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niyad

(113,496 posts)
Tue Dec 26, 2017, 02:18 PM Dec 2017

How a Black President Stoked White Male Fragility.

How a Black President Stoked ‘White Male Fragility.’

Did the election of the first Black president inadvertently create a climate harmful to women? Research suggests that may be the case.



In 2008, many Hillary Clinton voters found consolation in the fact that while there was not going to be a woman president, the first African-American in that job would support women’s issues. And that proved to be true. But the election of Barack Obama stoked other, darker emotions in a segment of the American electorate. A heightened sense of “White Fragility” has swept across the land like a cold New England winter wind, stirring up a nativism that many of us thought had been pushed to the fringes. Charlottesville proved the “fringe” idea wrong, as Klan members and neo-Nazis turned out in force at a rally at which a woman was killed after being deliberately struck by a car. Apparently, the sight of a black man holding actual power as the actual president of the United States struck a deep-seated nerve.

Dr. Robin DiAngelo of Westfield State University named the fear. “White Fragility is a state in which even a minimum amount of racial stress becomes intolerable, triggering… anger, fear, and guilt. These function to reinstate white racial equilibrium. ”Psychologically, the bubble of whiteness in which many Americans lived was punctured by Obama. There was a comfort level in a white power structure that seemed reassuring. You belonged to the dominant group, even if your job had fled overseas, and you couldn’t pay your health care bill. But you were still white. Suddenly, however, white dominance was no longer assured. As the Atlantic’s Ta–Nehisi Coates writes,”To Donald Trump, whiteness is not just symbolic, but is the very core of his power. “ Maleness was anther hallmark of Donald Trump’s appeal. Indeed, Trump has been consistently dismissive of women. He called Hillary Clinton a “nasty woman,” and claimed that Fox anchor Meghan Kelly had “blood coming out of her wherever.” He has made demeaning comments about the female mayor of San Juan, Puerto Rico and picked fights with the wife of a slain U.S. serviceman.

. . . . .

Another stream swelling the Trump success is the media narrative that women are succeeding while men flounder. The bestselling book, The End of Men, argues that since women are filling more college seats than men, their success in school will lead to their taking over the best jobs in business, science, the law, medicine, etc. The author, Hanna Rosin, wrote that the U.S is fast becoming a “middle-class matriarchy” as women become the major breadwinners. True? Not at all, In fact, the reverse is true. Women have indeed made enormous strides over the last 40 years, but those gains are slowing. Women are doing great in academia, but the workplace is a different story.

Women may earn more advanced degrees than men, but their wages still trail far behind. The think tank Catalyst reports that female MBAs earn, on average, $4,600 less than male MBAs in their first job out of business school. Female physicians earn, on average, 39% less than male physicians. Salary gains that female managers acquired in the 1980s and 1990s have dropped off, and in all sectors of the workplace, men’s salaries are pulling far ahead once again. Women start behind and never catch up. These facts—combined with Trump’s sexist campaign– should have triggered a female backlash against hm. It did not.

. . . . .


http://womensenews.org/2017/12/how-a-black-president-stoked-white-male-fragility/

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Nitram

(22,845 posts)
4. I'm not sure it "stoked white male facility." My view is that it gave permission to racists,
Tue Dec 26, 2017, 04:55 PM
Dec 2017

to act out in the real world the fetid emotions they have been expressing anonymously online (and perhaps among like-minded friends and family) for their entire adult lives. I believe I saw just as many women as men openly express in public their deep hatred of Obama and, by extension, every person of color. Trump's election broadened the effect, giving permission to all racists, misogynists, xenophobes, authoritarians, and other of that ilk permission to do the same. The nazi demonstrations in Charlottesville were a perfect example of that.

niyad

(113,496 posts)
8. I do think you are correct that the ascension of this bloated orange. . . thing. . . has given
Wed Dec 27, 2017, 02:33 PM
Dec 2017

the closet racists and haters permission to come proudly out in the open. the only advantage I can see is that we now know who many of them are--no more skulking in the shadows for them.

sunlight is the best disinfectant.

TlalocW

(15,388 posts)
5. I've mentioned several times
Tue Dec 26, 2017, 10:02 PM
Dec 2017

A mini-doc done by Nancy Pelosi's daughter about the 2008 election where they interviewed several people about the election while giving a short history of events that went on, and they found the most stereotypical southerner - wife-beater t-shirt, obese, scraggly beard, Nascar hat, etc. and he was all mouthy about how he won't even let his daughter vote, and at the end he was in tears because with Obama's election, there was nothing left that was just for the White man. I knew then we were in for a bumpy ride, and all the subtle racism was going to explode to be in your face, and the smartest thing Trump did to get himself elected was attempt to normalize it, telling people like the guy in the mini-doc that they were right to be angry, and their prejudices were valid.

TlalocW

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