Maybe you've heard it. Maybe not. But there was a woman, asking a very highly placed man a question. The woman was a reporter; the man didn't like the question.
So, instead of sucking it up and answering, or even deflecting to an underling to explain, he told her to be quiet. And added the epithet "piggy"
Okay, if you've not been a woman - if you've not been a woman who was unpopular as a kid, or gained weight when she "developed," or had men say gross things to her, you might not realize how deeply that cuts. But it does.
I've said before, I was a bullied kid in school. I wasn't popular. There were reasons, some of them not entirely fair - my family had less money than the median family in that town, or at any rate, my parents didn't do conspicuous consumption like some of the other families. And I was a weird kid. Probably some flavor of neurodivergent; I still am*. I cried easily, I got fixated on things, I was anxious, I tended to like things "younger" than what my peers did (being told, for example that liking The Muppet Movie was "for babies" when I was about 11). I could also be a little pedant. That was probably the most forgivable reason for the kids bullying me, I don't know. (The money thing was probably the least, as it was in no way my doing).
(*it's gotten worse, too. I can feel it being worse now than before the pandemic. I am far more awkward now)
But being called names. It's such a horrible, exclusionary thing. I got called "stupid" and "fatty" and the "r-slur" and any number of other things from like first grade and into high school (It was less in high school because I was at a prep school where (a) seeming shabby and down at the heels was actually kind of cool, and I had that naturally and (b) most of us were weird nerds who had not been happy in the earlier grades)
And I can't fully explain the unpleasant flashbacks hearing that reporter called "piggy" did to me.
It does cut you from the pack. The person saying the word is immediately trying to imply you don't belong, you're defective.
And while that can be defused if you are popular enough to have defenders, I never was. I don't EVER remember someone defending me when I was taunted as a school kid.
Of course, that takes bravery to do. Because if you stand up for someone unpopular who is being taunted, it makes YOU unpopular, too. You get that loser-stink on you and it's hard to wash off. You become the person who stood up for that weird kid - oh no, maybe you LIKE them. And so few kids have that kind of gumption to risk rejection to defend a classmate, especially not someone they're not close friends already with.
But what made it worse? Back in the 1970s, the teachers - the adults in charge, the people with authority, perhaps with the power to shut down some of the bullying - they by and large did nothing in my school.
I'm not sure why. Maybe they didn't care. Maybe they thought kids like me deserved the hassling we got. Or maybe they believed in some kind of "law of the schoolyard" business, where "letting bullied kids be bullied" means they learn to work it out somehow** and also, maybe, it'll toughen them up and make them stronger adults.
It didn't make me stronger. It made me afraid. As an adult I'm slow to open up to people because I learned young if you do that, it WILL be used against you some how. You can't trust, and maybe it's better not to like too quickly, because people will turn on you.
It's unfair to the people around me but I still sometimes expect it as an adult - "why are they being friendly to me? is there an ulterior motive?"
(** and even back then? If it was the sort of shove-and-kick bullying boys did to each other, and a victim tried to beat up a bully, more often than not, the VICTIM got an in-school suspension. Because bullies learn to cover up what they're doing. Doubly so for girl-bullies, who use words and rumors and ostracization as their weapons)
And yes, as several people have pointed out: the reporter was there in a scrum. No one spoke up for her. No one challenged the (admittedly-powerful) man for his unnecessary slur. Cowards. Not wanting to get into the line of fire. Just as much cowards as some of the kids I went to school with. Or devious; figuring if they pretended not to see what had been done, they would be able to keep access to that powerful man for their jobs.
And yes, she's a full grown woman making a good salary and I suspect she has a partner and maybe kids who love her and helped take some of the sting away. (But it never really does; not fully - I had parents who loved me very much, and some of the other adults at church loved me almost like my parents, and I had a few friends - but that never quite makes up for the fear that maybe you really are defective).
And I admit, maybe I let it hit me a little harder than I should have. But wow, do I remember that feeling, of hearing something like "STUPID!" yelled in a hallway and looking around just to see the source of the noise, and hearing that mocking laughter and "Oh look it knows its name" (An experience I had in, dear God, first grade, and I STILL remember it)
And yes, I need to let it go. But it's very hard when you have that experience so much as a kid. It puts doubt in your mind - maybe I am ugly (to this day, I cannot realistically evaluate my appearance and more than once as an adult I've dissolved in tears while putting on make up or trying to do my hair because why can't I just look like the normal women I know?). Maybe I am stupid or weird or don't belong anywhere.
And it's HARD.
And this year, with the seeming efflorescence of incivility in our culture***, I'm having flashbacks to bad grade school experiences. Oh, I'm OKAY, I guess, I keep soldiering on and when I get involved in a project I forget what it was that wounded me. But seeing it again, and again, and seeing it seemingly approved of by others.....well, it makes me think "yeah no don't go out into the world and try to make friends, it's too much risk of rejection and pain for the possible pay off of making a friend"
***And yes, it has always been such, more so for some groups I am not a part of. But until very recently it did feel like it was getting better, like people were becoming, if not more tolerant, more aware that open intolerance isn't cool and people didn't approve of it any more.....but maybe people are starting to approve of it again?
Honestly I remember going around as a kid wishing I was someone other than who I was - prettier, or tougher, or more palatable somehow to my peers. I still feel that, some times. But instead, I just kind of have to keep soldiering on and try to find ways to shut up that part of my mind that reminds me that "you're probably Not Right, that's why kids made fun of you all those years ago...."