By Tom Woods
I can’t keep up with the left-libertarian world anymore. The nuttiness is coming out faster than I can smash it.
The latest entry: Sarah Skwire, in Newsweek.
“Who Hates Women Most? Pence, Trump, or Weinstein?”
You can already see where this is going (Skwire in italics):
Vice President Mike Pence won’t meet alone with women.
Meanwhile, guys like Donald Trump and Harvey Weinstein won’t keep their hands off them.
Almost the same thing, obviously!
Pence’s camp would have women kept in some sort of professional
purdah, where important avenues to public influence and power are cut
off because it is just too morally dangerous to interact with women on
equal terms.
Trump and Weinstein would have women brought front and center—as
long as they’re showing off a lot of cleavage and getting groped—but
only as signals of their masculine power and success.
Not dining alone with women who are not his wife — not a completely
insane policy on both sides, you’d think — doesn’t seem to most people
to involve cutting women off from positions of influence and power. It’s
almost as if feminism is driven by hysteria and irrationality, but we
shall return to that topic another day.
Meanwhile, the normal-person population still probably clings to the
idea that (1) not dining alone with women, and (2) molesting them, are
distinct enough courses of action that there’s no neat little lesson to
be drawn by considering them together.
Those who think women must be secluded from men because they
offer too many dangerous temptations or too much potential for rumor,
and those who think that women are just great as long as they can be
treated like amusement parks may appear to be treating women
differently.
They may appear to be treating them differently, you see.
But they’re not treating them differently, according to our author. A
guy who brutalizes women and forces them into sexual situations against
their will is really doing the same thing that Pence does: “treating
women as ancillary to men.”
(This is straight out of the SJW playbook — where, for instance,
speech and violence are really the same thing. Oh, really? Get your
teeth kicked in sometime and tell me that’s really the same thing as
being called a name.)
Perhaps the article was posted before the rape accusations against
Weinstein surfaced. I’m willing to give the author the benefit of the
doubt.
But what we knew about Weinstein even before the rape charges was grotesque enough.
As the father of five girls, I think it’s safe to say a normal person
would consider them safer in Pence’s company than in Weinstein’s. (I
have no doubt Skwire agrees.)
What’s hard to fathom is that news about an outright predator would
surface, and someone would think: let’s draw a parallel to — of all
people! — Mike Pence.
I’m no Mike Pence fan, as you all know. But what kind of bizarre
motivation is at work here, that you’d hear about Weinstein and
immediately think: get Pence! (I shall leave this to you, dear reader,
as an exercise.)
It really is the transvaluation of all values. Pence’s policy is now
to be rendered odious — so much so that he belongs in the same analysis
with a molester.
We do, at last, get this grudging concession:
It matters, of course, that guys like Weinstein are sexually
predatory, while guys like Pence are just exclusionary. One is illegal.
The other is merely obnoxious.
The fact that sexual predation is illegal seems hardly to be its most
salient feature. How about traumatizing, invasive, or evil?
Can’t go there, I guess, because then it would be even more
preposterous to try to draw a common lesson that would include both
Weinstein and Pence.
A pop libertarian commentator posted this article on Facebook and added, “Skwire nails it here.”
The response was widespread disgust — nearly every comment has been one of utter disbelief.
Skwire is the same person who once said a humorous article by the
popular and capable Julie Borowski made her embarrassed to be a
libertarian.
Now we know how you felt, Sarah.
Reprinted from the Tom Woods Letter.
Posted by ΛΕΟΝΙΔΑΣ
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