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On the Frontlines
Appleton (Wisconsin) Post-Crescent print edition 11-16-01 | 11-15-01 | Manon McKinnon

Posted on 11/17/2001 8:26:30 AM PST by petuniasevan

On the Frontlines

American women can help defeat terrorists
by abandoning the politics of 'victimization'

By Manon McKinnon
For KRT News Service

"This is no time to go wobbly," the strong-minded Margaret Thatcher once famously cautioned an American wartime President. That decade-old advice - to the first President Bush - is still good. It is exactly what American women need to hear now. These are serious times. Having come face to face with a dangerous world, women, too, must become serious. It is time to abandon to weakness of victimization and return to the strength that females have marshaled throughout this country's history.

Being aggrieved has, over 30 years of gender feminism, become an all too accepted female attitude in America. At endless meetings, in dishonest literature, in pointless "women's studies" courses, the aggrieved have cultivated among many women a false indignation and a groundless sense of oppression at the hands of an imaginary enemy, the male patriarchy. In her book, "Who Stole Feminism," author Christina Hoff Sommers documents the absurdities of this gender grievance crowd at a recent conference where "being aggrieved was a conference motif" replete with "narratives of pain," "litanies of outrage," "ouch experiences," and "healing circles."

Sad to say, such foolish indulgences have characterized feminism in the public mind since the 1960s. The times now require that we turn our attention from sexual harassment, date rape, the absurd notion of placing women in combat, and from the endless feminist myths that have invaded the public consciousness. We must stop pretending that women are being shortchanged, and gender quotas must be put aside, for there is more important work to do. Women of America, our country needs us. Our families, our friends and neighbors, our children, our colleagues, and our communities need us. Military women are serving. We civilian women must stand ready to take our role in homeland defense, and to do whatever we are asked, with the courage and strength that has always characterized American womanhood.

It was not the weak and faint-hearted who built this country out of wilderness. From the early Pilgrims, colonial women worked alongside men to produce what was needed and to care for others. Women played a vital role in achieving American independence. During the Revolutionary War, women raised funds, sewed troop clothing, gave their homes as meeting places, tended crops and livestock, and looked after front line troops. The frontierswomen faced every hardship imaginable - primitve conditions, privation, disease, wild animals, climate, Indian wars - while they took on endless domestic chores, helped with the men's work, and brought schools, churches and civil society to a primitive land. At the same time, women in the New England states were bringing on the Industrial Revolution through their work in textile mills.

When the Civil War came in 1860, women rushed to fill the need for medical and relief work, serving as nurses, as spies, as vivandieres, or provisioners, to the troops, and even as physicians. Once again, they were keepers of plantations, farms, and businesses as men went to war.

It was the American women's performance during World War I that prompted President Woodrow Wilson to lend his support to passage of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution extending the vote to women. In war, women had demonstrated their abilities serving both on the front and replacing men in offices and factories. He said, "We have made partners of the women in war; shall we admit them only to partnership of suffering and sacrifice and toil and not to a partnership of privilege and right?"

The indispensable women of World War II are legendary: the nurses, the WACS and WAVES, Rosie the Riveter, civilian defense volunteers. They were single women, wives, and mothers who willingly took on the jobs and volunteer efforts to run the homefront.

This history and these women remind us what there is to love about America. American women are, writes author Midge Decter, "among the luckiest, healthiest, freest people on earth." Some of us have taken a harmful detour into an irascible victimhood. It's time to turn that around, to recognize our blessings and our legacy, to gather our strength and pitch in. Remember, "this is no time to go wobbly."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: 20somethingslist; women
Definitely worth transcribing from print.

What a wake-up call!

1 posted on 11/17/2001 8:26:30 AM PST by petuniasevan
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To: toenail; backhoe; Question_Assumptions; wardaddy; jalisco555; patent; nopardons; RnMomof7...
PING!
2 posted on 11/17/2001 9:09:57 AM PST by petuniasevan
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To: GeorgeandtheDralgore; WolfsView; riley1992; sit-rep; Goodlife; DebtsPaid; Senator Pardek...
PING!
3 posted on 11/17/2001 9:17:15 AM PST by petuniasevan
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To: petuniasevan
I have always said,

"I'd rather have one good woman on my side than ten sorry men..."

4 posted on 11/17/2001 9:17:36 AM PST by backhoe
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To: grimalkin; cajungirl; JustAmy; GVgirl; In mourning for six years; Howlin; alethia; pjb819...
PING!
5 posted on 11/17/2001 9:30:48 AM PST by petuniasevan
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To: petuniasevan
bttt
6 posted on 11/17/2001 9:57:53 AM PST by independentmind
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To: petuniasevan
Thank you for the ping. Have a great day.
7 posted on 11/17/2001 10:52:25 AM PST by Snow Bunny
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To: backhoe
"I'd rather have one good woman on my side than ten sorry men..."

Especially in San Francisco.

8 posted on 11/17/2001 10:56:26 AM PST by Paul Atreides
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To: petuniasevan
Thanks for the PING, petuniasevan. I'm more than ready to do my part. I've NEVER bought into the "victim" mentality promoted by feminists. In business, my premise has been that if I can't stand on my own performance and merits, then I don't deserve to serve in a leadership role. Period. This premise has served me well.

I have worked with and for both men and women of all ethnic backgrounds. I have had both genders work for me. In all of these scenarios, performance (walking the walk), values and ethics have been the driving force for the most successful enterprises -- not gender.

Thanks again for the ping.

9 posted on 11/17/2001 11:21:09 AM PST by alethia
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: petuniasevan
American women can help defeat terrorists by abandoning the politics of 'victimization'

Hopeful words. One can only pray they'll be heeded!

In addition to performing factory jobs, etc. in war time, I like to remind people that it was the women of this country who brought issues of public health and sanitation into the political spotlight, and this country has been better for it.

11 posted on 11/17/2001 11:54:20 AM PST by GVnana
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To: petuniasevan
BUMP
12 posted on 11/17/2001 11:54:26 AM PST by Elenya
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To: Paul Atreides
Haw! Good one!
13 posted on 11/17/2001 1:12:44 PM PST by backhoe
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To: petuniasevan; *20somethings_list
thanks for the ping. surely a sorry change in society. the question is, how do we change?
14 posted on 11/17/2001 4:40:25 PM PST by Benson_Carter
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To: petuniasevan
Very good piece. Thanks for the flag.
15 posted on 11/19/2001 1:17:21 AM PST by riley1992
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To: backhoe
"I'd rather have one good woman on my side than ten sorry men..."

And I've always said, "Boy, I sure like that backhoe guy." LOL

16 posted on 11/19/2001 1:18:45 AM PST by riley1992
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To: riley1992
There's an old saying that goes

"It's not the size of the Dog in the Fight that counts;
It's the Size of the Fight in the Dog...."

17 posted on 11/19/2001 3:38:38 AM PST by backhoe
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To: petuniasevan
Thanks for the PING; let's hope this sentiment find purchase. Also, an enforced weekend in San Francisco (ferrying my kids to their Mom's) reinforced the reality that American men (at least in some places) leave every bit as much to be desired as feminists do. Thank God that place isn't mainstream, or I'd definitely have to find another country to live in.

BTTT!

18 posted on 11/19/2001 11:20:24 AM PST by constable tom
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To: backhoe
As a 5'4", 150lb guy who used to play Left Guard and pole vault, Amen. Height is the most overrated male attribute there is. Heart triumphs over height every time.
19 posted on 11/19/2001 11:23:45 AM PST by constable tom
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