In the
Nature vs. Nurture debate, feminists rabidly insist that all
psychological and social differences between the sexes are caused
by the social environment. That ideologically-loaded belief
is captured in that innocent-sounding word, “gender.”
There’s a strategic reason for that dogmatic assertion.
As long as people believe that men and women are biological
clones, the rad-fems can claim that the under-representation
of female CEOs and politicians can be blamed on the Glass Ceiling,
not on the informed lifestyle choices that women make.
And that in turn justifies the gender quotas, government set-asides,
and all the other appurtenances of a feminist society.
The feminist thought police do not take kindly to persons who
challenge widely-held beliefs. So when Harvard president Lawrence
Summers suggested innate sex differences, not gender socialization
patterns, might account for the shortage of female scientists,
the Lefties were aghast.
But scientists insist
Summers has a point, that the brains of men and women are anatomically
and functionally different. Referring to the spatial abilities
of the sexes, Judith Kleinfeld of the University of Alaska notes,
“The average difference between males and females on psychological
tests of these abilities is huge.”
The Summers’ dust-up has broadened into a broad-based
examination of sex and gender. That argument is now being waged
on two other fronts.
First is the Great Op-Ed Debate, that non-stop catfight that
has been trying to answer the vexing question, Why do women
represent only a small fraction of newspaper opinion writers?
Of course, there were the pundits like Amy Sullivan who predictably
played the victim
card. Sullivan blamed the problem on women who “have
been raised to feel ill-at-ease in the rough-and-tumble, male-dominated
world of political expression.” Sorry, Ms. Sullivan, that
argument may have played in Peoria 50 years ago, but not in
2005.
Others searched for more plausible explanations.
Gail Collins, the woman who runs the editorial page of the New
York Times, admitted in a round-about way, “There
are probably fewer women, in the great cosmic scheme of things,
who feel comfortable writing very straight opinion stuff.”
And Maureen Dowd, whose writing style is perpetually stuck in
full-attack mode, sounded more like a purring kitten when she
admitted, “I wanted to be liked, not attacked...This job
has not come easily to me.”
But it was Catherine Seipp who finally came out and stated
the obvious: “The uncomfortable fact is that women just
seem less interested in politics than men.” Why? Because
“that typically female emotional-reaction-as-argument
is one big reason why the op-ed pages are still mostly male.”
By remarkable coincidence, the Great Op-Ed Debate was being
waged just as the journal Nature was about to release
the startling results of a study that would profoundly challenge
the basic feminist assumptions of gender.
That research,
published late last month, found the inborn differences between
men and women are far greater than previously suspected. Men
and women differ by two percent in their genetic make-up.
And here’s the jaw-dropper: That two percent sex difference
is greater than the biological gap between humans and chimpanzees.
In other words, the built-in differences between men and women
are akin to the dissimilarities between man and ape.
Now we know why millions were so engrossed by that long-running
TV series about Tarzan, Jane, and Chita.
First Larry Summers. Then the Great Op-Ed Debate. And now breakthrough
research on the genetic differences between the sexes.
It’s high time that we accept the obvious: Men and women
are not the same. Vivre la difference!
Carey Roberts is a regular contributor
to NewsWithViews.com,
and has been published in The Washington Times and LewRockwell.com,
among others.
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