142 comments on The geopolitics of oil gains a new constituency
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People of both genders are exporting untold billions of their hard-earned dollars which support regimes with appalling policies. It's not unreasonable for the human rights issue to surface, or for feminists to view it through their own lens. And bringing it up 3 times in 24 years doesn't seem very pushy.
And then there is the cultural lens. If you live in a country where women are taken seriously, it's easy to forget that it's not true everywhere. In gender gap ratings (PDF), just as an example, New Zealand ranks #6 overall, and #1 in political empowerment for women--versus #17 and #19 respectively for the USA. The American sisters have a long way to go, and bringing up the issues can't hurt.
We decided as a species to continue investing in living arrangements that were increasingly oil dependent. We doubled the global population and the cult of consumerism and endless growth spread worldwide. Hundreds of millions embraced the various fundamentalist religions, including insane death cults who believe global thermonuclear war would trigger the rapture. Feminist splinter movements within traditionally masculinist cultures (never more than a small minority of women) were a passing artifact of the cheap oil era. As the world becomes poorer, and once again more local, gender relations will return to the local past.
In a few places like Scandanavia, NZ, and Oregon's Willamette Valley, the deep rooted local cultures of gender balance will persist. In Mississippi and Afghanistan the patriarchal plantation master and warlord will rise again. There is no more hope of changing this than Jimmy Carter had of selling peak oil mitigation 30 years in advance. Going forward, post peak women will need the same things that men will need - allies who can help acquire and defend survival resources. There will be no post peak sisterhood other than ones biological sisters and in-laws.
I don't know what will happen to gender relations in a future era, but if the point now is to get the message out to as many people as we can, then we're going to have to learn how to tailor our delivery to different constituencies.