Posted on 05/15/2010 7:51:48 AM PDT by Kaslin
Raquel Welch just explained it all.
If you need a quick primer on the birds and the bees and how a culture has been misled, the actress once declared "Most Desired Woman" by Playboy can help you out.
Welch has written a book, "Raquel: Behind the Cleavage," which might just stand out on bookstore shelves. We need it to!
In an article that coincided with her book's launch, she wrote: "Margaret Sanger opened the first American family-planning clinic in 1916, and nothing would be the same again. Since then the growing proliferation of birth-control methods has had an awesome effect on both sexes and led to a sea change in moral values."
Go, Raquel!
Further, what she writes knocks the glimmer off the rose of so-called "sexual freedom." The concept, ushered in by the pill, she says, "has taken the caution and discernment out of choosing a sexual partner, which used to be the equivalent of choosing a life partner. Without a commitment, the trust and loyalty between couples of childbearing age is missing, and obviously leads to incidents of infidelity. No one seems immune."
In an otherwise largely celebratory forum on the pill that appeared on CNN's website, Republican strategist and book publisher Mary Matalin cleverly wrote: "(P)ackages of portable liberation ushered in a generation of women determined to break free from their inferior patriarchal oppressors. And how did they manifest their superiority? Their freedom? Thanks to the pill, by casual, drive-by sex. Whoa. That really showed those stupid boys."
The feminist movement has a lot to answer for when it comes its open and enthusiastic embrace of the contraceptive mentality, which interfered with a woman's relationship with her own body, never mind her relationships with men. Of course, many of the women of the "sexual revolution" generation paid the price in their own lives, later finding that their best fertility days were long gone by the time they realized they wanted to be women, not women suppressing that which makes them most creative.
Welch and Matalin's message stood in contrast to the spin that was predominant this Mother's Day, which happened to be the 50th anniversary of the birth control pill, in some ironic twist of the calendar. Among the parade of pill celebrations was an item from the AFP newswire which read like a press release from the group "Catholics for a Free Choice," known more for being successful at getting press attention than representing anyone or any principled "Catholic" position. The AFP dispatch from the pill PR agency slammed the late Pope Paul VI for his warnings, basically, about everything Raquel Welch regrets in our oversexed culture, in his searing, prescient 1968 encyclical, "Humanae Vitae."
Janet E. Smith, editor of "Why Humanae Vitae was Right," among other books, and a professor of life ethics at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, tells me: "I keep hoping common sense might have some force with the secular world." In the spirit of that hope, Welch's comments are a welcome change. When the first "Sex in the City" movie came out a few years ago, I went to the most depressing opening-night showing in midnight movie history. The reactions of the young audience in their Jimmy Choo knock-offs suggested a little talking-to from Janet and Raquel might do them a world of good.
Welch echoes another pope when she talks about sexual explicitness in our culture. In an interview, she asked: "Do we really have to go so far where nothing is happening unless we're getting graphic? Can't we use our imagination anymore?" Welch continued, "A woman is wonderful thing. We are a real prize to be won. It's not an easy role to play, but a beautiful and powerful one." The late John Paul II called it the "feminine genius." She also talks about other "traditional" ideas that have been out of style in elite culture. She embraces the "ideal" of a two-parent family, of marriage, despite her own admitted failings on these fronts. She emphasizes the different roles of the mom and dad and how they can truly make a formative difference in a child's life.
I understand why many in the media worked overtime spinning the pill as good for man- -- and woman- -- this Mother's Day. But the truth is that motherhood is at the heart of what it means to be a woman, and the pill has helped deny that reality. Mind you, you don't have to have children to be in tune with that great gift to the world, but you do have to know it, acknowledge it, and not pop a pill whose purpose is to treat fertility as if it were a disease rather than a tremendous power.
To groups that have for decades insisted that they represented so-called "women's issues" and interests, the truth behind Raquel Welch's comments must be a bitter pill. So keep preaching it, Raquel! It's a more liberating message --about the nature of life and love and men and women -- than the feminist revolution ever offered.
Simply amazing what makeup can do. She looks great.
God Bless her.....not JUST a pretty face!!
I don’t how old the picture is. BTW she is a conservative as far as I know
Two years old, if the data on the pic is correct.
Make up and great genetics.
Can’t believe she turns 70 this year!
I want the number of her plastic surgeon...best job ever. The only other woman that age that looked as good was Lena Horn.....
she looks good, doesn’t she?
You can say that again
The pic that shot her to super-stardom.
Who says she ever had plastic surgery? Maybe she just took care of herself?
Beautiful - inside and out.
The woman is past 70, no one takes that good a care of themselves...a nip or tuck there maybe all she had, but she had something done or is the only 70 year old without a wrinkle....I like her, its not a dig at the woman...Lena Horn also never developed a wrinkle...maybe they both have a rare gene, but I think Lena Horn died recently...I want that rare gene.....:O)
Raquel Welch on being conservative in Hollywood
The Factor welcomed Raquel Welch, who has just written a book about her life and career. The 69-year-old sex symbol explained how she continues to rebuff advances from Father Time. "There are two sides to me," Welch said. "There's the sloppy girl who stays up and eats cake and cookies at night, and then there's the Raquel in training, which is like a military regime. I wake up at five o'clock in the morning to go to my yoga class, which I mix with weight training. I am Raquel Welch and I am paid to look good." Welch also outed herself as one of Hollywood's rarest of breeds, a conservative. "I think it was my upbringing and my midwestern values. I was just raised in a certain way - your country is important and you should honor those people who fight for our country."
Lena Horne turned Catholic later in her life....maybe Raquel found Jesus also.
It appears Raquel has that figured out.
When my best friend was very ill, her brother was an evangelical pastor and spent lots of time with her reading the bible and talking with her....just days before she died, he ask her about wether she was ready to go and she told him I am ready to go where Jesus wants me to go....She was not a church going person, but days before she died she accepted him as her savior...its never too late. She passed peacefully..
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.