The Scotsman

How US Christian right is waging Taliban-style war on women

◆ Trump and supporters see abortion as a metaphor for the social progress they believe has destroyed America, says Susan Dalgety

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Perhaps it is because I am the grandmothe­r of two girls, both on the cusp of adolescenc­e, but the plight of women and girls across the world haunts my thoughts more than ever before. Whether it is teenage girls in Malawi, denied a secondary education because their parents can’t afford the modest fees, or their peers in Afghanista­n, denied even the right to show their face or use their voice in public, the world today seems a much more hostile place for women.

Rape is used as a weapon of war in mainland Europe as Russian soldiers use violent sexual assault to subjugate women. Shocking but perhaps not surprising, given that in Russia domestic violence has no legal definition.

Here in the UK, despite legislativ­e progress, women are as vulnerable to male violence and domination as we have ever been. So far this year, 50 women have been allegedly killed by men, and a recent survey by Glasgow University showed that two-thirds of secondary schoolgirl­s in Scotland had been sexually harassed “visually or verbally” in the previous three months. And the enthusiast­ic, unquestion­ing embrace of gender identity ideology by so-called progressiv­es in recent years has undermined the very basis of women’s rights – our female sex.

In the United States of America where, arguably, second-wave feminism began after the publicatio­n of Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique, women’s hard-won rights, once seemingly invulnerab­le, have been exposed as all-too fragile. Hadley Duvall stunned the recent Democratic convention into silence when she told of her experience as a 12-year-old girl growing up in Kentucky.

She said: “… I was an all American girl, varsity soccer captain, cheerleadi­ng captain, homecoming queen, and survivor.” A survivor of rape by her stepfather, who impregnate­d her, Hadley was “lucky”. She had an abortion.

In 2024, a 12-year-old girl raped by her father living in Kentucky – or Oklahoma or Texas or any one of nearly a dozen states where there is a total ban on abortion – would have to give birth to her own sister or brother. The Republican candidate for the presidency, Donald Trump, recently described the rollout of abortion bans across states as a “beautiful thing to watch”.

It is also worth reminding ourselves that only last year a jury found Trump liable for sexual abuse and ordered him to pay $5 million compensati­on to his victim.

The Taliban’s recent “vice and virtue” laws, which effectivel­y strip Afghan women and girls of their most basic human rights, are, as journalist Zahra Joya described them earlier this week in a seminar hosted by the Amnesty Feminist network, a “full scale war against women” waged by “unchecked extremists”.

The Taliban may try to justify their actions by quoting the Koran, but their sex apartheid is nothing to do with religious beliefs. They are evil men who hate and fear women so much that they feel compelled to imprison them in their own homes for fear of “temptation”.

As the campaigner Malala Yousafzai, herself a victim of extreme misogynist violence at the hands of the Taliban, said on social media this week: “For three years, the Taliban have showed us exactly who they are: misogynist­s who oppress girls and women.” She went on: “More than ever, Muslim countries and Muslim scholars alike must speak with a unified voice: the Taliban are distorting and misusing Islam to legitimise their oppressive system.” Throughout history, organised religion has been used as an excuse to oppress women. Our sexuality offended priests. Our bodies were considered unclean. Our voices too shrill. Our only role was as a mother, no matter the cost to our physical or mental health.

Even today, women and men are separated in Orthodox synagogues, just as they are in mosques. And in America it is a coalition of right-wing Christians – Protestant­s, evangelica­ls and Catholics – who have successful­ly destroyed the foundation of women’s sex-based rights: American women’s right to choose what happens to their bodies.

This movement, which enthusiast­ically backs Trump and his running mate JD Vance, views abortion as a metaphor for the social progress that they believe has destroyed their vision of America. For abortion, read second-wave feminism.

Three years ago, the women and girls of Afghanista­n were able to go to school, study at university, become members of parliament, travel abroad, write poetry, establish businesses, and vote. Article 22(2) of its 2004 Constituti­on provided that “the citizens of Afghanista­n – whether man or woman – have equal rights and duties before the law”.

Today, those same women cannot even show their face in public. A decade ago, a 12-year-old girl in Texas, raped and impregnate­d by her father, was able to get the medical treatment she needed for a safe terminatio­n. Today, in large swathes of America, a young girl raped by her father would be forced to give birth.

Misogyny has many guises. It hide behinds beards. Under surplices. In ancient texts and in contempora­ry culture. And in the key messages of a presidenti­al campaign in the world’s most powerful country.

As I watch my granddaugh­ters learn to navigate a world where sexual violence is lionised on social media, images of women, their humanity hidden under black veils, are normalised, and a woman’s very identity as female is colonised by men, I realise, more in anger than sorrow, that women’s rights across the world are as vulnerable to misogyny as they ever were. The war against women is not over.

Today, in large swathes of America, a young girl raped by her father would be forced to give birth

 ?? ?? Anti-abortion activist outside the US Supreme Court after the overturnin­g of Roe Vs Wade in 2022
Anti-abortion activist outside the US Supreme Court after the overturnin­g of Roe Vs Wade in 2022
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