Posted on 03/28/2011 2:21:16 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
I just heard that former Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro passed away last Saturday. Hearing this news evoked so many memories.
I recall being a young feminist when Walter Mondale selected Ferraro as his vice presidential running mate. I was so proud and excited. What a turning point for women, I thought!
I admired Ferraro; she was a no-nonsense, straight-talking New Yorker, like me. Although my New Yorkese had been seriously watered down after a few years in California, I still appreciated an East Coaster. You always know where you stand, as opposed to Californians who hide their displeasure behind an artificial smile.
Im sad to hear that Ferraro has died. But my sadness isnt just for Ferraro, its for all of us; its the death of an era when female politicians were respected and protected. What a 180 degree contrast between how Ferraro was treated and Sarah Palin!
Back in the 80s it would have been unheard of for any woman politician, either from the Right or the Left, to be blasted with obscenities. No one would have dared.
In the very unlikely circumstances that someone did lob an obscene comment at a woman the person would face stern consequences. Certainly when Ferraro was on the ticket she was never called a monster or a b__ch like Hillary Clinton.
But whatever was done to Clinton pales in comparison to the treatment of Sarah Palin. Sexually degrading and menacing words have been hurled at Palin on a daily basis. Because no one in a position of authority called off the dogs early on (think Obama here,) its been open season on her and other conservative women.
With no one demanding that the verbal rape stop, the abuse has only gotten worse. Not surprisingly, just this week, Bill Maher has gotten away with a vile characterization of Palin, with no consequences at all.
Back in the day women of both parties could run for office without their daughters being subjected to rape jokes. And it wasnt just liberal politicians. Republican Paula Hawkins was the first woman to be elected to the Senate in her own right. It would have been unthinkable for anyone to use sexually objectifying language towards her or her colleagues.
What has happened since then? So many things: theres the Internets immediate gratification and anonymity. Weve seen the unraveling of the social and moral fabric with 24/7 pornography and violent media. The Judeo-Christian values that bind us together lay in tatters.
And last, but not least, we have the reign of Obama. He apparently gestured with his middle finger when invoking Hillary Clintons name during a campaign speech. Obama made the classless remark comparing Palin to a pig with lipstick.
And, most significantly of all, when Palin and her daughters were menaced with sexual threats, when her church was torched with children in it, Obama said nothing. The not-so-subtle message to his base was that it was open season on female conservatives.
Goodbye to All That
This elegy that Im writing is for Geraldine Ferraro, whom I admired as a hard working woman dedicated to bettering this country. But my goodbye is not just for her.
I also say goodbye to my younger self who truly believed that having women in high places would restore civility to this world. To my shock I have discovered that women will sell out each other without blinking an eye. Just look at how enthusiastically leftist women have trashed Palin.
I also say farewell to my younger self, that former leftist who believed in identity politics. Now Im older and wiser and vote for the most competent choice, regardless of race or gender.
And, perhaps most sadly of all, I say goodbye to a bygone era when women could run for political office and not be the target of rape jokes. Those days are dead and gone.
Ironically, Ferraro learned first-hand how much things have changed when she helped to run Hillary Clintons campaign for President. In her straight talking manner, Ferraro made the obvious point that Obama was a serious presidential contender not based on stellar credentials, but because of his ethnicity.
Of course Obamas handlers and the politically correct media cried racism. Ferraro took the hit and resigned from Clintons campaign.
As a Queens DA, a Congresswoman, a VP candidate, and an Ambassador, Ferraro spoke her mind. But the rules of the game had changed once Obama entered the national arena.
It was all over for women, the dignity and the decency. Racism, alleged or real, trumped everything.
The lesson for Ferraro, for all of us? Women are fair game. The skys the limit when it comes to degradation. Because in the age of Obama, women do not matter and neither do men, frankly. Its all about power his, not ours.
Somebody got murdered on New Years Eve
Somebody said dignity was the first to leave
I went into the city, went into the town
Went into the land of the midnight sun
Searchin high, searchin low
Searchin everywhere I know
Askin the cops wherever I go
Have you seen dignity?. . .
Drinkin man listens to the voice he hears
In a crowded room full of covered up mirrors
Lookin into the lost forgotten years
For dignity
(from, Dignity, by Bob Dylan)
Geraldine and Sarah Palin do not belong in the same sentence.
I was talking about this last night with Mrs. 2ndDivisionVet, a former liberal & feminist. She said that every woman she know who’s expressed an opinion is FURIOUS over how Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin were both treated in 2008 and about how long it took for a major party to nominate another female VP candidate. She also said that many are still mad that black men were given the vote decades before all women were. Just throwin’ that out there for discussion.
Sure they do.....but there has to be a “is nothing whatsoever, apart from gender, like “.....in between the two.
LMAO.
I wouldn’t be surprised if Sarah started the Plague.:)
The difference between the way Ferraro was treated and the way Palin is treated can be summed up thusly:
Ferraro’s opponents were conservatives.
Palin’s opponents are liberals.
It is almost that simple.
With the demonrats, it's always progressive ideology and party first. Party before country; party before Constitution and certainly party before gender. As long as you know that truth, you can predict what they will do. It's sad and infuriating, but not all that surprising.
Geraldine wasn’t called bad names? I see to remember Barbara Bush saying “That four million dollar it rhymes with ‘witch.’”
Politics is a blood sport. Given the stakes, it can’t be otherwise.
I’ve been researching the year 1965 lately. It was indeed, a more civil time. Why? Because BOTH parties were busy working together for America’s doom. I’ll take incivility any day, thank you.
As far as I’m concerned, the only qualification that Ferraro had for VP was the same as Sandra Day O’Conner for Supreme Court . . . “she was sitting on her qualifications” . . . one of Reagan’s worst mistakes.
We haven’t arrived until we leave gender out of it altogether.
But you see, we don’t.
Identity politics is used just like the race card.
As we can see, with Obama, race card worked. Much to our dismay.
Yes, Ferraro was definitely an affirmative action hire, or more cynically, a publicity stunt.
Like the TV show from years ago, “My World and Welcome to it!”
I am not condoning the absolutely unacceptable manner in which Sarah Palin and others females have been treated, but it's nothing new, men have dealt with it for a long, long time.
That is so funny. I got a good chuckle.
Woman and black candidates always get treated bad. Moreso because they are conservatives.
The 2012 race is going to be a miserable and ugly mess.
This is just the tip of the iceberg.
I agree: “Ferraros opponents were conservatives.
Palins opponents are liberals.”
On Fox, about 6 to 8 months ago, maybe more, I saw Ferraro and Palin seated together talking about running for VP and other political issues. Ferraro did not look healthy at that point and was very, I thought, opinionated and felt above Sarah in every way. Sarah, on the other hand, was very supportive of what Ferraro had done. I thought Ferraro was just arrogant in that interview and could not give Sarah an inch. I was disappointed in Ferraro’s character but not Sarah’s.
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