Over at the Motherblog, Dana notes that though she often hears folks say that female pundits are blaming sexism for Hillary's loss, she's not actually seeing many female pundits blame sexism for Hillary's loss. Rather, a lot of observers are trying to sort through a complicated election in which sexism played a part, Iraq played a part, caucus states played a part, gender solidarity played a part, racism played a part, John Edwards played a part, messaging played a part, racial solidarity played a part, and on and on and on. Amidst all that, it would be really weird to confidently assert that misogyny cost Clinton the election. But there's no doubt that misogyny often surfaced during the election, and it should be talked about.