Every year when calendars mark International Women’s Day on March 8th many people take no notice. But a lot of women around the world do, as we mourn the travesties that are still being perpetrated against females of all ages in most places on the globe. It’s worrying to note that we must begin this year witnessing (or ignoring) a staggering increase in political, personal, and cultural misogyny ranging from sexual abuse, anti-woman legislation, and violence.
Take for example a CNN report about the Taliban which has just decreed that men can beat their wives “so long as they don’t break bones or leave lasting wounds.” A husband could be jailed for 15 days if there is physical evidence of assault. 15 days! That is if a woman seeks justice even though her testimony will be worth half that of her husband’s.
Not all oppression of women is so dramatic. An article in The Guardian cited the street behavior of men who push women aside on the pavement, or ogle and cat-call them. “Loosening the grip men hold over all public space would go a long way toward helping women feel less oppressed,” Lucy Pasha-Robinson wrote in the article, adding that “men who are so angry they are lasing out at random women for their need to feel power.”
In between those two examples there are myriad ways to keep women in their place, which in many cultures, is seen by feminists as the angel in the house or the madwoman in the attic.
Consider the ominous restraints on women’s autonomy articulated in the infamous Project 2025, which are now becoming the mantra of arch conservative legislators here in our so-called developed nation. Bans on abortion. Legislators going so far as to advocate executing women who have them. Imprisonment for miscarriage. Attempts to keep women from voting, and more, as Open Democracy points out citing legislative proposals and policy agendas that are on the table since Congress became dominated by conservative, rightwing zealots .
Then there’s the narrowing of how sex is defined, the reduced funding for reproductive health services which could save women’s lives, the attempts to defund Planned Parenthood and the possibility of reinstating the Comstock Act to remove access to abortion medication. Add to that the lack of childcare, aimed at physically and psychologically limiting women’s autonomy, economic security, and self-determination. It’s all about keeping us barefoot, pregnant, and afraid. All of that suppression constitutes acts of violence.
So does the attempt to establish fetal personhood. The far right also wants to go further by defining “sex” as a biological assignment at birth which of course is meant to discriminate against transgender women. Other proposed bills are designed to eliminate funding for family planning, and limit contraception based on income. Then there’s the SAVE Act that would require people to show proof of citizenship to vote, creating barriers for married women who took their husband’s surname.
All these repressive legislative ideas and proposals are clearly forms of controlling women’s lives, including their access to education, healthcare, economic security, and a public presence in most sectors of society. The draconian idea of incentivizing women monetarily to bear children while restrictions on childcare and parental leave speaks loudly to an insidious agenda articulated by men who fear women’s intelligence, energy, competence, and agency.
When you connect the dots, it soon becomes clear that “the rising global far right is violent, racist and misogynistic – and depends on exploiting women,” as Sian Norris put it in Open Democracy.”
If you prefer a visual that represents political violence against women and girls, you have only to see ICE shooting Renee Good in the face or dragging women by their hair out of their cars and putting them in choke holds. You could watch the Epstein/Maxwell survivors who are brave enough to share their stories. Or you could shudder to see pictures of babies and children being torn from their mothers at schools and workplaces while adolescent girls, called Blue Butterflies, are sequestered in separate spaces likely to be sexually abused or trafficked. If that doesn’t work, look at nearly 200 beautiful faces of Iranian little girls slaughtered in their school, or peek at Burka-clad women with male escorts in Afghanistan streets while their female children are forbidden to attend school.
It’s important to understand that violence against women and girls in any form violates their basic human rights. These violations are grounded in centuries of patriarchal societies who have viewed women as a threat to male power. That threat goes beyond individual men. It occurs at numerous structural levels and in male-dominated institutions in both private and public sectors.
Eliminating the injustices and deep harm these longstanding practices and behaviors cause women is a monumental task. We must recognize it, understand it, care about it, and condemn it for more than one day or month a year, because as writer Rebecca Solnit has said, “We have an abundance of rape and violence against women in this country and on this Earth, though it's almost never treated as a civil rights or human rights issue, or a crisis, or even a pattern. Violence doesn't have a race, a class, a religion, or a nationality, but it does have a gender.”
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Elayne writes from Brattleboro, Vt.