Anyone who watches professional combat sports will notice that there are always scantily-clad women carrying large cards around a ring or a cage to remind viewers what round in the fight we're in.
Apparently, some very well-meaning, though misguided feminist activists and politicians in Australia have decided that enough is enough. They want to end the objectification and exploitation of women by banning ring card girls (a.k.a. "round progress managers") at a championship boxing match this past August. They are now even petitioning the UFC not to have the iconic Octagon girls in between rounds in the upcoming event this coming October.
Are current feminists all of a sudden uncomfortable at the thought of women showing their bodies and getting paid handsomely for it if they want to? I was under the impression that a way to empower women is by giving them choices in the types of work they do. If a woman wants to show off as much or as little of her body in public as she wants, nobody should be able to tell her otherwise
I can see where the "objectification" argument might come from, but as for "exploitation", I tend to disagree. None of these politicians and activists actually asked the women doing the ring girl jobs if they've ever felt exploited or forced to do this.
By banning these jobs, these politicians and activists are effectively
taking away these women's right to make a living legally. And yes, I do call this
work for the simple reason that it takes commitment and discipline when
it comes to exercise and diet to maintain the physical condition that these women have. Also, if you do any research, you'll learn
that many of these women have actually used the platform of combat sports as a launching
point for extremely lucrative partnerships, sponsorships and careers in modeling, art, broadcasting, podcasting, and other fields.
Maybe it's a question of representation. Would there be as many complaints and bans if more "plus-sized" women were
represented in the job the same way that we now have an increasing
amount of "plus-sized" models? What if we had more women over the age of 45 doing the job? Or maybe more women in wheelchairs?
Would there also be as many complaints if in addition to having ring card girls during men's fights, we had ring card guys during women's fights? The all-women MMA promotion Invicta FC debuted Canadian pro-fighter Elias Theodoru as their ring card boy last year. He hasn't done it since, but I think it would be more interesting to see dudes doing the same type of job in other organizations.
Personally, I've always thought that it was a bit weird to see ring card girls in between rounds of a women's MMA championship fight. So it would make more sense to have more ring card guys reminding us what round it is. It would be somewhat sexist and regressive to consider this job as exclusively "women's work" after all.
The point I'm trying to make is this. The Australian bans are simply an attack on soft targets that make it look like they're doing something when they're really just trying to show off how much more virtuous they are than the rest of us. If politicians and feminists were really looking to empower women, stop exploitation and objectification, they would be aiming their outrage at real issues of violence against women and lack of education for girls in other countries outside of the Western world.
Would there also be as many complaints if in addition to having ring card girls during men's fights, we had ring card guys during women's fights? The all-women MMA promotion Invicta FC debuted Canadian pro-fighter Elias Theodoru as their ring card boy last year. He hasn't done it since, but I think it would be more interesting to see dudes doing the same type of job in other organizations.
How many feminists and activists would complain if pro-fighter Elias Theodoru continued working as a Ring Card boy on the side? |
Personally, I've always thought that it was a bit weird to see ring card girls in between rounds of a women's MMA championship fight. So it would make more sense to have more ring card guys reminding us what round it is. It would be somewhat sexist and regressive to consider this job as exclusively "women's work" after all.
The point I'm trying to make is this. The Australian bans are simply an attack on soft targets that make it look like they're doing something when they're really just trying to show off how much more virtuous they are than the rest of us. If politicians and feminists were really looking to empower women, stop exploitation and objectification, they would be aiming their outrage at real issues of violence against women and lack of education for girls in other countries outside of the Western world.
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