This was not the first time that the Trump administration had shown pictures of all-male groups making policy on women. In January, for instance, the president signed an antiabortion order — reinstating what’s known as the “global gag rule” — surrounded by men.
In both cases, the Internet was atwitter with outrage. At the New York Times, Jill Filipovic even speculated that Trump’s all-male optics were an intentional appeal to his mostly male base of supporters.
Public outrage when groups of men are making decisions about women’s lives has been with us for a while. In 2012, the Internet went into spasms when Rep. Darrell Issa convened a congressional committee hearing on contraceptive coverage with only male panelists. And in 1991, famously, an all-male, all-white congressional committee interrogated Anita Hill — a black woman — about being sexually harassed. The outrage lasted into the next election, buoying more women into office.
Whether the Trump administration has purposely staged and released the all-white-male photos, our research suggests that this approach will backfire. All-male decision-making bodies erode citizens’ confidence in their political institutions. This is true for both men and women — and even for Republicans.
How we studied U.S. public perceptions of all-male decision-making bodies
In November 2016, we ran a series of survey experiments. We asked a representative sample of Americans to read a fictitious newspaper article about an eight-member state legislative committee evaluating sexual harassment policies. We varied the article so that some respondents read about a panel consisting of eight men, while others read about four men and four women. We asked how citizens felt about the panel when it made a decision that either restricted or advanced women’s rights — here, either decreasing or increasing penalties for those found to have sexually harassed others in the workplace.
Nobody likes all-male panels
Here’s what we found: Citizens don’t like all-male panels.
As we show in the figure below, when all-male committees decrease penalties for sexual harassers, U.S. respondents are less likely to say they agree with the decision and less likely to view the outcome as right for citizens or fair to women. They are also more likely to view the procedure as unfair, more likely to think the decision should be overturned, and report less trust in the panel.
When female legislators are involved, respondents view both the decision and the decision-making process much more favorably.
Men especially dislike women’s exclusion
How do American men feel about all-male panels? They dislike them even more than American women do. As you can see, while both men and women think more highly of decisions made by a gender-balanced panel, the effect is much larger for our male respondents. Men increase their agreement with the decision twice as much as women do when the decision is made by a gender-balanced group than when the committee is all male.
Why? Our research shows that women are more likely than men to view sexual harassment as an important issue. Because women have stronger opinions about the outcome than men (whether they’re for or against reducing penalties), the panel’s gender composition is less likely to sway their feelings about the decision itself.
Even Republicans dislike all-male panels
What about Republican respondents? Our findings suggest that if the Trump team is strategically trying to show that men are in charge of the decisions, they’ve taken the wrong approach. As with our broader sample, the figure below shows that our Republican respondents are also less likely to support rolling back women’s rights when an all-male panel makes this decision.
What’s more, leaving women out of decision-making more broadly damages Republicans’ faith in their political institutions.
Republicans might prefer outcomes that restrict women’s rights, but appear to believe that women’s presence helps legitimate these decisions.
Excluding women from decisions makes U.S. citizens distrust their government — even when the decision favors women
But what if men decided to increase penalties for sexual harassers? In this case, women’s presence doesn’t affect respondents’ perceptions of the decision itself. But having women involved in the decisions significantly improves citizens’ perceptions of the decision-making process and their trust in their political institutions.
In sum, male dominance corrodes citizens’ faith in their political institutions — especially when the group rolls back women’s rights, but even when it doesn’t.
Source: The Washington Post




April 7, 2017 at 8:22 am
It’s an indicator of how good the GOP is at using abortion as a wedge issue to mask their program of shifting ever more money to the wealthiest. The so-called “pro-lifers” think they are politically powerful, but they’re being conned, just like that woman in Indiana married to a Mexican who voted for our Leader because she knew he’d only deport the “bad Mexicans.” The ICE seized him just a couple of days ago.
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April 7, 2017 at 8:55 am
“We asked a representative sample . . .” — Four, right?
The Washington Post — That’s like asking a cartel to talk about drug abuse.
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April 7, 2017 at 8:58 am
Sorry, Chuck, my above comment should be here and the one under yours is “maybe he’s a bad Mexican.”
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April 7, 2017 at 8:58 am
I still can’t get it right.
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April 7, 2017 at 10:58 am
No problem…
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April 7, 2017 at 1:24 pm
On April 6, JD posted that he voted for T because of JD’s expectations for T and abortion. Those seem to be coming true. No surprise.
I find this ironic since T won with help from Putin, and Putin’s Russia has an abortion rate 3x that of the US and more than 2x the second place country (CDC data) . In Russia, abortion is even used as a contraceptive.
Maybe John should move there and protest.
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April 7, 2017 at 3:33 pm
No, David, the so-called “pro-lifers” are only committed insofar as it does not cut into their income, their wealth, their time, their energy and their convenience. They want to be heroes, but they want to do it on the cheap.
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April 8, 2017 at 3:41 am
Chuck’s got that right, David. That’s why I keep him around.
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April 8, 2017 at 3:40 am
We use it as a contraceptive too. If it don’t work, kill somebody See “Contraception” is Murder.”
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April 8, 2017 at 10:56 am
Very few people in America are opposed to some form or another of murder, Mr. Dunkle. You’re going to have to develop a different PR approach.
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April 8, 2017 at 12:34 pm
I can’t follow this one, Chuck. I’m opposed to all forms of murder. Is that what you mean?
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April 8, 2017 at 1:30 pm
I don’t know about you, JD, but most right wingers I have known favor capital punishment and are anti-choice. That was Chuck’s point. Don’t waste time with trying to split hairs between murder-killing-capital punishment.
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April 8, 2017 at 6:53 pm
Yeah, I favor capital punishment and am anti-choice. But I’m a liberal. I don’t understand that last sentence.
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April 9, 2017 at 7:47 am
You have often used the term killer for abortion provider rather than murder because murder is defined by law in a way so that it does not apply to Roe-v-wade allowed procedures.
“I am opposed to all forms of murder” but being OK with capital punishment makes you a hypocrite.
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April 9, 2017 at 2:58 pm
Capital punishment isn’t murder.
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April 9, 2017 at 10:26 am
Wait a minute. How could I have forgotten? You absolutely support murder: You have praised murders of abortion providers. You let the murders post on your website until you lost in court. You stood vigil in support of a murderer in Florida (Pensacola at his execution, as I recall). You have declared the only reason you don’t murder the providers is fear/cowardice.
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April 9, 2017 at 3:00 pm
Killing the enemy in a war is not murder either.
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April 9, 2017 at 11:55 am
Mr. Dunkle, in most of our biosphere, for something to live, something else must die. The aborticentric’s claim that “life loves life” is incomplete. Life loves life for lunch.”
Your longevity is due in part to the hundreds of thousands of murders committed in your name, from earthworms to baby calves. Eating one piece of veal makes you an accomplice to a death more heinous than any abortion.
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April 9, 2017 at 3:02 pm
God made people in his own image and likeness; he didn’t make the other animals that way.
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April 9, 2017 at 1:00 pm
Colorado sees abortion rate drop by 50% through employment of intelligence!
http://www.alternet.org/personal-health/family-planning-miracle-colorado-program-has-teen-births-and-abortions-drop-half-and
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April 10, 2017 at 7:12 am
Killing in war is not murder. Killing against the law is, which is what the murders you support have done.
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April 10, 2017 at 8:55 am
David, haven’t you ever heard of guerrilla warfare?
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April 10, 2017 at 7:15 am
God made people in his image? So god has arms and legs and a head and a penis (you have previously said gad is a he)? Seriously?
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April 10, 2017 at 8:57 am
Yup, seriously.
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April 10, 2017 at 10:51 am
So god is a physical entity? Like Shiva or the Greek/Roman gods? Gee, and here I always thought god was a spiritual entity pervading the entire universe.
(Of course I’ve heard of guerrilla warfare, but unless the guerrillas follow the standards of conventional warfare per Geneva Convention, the killing they do is still murder. The abortion provider murderers do not follow those rules, so you still support murder.)
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April 10, 2017 at 12:35 pm
God is a physical entity, Jesus, and a spiritual entity, the Holy Trinity.
And the guerrilla warfare that all too few of us pro-lifers are engaged in does follow the Geneva Convention.
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April 11, 2017 at 8:01 am
Wrong again. One of the four requirements is “3. Carry his weapon openly to indicate his combatant status and to distinguish fighters from the civilian population.” I have not heard of ANY of the murderers of abortion providers who do either of those. Furthermore, the abortion providers may be killers in your mind, but they are not by any definition combatants. John, give up – you support murder in the name of your cause. Don’t be so ashamed of that; it is what and who you are.
(But god made Adam in his image BEFORE he got Mary pregnant, so there was no physical form Jesus to pattern man after. But maybe you are onto something! The extra 23 chromosomes that Mary needed [sometime ago I asked where those chromosomes came from and I never got an answer] came from physical god’s sperm! Exactly how they got from god’s testicles to the angle and then into Mary is something that we can follow up in a later thread.)
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April 11, 2017 at 10:29 am
You got me there, David. If I were to take part in the guerrilla warfare, I would not carry my weapon openly, as Paul Hill did; I would hide it, as Jim Kopp did. So, not only would I be breaking the laws of my country, I would be breaking the laws of the Geneva Convention.
But of course baby killers are combatants. They kill the people on my side right and left. As far as numbers go, they’re ahead in the killing by about seventy million to four.
(I don’t understand the first sentence. I’m sure the second sentence is right but what’s the something I’m onto? I don’t understand the third sentence. And the fourth sentence — yeah. let’s follow that up.)
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April 12, 2017 at 2:52 pm
You said the physical form of god is Jesus which I shortened to “physical form Jesus”. But since he was not born until long after the human race began, he could not have been the form god used if he made man “in his image.”
The “something” you are onto (I was being sarcastic) is the answer to my question “where did the 23 chromosomes supplied by the male in human reproduction come from when Mary was impregnated?” If from Jesus before he was born, that would lead to time-travel incest.
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