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Home » TRIGGERnometry: w/ Helen Andrews on Feminization of Institutions (Transcript)

TRIGGERnometry: w/ Helen Andrews on Feminization of Institutions (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of journalist Helen Andrews’s interview on TRIGGERnometry Podcast, January 1, 2026.

Brief Notes: In this thought-provoking episode of Triggernometry, author and journalist Helen Andrews joins hosts Konstantin Kisin and Francis Foster to discuss her viral and controversial thesis on the “feminization” of modern institutions. Andrews argues that the shift toward majority-female workforces in fields like law, journalism, and academia has inadvertently fueled the rise of “wokeness,” prioritizing empathy and consensus-building over objective truth and rigorous debate.

The conversation explores the legal “thumbs on the scale” like DEI mandates and sexual harassment laws that she claims distort pure meritocracy, as well as the potential long-term civilizational impacts of declining birth rates and the “two-income trap”. Ultimately, Andrews makes a case for preserving “masculine modes of interaction” in certain spheres to protect innovation and the “maverick” spirit necessary for institutional success.

Introduction

KONSTANTIN KISIN: Helen, welcome to TRIGGERnometry.

HELEN ANDREWS: Thanks for having me.

KONSTANTIN KISIN: It’s great to have you on. You wrote an article based on a speech you gave at the NATCON conference which exploded the Internet, I think it’s fair to say. It went super viral, caused a lot of debate and discussion. It’s basically—I mean, I’ll let you say it in your own words—but it’s kind of a little bit about how the fact that women now control, or at least represent the majority of the employees at many institutions, is one of the reasons that society has gone the way it has. Is that fair?

The Feminization Thesis and Wokeness

HELEN ANDREWS: I think that’s fair to say. Some people have reacted to the piece by acting as if I’m saying women cause all the problems in the world. I’m definitely not saying that, but I am saying that feminization has caused one specific particular problem, and that is wokeness.

Like a lot of people, I was baffled by the woke phenomenon. Why did everyone seemingly go crazy all at once in the summer of 2020? It was inexplicable. It seemed to be mass hysteria, genuinely. And the more I thought about what caused it—which is a very important question, because if we know what causes it, we know how to prevent it from happening in the future—I read an article that someone else wrote that put forward a really simple, elegant thesis, which is that wokeness is simply feminine patterns of behavior applied to institutions where women had not been very well represented until recently.

Women tend to be more consensus-focused, consensus-oriented. Men, when they’re approaching a moral question, will ask, “What are the facts? What are the rules?” Whereas women will say, “What are the relationships at play here? How can we make everybody happy? How can we reach an outcome that will satisfy all the parties?” as opposed to the male perspective of “How do we reach an outcome that is just and according to the rules?”

That sounded a lot like wokeness to me. And the piece that made it all click into place for me was the coincidence of timing. It is the case—we can all agree, as a matter of fact—that a lot of institutions that went woke or were affected by wokeness became demographically female in the last five years.

Law schools in America turned majority female in 2016, and they’ve gotten a little bit more female every year since then. I think now it stands at 55, 56%. The New York Times became majority female in its workforce in 2018, which is maybe why it was so susceptible to the fads of wokeness and the internal policing and the Slack revolts that took place internally over there.

Medical schools are now majority female. The white-collar workforce overall—employees in the United States with college degrees—a majority of them are women. And managers, management positions in the US workforce, 46% female, so almost majority female. So the fact that all of these institutions tipped over to being majority female around the same time that wokeness emerged seemed to me that couldn’t possibly be a coincidence.

The Critical Mass Question

KONSTANTIN KISIN: And there’s so many questions within that. I guess the first stress test of this argument would be, well, they were also very close to being majority female 10 years prior to that, right? So does going from 48 to 52%—is that really such a major shift that it would cause something as dramatic as that?

HELEN ANDREWS: Well, you’d be surprised. I thought that the higher education workforce, professors in the United States, would have gone female ages and ages ago, but it actually only became majority female in 2023. So we think of feminization as something that happened a long time ago, but it really does take a certain amount of time for older generations to retire.

But I think the reason why attaining a critical mass of women has such a dramatic effect is that we’re not talking about individual differences—differences between individual men and individual women—but differences in group dynamics.

For example, you might be able to say from the perspective of psychology as a discipline that women tend to be more emotional than men and men tend to be more rational. Or any kind of generalization about men and women might have a certain amount of empirical support based on surveys, but at the end of the day, those differences are not massive, right? Female support for free speech is less than male by double digits, but it’s not like night and day.

But when it comes to group dynamics—how does an organization function? How does an institution deal with conflict?—when you’re talking about those kinds of things, those tend to be more binary. Either you solve your conflicts within an organization in a masculine way or in a feminine way. Either open conflict is something that your institution will tolerate or it’s not. So that’s the kind of thing where once you get a critical mass, you really kind of have to pick which one you’re going to do.

Consensus vs. Conflict

KONSTANTIN KISIN: Well, you mentioned consensus and sort of empathy and including all perspectives.