Townhall...
The
Real
‘War on Women’
by Thomas
Sowell
Jun 07,
2012
Among the
people who are disappointed with President Obama, none has more reason
to be
disappointed than those who thought he was going to be “a uniter,
rather than a
divider” and that he would “bring us all together.”
It was a
noble hope, but one with no factual foundation. Barack Obama had been a
divider
all his adult life, especially as a community organizer, and he had
repeatedly
sought out and allied himself with other dividers, the most blatant of
whom was
the man whose church he attended for 20 years, Jeremiah Wright.
Now, with
his presidency on the line and the polls looking dicey, President
Obama’s
re-election campaign has become more openly divisive than ever.
He has
embraced the strident “Occupy Wall Street” movement, with its
ridiculous claim
of representing the 99 percent against the 1 percent. Obama’s
Department of
Justice has been spreading the hysteria that states requiring photo
identification for voting are trying to keep minorities from voting,
and using
the prevention of voter fraud as a pretext.
But anyone
who doubts the existence of voter fraud should read John Fund’s book
“Stealing
Elections” or J. Christian Adams’s book, “Injustice,” which deals
specifically
with the Obama Justice Department’s overlooking voter fraud when those
involved
are black Democrats.
Not content
with dividing classes and races, the Obama campaign is now seeking to
divide
the sexes by declaring that women are being paid less than men, as part
of a
“war on women” conducted by villains, from whom Obama and company will
protect
the women -- and, not incidentally, expect to receive their votes this
November.
The old --
and repeatedly discredited -- game of citing women’s incomes as some
percentage
of men’s incomes is being played once again, as part of the “war on
women”
theme.
Since women
average fewer hours of work per year, and fewer years of consecutive
full-time
employment than men, among other differences, comparisons of male and
female
annual earnings are comparisons of apples and oranges, as various
female
economists have pointed out. Read Diana Furchtgott-Roth of the Hudson
Institute
or Professor Claudia Goldin of Harvard, for example.
When you
compare women and men in the same occupations with the same skills,
education,
hours of work, and many other factors that go into determining pay, the
differences in incomes shrink to the vanishing point -- and, in some
cases, the
women earn more than comparable men.
But why let
mere facts spoil the emotional rhetoric or the political ploys to drum
up
hysteria and collect votes?
The
farcical nature of these ploys came out after House Minority Leader
Nancy
Pelosi declared that Congress needed to pass the Fair Pay Act, because
women
average 23 percent lower incomes than men.
A reporter
from The Daily Caller then pointed out that the women on Nancy Pelosi’s
own
staff average 27 percent lower incomes than the men on her staff. Does
that
show that Pelosi herself is guilty of discrimination against women? Or
does it
show that such simple-minded statistics are grossly misleading?
The
so-called Fair Pay Act has nothing to do with fairness and everything
to do
with election-year politics. No one in his right mind expects that bill
to become
law. It will be lucky to pass the Senate, and has no chance whatever of
getting
passed in the House of Representatives.
The whole
point of this political exercise is to get Republicans on record voting
against
“fairness” for women, as part of the Democrats’ campaign strategy to
claim that
there is a “war on women.”
If you are
looking for a real war on women, you might look at the practice of
aborting
girl babies after an ultrasound picture shows that they are girls.
These
abortions are the most basic kind of discrimination, and their
consequences
have already been demonstrated in countries like China and India, where
sexually discriminatory abortions and female infanticide have produced
an
imbalance in the number of adult males and females.
A bill to
outlaw sexually and racially discriminatory abortions has been opposed
and
defeated by House Democrats.
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