The dowager queen and princess of smashing sexist stereotypes are Hillary and 
Chelsea Clinton, who in 2019 published The Book of Gutsy Women, an anthology of 
inspiring female pioneers. The Clintons' "gutsy women" include, for example, 
Margaret Chase Smith, the first woman to serve in both US Houses of Congress, 
and Sally Ride, the first American woman to go into space. Let's call the 
stereotype-smashing, freedom-chasing school of women's liberation "Clinton 
feminism": it's a movement of strong female role models and stories about "the 
first woman to do [stereotypically masculine thing]". What's not to like?

Back in 2016, of course, Clinton feminists were busy cheering on Hillary 
Clinton herself, who looked like she might pull off one of the most 
high-profile "first woman" accolades still unclaimed: President of the United 
States. Only then it turned out that the new President would not only be 
another man but – worse – a man whose most famous remark on the subject of 
women was how he liked to "grab 'em by the pussy".

In response to this affront, millions of angry women donned knitted pink 
"pussy" hats and took to the streets in protest. And the demographic make-up of 
these marchers reveals something that is routinely swept under the carpet by 
Clinton feminism: social class. According to one survey, 43% of marchers earned 
above $75,000 per year – despite only 16% of Americans of either sex earning 
that amount or more. Meanwhile, 52% were graduates, compared to 35% of American 
women.

But this wasn't just some freak of the Women's March. When it comes to 
embracing feminism, there's a well-established gap between working and 
middle-class women. One poll from 2018 showed that 16% of women educated to 
high school level identify themselves as feminist compared to 26% of graduate 
women. Why is that? Surely feminist liberation and equal opportunities are for 
all women? Well, kind of. When you look a little closer, it becomes clear that 
the Clinton feminism of "gender" doesn't just sweep class under the carpet (or, 
perhaps, asks the cleaner to do so). It also hides what 'gender' refers to: sex.

The relation between class and sex becomes clearer when you remember that 
chasing workplace equality gets steadily easier the less physical a job is. 
It's one thing to demand an equal right to earn hundreds of thousands a year as 
a lawyer, but there's no feminist campaign for an equal right to become garbage 
men. And everyone knows why. It's because waste collection is arduous work, and 
men are almost always stronger than females.

Gruellingly physical jobs are just less appealing, too. You're bound to fight 
harder for a crack at the jobs traditionally done by men in your social class 
if those jobs have titles like "lawyer" rather than "sewage worker" or "garbage 
man". And even for lawyers, Clinton feminism can only ignore sex so far: what 
we call the "gender pay gap" is mostly an effect of the brutal fact that 
smashing the glass ceiling is difficult to combine with having babies. Although 
this is also easier if you're rich, because along with doing non-physical jobs 
wealthy women can subcontract the work of raising babies  – and even, for some, 
gestating them. Seen from this perspective, the shortfall in working-class 
women identifying as "feminist" seems justified.

Because inasmuch as it refers to smashing stereotypes and celebrating CEOs and 
Vice-Presidents, at least in its mainstream usage, the word "feminism" has been 
colonised by the class interests of a wealthy elite. This minority of women 
have comprehensively liberated themselves from the constraints of female 
biology – whether it women's relative physical weakness or the time constraints 
imposed by motherhood – and have achieved this at least in part on the backs of 
poorer women. That is, under Clinton feminism, the richer a woman is, the freer 
she is.

And it doesn't stop there. Having freed wealthy women from their own biology, 
Clinton feminism has set its sights on abolishing biology for everyone – 
including those women still affected by it. On his inauguration day, Biden 
signed an executive order obliging federally funded institutions to interpret 
"sex discrimination" to include "gender identity" in the category "sex". In 
other words, it's now forbidden to discriminate against a woman for being male, 
if that male identifies as a woman.

>From a Clinton feminist point of view, this is self-evidently feminist 
>progress. It's part of the great feminist project of ending all sexist 
>discrimination – up to and including discrimination against people who 
>identify as women, for not being biologically female.

In a way, this is understandable. Katniss Everdeen and her ilk gave a 
generation of women the impression that men and women are broadly physically 
similar. And the more middle-class you are, the less opportunity you have to 
revise that view. If your understanding of male and female physical 
capabilities was shaped not by family members hauling bins for a living, but 
high-kicking action movie heroines, the idea of anyone's choices being limited 
by something so trivial as "sex assigned at birth" just looks like the kind of 
bigotry feminism has been fighting since forever.

So an edict that forbids schools from excluding male competitors from 
all-female athletic competitions, provided they identify as female, may, as the 
Guardian put it, "offer hope for young trans athletes". But it also abolishes 
at the stroke of a Clinton-feminist pen any possibility of fair sporting 
competition for girls and women. Meanwhile, according to radical feminist 
campaign group WoLF, it could also end any legal standing for sex segregation 
in domestic violence shelters or prisons.

This all leaves American supporters of women's rights in a bit of a bind. Trump 
may have grabbed 'em by the pussy, but is it really better to be governed by an 
administration that lacks even Trump's grasp of female anatomy?

For just as the perks of Clinton feminism trickle up the class hierarchy, its 
downsides sink to the bottom. It won't be Clinton feminists who watch the 
athletic scholarship that was their only prospect of college funding be swept 
away by someone who went through male puberty. And it won't be the Clinton 
feminists who get locked in prisons that are now effectively mixed-sex.

All but the wealthiest women know that you can't just legislate biology out of 
existence. As the losses and indignities resulting from the Clinton feminist 
effort to do so multiply, outrage will build as well. I suspect we'll see a 
feminist mutiny before long – and not the nice polite feminism of women who 
earn more than $75,000 a year. And I don't think it will be directed at the 
patriarchy. It'll be directed at the selfish elite who stole the women's 
movement to feather their own nests, then tried to abolish females in the name 
of freedom.


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