Why a fat bloke cannot be a feminist
Apart from the fact that describing your average feminist (if there is such a thing) is likely to get a fat bloke with a suspect limp like me into an awful lot of trouble, I do not think I would be allowed in that particular club. And quite right too.
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Hide AdIt has long been said that you don’t have to be a woman to be a fully paid up member of the feminist cause, but it helps.
Of course, two very well known men have recently got themselves into a tight corner for purporting to be feminists.
Take a bow Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband, the deputy prime minister and leader of the opposition respectively, who in their obscene haste to appeal to Worcester Woman (or whatever she may be called this time around) ahead of next year’s General Election, appear to have scored an own goal.
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Hide AdThey, now famously, slipped into t-shirts bearing the slogan ‘This Is What Feminist Looks Like’, got all pompous when the PM David Cameron declined to do so and got caught out when it was alleged that the garments were made by Mauritian workers (most of whom were women) earning 62p an hour.
While the claims these women were being forced to work in a sweatshop have been vigourously denied, that they were both left vulnerable to such a claim should result in them both being made to wear tanktops emblazoned with the legend This Is What A Numpty Looks Like.
Even before the claims came to light this hapless duo should have been lambasted for this very cheap and cynical PR stunt.
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Hide AdClearly there is no one true face of feminism but having come into close contact with those who are fully committed to the cause it has always struck me that whatever the debate or the argument they will almost always contest that any situation would be improved if a woman’s lot was improved.
It isn’t possible for any man to think like that although that doesn’t mean that all men are chauvinists.
It is beyond question that the majority of men are programmed differently to their fathers and grandfathers when it comes to treating women as equals.
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Hide AdAs a father of a football supporting, pirate loving, pink hating five-year-old daughter I am certainly now more alive to the issues that women face today than I was before she came along.
I do think society would benefit from more women in our boardrooms and in politics.
Like all 21st Century men I recognise the huge strides that have been made in the last 25 years and shudder at the treatment that our mothers and grandmothers had to put up with.
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Hide AdBut I would argue along with most of my peers that while there is still work to be done that the most significant obstacles have been cleared.
And that sums up why I nor any man for that fact can ever be truly regarded as feminists.