Everyone knows by now that Senator Mitch McConnell invoked a rarely used Rule 19 to silence Senator Elizabeth Warren as she was reading a letter that Coretta Scott King wrote years ago against Jeff Sessions. Warren was an immediate media sensation to the Democratic base. Women identified with her as she was told to shut up and sit down for being a naughty girl. Civil rights groups were outraged that the reading of a letter by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was cause for punishment.

But Salon points out that McConnell was throwing red meat to his base by telling an uppity left wing woman to shut up.

The Trumpistas hate Warren. They would like to punch her in the mouth. She is far and away the most outspoken, smartest, toughest woman in politics at the national level. She is articulate and fearless. She must be silenced, and McConnell won one for his base.

All of this reflects George Lakoff’s analysis of right-left thinking. The left is compassionate, empathetic, rational, and thinks that facts will win elections.

The right, says Lakoff, sees the world as a morality play, in which strict fathers make the rules and enforce them. Girls should not be outspoken. They should be polite and deferential. The strict father gives a warning. If the naughty girl persists in speaking up, she must be told to sit down and not allowed to speak again. Or leave the room.

Who won?

Of course, you can extend this line of thought to the field of education, which has a predominantly female work force. The legislate are mostly male. They make the rules. They believe they know what schools should do and how they should run, because they went to school. They think of the profession as a bunch of women who should stick to their classrooms and stay out of the serious business of decision making about policy. That’s for the men.