<\/a>"You are what you tweet"
doodle by neabat<\/p><\/div>\n
The flagrant misogyny of most of these trending topic
hashtag tweets makes me furiously angry. But I don’t
find them shocking. I think Germaine Greer is wrong on lots
of things but right on this one: \u201cWomen have very
little idea of how much men hate them.\u201d Well, now we
have a handy index in our Twitter sidebar. The scale of the
problem is intimidating, I agree, but being shocked
isn\u2019t going to help.<\/p>\n
The good news is we don’t need to start a cultural
revolution from scratch. There\u2019s some excellent work
already going on: for example, Womankind<\/a>
and PinkStinks<\/a> are
challenging misogyny and sexist attitudes among young people
(who seem like the obvious group to start with, to my
mind).<\/p>\n
There are also lots of truly wonderful online projects that
are trying to break down some of these poisonous stereotypes
and ideas. BadRep is one, of course ;-) .\u00a0 But another
of my favourites is Genderfork<\/a> \u2013
follow them on Twitter for the perfect antidote to all this
#rulesforgirls\/boys crap.<\/p>\n
What else can we do? Mocking the hashtags is fun. Hijacking
them is fun too. It might not overthrow the sexist idiot
regime, but if it makes just one person stop and think then
it’s surely worth it. Another blogger on the topic of
hashtags suggested getting some feminist hashtags
circulating. Suggestions included #feminist and
#ilovemybody. That’d be nice for other feminists, but
I can\u2019t see how they\u2019d have very wide appeal,
particularly because they don\u2019t invite people to
personalise them.<\/p>\n
So I\u2019m going to end with a challenge:
can we come up with a funny, pro-feminist \/ genderfuck
hashtag people might actually use?<\/strong><\/p>\n