Sanna Marin and the female leadership myth
The notion that women make better political leaders than men is one of the two main shibboleths of present-day feminism
The notion that women make better political leaders than men is one of the two main shibboleths of present-day feminism
The two main opposition parties both beat her Social Democrats
It has become far too easy to let nonsense pollute our information ecosystem
With an honourable exception for the Beastie Boys, I can’t stand the use of ‘party’ as a verb. It immediately reminds me of ‘Party, party, party, oikies!’ – the war cry of the drunken potbellied Afrikaaners who once roared in their bakkiesonto our Namibian campsite at about 2 a.m. and proceeded to be, well, Boerish. It’s a usage that smacks of creepy men in movies inviting young women into their cars, or footballers in search of questionably consensual sex. It has passed from a frat-boy Americanism into a tabloid euphemism for illegal drug use and sexual sleaze without ever quite passing through a phase of meaning, actually, having a party.