Tag Archives: politics

Tennessee Guerilla Women: MSNBC Axes Olbermann & Matthews as News Anchors – Hallelujah!

Tennessee Guerilla Women: MSNBC Axes Olbermann & Matthews as News Anchors – Hallelujah!.

“MSNBC is doing the world a favor and dropping its two most popular sexist jerks from their gigs as anchors of live political events. The self-centered opinionated woman-hating duo will be replaced by David Gregory during the upcoming presidential and vice presidential debates and on election night.

This means some women might actually tune in to the misogyny channel. Or not!

Let’s not forget that Keith Olbermann is the low-life Rush Limbaugh clone who said this about Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton:

Because a senator – a politician – a person – who can let hang in mid-air the prospect that she might just be sticking around in part, just in case the other guy gets shot – has no business being, and no capacity to be, the President of the United States.”

AdvancingWomen.com  applauds all those women’s groups who put their efforts behind getting these two insulting misogynists dumped from their anchor spots.  Here’s a video showing them in action:

Clash of the Titans – Dowd Predicts Clinton vs Palin in 2012

Clash of the Titans (Wizbang).

NY Times Columnist Maureen Dowd has an interesting view of the future.

If Barack Obama had chosen Hillary Clinton as his running mate, we would now be looking forward to the greatest night in the history of American politics: the Oct. 2 vice presidential debate between Ma Barker and Sarah Barracuda.Now, alas, we’ll have to wait until 2012 when the two fiercest competitors on the trail will no doubt face off in the presidential debate, with Palin still riding high from her 2008 field-dressing of Obama

Dowd goes on to predict President McCain will be too worn out to continue beyond 2012. (She characterizes Palin and Clinton as), as ideological opposites: the gun-toting hockey mom and the shot-swilling Warrior Queen of the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pantsuits are opposites. The rest of Ms. Dowd’s column is her usual mix of balderash, but could she be right about the candidates four years from now?

The X Factor by Lynette Long

Lynette Long, psychologist in Bethesda and the author of 20 books

The X Factor

Gloria Steinem, in her September 4th editorial in the Los Angeles Times, came out strongly against Governor Palin claiming the only thing women have in common with Palin is an X chromosome. I respectfully disagree. Governor Palin knows what it is like to be a woman, a mother, a daughter, a sister – things the two men on the Democratic ticket can never fully understand. She knows what it is like to grow up invisible in an incredibly sexist society, to be stared at, groped, and sexually harassed. She knows what it is like to be smaller in stature than men and physically vulnerable. She knows what it’s like to worry that you are pregnant when you don’t want to be or that you are not pregnant when you want to be. Sarah Palin knows what it is to experience the joys and sorrows of motherhood, to nurse a baby while holding down a job, to leave for work in the morning with a toddler tugging at your pant leg, or to have your children calling you at work to diffuse squabbles or ask for help with homework. She knows that once you get to work you have to speak twice as loud and twice as often to be heard and work twice a hard to go half as far. She knows what it is to be a member of the second sex.

Gender is the most fundamental human characteristic. The first comment made when a child is born is either, “It’s a girl” or “It’s a boy.” From that second on, boys and girls live in parallel universes in the same culture. From the nursery room to the board room, boys and girls are given different messages about their respective roles in the world. At the hospital they are given different types of names and wrapped in different colored blankets. Once home, baby girls and boys wear fundamentally different clothes and play with different toys. This differentiation extends through school where girls are given less attention, picked less frequently to answer questions and placed less often in advanced science and math classes. Once in the workforce, women are steered into lower-paying careers, paid less for the same work, and forced to juggle the responsibilities of work and home. You can’t learn what it is to be a woman, unless you are one. You can’t have a government essentially devoid of women that knows what’s best for women. You can’t legislate for women, without women.

After the last Democratic Primary was over and it was clear Senator Clinton was not going to get the Democratic nomination, myself, and a small group of Clinton supporters met with Senator McCain and Carly Fiorina. I personally explained to Senator McCain that women comprise well over half of the population, yet are underrepresented in every branch of government. I asked him loudly and clearly to choose a woman for the VP slot and to increase the number of women in the cabinet and on the Supreme Court. Senator McCain listened respectfully to my request. Representatives of The New Agenda also met with Carly Fiorina as well as members of the Obama campaign to make similar requests.

After the Democratic Primary, I was personally in contact with a member of Obama’s Finance Committee. He left several messages on my office phone, “urging” me to support Senator Obama. We had numerous contentious conversations and I finally told him I would be happy to vote for Senator Obama and rally other Hillary supporters to vote for Obama but in return I wanted Obama to pledge gender parity in the cabinet. I foolishly thought equal representation in government was a reasonable request. “What if there aren’t qualified women you still expect us to appoint half women to the cabinet?” he replied. I was confused. “There are 300 million people in this country; you’re telling me you can’t find ten qualified women?” He responded, “You can’t have that.” We had no further conversations. There was nothing more to say.

Weeks later I approached a training session for DNC canvassers at a park in my neighborhood. Eager to practice their new skills, they all ran up to me, “Do you support Senator Obama? Do you want to donate money to the DNC?” After explaining that I was a Hillary supporter, I again made my request. I will support Senator Obama if he will pick a woman as his running mate and promise gender parity in the cabinet. The men in the group openly laughed at me and found my request ridiculous. I looked at the horrified faces of the newly minted female canvassers. “They’re laughing at you too,” I muttered.

Not one to give up, I contacted a daughter of a friend of mine who is a policy advisor for Obama. She assured me Obama was a good guy, so I posed my request to her. She generously responded, “I’ll ask him.” When I did not hear back from her in a few days, I shot her another email. She told me how disappointed she was in me for making such a stupid request. Obama was on the “right” side of the issues. Why did it matter whether men or women legislated those issues? I guess the answer from Obama was No. What saddened me was her mother was one of this nation’s greatest champions of title nine, educational equity and gender parity. Her mother and I counted the number of pictures of boys and girls in text books, male and female cartoon characters, and documented the underrepresentation of girls in math classes in our nation’s schools. Yes, policy is important but who decides and delivers that policy is even more important. As Marshall McLuhan profoundly noted, “The medium is the message.” Children incorporate many of their perceptions about gender by age five. Little girls won’t understand if Sarah Palin is pro-life or pro-choice, believes in gun control or is a member of the NRA, but they will know the Vice-President of the United States of America is a girl and that alone will alter their perceptions of themselves.

I have given my loyalty to the Democratic Party for decades. My party, which is comprised primarily of women, has not put a woman on a presidential ticket for 24 years. My party refused to nominate my candidate, Hillary Clinton, for president or vice president, even though she received more votes than any other candidate in history. My party stood silently by as Hillary Clinton was eviscerated by the mainstream media. My party was mute while the main stream media repeatedly called Clinton a bitch and symbolically called me and every other woman in this country a bitch. My party was disturbingly silent when the main stream media commented on Hillary’s body or the shrillness of her voice, reminding me and every other woman the fundamental disrespect we endure on a daily basis. My party’s candidate was mute when Rev. Jeremiah Wright and Father Pfleger openly mocked Senator Clinton from the pulpit of Trinity United Church of Christ. My party’s candidate was silent when the rapper Ludicrous released a new song calling Hillary a bitch. My party and it’s candidate gave their tacit approval for the attacks on Senator Hillary Clinton and consequently women in general.

I have a choice. I can vote for my party and it’s candidates which have demonstrated a blatant disrespect for women and a fundamental lack of integrity or I can vote for the Republican ticket which has heard our concerns and put a woman on the ticket but with whom I fundamentally don’t agree on most issues. If Democratic women wait for the perfect woman to come along, we will never elect a woman. We have to seize opportunity where it presents itself. Besides, the Democratic Party is no longer my home. I have no home, but this election I will make my bed somewhere else.

I respect Gloria Steinem’s right to support the presidential ticket of her choice but she is openly trying to derail Sarah Palin’s historic candidacy. As Madeleine Albright said, “There is a special place in hell for women who don’t help other women.” I will vote for McCain-Palin. I urge other women to do the same. I might not personally agree with Palin on every issue and I promise to the first person knocking on her door, if Roe v. Wade, or any other legislation that goes against the rights of women is threatened. But in Governor Palin I find a woman of integrity, who not only talks the talk but walks the walk. I can work with that. I will work with that. When I walk down the street, I don’t have Democrat printed on my forehead, but my gender is obvious to everyone and impacts every interaction in my life. Since my country is far from gender neutral, right now for me gender trumps everything else. I urge other women to join me in this fight for equality. Sometimes opportunities occur where you least expect them.

Sexism & Sarah Palin – WomenCount || Blog

Sexism & Sarah Palin – WomenCount || Blog.

“It started Friday afternoon with John Roberts on CNN, and then in a slow build over the weekend it became clear what the leading sexist charge would be against Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin: Is it appropriate for her to accept the vice presidential nomination given the magnitude of her current family responsibilities? …

The obvious retort is whether anyone would ask the same question of the father of a four-month-old with Down Syndrome and a pregnant teenager. We think not.

Stamping out sexism is about shifting the culture. It will be good for America to watch Sarah Palin on the campaign trail – bouncing from parenting to politics. That’s how most women function – multi-tasking, leaning on friends and family, and waking up each morning and doing it all again.”

AdvancingWomen.com thinks the media should stand down from their sexist harassment and disparagement of VP Nominee Sarah Palin. We are in complete agreement with WomenCount that “It is important to distinguish between the broader issue of sexism and the ideology of an individual.” It is irrelevant whether Palin is conservative or progressive on social issues and values. This is America.  Palin has every right to put forth her candidacy and make her case. Whether we choose to vote for her or not is each person’s choice.  But it should be every woman’s choice to defend Palin’s right to take the public stage and not have to endure a barrage of sexist criticism and gender biased innuendo.  Until the day comes when a women can enter the political arena and participate on a level playing field, every woman should say “What they did to Hillary Clinton, what they are doing to Sarah Palin, they do to me as well.”  So, to those in the media who, like Rip Van Winkle, may have slept through the women’s movement, wake up!  Time to move on and be fair to all of us.

Amy Goodman and Two Democracy Now! Producers Unlawfully Arrested At the RNC

Amy Goodman and Two Democracy Now! Producers Unlawfully Arrested At the RNC.

ST. PAUL, MN—Democracy Now! host Amy Goodman was unlawfully arrested in downtown St. Paul, Minnesota at approximately 5 p.m. local time. Police violently manhandled Goodman, yanking her arm, as they arrested her. Video of her arrest can be seen on Youtube

Goodman was arrested while attempting to free two Democracy Now! producers who were being unlawfuly detained. They are Sharif Abdel Kouddous and Nicole Salazar. Kouddous and Salazar were arrested while they carried out their journalistic duties in covering street demonstrations at the Republican National Convention. Goodman’s crime appears to have been defending her colleagues and the freedom of the press.

During the demonstration in which they were arrested law enforcement officers used pepper spray, rubber bullets, concussion grenades and excessive force. Several dozen others were also arrested during this action.

Amy Goodman is one of the most well-known and well-respected journalists in the United States. She has received journalism’s top honors for her reporting and has a distinguished reputation of bravery and courage. The arrest of Goodman, Kouddous and Salazar is a transparent attempt to intimidate journalists from the nation’s leading independent news outlet.

AdvancingWomen.com joins Democracy Now! in calling on all journalists and concerned citizens to call the office of Mayor Chris Coleman and the Ramsey County Jail and demand the immediate release of Goodman, Kouddous and Salazar. These calls can be directed to: Chris Rider from Mayor Coleman’s office at 651-266-8535 and the Ramsey County Jail at 651-266-9350 (press extension 0).

Woman in the News – Palin, an Outsider Who Charms – Biography – NYTimes.com

Woman in the News – Palin, an Outsider Who Charms – Biography – NYTimes.com.

Here it is…. all the low down about the surprise Republican VP candidate.  Women particularly will be scourering Governor Palin’s bio for clues about her position on policies and, as a practical matter, the positions she will take on women’s issues.

Sarah Shocker – Women Count Blog

Sarah Shocker – Women Count Blog

“Wow! McCain definitely knows how to shake things up. Picking Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate today makes it crystal clear – women are the most coveted demographic for both Obama and McCain. It is also clear that Senator Clinton’s candidacy continues to impact the race in unprecedented ways. In fact, many think McCain’s pick is a reaction to Obama not picking Clinton as his running mate. We just listened to Governor Palin’s speech and noticed that she didn’t mention Obama or Biden by name, but she did give props to Senator Clinton and Geraldine Ferraro. Like the rest of the country, we still need to get up to speed on everything about Governor Palin, but there is no doubt that she is pro-life, and really close to Big Oil interests. If McCain thinks we will fall in line simply because he picked a woman – we will give him our own surprise. We know that Senator Clinton’s supporters didn’t just vote for her because she was a woman – they voted for her because she was a qualified woman who was with them on the issues. Stay tuned – WomenCount will uncover the “substance over style” and we will continue to keep you updated as the “Sarah Shocker” plays out”

AdvancingWomen.com’s take on “Sarah Shocker”:

AdvancingWomen doesn’t think we should “fall in line”  as we examine Governor Sarah Palin’s credentials, just because she’s a woman.  We do think, however,  we should be extraordinarily respectful and mindful that, as women, we do share a common history with her, and whoever is elected, we will share a common future, so it would serve us well to look for common ground and ways to work together, whichever side of an issue we fall on. We should all remember that women legislators of both parties have done more for other women than men of either party.

We think Governor Palin’s nomination should give us all hope…. at a time when many of the “first wave” of women advocates, have given up the fight, or settled for achieving their own ambitions without reaching down to give a hand up to other women.  Or they become imbued with a sense of sadness and loss instead of a fighting spirit which inspires them to move on and take up the next challenge.

This morning Ellen Goodman wrote  a kind of sad, elegiac tribute  titled “Curtain call for Clinton’s drama”, http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/08/29/curtain_call_for_clintons_drama/, mentioning the lost battles of Geraldine Ferraro and Hillary Clinton, noting “For the first time, the woman checked off the box of experience. And watched it reframed as “old politics.” And “However many speakers talked about the 18 million cracks in the glass ceiling, the ceiling is in place. While polls say that women now feel it’s more likely to have a woman president in the future, older women wonder, “In my lifetime?”  Goodman ended with Senator Clinton’s quote: “My mother was born before women could vote. My daughter got to vote for her mother for president. That, for the moment”, wrote Goodman” is history enough.”

AdvancingWomen.com respectfully disagrees.  That is not history enough. We are thrilled to welcome Governor Sarah Palin into the race.  Of course she will be imperfect like every man who’s ever served, just like Jefferson and Lincoln and John Kennedy.  Of course she won’t agree with us on every issue.  As women trying to crack the glass ceiling, we should offer a big enough tent to allow people to have civil debate and try to reach common ground. We don’t think serious, thoughtful people will vote for Governor Sarah Palin just because she is a woman any more than some people would vote for Barack Obama just because he is a Democrat.  Hopefully they will study the candidates in depth and in context and make a judgment on the totality of the issues before casting their vote.
But, in the meantime, the valiant run  of Senator Clinton and the bold nomination of Governor Sarah Palin are just two more steps on a long , steep road that will eventually take a woman crashing through that highest and hardest glass ceiling and into the seat of power in the Oval Office.  AdvancingWomen looks forward to all of us working together to do everything possible to make that day come sooner rather than later, starting with developing that women’s farm team, with electing women dog catchers and sheriffs, city council women and school superintendents, mayors, governors, senators and ultimately….Madame President.

Curtain call for Clinton’s drama – Ellen Goodman on Women’s Reach For The Highest Office

Curtain call for Clinton’s drama – Ellen Goodman On Women’s Reach For the Highest Office.

Ellen Goodman traces the arc of conventions she’s attended, from “Shirley Chisholm’s run for the presidency turned into a sprint for the vice presidency to Geraldine Ferraro  saying, “American history is about doors being opened.” We were sure it was a beginning.

(She) was there in 1992, in the aftermath of the Clarence Thomas hearings when angry women energized the Year of the Woman, sending four new women to the Senate. The same year Hillary Clinton made her debut and her audition tape as the favorite target of the right wing.

This time, for the first time, the woman checked off the box of experience. And watched it reframed as “old politics.”

However many speakers talked about the 18 million cracks in the glass ceiling, the ceiling is in place. While polls say that women now feel it’s more likely to have a woman president in the future, older women wonder, “In my lifetime?”

What we know about the “sisterhood of the traveling pantsuits” is that women need a farm team… Not enough women imagine themselves running for office and so do not run for office.”

AdvancingWomen thinks that is something we need to change.

Goodman says: “Near the end, the senator offered a long view. “My mother was born before women could vote,” she said. “My daughter got to vote for her mother for president.” That, for the moment, is history enough.”

We respectfully disagree.  That is not history enough.  That is just another step on a long and winding road that will eventually take us to the top… that will eventually take a woman crashing through that highest and hardest glass ceiling and into the seat of power in the Oval Office.  We will work together to do everything possible to make that day come sooner rather than later, starting with developing that farm team, with electing women dog catchers and sheriffs, city council women and mayors, governors, senators and ultimately….Madame President.

WomenCount Launches – Hillary Recognizes 88th Celebration of Women’s Suffrage

WomenCount || Blog

The following is an account written live at the WomenCount launch event at the Democratic National Convention by members of the MOMocrats :

Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney said: ( Hillary’s)

“Her candidacy was the best of times and the worst of times. I’m so proud of her. she gained. she earned 18 million votes. and she raised more money than any other candidate in history except Barack Obama. I am standing taller and I believe every woman is standing taller. Thank you Hillary Cliinton for being there and running and doing so well.”

“But it was also the worst of times for women because we saw the dark underbelly of sexism and misogyny, and like Ginger Rogers who did everything backwards and in high heels, women have more barriers to break. Someone should write a book, about women who have come so far yet still have obstacles.”

Jemu Greene: “As Madeline Albright says, ‘There’s a special place in hell for women who don’t help other women’.”

Congresswoman from Florida, Debbie Washington Schultz:”

Congresswoman Schultz: Of the 240 women who have served in the House of Representatives, 70 are serving now. Take a look at the candidates at the WomenCount site – take a look at all of these candidates and support them. “Tonight will be a fantastic celebration of Hillary Clinton’s candidacy.”

“We need you to join us in this movement… to get this organization launched… with some of the most amazing women I’ve worked with.”

Acknowledging the the founders of WomenCount: Rosemary Compasano, Susie Tompkins Buell, Amy Rao, Stacy Mason

“This team – with your help, if you join our team, we will not just get language on sexism and gender bias on the Democratic platform; we’ll get it on the Republican platform.” (Jehmu Greene)

Greene: “With your commitment… a woman will be president!”

Senator Clinton then recognized all of the congresswomen who are present, and she recognized today as the 88th celebration of women’s suffrage.

“We cannot be deterred. We cannot be divided.” “I have served in the Senate and I do not want to see progress subverted for four more years with a Republican in the White House… but what it so great about our country is we don’t sit around wiaiting for our government to do things… that’s where citizen activism has always made a difference. The march toward women’s suffrage that ended in 1920 with the passage of the 19th Amendment started in 1848 with the Women’s Rights Convention in New York…” Women kept at it, she said, and WomenCount is one of the organizations that takes on that good work… “WomenCount will continue to stand up against the pervasive bias that we saw in the media. WomenCount will continue to stand up and be a voice for those who feel that they are left out and left behind. There is so much work to be done and this is exciting and energizing work.”

She thanked everyone for working so hard for her.

“I will be there with you, I will work with you.” “We have made a lot of progress… but we have a lot more to do. So join with us, be part of this ongoing effort to realize the promise of America and the lives of Americans.

Hillary Clinton speaks at Women Count Launch About Future of the Organization