Millions of American women rejected victim feminism and voted for Donald Trump, especially white, non-college-educated women.

Exit polls show 53 per cent of white women in total chose Trump over Hillary Clinton, and 62 per cent of white women without a degree.

They know how unfair it is that the men they love have been cast as the arch villains of Clinton’s elitist brand of feminism, castigated for enjoying patriarchal “white male privilege” when their jobs are gone, social norms destroyed and their children are dying of drug overdoses.

But Australia’s misogyny crowd are slow learners. They are the ones who keep pretending that domestic violence is the domain of “white male privilege”, and that affluent feminists are its primary victims.

media_camera Students protest against President-elect Donald Trump at the University of California, Los Angeles. (Pic: AFP/Frederic J. Brown)

Clueless Gillian Triggs, for instance, missed the lesson of the US election and kept shrilling for victim feminism when she hailed Clinton as a “beacon” brought down by “abuse of a woman with quite exceptional experience... simply on the basis that she’s a woman.”

Melbourne University Publishing’s leftist chief executive Louise Adler declared she “fears for the world” over Trump, a man “of bigotry and racism”.

And Destroy the Joint founder Jenna Price moaned: “There are still different rules for men and women... Rules which make it possible for a man to become president but not a woman.”

No, there are just voters, including vast numbers of women, with more important concerns than breaking a glass ceiling just for the sake of it.