Posts tagged ‘Clinton’

May 27, 2008

Bridges

A dozen cool bridges:

A bridge inspires us. A bridge overcomes an obstacle and connects someplace to someplace else, with strength and often with grace and beauty. A bridge lets us go to the other side.

I don’t know about all that, but these are neat looking bridges, regardless. The only one that I’ve walked over is the Ponte Vecchio.

Shocker! CDM is a big, old mess:

Leading academics and watchdog groups allege that the UN’s main offset fund is being routinely abused by chemical, wind, gas and hydro companies who are claiming emission reduction credits for projects that should not qualify. The result is that no genuine pollution cuts are being made, undermining assurances by the UK government and others that carbon markets are dramatically reducing greenhouse gases, the researchers say.

(via Majikthise)

Interesting summary of Sen. Durbin’s recent hearing on Global Internet Freedom:

Durbin said he called the hearing to examine “the role that American companies play in internet censorship, and displayed a lot of passion on the issue. He asked whether Congress should find that it’s wrong for an American company to in any way cooperate with censorship and repression.

You know, if the worst “the Man” has to fear is vegans and Critical Mass bicyclists, I’d say he can safely fire his food taster and stretch out in his throne.

A prediction: I predict that when Obama gets the nomination, we’re going to have whole crapload of articles about how all of Clinton’s female supporters are now supporting McCain (even though there won’t be any actual evidence of this) because (and this will certainly not be overtly stated, only heavily implied) women are so freaking stupid that they don’t understand or care about real political issues – they just wanted a girl, and now they’re pissed.

Of course, I could be totally wrong, and we won’t see any articles like this. Shall we take bets now?

May 20, 2008

Just Because People Say It…A Lot

In two separate studies, neither of which should come as a surprise to anybody with a brain, the Washington Post today dispels some things we’ve heard a lot of squawking about for the past couple of years:

First of all, no, there is no education crisis in which girls’ increasing achievement is coming at the expense of boys’ success:

“A lot of people think it is the boys that need the help,” co-author Christianne Corbett said. “The point of the report is to highlight the fact that that is not exclusively true. There is no crisis with boys. If there is a crisis, it is with African American and Hispanic students and low-income students, girls and boys.”

This ought not to come as a surprise, because whenever you hear about a boys’ crisis in education, you never hear about boys doing worse than boys did in the past (clearly, because they’re not) – you only hear about girls doing better than girls did in the past. But there’s no discrepancy here for people who feel any advancement made by women is by its very nature at the expense of men. (Incidentally, remember back when Laura Bush decided to make saving American boys her mission?)

And secondly, no, teenage girls aren’t using a technicality to blow the football team and still call themselves virgins:

Contrary to widespread belief, teenagers do not appear to commonly engage in oral sex as a way to preserve their virginity, according to the first study to examine the question nationally.

This ought to come as no surprise, because there’s always ongoing speculation by adults who can’t get their minds out of teenagers’ pants about what porn-o-riffic exploits the young might be indulging in these days. I’m no fan of Caitlin Flanagan (in part, because she frequently mourns for poor, neglected, American boys), but this Atlantic article is a good explanation of where this sort of speculation comes from, and why it’s degrading and insulting to teenagers:

The moms in my set are convinced-they’re certain; they know for a fact-that all over the city, in the very best schools, in the nicest families, in the leafiest neighborhoods, twelve- and thirteen-year-old girls are performing oral sex on as many boys as they can.

Related, the creepiness of purity balls! There’s a line at which traditional safeguarding of the “virtue” of young girls becomes more perverse than its opposite, and I think it’s around the time people forget that a vagina is something a girl has, not something that she is.

More on appeasement:

Bolton in the WSJ…:

‘When the U.S. negotiates with “terrorists and radicals,” it gives them legitimacy, a precious and tangible political asset. Thus, even Mr. Obama criticized former President Jimmy Carter for his recent meetings with Hamas leaders. Meeting with leaders of state sponsors of terrorism such as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or Kim Jong Il is also a mistake.

…versus Scoblic in the LAT:

Containment, negotiation, nuclear stability — each of these things helped protect the United States and end the Cold War. And yet, at the time, conservatives thought each was synonymous with appeasement.

(via NYT)

I’m sick to death of talking about the primaries, but I’m even sicker lately of hearing people say things like this:

[W]ere it not for Hillary’s vote for the war, [Obama] would not have run because there was no opening. She gave him the opening by voting for the war. So spare me the stories about her being defeated by sexism or whatever. Democrats are dying to vote for a qualified liberal woman for President (just as some of us are dying to vote for a qualified liberal African American. And this year we will).

What this writer really means is: “MY FRIENDS AND I are dying to vote for a qualified liberal woman for President….” Just because you are a liberal who dislikes Clinton based on her (lack of) merit does not mean that sexism hasn’t played a huge part in her reception as a candidate. If you truly, genuinely believe that race and sex play little part in how the majority of Americans (yes, even liberal Americans) see these candidates, well, then you have a far, far more hopeful view of people than I do, and I hope you’re right.

But you’re not.

Also, while I’m talking about this, I’d like an end to the oft-repeated exclamation that no one mentions black women when the topic at hand is the general reception of these two specific candidates. Does everyone really have to spell out “women, including black women” and “black people, including black women,” in order for people to stop tossing in the observation that “no one’s talking about black women” to bolster their claims that either (a) white women are trying to say they’re worse off than black men; or (b) people are generally more reactive to racism than sexism?

On a lighter note (before I explode), I have an odd obsession with competitive eaters – my favorite is Sonya “The Black Widow” Thomas, who manages a McDonald’s and weighs less than 100 pounds – but even if I didn’t, this interview with Crazy Legs Conti is particularly hilarious:

I ate three sticks of butter as fast as I could. I wouldn’t recommend that for a pro-eater or a casual diner. . . .I also ate my way out of an eight foot box of popcorn, the Popcorn Sarcophagus, which earned me the moniker, “The Houdini of Cuisini”. I found it wasn’t the pop or the corn that did me in, but the butter. Butter is seems, is my kryptonite.

February 4, 2008

Stupid Men Continue to Flat-Out Dare Women to Elect Hillary Clinton

The latest: Bill Kristol provides an opening for Erica Jong to get all “Erica Jong” about Clinton.

UPDATE: Here is a very good post at Bitch Ph.D. about the struggle to decide, Obama or Clinton (and the post includes links to other posts on the same topic). I think this is really a terrific overall summary of what those of us stuck on the fence are thinking (I linked to this through The Edge of the American West), and it being Super Tuesday and all, it’s probably the last link I’m going to post about this. I’m getting sick of the topic.

Before I close this up, however, I want to say that while my posts here on the blog have mostly focused on Clinton and the general reception she is getting as a candidate, that’s not actually my main personal focus in the primaries as a whole. It’s been my focus here on the blog for two reasons: (1) the vast majority of my friends are Obama supporters already; and (2) the general anti-woman framework within which so many anti-Clinton arguments have been presented pisses me off a lot, and my main motivation for writing anything is being pissed off. But I am increasingly impressed with Obama, and I think his candidacy is as goopy-exciting as do my fellow youths. Two of my favorite people have been working on the Obama campaign for months now, and they are both smart as whips and have nothing but great things to say of the man and his platform.

Also, I totally dropped the ball: I didn’t look into registering here in Brooklyn until this past weekend, and realized I would have had to register by January 11 to vote in the primary (besides which, apparently you can’t vote in the primaries in NY if you’re registered as an independent?), so I myself will be forced to avoid making an actual decision on this, and I can’t really say I’m sorry. Regardless, this primary season has certainly been the most interesting and exciting in my adulthood, and I eagerly anticipate the next phase.

January 8, 2008

No One Would Vote For Achola Obama

Gloria Steinem in the Times: “. . . what worries me is that he is seen as unifying by his race while she is seen as divisive by her sex.”

Update: I’m going to post more links about Clinton here, because, even though it’s completely outside the scope of this blog, this is a hot topic for several of my friends and relatives, and I know they’ll be interested. Let me just say, before I get into this, that I myself am not an unadulterated Clinton supporter. I don’t dislike her, though – certainly not with the vehemence of so many Democrats. I’ve also been an Obama fan ever since his 2004 Senate run. I was thrilled he won in Iowa and inspired by his awesome speech. I feel very conflicted about the primaries this year, and I know a few of you do, too; thus, all the linkage:

The following Slate post kind of annoys me, because it attributes Clinton’s New Hampshire win to a Hallmark-y outpouring of sympathy, including all the usual explanations that make me want to punch people – women voted for her because she cried, or because they felt sorry for her, etc. I do, however, love this description of the candidates:

Since Iowa, Hillary has been for me the brainy girl who studies hard for every test and writes great papers, semester after semester. And Obama has been the smooth, crowd-pleasing, charismatic genius guy who breezes in and charms his way to the prize—award for best student, admission to the college of choice, a ticket to the White House, whatever.

And here’s a brief response to Steinem’s column that gives women a little more credit for having substantive reasons to back one candidate or the other:

What I hoped to point out is that in so frequently describing how gender isn’t the main factor in this presidential race, we are sometimes quick to assure ourselves that it isn’t a powerful factor.

Going back to Steinem’s column, the following quote really stood out to me:

What worries me is that some women, perhaps especially younger ones, hope to deny or escape the sexual caste system; thus Iowa women over 50 and 60, who disproportionately supported Senator Clinton, proved once again that women are the one group that grows more radical with age.

I have noticed this sort of attitude in other young women (and in myself) for years, and it’s really been highlighted with Clinton’s candidacy. So many times, I will find myself reluctant to even mention gender, because it makes me feel silly. Like, ‘oh, come on, that? Haven’t we all gotten past that yet?’ I think women my age believe that, if they just refuse to acknowledge the ways in which sexual inequality still exists, it won’t affect their lives and their choices. But as each generation ages, and attempts to accomplish bigger and more important things in their lives and in the world, they realize that sexism is not anywhere near dead yet, and feminism must remain part of the dialogue. And on that note, here’s yet another Slate post.

And another one attempting to explain New Hampshire. As I’ve said, I think that the Lazio effect is an inadequate explanation, and not merely because it is insulting (although Clinton herself says she thinks it contributed). One need only be a bit down on one’s luck in New York City for a few days to realize just how very much people – men and women alike – do not love a loser. America has no pity: if you fall down, the majority of people will just start a-kicking. And despite the stereotypes, women are usually no less predatory in this respect (remember seventh grade?). I think the fourth explanation offered is the most likely. Here’s Josh Marshall’s take.

One thing is certain: the Obama v. Clinton issue is a big conundrum for a lot of women. Several interesting reader comments on Talking Points Memo: here, here, here, and here.

Well, if Clinton’s candidacy accomplishes nothing else, at least we can now use the singular ‘they’ without shame.

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