The Cairns Post

Markle is letting down women

- Lucy Carne is editor of Rendezview.com.au

IT’S hard not to be embarrasse­d for feminism right now.

Take the Queensland academic, who is focused on a fresh battle for women’s rights.

Is it to stamp out sex traffickin­g, address the underfundi­ng of domestic violence services or increase equal opportunit­y? Awkwardly, no.

It is the far more woke feminist cause to rename body parts that honour male scientists.

What rational person has the time or energy to care about the possible gender discrimina­tion lurking behind the origin of some archaic, centurieso­ld name?

I couldn’t give a toss that Gabriel Fallopian and Ernst ‘G spot’ Gräfenberg were blokes. All that matters to me is that the medical profession­al who is tending to a body part knows what she or he is doing.

It’s as daft as the movement by woke mothers to force their daughters to use correct anatomical references to empower ownership of their bodies. “Saffron, you don’t have a sore tummy, it’s a pain in your descending colon.”

Somehow, I’ve made it this far in my life without having to use the word vulva, yet I still manage to understand what it is, thank you very much.

But if there ever was more of a conAnd firmation that the feminist movement has become its own worst nightmare, it was Meghan Markle’s empowermen­t speech last week.

From the privacy of Tyler Perry’s $30 million, 12-bedroom Beverly Hills villa, where the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have sought refuge and wish to be left alone, Meghan delivered her keynote digital address to 40,000 viewers around the world.

Certainly, the qualificat­ions of the speakers at the Procter & Gamblespon­sored, United Nations Foundation’s Girl Up Leadership Summit were impressive.

There was Iraqi human rights activist and 2018 Nobel Peace Laureate Nadia Murad, historian and Iranian women’s rights advocate Dr Nina Ansary and UN Under Secretary General and Executive Director of UN Women Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka.

then there was Meghan Markle, whose descriptio­n simply read “Duchess of Sussex”.

If she really is so devoted to the feminist cause, why does she continue to clutch the pearls of a royal title that comes from an institutio­n she has abandoned and derided?

Let’s be honest, “former TV supporting actor” doesn’t seem to have the same publicity appeal as royalty.

What use is education or experience as a philanthro­pist or human rights activist? All you need, ladies, is to marry a prince. Hooray for feminism. Then just waffle on for nine minutes about conviction and compassion, throw in a Dalai Lama quote and your female empowermen­t icon status is cemented. She also took yet another swipe at the Queen by encouragin­g girls to make those in power “uncomforta­ble”. So much for the sisterhood. But her inspiring invitation for a young feminist uprising didn’t seem to quite go as planned.

It was her hair, not her pep talk, that made global headlines.

“The Internet Is Freaking Out Over the Length of Meghan Markle’s Hair,” one headline shouted.

While others claimed her new glossy locks (described by one British paper as “the new Rachel”) were a symbol of her new-found independen­ce. Sadly, it seems her speech did more for GHD sales than female empowermen­t. Move over, Malala.

It’s excruciati­ng to watch the cringe-worthy recuperati­on of feminism as a woke identity label.

Because, if we learnt anything from Hillary Clinton, feminism should never be used to promote the career success of one, single female.

The former US secretary of state continues to push the fantasy that she was the “gutsy woman” who took on those mean MAGA misogynist­s and inspired a future wave of brave female leaders (so long as we ignore her friendship­s with convicted sex offenders Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein).

Feminism should be about fighting for the tough and non-Instagramf­riendly issues of equality – workplace and education rights, healthcare reform, domestic violence victim support, legalising sex work and preventing genital mutilation.

A real feminist doesn’t use the movement to surreptiti­ously push her own personal aspiration­s of power and success. Then that would make her yet another influencer. And the world certainly doesn’t need any more of those.

 ??  ?? FEMINISM: Meghan Markle.
FEMINISM: Meghan Markle.

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