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The Rittenhouse Review
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"The Rittenhouse Review A Philadelphia Journal of Politics, Finance, Ethics, and Culture
Sunday, February 20, 2005
KEVIN DRUM WRITES
“Liberal” Blogger Goes All Sexist and Stuff
How noble, how thoughtful, and how socially aware of blogger Kevin Drum , a little spare time on his hands, to go looking around for bloggers lacking his “Y” chromosome.
In a few offhand thoughts assembled under the rather predictable -- Or should I say condescending? -- heading “Women’s Opinions,” Drum writes:
Although [the political blogosphere’s] geeky Usenet roots were (and are) testosterone[-]laden affairs, there are still no formal barriers to entry here, no old boys club in the usual meaning of the word. Yet if you take a look at the Blogosphere Ecosystem, which for all its faults is probably the closest thing we have to a consensus measure of popularity for political blogs [Ed.: Uh, no. Try the more accurate Blogstreet rankings instead. There: The Rittenhouse Review : No. 29, Political Animal : No. 31. At the same site, please review the Most Important Blogs : The Rittenhouse Review : No. 4, Political Animal : No. 15.], you will find exactly two women in the top 30: Michelle Malkin and La Shawn Barber . . . .
That’s a grand total of [seven percent] of the most popular political blogs. And to gaze even more deeply into our collective navel [Ed.: Drum’s words, not mine.], that [seven percent] is 100 [percent] conservative. On the liberal side, Wonkette weighs in at [No.] 33 and TalkLeft at [No.] 48 -- and that’s it for the top 100, unless I’ve missed someone.
So what’s up? There aren’t any institutional barriers in the traditional sense of the word, which means either[:] (a) there are fewer female political bloggers and thus fewer in the top 30, [ sic ] [;] or (b) there are plenty of women who blog about politics but they don’t get a lot of traffic or links.
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