the answer is no.

That's advocacy? Hah! She's saying that homosexuals should be allowed to pursue orientation change if they want it -- not that they *should* want it, or should be encouraged to use it.

Revenant said...

I asked for evidence that anyone's rights, beliefs, or lives were threatened by Catholics' involvement in politics -- as you asserted -- and you can't give a single example, and yet you still feel comfortable dismissing my question.

The obvious example would be that the Catholic church lobbies to restrict abortion rights, gay rights, and reproductive health care.

Joan said...

So, the fact that Catholics lobby for their beliefs threatens others' rights, beliefs, and lives?

So we're back to the idea that simply bringing certain issues up for discussion -- or legislation -- is threatening?

From the Catholic perspective, we're trying to save lives. How many millions have been lost to abortion?

TMink said...

Rev gave examples of Catholic advocacy: "The obvious example would be that the Catholic church lobbies to restrict abortion rights, gay rights, and reproductive health care."

Yes, those are some of the issues that they advocate. Many of us Christians see "abortion rights" as murder rights and an abomination. Now the people that bomb clinics and threaten or shoot doctors whom perform abortions are terrorists and should be treated as such.

But what do you call a person who seeks to change abortion laws through legal means? You call us citizens. Same as you. We advocate for the change of unjust laws, same as you. We care about America, same as you. If you cut us do we not bleed? (OK, that was a little over the top.)

A different agenda is not bigotry. It is the process of democracy.

Trey