sexism

Right Wing Response: Bush, Palestine, Eco-freaks, and the New New Deal

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Michael Ramirez cartoon from Investor's Business Daily for Jan. 12, 2009

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict may seem old news, but it’s entering a new phase, argues Jonathan Schanzer, deputy executive director of the Jewish Policy Center. Mark Hemingway of National Review Online discusses Schanzer’s new book, Hamas vs. Fatah: The Struggle for Palestine, and relays Schanzer’s argument that the mainstream media have oversimplified the conflict by underestimating the internal divisions in Palestine. After all, Fatah and Hamas aren’t allies. Israel’s current struggle is with Gaza alone.

President George W. Bush held his final press conference yesterday morning. Fox News commentators and guests offer analysis.

And here Bush gets a little more personal with Fox’s Brit Hume. The president explains why he is so calm and content as he prepares to leave office, and tells Hume that he’s even planning to write a book that will explain and defend some of the most controversial decisions he made while in office.

Is it a new New Deal or not, and does it even matter? President-elect Barack Obama’s record-smashing stimulus plan will likely top $1 trillion when it’s finally approved. Jonah Goldberg writes over at NRO’s The Corner blog that only liberals are comparing this strategy with FDR’s New Deal and adds that conservatives feel the comparison is moot. But Pat Buchanan would apparently disagree. In an editorial for Investor’s Business Daily, Buchanan argues not only that Obama seems to be channeling Roosevelt, but that massive spending is more likely to get us into trouble than to bail us out of it. In a separate IBD editorial, Lawrence Kudlow sees a more conservative tinge to Obama’s plan, drawing a parallel to Reagan’s tax-cut plan. Big government, limited government, or something in between? Obama keeps us guessing.

Google searches are speeding climate change (but then, isn’t everybody?). A physicist is trying to publish his findings on the amount of energy consumed by Google’s data centers every time you try to run a search (the energy used boiling water for a cup of tea equals two searches). William Teach responds sarcastically at Right Wing News, suggesting that the global warming “Believers” log off and stop using the Internet. Teach writes that he did 15 Google searches after reading the article, just for fun.

Eco-warriors: stop procreating, humans hurt the planet. Feminists: stop procreating, it’s sexist. Cassy Fiano writes on her blog and on Right Wing News that the newest argument in favor of the extinction of mankind is that sexual reproduction is a sexist, culturally oppressive holdover from a less civilized time, more or less. She goes on to excoriate modern feminism as it drifts toward something like Stalinism. But hey, sex without reproduction would be really fun for about, say, one generation.

Always a rebel, Mickey Rourke’s Hollywood comeback doesn’t preclude careless comments—you know, supporting Bush. It’s unpopular in Hollywood to defend the outgoing president, writes Andrew Breitbart of Big Hollywood, but having just won the best actor Golden Globe award for his performance in The Wrestler, Rourke did just that. Bush was simply “in the wrong place at the wrong time,” Rourke said, and the situation after 9/11 would have been near impossible for any conceivable leader. Breitbart suggests that Rourke’s peer-slash-rival Sean Penn had a much inferior and less ballsy dalliance into politics when he publicly supported Fidel Castro’s regime, and writes that any “no friend of Sean Penn is a friend of mine.”

Amuse Bouche: Actions Speak Louder Than Words

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Dick Morris and the entire Fox News election coverage team could have saved themselves a lot of hot air while bloviating about the sexism rampant in hard-nosed discussions of Sarah Palin throughout her introduction to the American public.

They could have just gone to www.voteforthemilf.com and found out who the real lowlifes are and exposed them as undeniably chauvinistic pigs.

See for yourself.

UPDATE: Prank or not, the link has now been change to redirect people (even first time clickers) to Google.  Party’s over.

Source (and home to plenty of evidence): GovGap.com

Hillary’s manhood problem

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

younghillary

Sen. Hillary Clinton “makes Rocky look like a pansy,” according to the North Carolina governor. She has “testicular fortitude,” in the words of one labor leader. In contrast, she’s behind shirts with pantsuits on them.

Say what?

Feminism isn’t the same now in the wake of the Clintons. And the Hillary Clinton campaign is partly responsible for femininity’s evolution. Clinton changed the way we view women, but in the process has changed feminism: from equality between genders, to expectation among genders.

And what better way to crystallize this than the success, fanfare and excesses of Sex and the City the movie… to remind yourself that men come and go, but three sidekicks and a ludicrous wardrobe make life worth living while you traverse a swampy city.

But what Sex and the City hits on is a female camaraderie, that when one is down, another will be there for a pick up. The franchise is marked by an odd hedonism and materialism, but gentle female blood exists. As women are there to pick another up, it is the downtrodden women whose responsibility it becomes to never forget.

Like how they’ll never forget Peggy Agar.

Agar is a reporter in Detroit. She harangued Barack Obama, trying to get a question off about autoworkers while he was touring a Chrysler factory.

“Hold on one second, sweetie, we’ll do a press avail, thanks,” the Illinois senator said.

(more…)

The non-conversation on sexism

Friday, March 21st, 2008

hillsexism.jpg

For all the references to the “historic” quality of Hillary’s run for the presidency, sexism as a political topic, still seems to be merely riding along in the passenger seat. While racism as a topic has gone viral, like the Reverend Wright videos, sexism plays like an old sitcom in syndication, Geraldine Ferraro and Gloria Steinem speaking out like ghosts of a social-issue past, conjuring images of bra-burning flower-children from our culture’s collective subconscious. The tepidness of analysis on media sexism compared to that on racism seems so glaring it raises the question of just how far behind we are in fighting such ignorance.

Obama made a great speech this week on race in America. Almost every aspect of race relations he mentioned, however, could be just as well applied to gender relations. As the 2005 Census demonstrates, there is a wealth and income gap between males and females, just as there is between whites and blacks. There is discrimination in hiring, among police and fire departments, and at loan agencies against women and African-Americans. The failure of our abstinence-based sex-education programs to protect young women is also evident, as a new study reveals that one out of four teenage girls has at least one sexually transmitted disease, an astounding reflection of the lack of resources and information young people receive. Furthermore, the meager number of women in science-and-math-related studies is justified by “scientific proof” concerning the “male brain” versus the “female brain,” a throwback to the way analysts for decades excused racism on “scientific” notions of “inherent biological differences.” It’s the same today with sexism.

Tracy Morgan’s spiel on SNL last week is an example of the way we view racism and sexism. Morgan trades in stereotype, of course, but the stereotypes he drew on here make the same subtle distinction we hear made all the time, an essential factor in the nature of the biases. Black stereotypes are mostly cultural stereotypes: smoking Newports, drinking Old English, growing up on government cheese, etc., as Morgan put it. Of course, these stereotypes reference the negative characteristics arch-racists spuriously ascribe to African genetics, but most people see these stereotypes as tied to distinct social and economic history. The gender stereotypes, though, are accepted as societal but also as obviously biological. Morgan implies Hillary Clinton’s prime merit is that she is the wife of Bill Clinton, the masculine icon that has shadowed Hillary since the beginning of her political career. Then he goes on to reference her female sexuality as something weak and exploitable. She’s rich and unloved and so desperate because, you know, women are like that. She’s also a raging nag if she’s calling you at 3 a.m., because a woman will only call you at 3 a.m. to rage and nag.

Morgan makes it funny because the character he plays is the kind of human who would cause anyone in his life to rage and nag. Still, it’s revealing. There is a divide that separates racism from sexism and that suggests to me that the former will be easier to master than the latter. The effects suffered as a result of the gender power-politics constructed by mostly white men are equally objectionable to those suffered due to the race politics Obama mentioned in his speech. Sexism and racism should both be fought against from the same podium.

Obama is absolutely right about the legacy of discrimination existing not just in the minds of some people but as a universal American reality. I wonder, though, whether any woman would have received as sympathetic a response for making a similarly powerful speech about sexism? Or would she merely have been called an overly sensitive, PMSing feminist and dismissed, even if mostly subconsciously, as making much to do about merely the natural current of biological life on the planet?

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Hyunhye Seo works as a SESA (sex educator sales associate) at Good Vibrations in Berkeley. Visit her at work with questions or comments regarding pop, politics and/or sex.