It’s taken a while to figure out what this feeling is… The outcome of the US election bothers me more than I ever thought it could. And not just because the world is now probably on an even-faster-track to doom and destruction.
I’m bothered because Hillary’s loss is so much more than Trump’s success. It’s confirmation that the undercurrent of our human existence is a misogynistic rhetoric that’s in no danger of shifting anytime soon.
That a woman as skilled, dedicated, passionate and clearly more qualified than her opponent could not get the job she has been working towards for years is a reflection of the experience of women everywhere.
But it’s something more. It’s the way people talk about Hillary. Gender is absolutely part of this equation, regardless of how vehemently the misogynists claim it’s not. Finding gender-neutral reasons to despise someone is just part of the misogynistic modus operandi.
Ignorance is the other part of this equation. I see it up close and personal every time politics is raised in conversation. The vast majority of the population don’t have a clue about it. How the system works. The actual extent of a politician’s influence to bring about change in an environment where money talks louder than the greater good.
For those of you who cite lies, emails and the rise of ISIL as the real reason you don’t trust Hillary, I’m calling you out. Hillary has been a tireless campaigner for women’s rights for decades. She has championed education for girls and women around the globe. She is a former Senator and Secretary of State, not to mention a former First Lady and has the unique experience of seeing and understanding the inner mechanisms of US and world politics from every angle. And as for the rise of ISIL - her surname is Clinton, not Bush.
She should be the US President-Elect.
I had the absolute privilege of meeting Julia Gillard a couple of years ago. I knew I would have a few seconds to say something to her and I wanted it to be meaningful. So I told her that I absolutely believed that she had cracked that glass ceiling. That she had made it easier for the next woman, and the next. But right now, that feels like a lie.