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Beto Apologizes for Being White & Male After the Woke Trash Him Over a Joke About His Wife

 

 

Super Beto wasn’t lookin’ too super to some of the most woke among us while speaking to a coffee shop crowd Thursday.

Beto’s problematic pas of the faux variety was making a light, humorous remark suggesting his wife makes more of a contribution to taking care of their kids than does he.

Heaven forbid there be any kind of traditional gender roles in his household. Furthermore, thou shalt not express appreciation for thy woman’s sacrifice.

During the program, he said his wife, Amy, is rearing their three children “sometimes with [his] help.”

Egad!

He got ripped like a cheap shirt.

Here’s a bit of snagging from Vox:

“Jack Kerouac-style, he roams around, jobless (does he not need a job?) to find himself and figure out if he wants to lead the free world,” Nia-Malika Henderson wrote at CNN in January, during what she called Beto O’Rourke’s “excellent adventure.” “This is a luxury no woman or even minority in politics could ever have.”

One reason a Jack Kerouac-style journey would be difficult for many women: Moms, on average, still spend more time on child care than dads do. And mothers still face the widespread expectation that they’ll be the primary caregivers for their kids.

Say it ain’t so! Why would women — people with lactating breasts who carry their young for three-quarters of a year while feeding them from the inside with their bodies’ own nutrients — be primary caregivers to the human beings they pushed out of themselves like shoving a watermelon through that extra tiny front pocket on the right side of your jeans?

Beto’s remark wasn’t fair:

A dad who jokes about being a “sometimes” parent might get some criticism on Twitter, but he’ll also get knowing laughs from people who are used to seeing moms as the ones in charge of kids. A mom who makes the same joke — well, she’s just a bad mom!

More on male chauvinism:

The comment, some said, was meant as self-deprecation and an acknowledgment of the hard work Amy O’Rourke did for their family. But despite his intentions, Beto O’Rourke revealed a fundamental inequality of American life: While men throughout history have been able to rely on their wives to provide child care while they fulfill their political ambitions, women have rarely been able to count on partners to do the same. And as New York Magazine writer Rebecca Traister pointed out, a woman who joked about being a part-time parent while on the campaign trail would be harshly criticized — and might find her political career over before it began.

And also:

Child care responsibilities may affect whether women run for office — political scientists Jennifer Lawless and Richard Fox have found that as women’s household responsibilities decrease, their interest in running increases (the same was not true for men). It’s a relatively slight effect, but as Lawless and Fox notes, household duties might also affect how women run if they decide to do so — they quote gender politics scholar Georgia Duerst-Lahti, who says, “Women may now think about running for office, but they probably think about it while they are making the bed.”

For many mothers, “sometimes” parenting isn’t an option. And while Beto O’Rourke’s comment did draw attention to everything his wife does to support his campaign, it was also a reminder of the privileges many male candidates have that women don’t — in particular, the privilege of a partner who takes the lead in caring for your kids, and a society that accepts that as normal.

Some on Twitter agreed:

Beto’s far too cool to be cool with his coffee house cut-up of gross misogyny and…racism(?).

On the Political Party LIVE podcast just two days after announcing his 2020 presidential candidacy, he got right with it, apologizing for his masculine shame and systemically racist white disposition:

“Not only will I not say that again, but I’ll be more thoughtful going forward in the way that I talk about our marriage.”

Additionally, he promised to be more mindful in the way…let’s see…what was it again?

“…the way in which I acknowledge the truth of the criticism that I have enjoyed white privilege.”

Oh yeah. That.

Plus:

“My ham-handed attempt to try to highlight the fact that Amy has the lion’s share of the burden in our family — that she actually works but is the primary parent in our family, especially when I served in Congress, especially when I was on the campaign trail — should have also been a moment for me to acknowledge that that is far too often the case, not just in politics, but just in life in general,” offered O’Rourke. “I hope as I have been in some instances part of the problem, I can also be part of the solution,” he added regarding criticism that female candidates could not make similar jokes about their families.

The media love Beto. The voters? Not as much — he lost to Ted Cruz in November.

Nevertheless, as social justice warriors chirp about the evils of white men, the former Senate candidate’s playin’ to the cheep seats.

But personally, I agree with Tucker Carlson: apologizing’s for the birds.

-Alex

 

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