![]() (It is also the best example of Dworkin as a reporter.) At least we should regard it as an important historical text regarding the time that right-wing Jews and evangelicals began to collude - when a largely quite anti-Semitic group of people began to embrace Zionism. Yet somehow it’s often not regarded as intersectional “enough.” Fine, fine. Right-Wing Women, in one MAN’S opinion, should be regarded as a foundational intersectional text the entire argument of the book is about the relations of anti-Semitism, racism, age, poverty, sex work, welfare and hatred of gay people, all as related to hatred of women. ![]() (Chaired by Bella Abzug, the conference produced a National Plan of Action which… well, it didn’t go well. (Oh no, if only there was some kind of system to help men defend themselves!) After I got done muting everyone involved, I decided to re-read Andrea Dworkin’s Right-Wing Women, much of which consists of her account, published in 1983, of the National Women’s Conference in Houston in 1977. ![]() Last night I accidentally got dragged into some right-wing anti-feminist thing on Twitter about how there is a war on men because their good reputations are all besmirched when someone is accused of rape. ![]()
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