Categories
antifeminism creepy misogyny MRA the spearhead

Betty Friedan: Communist homewrecker?

Ladies Love Cool Joe (Stalin)
Ladies Love Cool Joe (Stalin)

Last week marked the 50th anniversary of the publication of Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique, which inspired a flood of commemorative essays everywhere from Slate to the New York Times.

It also inspired what I think is one of the most hilariously dumb sentences I’ve ever read on The Spearhead. In a post talking about Friedan’s “youthful Bolshevik activism” – she spent a number of years as a labor journalist – Spearhead head boy W.F. Price offers this assessment of the book that jumpstarted feminism’s second wave:

Although I haven’t read the book, it apparently stresses the need for women to engage in work outside the home, which is a basic Communist tenet.

Yeah, that’s why most women work. Not to pay the bills, but because they are pawns of the worldwide communist conspiracy.

Weirdly, Price is well aware that he’s full of shit here, and that most women throughout history have worked, not because of Communism but because of economic necessity. Indeed, he even points this out in his post. But he follows this acknowledgement with more thoughts on Friedan’s evil commie ways:

[I]t looks as though Betty Friedan was one of the many dedicated Communists who caused so many problems immediately after WWII. I once looked up a list of known Communist front groups in the US, and noticed that quite a few of them were women’s groups. Combined with accounts I’ve read from former Cheka agents, it makes for pretty convincing evidence that feminism was deliberately fostered in the US by Soviet agents. It makes sense to use women in that manner, because authorities are not as suspicious of women, and they can operate under the radar far more easily than men. Women also make excellent spies.

Although I’m sure resurgent feminism would have emerged in one form or another with or without Betty Friedan, it is interesting to note second wave feminism’s Cold War origins in Marxist infiltration of US society. …

It turns out she was little more than a loyal Bolshevik pawn who suddenly stumbled onto success by writing a thinly-veiled Marxist critique of American capitalist society from a woman’s perspective.

In the comments, TheTruthishere enthusiastically agreed with Price’s feminism-was-a-Soviet-plot thesis:

You are right a read the same thing on another site …  feminism was thought up in a russian thinktank to basically destroy the family as the states smallest cell. Basically so communism could be introduced in the western world. Well, it worked, it just took them longer than expected. By the way the Rockafellas are involved in this as well

RockEfellers. Not RockAfellAs. Or even RockAfellERs.

Uncle Elmer gave us this weird socio-sexual fantasy:

Speaking of Freudian, all feminists have a major clit-boner for “1963”, though it was not technically part of the mythic “50s”. Based on their persistent mention of that era, it’s clear they would gladly trade in their Birkenstocks for a chance to be slapped and rogured by Ward Cleaver.

They didn’t call him “The Cleaver” for nothing.

And Towgunner, for some odd reason, used the opportunity to express his disdain for “female” – in quotes – music composers.

I have a lot of classical music as my pandora stations, Mozart, Bach, Beethoven, Debussy, etc. So, guess what gets inter-mixed with the play sets from time to time…yep, the token “female” composer. I’m usually doing something else while listening and this never fails – I always know its a female composer because it, well, is bad music. Also, all of the female composers I’ve heard basically sound the same. All things aside, forget I’m an MRA, it has very little aesthetic value for anyone, except for those who think talent is the same thing as “social justice”. female composers create music that is akin to cold coffee left over from breakfast and now its 2:00 PM. And its not after a few minutes, I can tell a female composer in the first few seconds…that too never fails. Many of them painfully subject their listeners to simple scales and scattered and disagreeable harmonies…kind of like the background music for greys autonomy or any chick flick. Above all, it’s not, even in the slightest, original…frankly female composers are a perfect case study in that you can hear the innate female tendency towards conformity.

By the way, here are some songs by female composers – sorry, “female” composers. I’m not sensing a lot of conformity here.

229 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
hellkell
hellkell
11 years ago

Yeah, not effete. Especially when he was playing Stringer Bell on the The Wire.

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

And of course the idea of a man being effete is sooo baaaad, isn’t it? Because draggin’s using it as a synonym for effeminate rather than weakened or infertile, and the ultimate insult for a misogynist is to suggest a man is in any way like a woman.

Protip: draggy, just go look at some Tom of Finland pics. It might do your miserable little self some good.

ellex – I didn’t know Judi Dench is going bllind. 🙁 But yeah, I wasn’t thinking of her doing the role now, more a sort of generic timeless thing.

Emma Thompson would be marvellous!

I’d be interested to see how Tom Wilkinson would handle it. Or Robert Carlyle. Doctor MacBeth!

drst
drst
11 years ago

@clairedammit – aha! OK that makes much more sense. Hilton has had some fun with her persona more than once (I have fond memories of the video she made replying to John McCain invoking her in the 2008 election, whatever else I may feel about her).

I am not a Whovian so I leave recasting that to you all. However I did squee when I saw that Alex Kingston is going to be on “Arrow” this coming week! (Along with John Barrowman, who is a recurring character. 🙂

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

I loved Alex Kingston in ER, and in Silence in the Library, but I don’t much like the way they’ve written River Song since then.

Some Gal Not Bored at All

@drst

Paris Hilton played an attention-seeking God looking for worshippers posing as Paris Hilton on Supernatural. That was fun. 🙂

@The Kittehs’

I love River Song completely. She is the best thing about the show for me. But I totally agree about Alex Kingston on ER. She rocked.

Some Gal Not Bored at All

That should be a lower-case g in god. My autocorrect is a monotheistic. o.O

Some Gal Not Bored at All

And now it is just mocking me.

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

Autocorrect is a minion of Basement Cat.

Be afraid, be very afraid.

Say, Ellex, if you’re around – would you mind reposting the link to those compression gloves? I’ve completely forgotten which thread they were in.

Some Gal Not Bored at All

@The Kittehs’

It was in “Question Time.” Here is the link: http://www.handezegloves.com/

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

Thank you! My memory, it is a sieve.

Some Gal Not Bored at All

@The Kittehs’

I cheated and found it by looking at what page I was on before googling arnica. Yay for never clearing my browsing history!

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

BRB after I stop laughing about the idea of Idris Elba being effette.

(Don’t get me wrong, I love androgynous men, but Elba is not androgynous at all. ArksyDragon fails once again.)

As far as a female Bond, I think all the suggestions so far are too old. Not that Bond hasn’t been played by older actors before, but honestly it was a bit hard to swallow when it came to some of the more physical stuff. That’s part of the reason why Craig is a big improvement. Given that, why not Lena Heady? She’s 40-ish, I think, which is about right in terms of age, and she can play morally ambiguous really well.

ellex24
ellex24
11 years ago

Thanks, Some Gal. Sorry , Kitteh! Mom and I were watching “Community” and squeeing over Inspector Spacetime, and snacking on crab rangoon.

The high life…I’m livin’ it.

Whoever mentioned Colin Salmon for James Bond – I’m totally behind that. I don’t care if he’s already been in the franchise as another character, Colin Salmon would be perfect.

ellex24
ellex24
11 years ago

Regarding the Hand-eze gloves, another thing I found is that if you do a lot of computer mousing, a mouse pad with a wrist rest makes a huge difference. I was getting an ache with shooting pains from my elbow up to my shoulder for a while last year, and when I switched to a mouse pad with a wrist rest, the pain had almost disappeared in less than a month.

pecunium
11 years ago

I switched to a trackball mouse; a great improvement. Esp. if one is using a laptop.

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

That’s a good idea about the wrist rest! Never thought of it, but I’ll have a look for one. It’d be just the shot – between ManBoobz and photoshopping, I spend a lot of time using the mouse, and that’s mainly why my wrist gets a bit achey.

Any suggestions about the Handeze gloves, ie. have you tried different ones? I’m inclining toward the ones with the adjustable wrist straps at present.

cloudiah
11 years ago

Seconding the mouse pad with a wrist rest (I also have a wrist rest for my keyboard). I can’t use the trackballs myself, but some of my co-workers swear by them.

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

I prefer the mouse-with-laser style. I tried using the wossname mouse pad thingy on my laptop, but it’s just not for me, especially for working on pics. Mind you I don’t even use the keyboard on my laptop, I much prefer the old one from my PC.

Some Gal Not Bored at All

You can buy the wrist pad attached to a mousepad or separate. (which is nice if you want to keep your awesome Darth Vader mousepad. Not that I’d know anything about that.)

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

LOL!

If I had a mousepad it’d want to be of the “coffee cup rings, random cat furs and scattered crumbs” design to fit in with the overall look of my computer desk.

ellex24
ellex24
11 years ago

I’ve only used the original gloves and the 3/4 finger gloves. The finger ones took a little getting used to, but I really like them, especially since my hands have poor circulation and my fingers get cold.

I second cloudiah on the wrist rest for the keyboard. I have one of those as well.

Go to this website: http://www.zazzle.com/

You can make a customized mouse pad with wrist rest. Their prices are quite reasonable. I have some great personalized bumper stickers from them.

I also got a cheap mouse pad with wrist rest from Walmart for work. I didn’t want to spend a lot of money on something that was just an experiment to see if it would stop the ache in my elbow and shoulder.

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

What a cool site!

I think I’ll have a scout round the stores at home to see if wrist-rest pads are available and what the prices are like. There are times when it’s cheaper to get stuff from the States than from right here … sheesh.

Wally Wick
Wally Wick
11 years ago

Chelsea Wolfe is a good female composer.
http://youtu.be/D1KBjgF3J90
http://youtu.be/sjSkktZL7zk
But I guess she goes against her place in the “order of things”, where men write brooding, dark tunes while women produce lighthearted fluff.

pecunium
11 years ago

What I found with the trackball was 1: greater accuracy in placement, and less over all strain. 2: Less tiring, because fewer muscles required to move it. 3: Less in the way of RSI to my fingers.

For really fine work on photos I have a tablet.

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

Does the trackball work in essentially the same way as the mouse panel thingy on a laptop – ie. the fingers do fine movement on it rather than the hand moving the whole thing?