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Letters
Thursday, March 23, 2006 12:00 AM

What's lost when women aren't on the Op-Ed page?

An American Prospect editor on why it matters who writes editorials.

The letters thread is now closed.

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Thursday, March 23, 2006 01:22 PM

Suggestion

The author should familiarize herself with how one sets about writing an Op-Ed for The New York Times. It's no great mystery: you write your piece at appropriate length and submit it by email. Let's not give Broadsheet readers the impression that The Times is commissioning men rather than women to produce these pieces. Op-Ed writers commission themselves.

If you believe that a piece by a woman has been rejected in favor of an inferior piece by a man, I'm confident Broadsheet or Table Talk will help you share the piece and the injustice.

By all means fight any bias, but please show you've attempted to work within The Times's system, as men do.

Thursday, March 23, 2006 01:23 PM

Meanwhile, in patriarchal traditional South Korea,

it looks like a woman is about to be appointed Prime Minister - this woman is currently a legislator, formerly a cabinet minister overseeing a women's affairs department, highly involved in women's rights (obviously). Her husband is very involved in peace and anti-military work, spent time in prison and under torture during the Chun Doohwan and Noh Taewoo dictatorships. They're both Quakers, members of the only Quaker meeting in the country.

And the leader of the opposition political party, the conservative bunch? Also a woman - granted, the daughter of a former dictator, but very much her own woman and a reformer in her own way.

The US can't even get women on the op-ed page, and we look down upon a society like Korea for their patriarchal mentality. Ha!

Thursday, March 23, 2006 02:13 PM

Yet another ....

Yet another paleofeminist article on Broadsheet.

Let's meet at the organic lesbian commune for some whole wheat muffins and a bra burning.

Cervix viewings and womanist empowerment chant to follow....

Thursday, March 23, 2006 03:11 PM

When honest dialogue is eschewed, we all loose.

"By all means fight any bias, but please show you've attempted to work within The Times's system, as men do."

The reader who ends with this sentence illuminates the pragmatic aspects of writing for the Op-Ed page of the Times. He also illuminates his own bias, and weakens his own position, by ending with the pot-shot "as men do." This generalization is neither sporting nor accurate.

The other detractor, with a comment currently posted, cleverly strings together a series of colorful cliches guaranteed to get a chuckle out of anyone who's ever wrinkled their nose at a pair of Birkenstocks. But then what? Although humor is a much needed addition to the conversation, how about a laugh that's not "below the belt"? Cracking a joke that distracts from the topic is an easy (and transparently defensive) move. How about a thoughtful response?

Thursday, March 23, 2006 10:03 PM

Women on op-ed pages

Isn't there a word for those who regard what is between an author's legs as more significant than what is between his/her ears? Isn't that word bigot?

Friday, March 24, 2006 11:33 AM

Pro-choice is not and should not mean pro-abortion

The author seems very happy to encounter "unusual" views like Katha Pollitt's in the Slate exchange between Pollitt-Saletan that this article has a link to. (If the author would like to encounter more such views, I suggest that she subscribe to The Nation and/or live awhile in Berkeley.)

I want to address Pollitt's view (which the author does not explain): Saletan had expressed his hope in a recent NY Times op-ed piece that through sex education and birth control, the number of abortions might be reduced. Pollitt's counterpoint is, Why should abortion be seen as something to be avoided at all?

It saddens me to read this. She realIy has to ask?

I am unequivocally pro-choice. But I'm definitely not pro-abortion.

My conviction is that women must have control over their own bodies, and aborting is a distinctly better choice than bringing yet another unwanted child into the world.

Yet it can't be a good thing for people to get accustomed to extinguishing a potential human life as a matter of course. DESPITE the fact that pro-lifers sometimes make the same point (pathetically and fanatically), this point actually makes sense.

I feel it would be a bad thing if abortion became the principal means of birth control.

Even worse, if abortion were practiced so commonly that no one felt the least qualms about it, then in the worst case scenario, someone with power could decree that foetuses of a certain race or gender or social class or predicted IQ must be aborted. This specter, which may seem ridiculously unlikely at this moment, is something we can never rule out. If we've learned anything from the history of the last 100 years, it's that some of the most heinous acts imaginable are well within the realm of possibility.

So I would much, much rather see the need for abortion averted by sex education and birth control. (Valuable side effects would include a decrease in the prevalence of STDs and teen pregnancy.)

Friday, March 24, 2006 12:25 PM

Okay, it's a good second start . . .

The author writes:

Since I published my piece on the dearth of women writing about abortion on the New York Times Op-Ed page -- roughly 17 percent of Times Op-Eds on abortion were by women in a two-year period -- I've been asked if that's higher or lower than the percentage of women on the Times Op-Ed page generally. Based on a survey by the Washington Post's Howard Kurtz, it looks as though it's about the same.

Great -- this is how journalism is supposed to operate. Facts should be put in context and compared with other relevant facts. Questions must be asked.

Even though someone had to prompt the author to look into this, it is surely to her credit that she wrote about this as a kind of addendum to her earlier piece. Now I wonder, Has it occurred to her to look into why only about 17% of the NY Times op-ed articles are by women? And why so few women are writing opinion pieces in general? It is remarkable that she doesn't raise the question.

Some women write superb opinion pieces and some are outstanding investigative journalists. But (and I hope this is completely untrue) if most women writers tend to ask as few questions as Ms. Franke-Ruta -- or seem to understand as little about journalism as many of the Broadsheet contributors -- that could explain why the Times and other venues publish so few opinion pieces by them.

I have no idea: It could be due to anti-woman prejudice; it could be because only about 17% of the submissions are from women.

Whatever the case, the next question should perhaps be, Why is *that* the case? (E.g., Why are only 17% of the op-ed submissions to the Times fronm women?)

If the paucity of opinion pieces from women is in fact due to sexist prejudice at the Times and elsewhere, it would be very valuable to verify that fact and get publications to cut it out.

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