Misogyny I Won't Miss
By Marie Cocco
Thursday, May 15, 2008; Page A15
As the Democratic nomination contest slouches toward a close, it's time to
take stock of what I will not miss.
I will not miss seeing advertisements for T-shirts that bear the slogan
"Bros before Hos." The shirts depict Barack Obama (the Bro) and Hillary
Clinton (the Ho) and are widely sold on the Internet.
I will not miss walking past airport concessions selling the Hillary
Nutcracker, a device in which a pantsuit-clad Clinton doll opens her legs
to reveal stainless-steel thighs that, well, bust nuts. I won't miss
television and newspaper stories that make light of the novelty item.
I won't miss episodes like the one in which liberal radio personality
Randi Rhodes called Clinton a "big [expletive] whore" and said the same
about former vice presidential nominee Geraldine Ferraro. Rhodes was
appearing at an event sponsored by a San Francisco radio station, before
an audience of appreciative Obama supporters -- one of whom had promoted
the evening on the presumptive Democratic nominee's official campaign Web
site.
I won't miss Citizens United Not Timid (no acronym, please), an
anti-Clinton group founded by Republican guru Roger Stone.
Political discourse will at last be free of jokes like this one, told last
week by magician Penn Jillette on MSNBC: "Obama did great in February, and
that's because that was Black History Month. And now Hillary's doing much
better 'cause it's White Bitch Month, right?" Co-hosts Joe Scarborough and
Mika Brzezinski rebuked Jillette.
I won't miss political commentators (including National Public Radio
political editor Ken Rudin and Andrew Sullivan, the columnist and blogger)
who compare Clinton to the Glenn Close character in the movie "Fatal
Attraction." In the iconic 1987 film, Close played an independent New York
woman who has an affair with a married man played by Michael Douglas. When
the liaison ends, the jilted woman becomes a deranged, knife-wielding
stalker who terrorizes the man's blissful suburban family. Message:
Psychopathic home-wrecker, begone.
The airwaves will at last be free of comments that liken Clinton to a
"she-devil" (Chris Matthews on MSNBC, who helpfully supplied an on-screen
mock-up of Clinton sprouting horns). Or those who offer that she's
"looking like everyone's first wife standing outside a probate court"
(Mike Barnicle, also on MSNBC).
But perhaps it is not wives who are so very problematic. Maybe it's
mothers. Because, after all, Clinton is more like "a scolding mother,
talking down to a child" (Jack Cafferty on CNN).
When all other images fail, there is one other I will not miss. That is,
the down-to-the-basics, simplest one: "White women are a problem, that's
-- you know, we all live with that" (William Kristol of Fox News).
I won't miss reading another treatise by a man or woman, of the left or
right, who says that sexism has had not even a teeny-weeny bit of
influence on the course of the Democratic campaign. To hint that sexism
might possibly have had a minimal role is to play that risible "gender
card."
Most of all, I will not miss the silence.
I will not miss the deafening, depressing silence of Democratic National
Committee Chairman Howard Dean or other leading Democrats, who to my
knowledge (with the exception of Sen. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland)
haven't publicly uttered a word of outrage at the unrelenting, sex-based
hate that has been hurled at a former first lady and two-term senator from
New York. Among those holding their tongues are hundreds of Democrats for
whom Clinton has campaigned and raised millions of dollars. Don Imus
endured more public ire from the political class when he insulted the
Rutgers University women's basketball team.
Would the silence prevail if Obama's likeness were put on a tap-dancing
doll that was sold at airports? Would the media figures who dole out
precious face time to these politicians be such pals if they'd compared
Obama with a character in a blaxploitation film? And how would crude
references to Obama's sex organs play?
There are many reasons Clinton is losing the nomination contest, some
having to do with her strategic mistakes, others with the groundswell for
"change." But for all Clinton's political blemishes, the darker stain that
has been exposed is the hatred of women that is accepted as a part of our
culture.





Facebook
StumbleUpon