The Mail on Sunday

These fantasy-land feminists don’t even care about women

- Peter Hitchens

THE position of women in this country has changed beyond recognitio­n in my lifetime, mostly for the better, and mostly in ways I very much approve of. In education, the workplace, politics, the law, the church and the media, in advertisin­g and in their portrayal in films and on TV, the transforma­tion has been gigantic. In our school and university system, girls are now better off than boys, with most forms of selection tilted in their favour.

The question of equal pay for equal work has also been solved as far as humanly possible, as Kate Andrews of the Institute of Economic Affairs has shown and will patiently explain to anyone who doubts it. But those who doubt it do so because they want to doubt it, so they are uninterest­ed in facts. I’ll come to that.

So why are we being subjected to a great flood of media pigswill about how the oppression of women is a great and growing problem? Well, partly it is thanks to the frantic, overblown promotion of a tiresome and rather embarrassi­ng book by Margaret Atwood, The Testaments.

Enter any bookshop and it is piled upon the front table. The BBC is giving it the free promotion it reserves for those books it deeply approves of. Women garbed in red dressing gowns and white lampshades are roaming London to publicise it.

Ms Atwood is actually an accomplish­ed author, and her 1985 book

The Handmaid’s Tale was a clever fantasy about a world in which women’s l i beration went i nto reverse. Well, actually it wasn’t much of a fantasy. It was clearly based on the 1979 revolution in Iran, which ( as well as being murderousl­y repressive) imposed a stifling version of Islam on men and women alike.

The Iranian Ayatollahs forced that country’s women to huddle and cringe in black veils and robes, after many years in which they had been free to dress as they liked.

It might also have referred to Saudi Arabia, but in that country the status of women has always been pretty strictly controlled. In more recent years it might more justly have described the growing pressure on formerly free women in such countries as Egypt and Iraq to adopt the hijab and niqab and accept secondclas­s citizenshi­p. Or even the appearance on the streets of Western cities of women in black veils.

By setting it in America, she made it all the more shocking. But it was also a nonsense. Did anyone really believe, in 1985, that the USA was going to start forcing women to go about in shrouds? Of course not. Nor do they now. I know of no significan­t Christian sect or church that even believes in any such thing. But they pretend to.

Here, from the esteemed columnist in the London Times, Alice Thomson, is a possible explanatio­n. Ms Thomson declared last week: ‘Since I read The Handmaid’s Tale as a student 33 years ago, women’s rights have progressed, only to regress.’ She added: ‘ It was the # MeToo movement that made women realise just how little had changed and introduced my daughter as well as three sons to feminism. But it also created a backlash.

WE PRETEND that women’s rights are sti l l progressin­g, with more jobs for the girls and in some areas more equal pay, but i n many ways Britain feels increasing­ly like Atwood’s theocracy of Gilead.’ This is pure drivel. The fictional Gilead, which most people have

discovered through a nasty, explicitly anti-Christian sensationa­lised TV series rather than through the duller, more tempered book, is a totalitari­an terror state of torture and arbitrary executions in which women are banned from the profession­s and power, denied education, subjected to licensed rape and reduced to domestic servitude.

The TV version contains scenes of almost pornograph­ic cruelty involving chains, muzzles and tort ure, plus a profanity- flecked mockery of the Lord’s Prayer. The heroine is raped. Just in case any of us didn’t get the message, the crime takes place to the background of church organ music.

In case any viewers still don’t understand the point (Christians are bad!), the rapist reads chunks out of the Bible as he proceeds.

In what way, Alice, does Britain resemble or ‘feel like’ this? Do tell. Can you find me a single significan­t Christian who advocates such a society? How did you escape from your misogynist captors for long enough to write this comical drivel? How did you then get it published in a national newspaper? Talk about Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

There is another important aspect of this, which I have to keep mentioning. There are places where women are i ndeed oppressed. There is a religion which – in some versions – expects women to be veiled and submissive and gives them legal rights inferior to those of men. But the liberal intelligen­tsia, always happy to pelt the Christian faith with slime, is strangely reluctant to mention this.

Odd that the supposed champions of women’s freedom fall silent on this subject. Odder still that, having won so much, they still pretend they are oppressed losers.

I’m not even sure that these thirdwave feminists care all that much about women. Their aim is not the improvemen­t of the lot of women, but a complete overthrow of the Christian society in which we live.

HERE’S a very simple measure to cure our constipate­d democracy, and get rid of dead parties that no longer speak for us and foist dingbats and robots on us as parliament­ary candidates. At the top of every ballot paper, let’s have a ‘None of the below’ slot. If votes for this option outnumber the actual candidates, the election should be rerun.

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