Glory, Gloria, you've done it again!
by Daisy

"Feminism has never been about getting a job for one woman. It's about making life more fair for women everywhere."
Said Gloria Steinem, a woman who knows feminism because she defined it, grew it, nurtured it and helped it bear fruit.

I've established my liberal leaning, my support for Hillary Clinton, my choice of local candidate for state assembly, and more. I've even shared my favorite bumper stickers. When Barack Obama chose Joe Biden as his running mate, I worried a little. Biden has the credentials, the intelligence, the experience in D.C.'s trenches. He's been on the campaign trail enough to know how it functions. I worried more about the perception of the Old White Guy, the image of Obama picking someone to appeal to the political center.

Then John McCain picked Sarah Palin. Stylish, presentable, and female, the choice seemed to pander to the women who might leave Obama's camp for someone of their own gender.

Unfortunately for McCain, it's just not that simple. All politics may be local, but national politics do more than trickle down. What happens in Washinton, D.C. doesn't stay in Washington, D.C. It floods the nation. Women get that. We know that leadership at all levels needs to be in competent hands, whether male or female, whether black or white.

Michelle (Scribbit) and I have had many a civil conversation about our political differences, and none of those conversations even mentioned Palin's gender or appearance. Senator McCain doesn't get that. He doesn't understand that women vote with their brains, their thoughts, their philosophies. Women don't automatically pull the lever or punch the chad for the one who wears heels.

A Palin presidency (and make no doubt, it's possible) would be devastating to women's rights. Palin in or near the Oval Office would mean one giant step for one woman, but one giant step into quicksand for women.

Comments

 

Black, Gray and White

While I disagree with Palin's politics it's important to understand, unfortunately that she represents many women--and men. Seeing people cheer her at the Republican convention made it all too clear that there are those who really do tow the line of all those anti-women policies in the guise of something--family values, God, good of country? They refuse to hear that what is good for us all is also good for the individual. Her candidacy has legitimized the anti-woman stance, the paternal stance since she so enthusiastically embraces it. But we live in a world with many women and men who have grown up with trickle-down feminism, and I hope, no, I believe, that this, this visceral statement of equality, cannot be reversed.  

Laura, www.RebelliousThoughtsofaWoman.com

 

Senator McCain Isn't Dumb

Senator McCain doesn't get that. He doesn't understand that women vote
with their brains, their thoughts, their philosophies. Women don't automatically pull the lever or punch the chad for the one who wears
heels.

I'm curious about this assumption that McCain picked Palin to win Hillary supporters. I just don't see anything to indicate that. Personally, I don't think she was picked to win women's votes half as much as to win conservative religious votes and to energize the Republican Party.