Daily Archives: September 10th, 2008

This whacko thinks Palin is some sort of feminist milestone. Yeah, if you use the wingnuts’ perversion of the word. (But apparently she thought the same of Madonna.)

War Room:

When a local TV reporter in Milwaukee, Wis., asked Sen. Joe Biden if electing Sarah Palin as vice president would be a step forward for women, he replied: “I think the issue is what does Sarah Palin think? What does she believe? I assume she thinks and agrees with the same policies that George Bush and John McCain think. And that’s obviously a backward step for women.”

This remark prompted an e-mailed statement to reporters on Tuesday from Amber Wilkerson, spokeswoman for the Republican National Committee, who decried Biden as a sexist:

The only person taking a step backward is Joe Biden, whose appalling and arrogant statements are better suited for the back rooms of his old boys club. Sarah Palin’s nomination as the Republican vice presidential nominee is an historic opportunity to break the highest glass ceiling. While John McCain and Sarah Palin continue to press their message of change, Joe Biden should stop these sorts of old-style attacks. 

Aside from the lunacy of the assertion that it’s sexist to challenge Palin’s views on actual policies, there’s another troubling aspect to Wilkerson’s statement. Exactly what “opportunity to break the highest glass ceiling” is Wilkerson talking about?

Last we checked, Palin is running for vice president, not president. At best, Palin will break the second highest glass ceiling. Or is it the RNC’s view that a woman will never be president and the supportive role of veep is the best a girl can hope for?

War Room:

On the stump in Ohio Tuesday, Sarah Palin delivered what seemed to be a set of pretty killer lines.

“[I]t was just the other day that, surprisingly, our opponent [Barack Obama] — he brought up earmarks. And considering his record of earmark spending, I was surprised that he’d even want to raise the subject,” Palin said. “In just three years our opponent has requested nearly $1 billion in earmarks. That’s nearly $1 million for every working day.”

But there’s a catch. Turns out Palin has been keeping up with Obama — actually, by this standard, she’s more than keeping up with him.

As Palin said, she was only counting working days. I asked a McCain spokesman exactly what she meant, and he sent over the calculations. The McCain camp used TimeandDate.com to tally up Obama’s time in office at 930 days. That number does not include weekends or federal holidays. (According to ABC News’ Jake Tapper, Obama has made a total of $931.3 million in requests.)

Using the same Web site, I did the same calculation for Palin’s time in office and came up with 447 days. According to the Anchorage Daily News, Palin’s administration has asked for a total of roughly $453 million. (There’s a different number floating around, $750 million, but I’ve confirmed that $453 million is the correct figure.)

So wouldn’t you know it: Palin has requested a little over $1 million for every one of her working days, right on pace with Obama. In fact, per working day, she’s actually slightly ahead of him.

Thank god New York still has old crappy machines.

And remember: vote with your mind. Not your heart. Or your genitals.

Info.

Manual.

But she is liberated in that being against her policies is not an act of sexism.

In 1966 Betty Friedan is said to have scribbled the goals of the National Organization for Women (NOW) on a napkin: “To take action to bring women into full participation in the mainstream of American society now, exercising all privileges and responsibilities thereof in truly equal partnership with men.”

The group Emily’s List’s mission statement reads, “when women are involved in the political process, our democracy is truly representative. When women make policy, the needs of women and families are not ignored,” and later adds “we are making a long-term investment in women to develop their political skills and cultivate resources so that we can bring more women into politics and elected office.”

The White House Project, describes itself as “a national, nonpartisan, not-for-profit organization, 501(c)(3), to advance women’s leadership in all communities and sectors, up to the U.S. presidency,” and notes that, “by filling the leadership pipeline with a richly diverse, critical mass of women, we make American institutions, businesses and government truly representative…The White House Project creates a culture where America’s most valuable untapped resource–women–can succeed in all realms. To advance this mission, The White House Project strives to support women and the issues that allow women to lead in their own lives and in the world. When women leaders bring their voices, vision and leadership to the table alongside men, the debate is more robust and the policy is more inclusive and sustainable.”

But these groups are not cheering the vice presidential ambitions of Sarah Palin.

“We recognize what a moment that is for women’s leadership,” noted Elizabeth Hines, of the White House Project. “We are a nonpartisan organization but we are also a progressive organization. What we know so far is her vision of women’s rights isn’t necessarily on the same page of our vision for the future of women in this country.”

Olga Vives of NOW echoes Hines: “There will be people that will look at her favorably but once the campaign starts debating the issues, I think the country will see how extreme she is…”

These and other comments raise interesting questions: Should these and other “women’s groups” be seeking to advance women, any and all women, into positions of power or any candidate, male or female, who agrees with their politics?

Gloria Steinem’s argument-that women are just as talented and capable as men-has carried the day and brought a woman to the doorstep of the American presidency, but she doesn’t seem to be too happy about it.

If the polls are right, most American women are not wedded to any particular ideology but are either centrists or hybrids of conservative and liberal and while abortion is often cited as the issue that will ultimately keep a woman from voting for a candidate like Palin, in fact, most polls like this one andthis one, show that women actually tend to be more more anti-abortion than men by between 4-8 points.

For only the second time in American history a woman is on a major American political party’s presidential ticket and Sarah Palin is an election and a heartbeat away from being the most powerful person on the planet. Her candidacy is a moment of truth for these and other groups who must decide whether they are going to fight for all women who aspire to hold positions of influence and power, without regard for ideology, or instead work to elect candidates who, regardless of gender, share their political agenda.

Link.

Forget all that gansta rap and hip-hop $#!^ (the market is, it seems).

This is real: