No girls allowed by digby
I just don't even know what to say to this:
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/01/senate-women-secret-history-113908.html#ixzz3O4aEA4wb
By LIZA MUNDY
Kay Hagan just wanted to swim. It was late 2008,
and the Democrat was newly arrived on Capitol Hill as North CarolinaÕs junior
senator-elect. But Hagan was told that the Senate pool was males-only. Why?
Because some of the male senators liked to swim naked.
It took an intervention by Senator Chuck Schumer,
head of the Rules Committee, to put a stop to the practice, but even then Òit
was a fight,Ó remembers pollster Celinda Lake, who heard about the incident
when the pool revolt was the talk among Washington women. [...]
In the entire history of the United States Senate,
a mere 44 women have served. Ever. Those few who have were elected to a club
they were never meant to join, and their history in the chamber is marked by
sexism both spectacular and small. For decades in the 20th century after women
first joined, many male senators were hardly more than corrupt frat boys with
floor privileges, reeking of alcohol and making little secret of their sexual
dalliances with constituents, employees and any other hapless subordinate
female they could grab. But perhaps more striking is what I found after
interviewing dozens of women senators, former senators and their aides over the
past several months: Even today, the women of the Senate are confronted with a
kind of floating, often subtle, but corrosive sexism, a sense of not belonging
that is both pervasive and so counter to the narrative of real, if stubbornly
slow, progress that many are reluctant to acknowledge this persistent secret.
That article in Politico is a must-read for
anyone who thinks that all of us beyotches are just whining all the
time. Note the date that this swimming pool incident happened. It wasn't 1938.
It wasn't 1968. It was 2008.
Those elite Senators are fairly typical of men at
the top of the heap. They can't imagine having to give up even the slightest
privilege --- like not being required to wear a bathing suit in a communal
pool. Indeed, the more likely explanation is that they just didn't want to
share the pool with a woman at all and used that as an excuse. In either case,
they behaved like pigs when confronted with losing even the slightest bit of
their superior privilege over women.
Once again I'm compelled to point out just how
infuriating it is to hear such men complain about women or minorities wanting
"too much." It's one thing for average guys to be unaware of the sort
of authority they have (and women don't have) in normal human interactions.
Often women aren't exactly sure exactly what that is either even though they
feel it. But when elite males with these attitudes pat themselves on the back
for being the avatars of freedom, equality and democracy in action it just
galls.
We are half the population and yet only 44 women have ever served in the
US Senate over the course of more than two centuries. No woman has ever been
nominated by one of the major political parties to be president. What do you
suppose girls think when they hear that?