Monday, October 27, 2008

Putting lipstick on the woman....

I have been wrestling with myself and many friends over my defense of Sarah Palin. Family and friends are in shock because as they say to me, how can you? She isn't intelligent. She likes guns and is anti-choice. And those are good arguments for not voting for her which I am not but I find I am so busy defending her right to be who and where she is that I cannot even get to the substantive issues.

Whenever the press wants to "get" a woman candidate, it is always about her looks (some have called her a "soft porn queen") or the money spent to dress her up. Remember Hillary's pants suits? Or the vicious ridicule. Did any of you see the Hillary Clinton nutcracker? Well now, a Palin look-a-like is hung by a noose from the roof of a house!!! Yes, you may not see it because the press is not repeating it as they would ad nausea if anyone hung Obama in effigy. I think that would be called a "lynching" conjuring up images of racism in America. I guess a hanging is the equivalent for women of sexism in the form of domestic violence.

And her intelligence, clearly suspect after the Gibson and Couric interviews. Yet, no one mentions Biden's recent remark on the stump that Obama understands the real issue and it is a three letter word, J-O-B-S. Whoops! In fact, most haven't even heard it (like the noose) because the mainstream media only played it a couple of times. Obama dresses up Biden's gaffes by calling them "rhetorical flourishes". (Yes that is correct!) But everything Palin says is sifted for possible mistakes so that her intelligence can be questioned. Is she smart enough to be our President?

I don't think she should be President but it has nothing to do with her clothes or the stumbling in a press interview. Did any of you know what the "Bush Doctrine" was? The reality is most of us do not know what it is even now. None of the male candidates ever had to answer that one. Thank heavens Hillary was experienced enough to answer all those questions in the debates before Obama so he could draft in the wake of her intelligence when he had to answer.

I have been giving this a lot of thought and wonder why I am the only "feminist" who has a problem with the way Palin is being treated and the universal dismissal of her by the press and liberal thinking women like me. I wanted to write about this for some time and wished I could be articulate enough about the issue so all my women friends and men too (particularly my son) would understand but I could not. However, I found someone who did and so I am copying below an op-ed piece from the NYTimes. While I think the author is not necessarily proud of the present state of women, her comments ring true. Women may have actually come a longer way baby with Palin than any other woman so far. Sorry Hillary.


No Ordinary Woman

by Judith Warner

In 1977, Bella Abzug, the former congresswoman and outspoken feminist said, "Our struggle today is not to have a female Einstein get appointed as an assistant professor. It is for a woman schlemiel to get as quickly promoted as a male schlemiel." In other words, women will truly have arrived when the most mediocre among us will be able to do just as well as the most mediocre of men. By this standard, the watershed event for women this year was not Hillary Clinton's near ascendancy to the top of the Democratic ticket, but Sarah Palin's nomination as the Republicans' NO. 2.

For Clinton was a lifelong overachiever, a star in a generational vanguard who clearly took to heart the maxim that women “must do twice as well as men to be thought half as good,” and in so doing divorced herself from the world of the merely average. In that, she was not unlike Barack Obama — taxed by his race to be twice as reassuring, twice as un-angry, twice as presidential as any white candidate.

Mediocrity, after all, is the privilege of those who have arrived.

Palin is a woman who has risen to national prominence without, apparently, even remotely being twice as good as her male competitors. On the contrary, her claim to fame lies in her repudiation of Clinton-type exceptionalism.

She speaks no better — and no worse — than many of her crowd-pleasing male peers, dropping her g’s, banishing “who” in favor of “that,” issuing verbal blunders that linger just long enough to make their mark in the public mind before they’re winked away in staged apologies.

She is a woman who is able to not only get by but also be quickly promoted on the kinds of attributes that were once the exclusive province of unremarkable white men: rapport, the right looks or connections, an easy sort of familiarity.

In the days leading up to Palin’s pick as vice-presidential nominee, according to an article in The New York Times Magazine today, Rick Davis, who is John McCain’s campaign manager, said a friend had told him how best to choose a running mate: “You get a frame of Time magazine, and you put the pictures of the people in that frame. You look at who fits that frame best — that’s your V.P.”

Donny Deutsch, the ad executive turned talk show host, put it less elegantly on CNBC right after the Republican convention. “Women want to be her, men want to mate with her,” he said, describing Palin as a “new creation that the feminist movement has not figured out in 40 years.”

And this was the crux of the Palin Phenomenon: she was a breakthrough woman who threatened no one.

The McCain crowd would have you believe that Palin is the perfect representation of the post-feminist woman, a candidate whose very existence marks the end of feminism — of the old “liberal feminist agenda,” as McCain himself has put it — and the start of a more global kind of triumph for the great mass of women.

Just as some young women in recent years have argued that appearing topless on “Girls Gone Wild” is an act of sexual liberation, putting an untested Alaskan governor on the road to the White House was spun as a sign of the arrival of real, hot-blooded women into the mainstream of power.

But the finer points of what it takes for real women to make progress in seizing power don’t seem much to trouble Palin.

“Someone called me a ‘redneck woman’ once, and you know what I said back? ‘Why, thank you,’” she told the country singer Gretchen Wilson at a recent Republican rally.

I guess Palin has never seen Wilson’s “Redneck Woman” music video, which, in addition to images of an attractive Wilson driving a variety of fuel-inefficient vehicles, features a couple of stripper-styled babes dancing in cages, one of which is made of chains.

With her five children, successful political career, $1.2 million net worth and beauty pageant looks, Sarah Palin is really not an average woman, much less the worthy schlemiel envisioned by Abzug. She’s actually, as Colin Powell carefully said, quite “distinguished” — for her looks, her grace and charm, her ability to connect with an audience, her ambition and her drive. Those are admirable, even enviable qualities. But the American public, defecting from the McCain ticket in a slow bleed, is clearly not convinced that they amount to vice-presidential qualifications.

Seems like “real America” wants something more than a wife, mother or girlfriend in a female political leader.

Maybe we’ve come a long way after all.

Judith Warner writes Domestic Disturbances, a column at nytimes.com.






Friday, October 3, 2008

She's Back.....

I have many thoughts about last night's Vice-Presidential debate and I found it necessary to weigh so much within the context of where I was coming from---be that as a democrat, a feminist, a regular person, and a "revengocrat" (what my daughter calls me-- meaning a former Hillary supporter).  So what I am about to say blends all of these parts of me and cannot always be separated out and categorized easily. 

First, she was in great form.  This is a person who has been doing presidential politics for five weeks and she is on a stage with a man who has 35 years in the political arena. Palin deserves a standing ovation for her performance. She looked right into that camera and talked to us.   She glanced occasionally at Biden when she was referencing him in some way but mostly she was crisp, strong and direct.  The moderator who chose the questions concentrated on foreign policy and I wondered whether that benefited Biden who is an expert in that area. Certainly, given the recent economic problems facing this country I thought that might have been the major topic but it was introduced early on and then passed over with questions about Iraq, Pakistan et al.  Here, there is no question that Biden was at his best.  He did get a little messed up explaining his vote to "authorize" the use of power against Iraq but then he sounded like Hillary.  For the most part though, his experience in dealing with international issues and leaders gave him the edge over Palin.  

Governor Palin and Senator Biden were dead even when it came to doing what Vice-Presidental candidates are supposed to do---be the attack dog.  Both went after their counter-parts at the top of the ticket.  Biden successfully tied McCain to the Bush policies and Palin was equally good at pointing out the "tax and spend" liberal policies of Obama.

Over-all, without any scientific measurement, I thought she won the debate.  Maybe that is because she survived when everyone, even her ardent supporters, were so worried she wouldn't do well.  Maybe it was because Biden looked old, something that hung over McCain's head last week while she looked energetic and strong. Maybe it was because she held her own throughout and had some excellent moments. Maybe you had to give it to her because he was clearly not her better and that, given their disparate levels of experience and expertise, makes her the winner.

How will this impact the over-all race?  Very little. However, it does make her the future star of the Republican Party and the future leader of the conservative movement in the party.  I had a feeling of foreboding that I remember I felt when I first heard Obama at the Democratic Convention in 2003.  I thought then, "watch out Hillary."  And I have the same feeling again.