Meagan Tyler gripes about "choice feminism" because it doesn't comport with her vision of what feminism is or ought to be, and then:
First of all, the choice arguments are fundamentally flawed because
they assume a level of unmitigated freedom for women that simply doesn’t
exist. Yes, we make choices, but these are shaped and constrained by
the unequal conditions in which we live. It would only make sense to
uncritically celebrate choice in a post-patriarchal world.
Since the
religious tenet of "patriarchy" cannot be measured, it also cannot be dispelled or dispatched.
Second, the idea that more choices automatically equate to more
freedom is a falsehood. This is essentially just selling neo-liberalism
with a feminist twist. Yes, women can now work or stay at home if they
have children, for example, but this “choice” is fairly hollow when
child-rearing continues to be constructed as “women’s work”, there is
insufficient state support for childcare, and childless women are decried as selfish.
The idea that women might
choose to be mothers and homemakers is apparently lost on her, but it is evident in
the Swedish labor market, where women — with enormous paid maternity benefits — nevertheless elect to remove themselves from higher-paying positions in favor of jobs with more schedule flexibility. And if she's waiting for everyone to agree with her choices, guess what: that's not gonna happen, either, just as she disagrees with a lot of other women's choices. (But apparently it's okay when
she does it.) It turns out her big problem with "choice feminism" is that it's not Marxist enough:
It doesn’t demand significant social change, and it effectively
undermines calls for collective action. Basically, it asks nothing of
you and delivers nothing in return.
The first sentence is true, the second false. Collective action won't address women who don't go into STEM careers, who decide to become mothers and drop out of the labor market, thus pulling down overall female wages earned and contributing to the bogus "wage gap". "Social change" in this context demands special treatment for women, and
only women; choice feminism says women need to be grownups and own their lives and the choices made therein. Blaming "society" for every bad thing infantilizes women, claiming they can't change anything unless
everyone agrees to their utopian worldview. Imagine, for instance,
Nellie Bly or
Amelia Earhart subscribing to that nonsense; it's impossible. Ayn Rand said, “The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me.” The modern feminist says, "I can't, because all these people
might stop me."
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