Posted on 08/14/2012 4:47:26 PM PDT by SJackson
Paul Ryan, Mitt Romneys newly chosen running-mate in this years presidential election race, is a strong candidate on many grounds. He is a brilliant man, a thorough master of government finances which as we all know need work these days and he is more conservative than Romney, which should appeal to the partys skeptical Tea Party faction. He is a good speaker, and at age forty-two he is a generation younger than Romney and also a good deal younger than President Obama which might help the GOP connect with younger voters.
All this is just fine, but in watching the news today I also heard it suggested more than once that Ryan might be more popular than Romney with women. Romney, we are told, is an old-fashioned, milk-drinking square who wants to deprive women of their rights and privileges and send them back to the 1950s.
Ryan, by contrast, is a good-looking guy, tall and trim, said to have fantastic abs, and blessed with that enviable Irish charm. His line of chatter over cocktails might be off-putting to women few of whom care much about the federal budget but they probably figure that if they can corner him for a moment they can make him stop talking.
Many women, it seems, vote with their gonads.
When John F. Kennedy was running for president, hordes of young women invariably lined his parade routes. Theodore White, the author of the Making of the President series of books, observed that the women in the back rows would frantically jump up and down to get a glimpse of the dazzlingly charming candidate.
When JFKs opponent, Richard Nixon, went riding by, not a single woman onlooker lifted a foot. Probably most of them were into middle-age or older, and suffering from arthritis and gout.
The people who run for president are not unaware of this female tendency. John Kerry, when he ran at the head of the Democratic ticket in 2004, chose John Edwards as his running-mate. I cant think of any special qualities that Edwards brought to the ticket, except perhaps an ability to appeal visually to giddy, young female voters.
Bob Dole seems to have made a half-hearted stab at it when he ran against President Clinton in 1996, choosing as his running-mate the charismatic but slightly superannuated ex-football player Jack Kemp. I dont know what George Bush the elder had in mind when he chose young Dan Quayle as his running-mate, but the ticket did win the first time around, although Quayle himself turned out to be a dud.
I dont enjoy having to write this, but I think the time has come to limit womens suffrage. The noble experiment that began when women were granted the right to vote in 1920, by the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution, has failed.
In the years before the amendment was passed, womens suffrage was opposed not only by men, but also by some women. The historians tell us that it was opposed by married women who circulated in political-leadership circles, who had a behind-the-scenes influence on womens issues with the decision-makers, and who didnt want to see that influence turned over to the hoi polloi.
These women also argued that if women had the vote, they would want to impose prohibition of alcoholic beverages on the nation. Who is to say that they were wrong?
Those arguments arent the ones we hear today, but there still seems to be something wrong with letting women vote. The mere fact that they strongly favored Obama in 2008, and that they continue to strongly favor him in 2012, should be argument enough for some kind of reform.
I do not favor taking their votes away entirely. I dont perceive any threat that they will re-impose Prohibition. But I wouldnt allow them to vote in any election featuring male opponents, because they are too likely to make their choices for reasons that have nothing to do with the welfare of the republic.
I see no danger in letting them vote in elections where both opponents are women, but so far there has never been a presidential election in which even one of the major party tickets was headed by a woman. And there has never been one in which both V.P. candidates were women. So we are dealing only in theory for now.
I would even go so far as to suggest, in my even-handed way, that maybe men shouldnt be allowed to choose between two women, especially in the unlikely event that one of them was good-looking.
Suppose someday a woman runs against a man for the top spot? Should we let women vote in that case? I would say no, because they unquestionably would vote for the woman for chauvinistic reasons, unless her male opponent was a fantastic hottie like JFK, in which case they would totally overlook the female candidates good qualities. No matter how a woman voted, it would be a flawed choice.
Or bankers or billionaires, if you can cook them, you can vote. I’ll bring the pot
I’d give up the vote so long as the government gives up taxing me.
This type of argument only helps our enemies. Do women have the natural right to be free or not?
No the question should be: should men have their votes revoked or end men’s suffrage.
Maybe we should take the vote away from black Americans since they only voted skin color in 2008.
How about ending suffrage for nontaxpayers?
What a pile of bullsqueeze!
Just damn....
Oh, goody. ANOTHER “Wimmin R Evil” thread. I’m shocked.
Government doesn’t give rights.
The author’s argument is insufficiently defined. Universal suffrage is the real failure, not the 19th Amendment.
Heinlein’s ideas of distinguishing civilian from citizen and that citizenship must be earned is looking better and better every day.
I think her husband is the one most suited to know a woman’s mind. Repeal the XIX Amendm’t and give married men 2 votes!
Shades of Swift
That would fix a lot of problems.
It’s whimsy, folks. Lighten up.
No, we should not, there’s really no sense behind the argument. Limiting the vote to tax-paying property owners and military veterans at least had a certain Grecian logic behind it, although I do point out that in Athens it was for a democracy, not a republic. Limiting it on the basis of genitalia is simply weird, and robs the polity of the direct influence of some of the brightest and most creative people in it.
You can be free and not vote. “Free” is relative.
That would probably be the closest to correct. Property owners and taxpayers. Everyone else, nope. The people who are going to legally have their pockets picked, they ought to be the ones voting.
If you have taken any government freebies (and have proven yourself to be a moocher), you have no right to elect those that will provide you with more freebies.
If you have committed crime, you have no right to elect those that will provide you with shelter and pardon. Once criminal, always a criminal.
If you are mentally retarded or incompetent, you have no right to elect retards that might think like you do or cater to your retarded desires.
If you have no paid any taxes, you have no right to tell the rest of us to how to spend our tax money.
Yep, sort of like a few years ago, when "The Man Show" did a "man on the street" segment with one of the guys circulating a petition to "End the Suffrage of Women", and dozens of women signed.
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.