Long Beach (Calif.) Press-Telegram Wednesday Oct. 25, 1989 Sexism and a commentator's misplaced fear of fly By 'Asta Brown Not long ago on National Public Radio, there was a great flap over a new advertisement for Sansabelt men's slacks. In an apparent attempt to to give the brand's image some new voltage, the ad shows a woman confiding that she never decides whether a passing man warrants her attention "until I look down." The NPR commentator was having none of it. Since such crude statements about women a no longer indulged by society, she argued, we should now raise a hue and cry on behalf of all the men wronged by this reverse sexism. This is very high-minded, and surely there are at least a couple of guys out there crossing their legs and feeling grateful for the reverse chivalry. But most men aren't going to find such an ad offensive, they're going to find it for what it is: a feeble attempt to turn the tables. To the dismay of any post-feminists hoping this will show men just how lousy it feels to be a sex object, men may well find the scenario amusing or even flattering. The ad is not guilty of reverse sexism. There is only sexism, period, and it has always worked two ways. The same sexism that denies the full humanity of women also denies the full humanity of men. While we have made some progress on behalf of women, sexism against men is so ubiquitous and deep that we must break profound taboos even to suggest that it exists. And here is where public radio failed us, in railing against silly old Sansabelt: There is nothing very sexist about a woman sizing up a guy's physical contours; in a way, it's kind of refreshing. True sexism against men is far more subtle, and the woman doing it isn't looking at the front of anybody's pants: She's checking out the bulge of the wallet in back. Just as sexism reduces women to sexual objects, it reduces men to financial objects. Just as woman have been exploited as sexual and emotional commodities, men are exploited as cogs in the economic machinery, expendable war fodder, and providers who must never fail. For every two guys discussing a particular girl's physical charms, there are two girls discussing a particular guy's career prospects. For too long we have approached sexism as a problem caused by men, to be solved by women. It is neither. We all create it, and we are the only ones who can cure it. No wonder the subject is taboo: Once we face the problem and the pain, we're going to have to do something about it. And if you think there was hell to pay when women raised the first flag of non-