The Washington Post - USA (2022-02-22)

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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22 , 2022. THE WASHINGTON POST EZ RE C3


awarded the Polk prize for na-
tional reporting, was launched
last spring after Congress failed
to create a bipartisan investiga-
tive commission. The three-part
series “makes clear that the vio-
lence that day was neither a
spontaneous act nor an isolated
event,” Washington Post Execu-
tive Editor Sally Buzbee wrote in
a letter to readers.
The Post also won a Polk
Award for technology reporting,
shared with the Guardian U.S.
and Forbidden Stories, for “The
Pegasus Project,” which revealed
how spyware sold to govern-
ments by the private Israeli firm
NSO Group for the purposes of
tracking terrorists and criminals
was used to hack cellphones
belonging to journalists, human
rights activists and others. Those
targeted include two women
close to Jamal Khashoggi, the
assassinated Saudi journalist
and contributing Washington
Post columnist.
That reporting came out of
data accessed by nonprofit For-
bidden Stories and human rights
group Amnesty International
that was shared with and ana-
lyzed by news organizations
worldwide.
The Polk Awards also honored
journalism from the New York
Times and CNN related to the
U.S. withdrawal from Afghani-
stan and Kabul’s fall to the Ta li-
ban; journalists with ABC News
and the New Yorker for examin-
ing climate change’s far-reaching
impacts for the most vulnerable
people; and the Wall Street Jour-
nal’s blockbuster investigation
into leaked Facebook documents.
Notably missing: reporting on
the coronavirus pandemic,
which dominated much of the
previous year’s winning journal-
ism.
Housed by Long Island Uni-
versity, the Polk Awards received
610 submissions this year, a rec-
ord number. They came from “far
more sources of investigative re-
porting than ever before,” awards
curator John Darnton said in a
statement. “This speaks to the
vitality and continued promise of
a changing journalism landscape


POLK FROM C1


Coverage of


Jan. 6 gets


Polk A ward


BY JULIANNE MCSHANE

Last month, after nearly two
years of parenting in a pandemic,
Morgan Burke was angry.
Her days had been spent at
home, she said, the hours divided
up among cooking for her three
children, cleaning up their messes
and doing their laundry while her
husband did his paid work up-
stairs.
Her stress has been acute since
the start of the pandemic: Burke,
35, and her whole family — in-
cluding her older two kids, now 7
and 4 — had coronavirus symp-
toms in March 2020, before tests
were widely available, when they
were just a few days into what was
supposed to be a week-long Flori-
da vacation. Burke, who lives in
the Charlestown neighborhood of
Boston, was seven months preg-
nant at the time, so “we stayed for
six months and had a baby in
Florida,” she said.
Since then, she said, her quest
for any return to normalcy has
proved elusive. Her return to
work as a part-time home orga-
nizer, planned for the beginning
of January, has been delayed fol-
lowing her husband’s recent bout
with covid-19 and her 20-month-
old son’s belated return to day
care after a classmate contracted
the virus, she said.
So when her friend Sarah Har-
mon, a 39-year-old therapist who
also lives in Charlestown, invited
her to join a group of local moms
that planned to scream their pan-
demic-induced frustrations into
the frigid evening air last month,
Burke reluctantly agreed to join.
On Jan. 13, Burke, Harmon and
more than a dozen other mothers
met on the 50-yard line of a local
football field. Harmon opened the
event with a greeting and prompt-
ed the women to check in with
how their stress felt in their bod-
ies.
Then, they screamed.
For Burke, it was exactly what
she didn’t know she needed.
“It felt good to be able to be out
of control,” she said. “We have
been holding this tight leash on
everything we could possibly con-
trol during these two years.”
That was exactly the point,
Harmon said.
Two years of working with
mothers struggling with their
mental health — t hrough both her
private practice and her company


the School of Mom, which offers
mindfulness programs for moth-
ers — had shown her that many
mothers were at their breaking
points, and that people and insti-
tutions around them often
weren’t offering enough support,
she said.
Harmon hosted her first primal
scream event in March 2021.
While that one passed without
much fanfare, word of last
month’s e vent spread q uickly. As a
result, primal scream events —
many hashtagged #MomScream
— soon popped up in New Or-
leans, Alaska and New Jersey.
More are planned in the weeks to
come, in Virginia and New Jersey.
The events started becoming so
popular that Harmon released a
guide with tips on how moms can
plan their own scream events.
Moms have a lot to be angry
about: More than 1 million wom-
en who have left the labor force
since February 2020 have yet to
return, and Black and Latina
women have been hit hardest
with job losses over the course of
the pandemic. Some of those were
mothers who stopped doing paid
work — in part to manage child
care in the wake of mass school
and day-care closures — and

many have faced hurdles as
they’ve tried to rejoin the labor
force.
Experts say the proliferation of
primal scream events highlights
the paradoxical position mothers
occupy in American society, par-
ticularly during the pandemic:
They’re overburdened and under-
supported when it comes to do-
mestic and care work, but left
without many models of how to
express their anger about those
inequities. When they do express
anger, they’re often seen as rein-
forcing sexist and racist stereo-
types — particularly if they’re
women of color, experts say.
“Historically, our society has
not done a good job of giving
women s pace f or their a nger,” s aid
Pooja Lakshmin, a clinical assis-
tant professor of psychiatry at
George Washington University
School o f Medicine and the found-
er of Gemma, a digital education
platform focused on women’s
mental health.
“From what we’ve learned
growing up, anger is a dangerous
emotion... y ou’re a ‘bad woman’
if you’re angry, especially if you’re
a woman of color or a Black wom-
an,” she added.
The stereotype of the “angry

Black woman” is still pervasive. It
stretches back to slavery and can
lead to misdiagnoses, less effec-
tive mental health treatment and
cyberaggression toward Black
women, according to Soraya Che-
maly, the author of “Rage Be-
comes Her: The Power of Wom-
en’s Anger.” Latinas who express
anger tend to be sexually objecti-
fied in response, Chemaly added,
noting that Asian women who
show anger are often stereotyped
as “sad.” And angry W hite women,
Chemaly said, are often stereo-
typed as “crazy” in light of the
structural privileges they hold as
a group compared with women of
color.
Attendees to the primal scream
events — who appear to be over-
whelmingly White women in pho-
tos — were met with similar cri-
tiques from some commenters on
social media, who noted that the
women h ad the p rivilege to attend
the events without their kids and
likely had the option to work from
home during the pandemic.
But for Burke, critiques imply-
ing that the screaming women
had nothing to be angry about
have the effect of invalidating the
unique struggles she and other
stay-at-home mothers face, she

said.
“Stay-at-home moms did not
sign up to be trapped in their
house all day long,” she said. “Ev-
eryone’s hard is different, but ev-
eryone’s hard is hard.”
Some women w ho attended the
events said collectively screaming
helped them reframe their views
about the validity of their anger,
as well as the power of expressing
it alongside others in similar cir-
cumstances.
“I have always seen anger as a
negative, and I’ve learned that it’s
not a negative, it’s healthy, and it’s
how you respond and how you
react” to it, said Jessica Kline, 38,
publisher of the family-focused
website Macaroni Kid Clifton-
Montclair. Kline organized a
Feb. 6 #MomScream event in Ve-
rona, N.J., that drew a dozen
moms.
“I think this is something that I
definitely could’ve used maybe
even monthly for the past two
years,” Kline said of the event.
(She has a second scream event
planned for March 13.)
In Anchorage, 43-year-old Cali-
sa Kastning, co-founder of Moms
Matter Now, an online communi-
ty focusing on maternal mental
health, screamed alone in her
yard for a few days before she and
more than a dozen other local
moms gathered in a parking lot to
scream together Jan. 22, sur-
rounded by the flashing lights of
their minivans, she said.
There was no comparing the
two screams, she said: “It just
feels so much better to do it with
other moms.”
The communal aspect of the
events make them “a very healthy
and appropriate way to get your
anger out,” according to Laksh-
min.
But unless moms act on their
anger in a responsible way — by
articulating the support they
need from others, or mobilizing to
change stressful circumstances
within their control — they won’t
be putting that anger to its full
potential, Lakshmin added:
“There’s a l ot of energy that comes
with rage and with anger — so
how do we channel the rage that’s
coming to the forefront, rightly so,
and actually m ove to take action?”
Efforts are already underway
among some moms who are using
their anger to advocate for the
Senate to pass the stalled Build
Back Better legislation, which

some Democrats hope will in-
clude funding for child care and
expanded child tax credits,
among other measures that
would help parents.
Last month, the grass-roots
group MomsRising launched a
rage line for parents to call in to
leave messages venting their frus-
trations about the lack of child
care and paid family and medical
leave while they wait for the legis-
lation to move along. (The group
is assessing whether to keep the
line open, according to chief exec-
utive and co-founder Kristin
Rowe-Finkbeiner.)
Others — including some who
led the primal scream events —
are trying to confront inequities
at home, where women do the
majority of unpaid domestic la-
bor, research shows. Harmon and
her husband are working to more
equally share the burden of
household chores, which she has
traditionally done most of, she
said. Kastning said she and her
husband are trying to do the
same.
Chemaly sees such negotia-
tions as key ways for women to
more effectively express their an-
ger beyond #MomScream events.
“A first step for a lot of these
people out there screaming in the
fields is [to ask], do you actually
express y our need and expect your
family members to understand
that, or respond to it, or to say,
‘Okay, what can we do?’ ” she said.
Struggling moms who don’t
have access to a primal scream
event should reach out to friends
and other mothers via social me-
dia to express their anger in envi-
ronments in which they’ll be sup-
ported, as well as take care to not
be critical of themselves, Laksh-
min said.
And “if you’re noticing that that
rage is getting in the way of your
ability to function, then it’s a sign
that you should reach out to a
mental health professional,” Lak-
shmin added, d irecting parents to
the resources offered by Postpar-
tum Support International as one
place to start.
Burke is back to managing her
stress through her preferred
methods, including therapy and
daily exercise. But she has no
regrets about unleashing her pri-
mal scream.
As she put it: “We as women
have carried so much of the load,
and we are allowed to be mad.”

Can screaming in a field ease mothers’ anger? These women are trying it out.


ALICE ROUSE
Sarah Harmon, right, and other moms participate in a primal scream event in January in Peabody,
Mass. Harmon, a therapist, has released a guide on how moms can plan their own scream events.

and is reason to feel optimistic
about the future of our craft.”
Winners will be honored at an
in-person luncheon April 8.
Last week, the Polk program
also announced a new award in
honor of Sydney H. Schanberg,
whose work as a reporter, editor
and columnist spanned decades.
As a New York Times foreign
correspondent in 1975, he chroni-
cled Cambodia’s fall to the brutal
Khmer Rouge, reporting that in-
spired the film “The Killing
Fields.”
Schanberg died in 2016 at 82.
His widow, journalist Jane Frei-
man Schanberg, stipulated that
the $25,0 00 prize should honor
long-form investigative journal-
ism with lasting impact that
covers i ssues such as government
corruption or abuse, military in-
justice, war crimes or sedition.
Luke Mogelson of the New
Yorker is the first Schanberg
prize recipient. His 12,000-word
dispatch “A mong the Insurrec-
tionists” provided an on-the-
ground account of the siege of
the Capitol. In r emarks filmed f or
his acceptance of the prize, Mo-
gelson called Schanberg “an ex-
emplar of the kind of journalism
I aspire to.”
“If this article about the anti-
democratic forces in the U.S. and
their increasing militarization
can have a fraction of the impact
Sydney Schanberg’s stories did,
I’ll be even more gratified,” Mo-
gelson said.
Other Polk winners include:
l Foreign reporting: Maria
Abi-Habib, Frances Robles and
New York Times staff for their
investigation into the murder of
Haitian President Jovenel Moïse.
l Local reporting: Corey G.
Johnson, Rebecca Woolington
and Eli Murray of the Ta mpa Bay

Times for an investigation into a
lead-smelting factory endanger-
ing workers.
l State reporting: Carol Mar-
bin Miller and Daniel Chang of
the Miami Herald, along with
ProPublica, for exposing how an
old law meant to shelter medical
providers from lawsuits impact-
ed parents of disabled children.
l International reporting: Ian
Urbina of the New Yorker for
“The Secretive Prisons That Keep
Migrants Out of Europe.”
l Medical reporting: Adam
Feuerstein, Matthew Herper and
Damian Garde of STAT News for
an exposé of how a drug manu-
facturer used FDA back channels
to get approval for a polarizing
Alzheimer’s medication.
l Business reporting: Jeff Hor-
witz and the Wall Street Journal
staff for “The Facebook Files”
series.
l Environmental reporting:
David Muir, Almin Karamehme-
dovic and Esther Castillejo of
ABC News for “The Children of
Climate Change.”
l Magazine reporting: Sarah
Stillman of the New Yorker for
“The Migrant Workers Who Fol-
low Climate Disasters.”
l Military reporting: Freelanc-
er Azmat Khan and Dave
Philipps and Eric Schmitt of the
New York Times for investiga-
tions into intelligence failures
surrounding airstrikes in the
Middle East, including a drone
attack that mistakenly killed an
aid worker and seven children
during the U.S. military’s with-
drawal from Afghanistan.
l Political reporting: Linda So,
Jason Szep and others at Reuters
who chronicled widespread ef-
forts by Donald Trump support-
ers to intimidate poll workers
and government officials.

JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
T he Post won Polk Awards for national and technology reporting.
The N ew York Times and the New Yorker also won two p rizes each.

do, according to the Gallup data.
Meanwhile, 86.3 percent of re-
spondents self-identified as
straight or heterosexual.
The poll was conducted by tele-
phone last year, and incorporated
a random sample of more than
12,000 adults across the country,
Gallup said.
The high rate of LGBTQ self-
identification r eflects a combina-
tion of increasing cultural accep-
tance for L GBTQ people and the
fact that Gen Zers are increasing
in the national population of
adults while members of older
generations are dying, according
to Gallup senior editor Jeffrey
Jones.
“They’ve really grown up in a
culture where being LGBT was
normal and not something that
people had to be embarrassed
about or try and hide,” Jones said
of members of Gen Z. “Certainly
there’s still some discrimination,
but it’s n othing like it’s b een when
the older generations were grow-
ing up... it’s b oth things happen-
ing — the behaviors and the atti-
tudes are changing, and it’s also
the population changing.”
On social media, advocates
cheered the growing number of
Americans identifying as LGBTQ.
“Thanks to increases in visibili-
ty, representation, and equality,
more and more LGBTQ Ameri-
cans are able to come out and live
as our authentic selves,” Sarah
Kate Ellis, president and chief
executive of GLAAD, wrote on
Twitter.
Human Rights Campaign in-
terim president Joni Madison
said in a statement: “With more
LGBTQ+ people than ever before
living openly and embracing their
identity, the fight for LGBTQ+
equality in America must contin-
ue to represent this ever-growing
and beautiful community.”
LGBTQ members of Gen Z are
most likely to identify as bisexual,
at 15 percent, compared with
6 percent of millennials, the poll
found. More than half of LGBTQ
Americans overall — 57 p ercent —
identify as bisexual, according to
the results. (Respondents could
select multiple responses.)
Gen Zers are also more likely to
identify as lesbian, gay, transgen-
der or “other” than members of
other generations, according to
the results. Gallup began measur-
ing each category within “LGBT”
individually in 2020, and this

POLL FROM C1 year marked the first year that
they offered respondents the op-
tion to type in a response in the
“other” category, Jones said, add-
ing that Gallup plans to release
more data next year based on
those self-identifications.
Some of the disparities be-
tween generations, Jones said,
may partially be due to older
people being less inclined to self-
identify due to growing up in a
time of less acceptance for
L GBTQ people. (The Gallup data
shows that LGBTQ identification
tends to remain stable among
older generations, hovering
around 4 percent for Generation
X, 3 percent for baby boomers
and 1 percent for traditionalists
since Gallup’s first survey on
L GBTQ self-identification in
2012.)
Gen Zers also increasingly
make up a larger share of Ameri-
can adults as more of them turn
18 (the Pew Research Center de-
fines Gen Zers as being born
between 1997 to 2012). And
younger Gen Zers are more likely
than older members of their gen-
eration to identify as LGBTQ,
given that the percentage of them
who have identified as LGBTQ
has nearly doubled since 2017,
when it was 10.5 percent.
The distinctions between Gen
Zers and millennials reflect the
progress LGBTQ people have
made over the past few decades,
according to Sharita Gruberg,
vice president of the LGBTQI+
Research and Communications
Project at the Center for Ameri-
can Progress, an independent

nonpartisan policy institute.
When older millennials were
in high school, in 2003, the Su-
preme Court ruled in the land-
mark Lawrence v. Texas case that
the criminalization of sodomy
was unconstitutional, Gruberg
pointed out, adding that the Su-
preme Court ruled in favor of
marriage equality more than a
decade later — in 2015 — when
older Gen Zers were in high
school.
Of the legal progress LGBTQ
people saw during the time peri-
od, Gruberg added: “I can’t stress
enough what a difference that
makes in your comfort with your
identity, in public opinion... a nd
around stigma.”
But LGBTQ people — and Gen
Zers in particular — still face
myriad challenges: Gruberg’s
team published research last fall
showing that more than half of
LGBTQ Gen Zers report experi-
encing discrimination, and face
higher rates of mental health is-
sues and housing instability than
older generations of LGBTQ peo-
ple. And 10 states so far this year
have enacted bans barring trans-
gender students from participat-
ing in sports consistent with their
gender identity, according to the
Movement Advancement Project,
an independent nonprofit think
tank.
Data on LGBTQ people can be
hard to come by: Last year
marked the first time the U.S.
Census Bureau started asking
Americans about their gender
identity and sexual orientation
on their Household Pulse Survey,
used to measure the pandemic’s
impacts on households.
“We have very little informa-
tion through quality government
data, so in the absence of that, the
Gallup poll has really served as
how we estimate how many
L GBTQ people are in the coun-
try,” Gruberg said.
The Gallup poll is just a start,
she noted, pointing to the fact
that it doesn’t include data on
race or disability, and that 6.6
percent of people surveyed did
not respond.
But given that Gallup research-
ers expect the proportion of
L GBTQ Americans to continue to
increase in the near future, the
survey and its findings mark a key
step forward, she said: “We’re
moving to a place where more
than one in 10 Americans is
L GBTQ — that is information that
policymakers need to have.”

More Gen Z adults identify as LBGTQ

“Thanks to increases in

visibility,

representation, and

equality, more and

more LGBTQ

Americans are able to

come out and live as

our authentic selves.”
Sarah Kate Ellis, president
a nd chief executive of GLAAD
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