The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Aim anti-harassment effort at grossness, not romance

- Mona Charen

In 2003 a genetics paper revealed that one in 200 men alive in that year was a direct descendant of Genghis Khan (1162-1227). Khan was the Mongol emperor whose armies swept out of the north to conquer pretty much all of Asia. His successors took big chunks of Europe as well. When Marco Polo traveled to China, he met the conqueror’s grandson Kublai Khan.

Khan sent emissaries to the city of Merv in Turkmenist­an, demanding tribute and the city’s most beautiful women. The Seljuk Turks refused and killed the messengers. Khan’s army came three years later. The city’s leaders, perhaps having heard of Khan’s ferocity in the interim, surrendere­d, but Khan’s wrath was not assuaged. He ordered the entire city to be annihilate­d. Each soldier was to behead 300 civilians. Merv, which contained libraries, gardens and palaces, was razed and uninhabita­ble for 100 years.

Roughly 800 years later, his Y chromosome is to be found in 16 million men. Talk about conquests.

Let’s just imagine that most of world history is analogous to the Mongol invasions. Great armies or small armies or just neighborin­g clans sweep in, kill the men and rape the women. Whose genes are we all more likely to have inherited — the conquerors or the conquered?

It’s not just that the aggressors raped their way to success, either. Somewhere in our lizard brains, we admire the strongmen, and yes, that means you, ladies. Every woman who is drawn to the “bad boy” or the “leader of the pack” is expressing a primitive preference that has never been quite squelched.

So, when it comes to oafs like Al Franken and people ask, “How could he behave that way?” the answer has to begin with: Men will do what they think they can get away with. And for the last several decades, in matters of sex, it has been more or less anything goes. That may be changing.

Now some fear we are in the midst of a “moral panic.” I dislike the term, because it’s sometimes applied to plain old morality. When Tipper Gore launched a campaign to label lyrics for profanity and other objectiona­ble content, her effort was called a panic. On the other hand, anxiety about Satanic child abuse supposedly rampant at daycare centers was not a moral panic so much as mass hysteria. In any case, some, such as Ella Whelan at Spiked, think they detect some of that: “This is now a witch hunt on social media . ... The panic about harassment and women’s safety is spinning out of control. Listening to some feminists, you’d be forgiven for thinking women are in danger every time they step into the street.” Others are worried that flirting and office romances may be considered out of bounds in the current climate. Cathy Young notes that a tweet by the singer-songwriter Marian Call telling men “how happy women would be if strangers & co-workers never ‘flirted’ with us again” became an Internet sensation for a day or two.

It sure seems like the quotation marks around the word flirt were key. The men receiving muchdeserv­ed comeuppanc­e right now were not flirting.

These high-profile slobs were doing what they thought they could get away with. Most men, I hope (and I bet most women hope), still know how to flirt without being offensive. Because if we’re going to embark on building some sort of counter counter culture, it’s going to have to target grossness, not romance.

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