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Karmadillo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:10 PM
Original message
Gender More Of A Hurdle Than Race In American Politics.
Last night, Margaret Carlson raised the question of whether or not Hillary had a heart (her uncanny persistence in the face of adversity made one wonder...). And there's Obama's Saturday Night Live performance where Hillary was portrayed as a witch. And there's the cackle and the cleavage. And, and, and, so it goes.

http://www.theleftcoaster.com/archives/011833.php

Sunday :: Jan 27, 2008
Gender More Of A Hurdle Than Race In American Politics

by Jeff Dinelli
Looking ahead to February 5th's Super-Duper-Tsunami-Mega-Fat Tuesday, we should be able to look back and learn a thing or two from what's happened so far. One of those revelations is it's clear that America is ready, willing and able to elect its first African-American president. It's a wonderful development and fills all of us with an unprecedented optimism for this country's enlightenment and its future.

At the same time, however, it's abundantly evident that this same country is not necessarily ready to support the candidacy of a strong woman looking to lead from the Oval Office. The most discouraging aspect of this uncomfortable truth is the right wing hasn't floated this theme; indeed, it hasn't even had a chance to assign its formidable slime machine towards injecting some subtle sexism into the 2008 campaign. No, it's the media, the lefty netroots and even members of the Democratic Party that have led the runaway train of shoddy treatment handed to Senator Hillary Clinton.☼

The wonderful Chicago Tribune writer Jessica Reaves picks up on the truly, unbelievably unfair media coverage of the first viable female candidate in our country's history:

From Day 1 of this seemingly endless election cycle, it has been clear that the media don't have any idea how to handle Clinton. She was first lady for eight years, so it's not as if we haven't seen her before. It's just that we've never seen her like this: a candidate on her own terms, the equal of any man, with a real shot at the presidency.

And so we did what we've always done to women who overstep their bounds: We picked her apart, piece by piece, ignoring the substance and pouncing on the superficial. We sniped about her hair, her laugh, her pantsuits, her voice (which Chris Matthews, MSNBC's resident blowhard, likened to "nails on a blackboard").....


more...
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thunder rising Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:11 PM
Response to Original message
1. It's not gender ..it's Clinton politics that's at issue.
Edited on Sun Jan-27-08 07:12 PM by thunder rising
And Hillary has done a disservice to women with her campaign.
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Warpy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:25 PM
Response to Reply #1
4. It's gender. The male chauvinist piggery is at a feverish pitch
on unmoderated bulletin boards. Every male who feels entitled to an unpaid domestic servant at home and women only in subordinate and poorly paid work in the world is out there and shrieking his impotent rage.

I've been trying to tell my sisters of color for years that sexism is a much more deeply ingrained bigotry than racism is. Perhaps this election might make a few of them realize it.

Threaten an arbitrary color boundary, a little shit will fly. Threaten thousands of years of deeply ingrained patriarchy, and you'll get buried in it.
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mrreowwr_kittty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:31 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. You're right about the misogyny. But it doesn't mean I have to support her.
There is definitely this sense in the feminist community that you are expected to support her, no matter what reservations you have about her. Gloria Steinem's op-ed was the last straw for me. She came off as scolding us younger feminists for not getting in line.
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Warpy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 12:32 AM
Response to Reply #7
28. Oh, hell, I think she's wrong on the war and the only health plan
that sucks worse is Obama's. I'm for Edwards and I have the scars to show anybody who questions the hits I've taken as a feminist over the years.

It's POLICY, people, not anything else.
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AGirl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:37 PM
Response to Reply #4
10. The sad thing is
So many progressive people doesn’t seem to understand how misogyny operates and how prevalent it is.
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pathansen Donating Member (696 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 10:03 PM
Response to Reply #10
22. It's every where on earth
The man who heads the World Hunger Project admitted this.
He said that everywhere you go on the planet, they run into the same problem:
They must always make sure that food is given directly to each starving person
or the men will take all of it, while women and children starve.
Sad but apparently true, according to him.
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Captain_Nemo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:41 PM
Response to Reply #1
13. As a female I agree with the article. I think Hillary is the one to fix the problems. As I watch a
recap of the 2000 election (with liberals backing Nader like he was a rock star)it is utterly amazing how so many people can get behind the words hope and change with nothing behind these words.
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mrreowwr_kittty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 10:52 PM
Response to Reply #13
26. How is Hillary the one to fix the problems?
Why hasn't she fixed them by now? You make this absurd comparison of Obama and Nader but one can do the same thing with Clinton, among a lot of women. It astonishes me to see so many intelligent feminists act like merely electing her President will end sexism and misogyny as we know it. That is absurd.
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Captain_Nemo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 02:51 AM
Response to Reply #26
35. No, my opinion on my candidate is not absurd. Well, I'll act like the intelligent one here:
Here's my "absurd" as you put it, reasons:
1. She has the experience.
"McGovern said that he was "impressed by the experience she had as first lady. I know some people say it's not governing experience, but it really is. You're at the elbow of the power broker. She was there for all the decisions."
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=3661776&page=1

2. She is more experienced internationally:
"In the heat of presidential campaign politics, candidates on both sides dismiss a First Lady's work as insignificant to foreign policy. But in Hillary Clinton's case, such a presumption is not only wrong, it trivializes the important global issues of human rights, democracy, and international development that are so central to strengthening American values and influence overseas and are hallmarks of her exhaustive work around the world.

As First Lady and now as a two-term senator who represents the most ethnically diverse state in the nation and who sits on the Armed Services Committee, Hillary Clinton has become a fixture on international issues over the past 15 years. She has traveled to more than 80 countries, going from barrios to rural villages to meetings with heads of state. She has consulted with dozens of world leaders - Nelson Mandela, King Abdullah, Tony Blair among them -- on matters as diverse as America and NATO's roles in Kosovo, eradicating poverty in the Third World, and the plight of women living under the Taliban in Afghanistan."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lissa-muscatine-and-melanne-verveer/hillarys-unprecedented-e_b_76883.html

3. She will not compromise on women's rights. She is a feminist. She said it out loud during this time in American history when feminism is a bad word. She will choose a good Supreme Court nominee. Obama...well...what can I say? His "doing the lord's work" bullshit is either pandering to the religious right or he really believes it. Either way its crap.


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mrreowwr_kittty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 11:31 AM
Response to Reply #35
40. Bullshit. If experience were that important Biden or Richardson would be on top right now
Edited on Mon Jan-28-08 11:33 AM by thecatburgler
And you don't think either of the other candidates would appoint good SCOTUS judges? BTW, Clinton panders to the religious too. All the time.

On edit: As for your implication that I'm not intelligent, fuck off.
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Bitwit1234 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 08:01 PM
Response to Reply #1
15. JUST WHAT HAS SHE DONE. AND DON'T JUST SAY IT MAKE A LIST WITH A LINK
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spooky3 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 08:14 PM
Response to Reply #1
17. denying the reality perpetuates the sexism
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existentialist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:19 PM
Response to Original message
2. perhaps
after all, blacks got the vote how many years before women?

Something like 60 years before . . .

And, the same movement that freed the slaves worked hand in glove with a nascent women's rights movement until blacks actually were freed, and, at least nominally got the vote.

A deeper look, however, indicates that the two movements both prosper from alliance with the other.

The blacks may nominally have received the vote in the 1860s, but in practice they got very little until the 1960s.

It is unfortunate that the immediate election context has come to pit one against the other.

I think anyone who sets one against the other is in fact working against human rights, and hence against the rights of women, blacks, and all minorities.
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Barb in Atl Donating Member (254 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 08:22 PM
Response to Reply #2
18. LowerManhattenite?
Is that you?

Another blog did a REALLY good posting about this very topic - how the suffrage movement backed abolition and abolitionists backed suffrage - until blacks were given the vote. Then things got testy...

I'd provide a link, but don't know (and too lazy too look up) the rules.
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existentialist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 08:29 PM
Response to Reply #18
21. Is that who?
I haven't posted this on any other blogs, and I too am too lazy to look these things up for rigorous posting, but I do have some background in history, and I believe that my statements are accurate.
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Barb in Atl Donating Member (254 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 11:15 AM
Response to Reply #21
38. I think you misunderstood...
Edited on Mon Jan-28-08 11:16 AM by BleedinHeart
Deleted (wrong link) Oops a daisy!
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Barb in Atl Donating Member (254 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 11:24 AM
Response to Reply #21
39. Okay, here's the correct link...
Edited on Mon Jan-28-08 11:32 AM by BleedinHeart
Argh!!! Monday morning fog!!! I meant that what you posted reminded me of this post. Here's the link: http://www.groupnewsblog.net/2007/08/its-all-just-little-bit-of-history.html

It's long (and a good read) so I'll cut and paste the part of which you reminded me....

Before The Civil War, the most prominent spokesman for equal rights for Blacks—runaway slave, and self-taught scholar Frederick Douglass, and the most famous and fervent advocate for Women's rights, Susan B. Anthony, would become friends, and eventually alllies against the racist and sexist mores of the day—and against those who supported those disgusting, life-limiting tropes.

Those, as in...you know, scared, retrograde White dudes of means. The "Man", if you will. Douglass, a true Progressive of his time, was the only man to attend the first Women's Rights Convention headed by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, an Anthony mentor in 1848, and was the driving male force in the then nascent Women's movement. Anthony would become a loud and leading voice in the steamrolling Abolitionist movement when she joined the Anti-Slavery Society of New York State. In fact, speaking at the Womens Conference a decade later, she would say, "Where, under our Declaration of Independence, does the Saxon man get his power to deprive all women and Negroes of their inalienable rights?"

I remember reading that and thinking to myself, "Wow...that must've been a wild-ass time, with those two working the double-team against discrimination and what-not!"—although on deeper consideration now, I'm guessing it came out sounding a lot more like "Oh, snap!"

It was what followed in my reading—the "what-not" part, that was really interesting.

You see, Douglass and Anthony became friends. Close enough friends that he delivered the eulogy for Anthony's father upon his death in 1862. But that friendship would never be quite the same after 1869 when the 14th and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution were up for ratification. The 15th Amendment would have given Black men the right to vote, but not women just yet, which infuriated feminists, and Susan B. Anthony particularly, moving her to rally hard and heavy against it. And that angry rallying against it put her in close quarters unfortunately with some of the most vehement anti-Black demagogues of that time. This was even after the Equal Rights Association, a coalition that fought for the right for Blacks and Women to vote, and in which Anthony was a member of some prominence, opted to back the 15th Amendment.

The two friends, and compatriots in arms for the struggle against discrimination saw their friendship damaged in ugly ways. Susan B. Anthony would pretty much abandon her vocal support for equal rights of Blacks after the 15th Amendment passed, to push exclusively for Women's rights and suffrage. And in spite of Douglass' return as a strong voice for Women's suffrage after the Constitutional change (He called for another amendment that would give women the vote the following year and would write editorials advocating for it—one entitled “Women and the Ballot”), the Women's movement's time had seemingly peaked, and passed.

That "peaking and passing" was key, because it happened to coincide with the "Holy shit! What have we done?" head-shake and re-focusing of state-sanctioned hate that was Civil War Post-Reconstruction, where Blacks would again get the back of the hand of hard, naked racism, after getting a helping hand upward to quasi-equality. This duo—Anthony & Douglass, working in tandem was an F-5 strength, potential juggernaut for equality. But once they were pitted against each other, their collective strength was effectively diminished, and the power structure itself was able to buy extra decades of pretty much unchallenged hyper-dominance over both Blacks and women. It's worth noting that there was a great deal of voyeurism and much whipping up of the differences between these two giants of the political stage at that time. You'd almost think that certain people had a, you know... vested interest or something, in busting that coalition to keep shit just...as...it...was...?


Again, I think this kind of fleshes out what you posted.

Thanks for reminding me of it...

Peace!
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Withywindle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 01:19 AM
Response to Reply #2
32. Just one little clarification...
Black MEN got the vote long before women of ANY color.

It's a matter of framing. Sorry for nitpicking, but to say "blacks" got the vote before women writes black women out of the picture.
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AGirl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:23 PM
Response to Original message
3. i like this passage
Obama could proclaim in his Iowa speech, "They thought this day would never come." He frequently and passionately invokes Martin Luther King Jr. -- to great benefit. He refers to his candidacy as "historic" without even having to mention race directly.
When Oprah Winfrey introduced Obama before thousands of mostly African-Americans in South Carolina, race was the subtext. Obama aligned himself with Winfrey, saying their appearance on the stage was "improbable." Why? Because of their race, of course.
But as the first truly viable female presidential candidate, Clinton has had to invent a new playbook. She is struggling to present herself as a female leader who will appeal to other women but somehow not let her sex define her.
Before the New Hampshire primaries, Clinton was so busy focusing on appearing strong and powerful -- that is, not constrained by her sex -- that she came across as cold and calculating.
When she tried to defend herself, using the same words and tone a man would, she was called angry. When she directly mentioned the historic nature of her run for the presidency, she was accused of being divisive.
Nearly every effort Clinton has made to galvanize young women by directly mentioning gender has backfired.
"In so many ways, this all-women's college prepared me to compete in the all-boys' club of presidential politics," Clinton said in a November speech at her alma mater, Wellesley College. "So let's roll up our sleeves and get to work together. We're ready to shatter that highest glass ceiling."
The same day, Clinton released a YouTube video called "The Politics of Pile On," showing clips of the male Democratic candidates attacking her.
So what did the pundits do? They pounced on Clinton for "raising the gender card."
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robbedvoter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:26 PM
Response to Original message
5. Excellent article. Awakening the sleeping giant. Ignore at their own peril.
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Fresh_Start Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:31 PM
Response to Original message
6. gender is a hurdle everywhere in the world
Edited on Sun Jan-27-08 07:37 PM by NYCALIZ
not just the USA

women are half of the worlds population
women are still considered inferior
female fetuses are killed because males are more highly valued
women are still required to be inferior to mens will
woman earn less
woman work more




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intheozone Donating Member (839 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:32 PM
Response to Original message
8. I agree with Craig Crawford, the media has
a real sickness when it comes to the Clintons. The media hates the Clintons and it shows strongly in all the coverage of Hillary and Bill. At the same time, the media seems to be prepared to give Obama a pass with no vetting at all! The MSM makes me want to :puke:.
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jasmine621 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:36 PM
Response to Reply #8
9. I think my comment under another title is more appropriate here.
I am really ashamed of many in the Dem party tearing down the Clintons as they are doing. What have they done to anyone to deserve this rage and hate? I always knew that many disliked the Clintons in largely because he GOT CAUGHT with his zipper down. But the scorn and hate are much deeper than even I ever thought. And to hate Hillary so much for being smart, tough, compassionate, and for having stayed with an adulterous husband because she valued her family more than revenge is something I just can't understand. It's more understandable to me that blacks could be mis-led into believing that the Clintons are playing the race card against Obama, when in fact, it is the media that does this. But absolute rage and hate I for this couple is beyond belief for me. More than disappointed, I am truly saddened and frightened for my party and my country. How fast will the media lead the many Obama supporters down this road. What mistake of human frailty will cause this to happen to him. Maybe it won't ever happen to anybody else because this hate and rage against the Clintons may be unmatched. At this moment, I think most Dems are more enraged over and have more disdain for the Clintons than they do GW Bush.

It appears to me that there was much more forgiveness, reconciliation, and even reverence for JFK and Ted Kennedy where their numerous human flaws, and yes, adulterous affairs. I just don't get it.

Wake me when its over.
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krabigirl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 11:04 PM
Response to Reply #9
27. totally agree with you. It's scary.
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ellacott Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:38 PM
Response to Original message
11. A lot has to do with the person
Part of it may be her gender but it is also the person. Many didn't/don't support the person.

There is still misogyny but it's unfair to compare the two groups. There are still more female senators and goveners then African Americans in the same position. There have been female Heads of State in the world then African American Heads of State(besides Africa).
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spooky3 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 08:13 PM
Response to Reply #11
16. that's an inappropriate comparison, though, as women comprise
>51% of the population in this country, while African Americans are <13% - without regard to qualifications to do any political job.

Your comparisons from other countries must also take into account proportions in the population.

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ellacott Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 08:26 PM
Response to Reply #16
20. That's a fair point
I guess that's what makes any comparison somewhat difficult.
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Barack_America Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:39 PM
Response to Original message
12. I would believe that.
I think (hope) that the message regarding accepted attitude towards race is pretty universal throughout our country. They're not necessarily universally accepted, but everyone has a pretty good idea about what the "ideal" is. And most major institutions (i.e. media and churches) are in agreement.

But the messages regarding women and a woman's role are much more confused. And that is going to hurt Hillary, particularly in the South and Midwest.

Personally, I want to see both a black and a woman president. I just happen to feel that Obama is the better candidate for me.
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LostinVA Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 07:46 PM
Response to Original message
14. One only has to read GD:P to see the misogyny against Clinton
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Darth_Kitten Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 08:25 PM
Response to Original message
19. I don't think american men generally like women very much..
there, I said it.

No insult meant to the good guys at DU and beyond. :)

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pathansen Donating Member (696 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 10:08 PM
Response to Original message
23. Its also the women who do about 80% of volunteer work for Democratic Party
Edited on Sun Jan-27-08 10:09 PM by pathansen
A majority of women are democrats. Without them, we would most likely no longer have a democracy.
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THUNDER HANDS Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 10:19 PM
Response to Original message
24. if this was Barbara Boxer or Kathleen Selebius, that'd be one thing
you can't have a valid evaluation of what the first female running for president is like when it's Hillary Clinton. That would be like using King Kong as an example of gorillas to study.
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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-27-08 10:46 PM
Response to Reply #24
25.  . . .
:)
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DURHAM D Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 12:38 AM
Response to Reply #24
29. Stupid much? n/t
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Metric System Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 12:53 AM
Response to Original message
30. I think sexism is more socially acceptable than racism.
Well maybe a better way to phrase it is that sexist language is more socially acceptable than racist language. I also can't help but imagine (as a white man) that women of color face the most obstacles in society since they have to deal with both.
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 01:04 AM
Response to Original message
31. Completely laughable trying to use this to paint Hillary as a victim:

Race and Gender in Presidential Politics: A Debate Between Gloria Steinem and Melissa Harris-Lacewell

Gloria Steinem, feminist pioneer and bestselling author of several books, including Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions. In the early ‘70s she founded Ms. Magazine and New York magazine and also helped organize the National Women’s Political Caucus. More recently she co-founded the Women’s Media Center in 2004.

Melissa Harris-Lacewell, Associate Professor of Politics and African American Studies at Princeton University. She is author of Barbershops, Bibles, and BET: Everyday Talk and Black Political Thought. She is at work on a new book called For Colored Girls Who’ve Considered Politics When Being Strong Wasn’t Enough.

<...>

GLORIA STEINEM: Well, I was just—I think one learns a lot from parallels, and so it would be interesting to try to project what would have happened to Barack Obama in his life if he had been a female human being. I mean, I really think that we have seen historically that women of color, African American women, have understood—have been just in a better position, you know, to understand the roles of both sex and race, and it made me nostalgic for the days of Shirley Chisholm and campaigning for Shirley Chisholm.

AMY GOODMAN: What do you mean?

GLORIA STEINEM: Well, you know, it was so clear that, you know, because one didn’t have to choose between race and gender. And indeed, I am still trying not to choose between race and gender, because the basis of my choice was not that, but that, in fact, Hillary Clinton will arrive in Washington knowing how Washington works, because she’s had it written on her skin like Kafka in The Prisoner—wasn’t it?—when—and I think we can’t afford really—we’re in such dire circumstances that to have the first couple of years of Carter or even the first couple of years of Clinton again, who arrived in Washington not understanding how Washington worked. But if Barack Obama is the candidate, I will work for him with a whole heart. And I wish we had preferential voting, you know, so we can go one, two and three, at least, rather than having to choose only one.

AMY GOODMAN: You hadn’t originally come out for Hillary Clinton.

GLORIA STEINEM: No, my first column on this subject was essentially taking to task the media, who were asking us, trying to force us to choose prematurely and asking me, “Are you supporting Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama?” And I would always just say yes, because it seemed to me wrong that they were, you know, so forced on—so focused on this long before the primaries.

AMY GOODMAN: Melissa Harris-Lacewell, your thoughts on this discussion about race and gender?

MELISSA HARRIS-LACEWELL: Well, I mean, honestly, I’m appalled by the parallel that Ms. Steinem draws in the beginning part of the New York Times article. What she’s trying to do there is to make a claim towards sort of bringing in black women into a coalition around questions of gender and asking us to ignore the ways in which race and gender intersect. This is actually a standard problem of second-wave feminism, which, although there have been twenty-five years now—oh, going on forty years, actually, of African American women pushing back against this, have really failed to think about the ways in which trying to appropriate black women’s lives’ experience in that way is really offensive, actually.

And so, when Steinem suggests, for example, in that article that Obama is a lawyer married to another lawyer and to suggest that, for example, Hillary Clinton represents some kind of sort of breakthrough in questions of gender, I think that ignores an entire history in which white women have in fact been in the White House. They’ve been there as an attachment to white male patriarchal power. It’s the same way that Hillary Clinton is now making a claim towards experience. It’s not her experience. It’s her experience married to, connected to, climbing up on white male patriarchy. This is exactly the ways in which this kind of system actually silences questions of gender that are more complicated than simply sort of putting white women in positions of power and then claiming women’s issues are cared for.

Now, what I know from the work that I’ve done on the Obama campaign is that there are tens of thousands of extremely hard-working white men and women, as well as black men and women, as well as actually a huge multiracial and interethnic coalition of people working for Barack Obama. And so, for Steinem to sort of make this very clear race and gender dichotomy that she does in that New York Times op-ed piece, I think it’s the very worst of second-wave feminism.

AMY GOODMAN: Gloria Steinem?

GLORIA STEINEM: Well, it’s very painful to hear her say that, because what I meant was the opposite, you know, was to bring into the discussion the equal treatment of these kinds of questions, because—I mean, I didn’t want to write this. I was sitting there trying to do my own work and not do this, but I got so alarmed at the way that Hillary Clinton was being treated almost porno-–not just almost—pornographically, in ways that you can’t even mention in the New York Times.

AMY GOODMAN: What do you mean?

GLORIA STEINEM: Well, you know, that there were—there is pornography on the—you know, about her. There’s nutcrackers and with her legs as nutcrackers. There’s all kinds of—Chris Matthews saying, you know, if she hadn’t got the sympathy vote because of her husband’s affairs, she could never be in the US Senate. There’s people yelling in the crowd that—you know, “Iron my shirt!” or “Marry me!” or whatever it is.

And, you know, if we’re going to unleash the talents that we so desperately need in all of the country and do away with the system we have now, which has produced George Bush, who would be selling used cars if he didn’t have a famous father, if he weren’t white, if he weren’t rich—maybe not even selling used cars—we need to enlarge the talent pool in every direction. So my plea was really directed at the press to take all forms of discrimination seriously. And I’m very sorry if the parallel, you know, was not—didn’t make that clear in the beginning.

AMY GOODMAN: Melissa Harris-Lacewell?

MELISSA HARRIS-LACEWELL: Yeah, I absolutely agree that electing another president whose path to the White House is basically through either parental or familial connection is an absolute travesty for our democracy. Our democracy should not read—I don’t want my daughter, who’s six now, to go off to high school and read, you know, a story that says Bush, Clinton, Clinton, Bush, Bush, Clinton, Bush, Clinton, Clinton, Bush, Bush, Clinton. I actually absolutely agree that we have to have a deeper bench in American democracy. And that’s part of the reason that I’m a strong supporter of Barack Obama.

This is not, I think, the moment to suggest that one is owed the presidency, that there is kind of a natural line of succession. I think that’s exactly what we don’t want in this country. What we need is a real conversation with people who are willing to be honest about sort of all of the elements of who we are as people: our citizenship, our race, our gender.

And I will say that I am really offended by the ways in which the Hillary Clinton campaign has not taken the high road on this. They’ve consistently used ways of thinking about her as Bill Clinton’s wife. You cannot have it both ways. You cannot both claim this sort of role as independent woman making a stand on questions of feminism and claim that your experience begins as First Lady of Arkansas. You know, you simply have to stand on your own or not. There are dozens of white women in this country who I would be a huge supporter of for the American presidency. The president of my own university would be at the top of that list, but not someone who is making this claim towards being president as her right as a result of a relationship with a former president. I think that’s exactly what we don’t need in third-wave feminism.

more


Then there is all the media whining: Here is why complaining about media unfairness toward Hillary is ludicrous



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JackRiddler Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 01:28 AM
Response to Original message
33. The fallacy here comes right at the beginning...
Edited on Mon Jan-28-08 01:28 AM by JackRiddler
"it's abundantly evident that this same country is not necessarily ready to support the candidacy of a strong woman looking to lead from the Oval Office."

Who the hell is that? Please tell her to run!
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Political Heretic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 01:29 AM
Response to Original message
34. I don't think so.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 02:56 AM
Response to Original message
36. Well, if the breakthrough that women are being offered is the wife of a former President being
dragged across the finish line by the husband, then I believe that Gender issues is going to be helped by this.
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JackRiddler Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-28-08 03:31 AM
Response to Reply #36
37. Ouch.
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