Canadian and American Ladies’s Progress
In keeping with some semi-reputable sources gathered in an inventory right here, Rick G. Rosner could have amongst America’s, North America’s, and the world’s highest measured IQs at or above 190 (S.D. 15)/196 (S.D. 16) primarily based on a number of excessive vary take a look at performances created by Christopher Harding, Jason Betts, Paul Cooijmans, and Ronald Hoeflin. He earned 12 years of faculty credit score in lower than a 12 months and graduated with the equal of 8 majors. He has obtained 8 Writers Guild Awards and Emmy nominations, and was titled 2013 North American Genius of the Yr by The World Genius Listing with the primary “Genius” itemizing right here.
He has written for Distant Management, Crank Yankers, The Man Present, The Emmys, The Grammys, and Jimmy Kimmel Reside!. He labored as a bouncer, a nude artwork mannequin, a roller-skating waiter, and a stripper. In a tv business, Domino’s Pizza named him the “World’s Smartest Man.” The business was taken off the air after Subway sandwiches issued a cease-and-desist. He was named “Greatest Bouncer” within the Denver Space, Colorado, by Westwood Journal.
Rosner spent a lot of the late Disco Period as an undercover highschool pupil. As well as, he spent 25 years as a bar bouncer and American faux ID-catcher, and 25+ years as a stripper, and practically 30 years as a author for greater than 2,500 hours of community tv. Errol Morris featured Rosner within the interview collection entitled First Individual, the place a few of this historical past was lined by Morris. He got here in second, or misplaced, on Jeopardy!, sued Who Needs to Be a Millionaire? over a flawed query and misplaced the lawsuit. He received one sport and misplaced one sport on Are You Smarter Than a Drunk Individual? (He was drunk). Lastly, he spent 37+ years engaged on a time-invariant variation of the Large Bang Concept.
Presently, Rosner sits tweeting in a bathrobe (winter) or a towel (summer season). He lives in Los Angeles, California along with his spouse, canine, and goldfish. He and his spouse have a daughter. You may ship him cash or questions at [email protected], or a direct message through Twitter, or discover him on LinkedIn, or see him on YouTube.
Scott Douglas Jacobsen: I wished to speak in regards to the comparability and distinction between American types of ladies’s rights and Canadian types, specializing in what Canadians and Individuals are doing higher. For my part, Canadians are most likely doing higher, despite the fact that the USA is a wealthier nation. Within the up to date interval, Canadian ladies appear to have a a lot better time than in the USA, particularly when it comes to foundational issues like reproductive rights and privileges, the place they’ll entry many extra public advantages.
Rick Rosner: Let me arrange the U.S. scenario the place a 3rd of the inhabitants, after I was rising up, there was a time period referred to as “reactionary.” I don’t know the place it comes from, nevertheless it principally means you’re a dick since you don’t like what’s occurring. All of your positions are counter to, or in opposition to, one thing. It’s not that you simply’re pro-anything, it’s that you simply’re anti-anything that your perceived enemies like. Is that sort of what reactionary means? It’s right here and the MAGAs, which embody most likely near 50% ladies, possibly rather less. They’re in opposition to a variety of women-empowering issues as a result of that’s what the “libs” like. They hate the libs. The MAGAs are largely white, some Latino, virtually no black individuals. Extra males than ladies, most likely 60/40 males to ladies. Principally much less educated on common than all people else. To be trustworthy, dumber on common than the typical IQ or common intelligence of all people else. They assist Trump as a result of he upsets the libs and are okay with all the pieces the individuals who assist Trump stand for as a result of they assist Trump to upset the libs.
The individuals who assist Trump stand for curbing reproductive rights. There’s a enormous overlap between fashionable U.S. evangelicals and MAGAs. The trendy evangelical MAGAs assist the godless Trump as a result of he appointed the Supreme Court docket judges who removed Roe v. Wade. Everyone else in America, 60% of grownup Individuals, helps a largely empowering agenda that they vote for in their very own greatest pursuits and possibly what they understand to be the perfect pursuits of the nation. However 40% of the nation, in response to the polls, is reactionary and simply helps stances. Possibly a few of them truthfully imagine that life begins at conception, however most of them most likely don’t have robust opinions between life starting at conception and first trimester or abortion. They simply need to say “fuck you” to the opposition. Is that cheap? Not that they’re cheap, however what I stated.
Jacobsen: It’s a good characterization. How far do you suppose the USA is from a “Handmaid’s Story” model actuality? Or on the other facet, how can American human rights defenders and others combat in opposition to the encroachments of that sort of life?
Rosner: In “The Handmaid’s Story,” a variety of stuff led to the plot. There was a coup the place homegrown terrorists blew up the Capitol, took down the federal government, and put in their very own fundamentalist authorities. The northeastern a part of the U.S. is at battle with different elements of the U.S. It’s not simply that the entire U.S. all of the sudden turned repressively non secular. It’s simply a part of the U.S., and the remainder of the U.S. is combating. I feel Canada is combating a battle. The individuals trapped on this a part of the U.S. are below this fundamentalist regime.
The U.S. might be removed from a full-on “Handmaid’s Story” state of affairs as a result of even in “The Handmaid’s Story,” it’s solely a piece of the U.S. that’s like that. But when Trump will get re-elected and will get the Home and the Senate, would he be capable of go laws or encourage laws in Congress to ban all abortions besides in instances of rape and incest or to have a nationwide regulation that claims you may’t get an abortion after, say, 15 weeks? If states need to be extra draconian than that, they’ll.
I don’t suppose so. I don’t suppose that Trump will win. The bookies and Vegas odds favor him, however they favor Democrats holding or taking the Home again. So in case you go by Vegas odds, Trump will get reelected, Democrats have the Home, and Republicans narrowly management the Senate. That’s not sufficient to show the U.S. totally into “The Handmaid’s Story.” Proper now, the Supreme Court docket has a six to 3 conservative majority, and two of these conservatives are full corrupt assholes, as has been revealed. If Trump obtained one other 4 years, he would have the older assholes, Clarence Thomas and Alito, retire sooner or later so he can appoint youthful loopy assholes. Or if someone else drops off the court docket, it’s doable the court docket might find yourself with a seven to 2 conservative majority.
The Heritage Basis has this 900-page conservative platform referred to as Undertaking 2025 that lays out a really conservative draconian path for America. To get it performed, the Republicans must personal the presidency, the Home, the Senate, and they’d have the Supreme Court docket. It’s not clear that the seven members of the court docket, 4 conservatives and three liberals, would go together with it. There’s an opportunity that the not-crazy conservatives would go together with the liberals to cease something too insane. We’ll discover out subsequent week whether or not they give full immunity for any acts dedicated whereas in workplace to a president. I don’t suppose they are going to. It’s too loopy.
So I suppose, in a nutshell, I don’t suppose the U.S. can go full “Handmaid’s Story.” Another reason is you may’t actually get so much performed within the Senate until you might have a 60-person majority out of 100. No matter who controls it, no person will get 60 seats. The final time that occurred was for lower than a 12 months, or possibly 14 months below Obama. Obama used that point to get Obamacare handed. That was his push. So no, I don’t suppose the U.S. can go full “Handmaid’s Story.” A robust majority of the U.S. don’t need that. In order that’s the tip of that reply.
Jacobsen: What do you concentrate on the repeal of Roe v. Wade? How did that come throughout in California, with your loved ones?
Rosner: We don’t know, however we’re trying on the electoral penalties of eliminating Roe. In a number of elections, the place abortion rights have been on the poll in 5 – 6 states which have had elections since Roe went away, even in conservative states, abortion rights received out. There’s some indication that the Roe challenge will get a liberal majority to prove. Nevertheless, that’s contradicted by what the polls say, which is that Trump has a slender lead over Biden, and possibly greater than a slender lead in some swing states. As we’ve talked about, I don’t belief the polls. I feel the polls have been corrupted. I hope that Roe results in a robust electoral turnout for liberals, although neither facet will get as many votes as they did in 2020, as a result of that was on the peak of COVID. The nation made it straightforward to vote, particularly by mail. The Republicans hated that as a result of they misplaced solidly.
They’ve handed laws in a bunch of states to choke off voting, particularly for liberal-leaning demographics like black individuals or school college students. In 2020, 160 million individuals voted, which is two-thirds of voting-age Individuals. That’s the next share than ever earlier than. This time round, possibly solely 150 to 152 million Individuals will vote. The competitors is to see who can maintain on to extra of the individuals who voted for them, whether or not it’s Trump or Biden. Additionally, you’ve obtained a robust third-party candidate this time round with Kennedy, most likely getting seven to 9 p.c of the vote. That may minimize into each Biden and Trump.
Biden received by seven million votes final time, however that’s simply the favored vote. The electoral vote was 303 to 235, which is a robust exhibiting however not overwhelming. A number of states might have flipped and given it to Trump. This time round, there’s no approach that Trump might win the favored vote, however Trump might lose by 5 million votes and narrowly win the electoral school. So there you go.
Jacobsen: What do you suppose was probably the most vital win for ladies’s rights in the USA within the early twenty first century?
Rosner: Thus far, probably the most vital win is these particular elections in 5 states the place individuals voted for reproductive rights. A small win occurred a few days in the past when the Supreme Court docket threw out a case from a Trumpy decrease decide attempting to eliminate Mifeprestone, the abortion drug. The Supreme Court docket unanimously stated that the plaintiffs in that case didn’t have standing. The arguments, like docs being damage by being pressured to manage this drug, have been loopy. That’s not a giant victory as a result of the decrease court docket’s determination and the plaintiffs’ arguments have been so silly. The most important victory for reproductive rights within the twenty first century might be if it drives sufficient liberals to prove to cease Trump from getting reelected. It hasn’t occurred but. If it occurs, it’s nonetheless 5 months away. You need to discuss ladies’s rights in Canada.
Jacobsen: In 2019, Karen Jensen was the primary ever pay fairness commissioner for Canada. That’s a giant win. In 2019, there was the ultimate report of the nationwide inquiry into lacking and murdered Indigenous ladies and ladies, launched on June third, 2019. That’s a giant win when it comes to minority ladies’s rights in Canada. In 2022, there was an endorsement of the Nationwide Motion Plan on gender-based violence. There have been ongoing efforts to cope with vital points round pay and violence in Canada, particularly round ladies’s gender points.
Rosner: Canada has ten provinces and three territories, proper?
Jacobsen:: Sure, three territories.
Rosner: The territories most likely don’t rely a lot when it comes to nationwide voting. Are there any provinces just like the southern states now we have which are tremendous redneck and assist a redneck agenda with a redneck voting bloc?
Jacobsen: I don’t need to stereotype any explicit province in that approach. Nevertheless, when points typical of American southern states, like immigration, Muslims, ladies’s rights, and abortion come up, Alberta tends to be the place the place that turns into a major downside. There’s a push for having vast provisions of free prescription contraception for ladies throughout the nation. This was a giant win in British Columbia just lately. There’s a nationwide prescription contraception plan broad-based. The one province with vital pushback, and which will go to court docket, is Alberta concerning free contraception. So you might have one province out of ten. It’s a giant province although.
Rosner: One other main distinction between the US and Canada is that you simply guys don’t have Fox Information always propagandizing your inhabitants. Now we have some entities prefer it, however they don’t have practically the heft of Fox Information in the USA. The U.S. has practically half the states considerably rednecked. They don’t have half the inhabitants, possibly 40% of the inhabitants, however the Senate is split the place every state will get two senators. It’s not by inhabitants within the Senate. The Senate is legislatively extra highly effective than the Home. You want each to go laws.
Redneckism is more durable to combat within the U.S. politically as a result of the nation was set as much as give disproportionate rights to smaller states to make the union doable. This downside dates again to the unique 13 colonies, the place the compromise was that the Home is apportioned by inhabitants and the Senate is simply all people will get two senators. That has precipitated points, and the electoral school, the place every state will get quite a few electors that equals the variety of senators plus the variety of representatives, offers voting energy disproportionately to smaller redneck states. On account of this unhealthy deal, the U.S. is a robust unified nation as a substitute of a bunch of disjointed nation-states. I don’t see how a president might get away with appointing or creating a cupboard division for wage equality. We tried to go the Equal Rights Modification within the Nineteen Seventies, however you want a big fraction of the states to approve an modification to the Structure. It fell two states brief within the 70s when conservative ladies like Phyllis Schlafly rallied conservative ladies to not ratify it in states like Florida.
Solely prior to now three years did a pair extra states vote to ratify it, however the time expired. I feel you might have a restricted period of time to get your states to do this, and that expired 30, 40 years in the past. I don’t even know why states are voting on it now. Legislatively, we are able to by no means have as a lot equality for ladies as you do as a result of the redneck states have an excessive amount of energy.
Jacobsen: Within the southern states, do they view ladies as lesser than males? The applying suggests they do primarily based on the outcomes. Do they in actual fact vote?
Rosner: I don’t suppose it’s that girls are seen as lesser than males. The view, which many individuals in redneck states disagree with, is that there’s a place for ladies, and that place is a conventional one as a spouse. You may work, however in a conventional household that’s heterosexual, you possibly go to church, and also you don’t imagine in feminism. You might imagine in feminist concepts however don’t comprehend it as a result of you might have a warped concept of feminism. It’s not that girls are lower than males, it’s that they disapprove of feminism and don’t see their position as being firebrands.
Jacobsen: What do you see because the problem for ladies proper now in the USA and in Canada?
Rosner: There’s a Pew examine from 2022 that exhibits that the Republican Congress and Senate have drifted 4 occasions as a lot rightward because the Democrats have drifted leftward. The Democrats have just about stayed put. The problems round trans individuals have been propagandized to make it seem like the Democrats are radical, however trans points solely have an effect on a small share of the inhabitants. On main points, the Republicans have gone utterly loopy. The Republican Occasion has change into corrupt and dishonest, not aware of nearly all of voters, spouting a ton of Russian propaganda managed by wealthy conservative billionaires.
That’s the main impediment. The individuals who assist that get together, which is 30 to 40% of voters, are additionally an issue. Conversely, the main benefit for Canada is you don’t have that stage of bullshit. You stated you might have one province that’s a bit bit redneck. Now we have 24 states, generally extra, and the Republicans have realized how you can manipulate the system. The system is already pre-manipulated in favor of Republicans primarily based on the Electoral School and the Senate. Extra just lately, the Republicans took over state legislatures in 2010, and so they can wield energy even in states the place they’ve minority assist.
In order that’s the main factor—Republican politicians. Second, being an issue for ladies, is the Republican base. Conservative propagandists additionally don’t have good arguments to supply. They’ve dumb arguments, however they’ve a dumb base to take heed to these arguments.
Jacobsen: The tip.
Rosner: Oh, the tip.
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Photograph credit score: Lance Richlin.