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Claire Lehmann wants you to know that something is very wrong with young women today. No, not because they’re suffering from unprecedented rates of anxiety and depression, or facing assaults on their reproductive freedom, or drowning in student debt while the planet burns. No, the “woke”-obsessed antifeminist is concerned because these terrible gals are banging drums in libraries and throwing soup at (protective glass in front of) famous artworks to protest climate collapse and genocide.
In her recent piece for The Dipshit, sorry, The Dispatch, titled “When Women Are Radicalized,” Lehmann frets that young women are becoming dangerously committed to progressive political causes–and that society, disturbingly, hasn’t freaked out about this nearly enough.
Whether the cause is Gaza, climate change, Black Lives Matter, or feminism, overrepresentation of young women has become the norm in progressive activism. And this shift signals a susceptibility to ideological extremism.
Lehmann’s argument is simple: women are showing up at protests, so that’s bad, right, they must be getting radicalized. Her evidence for this: they’re, you know, showing up at protests. Sometimes they fling soup. Sometimes they delay traffic. Sometimes–brace yourself–they skip school. The horror.
Her examples of this new female extremism are really not terribly extreme.
Some protesters banged on drums in the Columbia library, chanting for a free Palestine. Lehmann reports this as if it were a hostage situation, and her indignation seems just a tad on the performative side. At the very least, her moral outrage is rather spectacularly misaligned. On the one hand, there are tens of thousands of Palestinians dead, millions displaced, aid blocked or bombed. On the other, some people brought drums to a library. And it’s the latter situation that gets her mad.
Next she waxes indignant at climate protestors throwing soup and paint at famous works of art, which on the surface sounds needlessly provocative even to me, but her account omits a key detail: the Just Stop Oil activists in question didn’t actually throw anything directly at Vincent Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” or Degas’ “Little Dancer”–these artworks were behind protective glass. No permanent damage was done. We’re talking cleanup, not the painstaking restoration of cultural treasures.
And then there’s the specter of Greta Thunberg skipping school at the age of 15, which Lehmann mentions twice, as if Greta had firebombed a schoolhouse.
Yeah, some of these tactics are disruptive. What else is protest supposed to be? Yet Lehmann treats these women not as passionate participants in mass movements, but as ideological zombies corrupted by the evil forces of … their own empathy, citing a survey that found women score higher than men on Care, Fairness, and Purity. “These tendencies,” Lehmann warns, “can also make young women particularly receptive to political narratives framed in terms of trauma, injustice, and moral absolutism.”
In other words: women care too much. And somehow in the world of today, in which masked government henchmen dressed up like ersatz Proud Boys are hauling supposedly “illegal” immigrants off to lord knows where, women giving a shit about shit is the big bad deal.
Lehmann continues:
While generally not coercing people through violence, female radicals coerce through threats of shaming and social exclusion.
Oh, no, not shaming! Not feeling left out! Someone might disagree with you in the group chat! Call the FBI!
This is the article’s big move: comparing young women’s desire to hold one another accountable for injustice with the actual violence committed by radicalized young men—mass shootings, alt-right fascists driving into crowds of protesters, you know the drill.
Lehmann’s entire argument depends on a deeply unserious equivalence. She gestures vaguely at the dangers of protest-related inconvenience, but can’t actually point to anything that rises to the level of radicalization as it’s usually defined–ideological commitment so extreme it justifies violence or terror. And she admits as much:
Women rarely engage in political assassinations or mass shootings, the way a small subset of fanatical men do.
Right. But soup.
Lehmann never engages seriously with what these women are protesting. Gen Z women are the first political generation to come of age in a post-Roe, late-capitalist, climate-emergency world. They’re furious, and justifiably so. Lehmann’s core complaint isn’t about radicalism. It’s about discomfort. She’s unsettled that today’s most visible protest movements are being shaped and sustained by women, often queer women, often women of color, often very young. And instead of engaging with the reasons for that, she diagnoses them with moral hypersensitivity.
Thing is, women have always been a huge part of protest movements, and they’ve sometimes used radical tactics. The suffragettes weren’t politely tweeting about the vote–they were bombing mailboxes and burning down buildings. And yet somehow, today’s soup-flingers are framed as more dangerous. Or more tragic.
The real problem, Lehmann seems to think, is that progressive activism is popular among young women. That solidarity, empathy, and moral intensity–things we usually consider virtues–are being turned against the institutions of the status quo. So she reaches for a grab-bag of evolutionary psychology and moral panic:
This artificial consensus can snowball, as individuals assume everyone else in their peer group agrees with a given sentiment, completely unaware that many don’t.
Huh. A Turkish student at Tufts University, a young woman, was “detained” by ICE for six weeks earlier this year for the crime of … co-writing an essay in the school paper critical of Israel. But god forbid some young conservative woman feel a moment of trepidation before tweeting, sorry, x-ing, about how genocide in Gaza is just fine, when you think about it.
Lehmann paints young women as hapless herd creatures, duped by social media and peer pressure. It couldn’t be that they actually believe in something. No, they’re just afraid of being left out.
Lehmann offers this ominous final warning:
Recognizing this pattern is the first step toward protecting young women from the misguided narratives that exploit their moral sensitivity. But to change it, we must first name it.
Yeah, let’s name it. It’s called giving a shit. It’s called being alive in 2025 and noticing that things are fucked.
The radicalization we should be afraid of is the one that ends in real violence, not the one that ends in a chant. But maybe that’s too inconvenient a truth for someone more alarmed by Greta Thunberg’s report card than the bodies buried in mass graves in Gaza.
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@ FMO
Totally agree. And great excuse to post this. I do like a bit of Wuxia.
@Elaine:
I can believe it. I remember back in University I had a friend with a… unique walk, who bounced up and down during his stride more than most people do. I literally managed to recognize him once while walking up King Street in Kitchener-Waterloo from close to a kilometer away, when my view was barely large enough to see the colour of his clothes, just by the beat of his walk, because I knew nobody else who moved like that.
Never did ballet myself, just some ballroom dancing and some martial arts, though these days the most use I get out of that is choreographing fight scenes in stories. (Which especially helps when you’re writing a character who practices Capoeira, which is both.)
@ jenora
We’re really good at identifying people by gait. To the extent that it’s actually admissible evidence in court.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S135503061930214X
We don’t even need to see the whole person. If you just put lights on peoples’ joints we can recognise people from that alone.
@alan
I enjoy the videos you post. It made me smile.
@jenora
Apparently I run really different compared to everyone else cause I keep my back real straight and the way I bounce on my toes as i go. To be fair my feet are fucked. My life long passion really changed the way my feet grew and took away my ability to wear sandals but that’s okay lol.
@ elaine
Bob Fosse, the choreographer, specifically recruited dancers with injuries or disabilities. He thought it made their movements more interesting. For example, Liza Minelli had scoliosis, and got the lead in Cabaret. Gates McFadden, of Star Trek fame, was also a dancer. She worked with Fosse, and she also has scoliosis. He also had a thing about knock knees.
But that’s how you get such amazing poses and body movements like everyone here.
I can’t watch this without a big grin on my face.
@Alan:
Yeah, it’s all pattern recognition, and it’s the sort of thing most people do entirely subconsciously. Just ask any old-school radio operator about identifying someone by ‘fist’, i.e., the specific sequence of timing of someone tapping out Morse Code which is almost as recognizable as a voice if people on both ends are really good at it. Anybody who can do Morse Code at high speed has basically got to the point where they’re treating it as a language of its own rather than spelling out each letter separately, and at that point personal muscle movements become the main source of timing variations.
(I’d be honestly surprised if that hadn’t been used as evidence in a trial as well, though I expect it would be more likely in military cases than civilian ones.)
Gaits are pretty much the same thing, where the basic process has dropped below full conscious operation and variations in muscle training become the ‘voice’. I actually wrote stuff about that into one of my stories, where the main character (who’s a trained mercenary) notes things about people’s movement, like ‘this person had a leg injury recently and hasn’t yet got used to their leg being a little different’ or ‘this person doesn’t normally move much at all so the nervous tics they’re currently showing are probably signals being sent to his partner’.
People pick up on a lot of stuff, much of which gets flushed as ‘irrelevant’ before it fully hits consciousness, because we can’t really handle that much information consciously. In the story I mentioned above, I was actively treating that sort of hyper-vigilance as a PTSD symptom.
Of course,
Schumer and Hakeem both refuse to endorse Mamdani.
I guess upholding zionism is more important than opposing trump.
@Elaine the witch,
I’m glad to see you okay and happy(ier) than you were a few months ago. Sad to hear your marriage is over, since you seemed happy with him. Hopefully he’s not one of the bad exes that show up here from time to time.
After seeing what the US Department of Labor has been up to lately, I can’t help but think that the endgame of the Republican Party is White Slavery.
Consider: no worker safety laws or really safety laws of any kind, few to no public services, wage collapse for everyone except the very richest, no meaningful rights for anyone, and anyone with an insufficiently pale shade of skin dead or fled.
@Redsilkphoenix
It’s for the best. With the amount of miscarries I have had, I don’t feel safe trying to have a baby in the United States. And that was causing a lot of fights amongst other issues. I don’t know what happened but he changed into a man that was very different then the one i first met.