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Pravda: America's Cultural Values Are Determined By Man Holding Presidential Title
Pravda ^
| April 14, 2003
| Derrick Steven
Posted on 04/14/2003 9:21:48 AM PDT by WaveThatFlag
In its longing for American culture to take some major steps backwards, the Republican party wants for its own repressive values and so-called "norms" to be mirrored by the rest of the country When presidential candidate Al Gore shared a prolonged kiss on with his wife Tipper before a worldwide television audience at the 2000 Democratic National Convention, it met with much applause and criticism. Following the Vice President's public display of affection, women came out in droves for Gore on election day. The unsubtle embrace gave voters a glimpse of what American life under a Gore administration might be like, and offered a stark contrast of how women are treated by Democratic men versus their Republican counterparts.
Naturally, many women loved the Gore kiss. In clear view was a sensitive, caring candidate who, if elected President, would help create a more loving and tolerant America, where individuals may feel unafraid to openly show their feelings for one another.
As expected, conservative pundits and other political adversaries blasted the Democrat's open embrace of his wife. From under the surface, they decried the spectacle out of jealousy and for the moral fiber the Vice President had appeared to dismiss so blatantly. Much resentment stemmed from the fact that any conservative moral code dictates respectful citizens would never dare treat their significant others so flamboyantly at any time, let alone in front of a national television camera.
Gore's boldly open display was seen by some as a slap in the face to the pre-1960s values and Victorian era society many Republicans wish to recreate. If it were a conservative's utopia, American culture may one where women are quiet and tame, sex is never discussed, and affection is absolutely kept out of public range.
Conversely, Republican candidate George W. Bush stayed in a hotel room with wife Laura during his party's convention, where a small camera caught a glimpse of the then-Texas Governor offering a peck that may have been longer and deeper had he been kissing his mother before leaving for school.
Gore's kiss showed America which party is indeed the more mature and affectionate one. By offering a stark comparison to the insignificant Bush kiss, Al and Tipper Gore may cemented in the public's psyche an image reflecting one of the Republican party's biggest weaknesses: its long standing inability to win the female vote. Well before the days when John F. Kennedy's youthful good looks helped endear the President and his party to early television audiences, the emotions of women have consistently been captured, and led to the ballot box by the red-hot dashing Democrats.
In its longing for American culture to take some major steps backwards, the Republican party wants for its own repressive values and so-called "norms" to be mirrored by the rest of the country. This means restricting exposure to anything having the potential for inconveniently provoking an emotional response, as the Gore kiss clearly did for such a sizeable majority of women (and perhaps some men) in the voting population. With a little help from his brother and the Supreme Court, the less affectionate candidate was handed the keys to the White House in the 2000 election. The Bush administration has shown America, if anything at all, that the architecture of the times, including social decorum, is designed within the office of the Presidency. Sadly, many of the same women who swooned at the sight of Al smooching Tipper may have more recently been cheering for war under the not-so-loving current administration. Perhaps they would have been wearing flower necklaces in the event of a Gore presidency.
Voters will undoubtedly remember the Al and Tipper kiss for years to come. If there is a glimmer of hope for a more adaptable American society to emerge, light must be shed upon the glaring differences between the two major parties' expectations of the very public they are elected to serve. At stake is the degree of freedom within the nation's unspoken social code that dictates how one is expected to behave, look, speak and think, based on what elected leaders in Washington declare "normal".
Whether or not Americans are aware of how much influence is wielded by those in power, one thing remains beyond certainty: America's cultural values, including what actions, speech, and even thoughts may be deemed acceptable, are determined in large part by he or she who holds the title President of the United States.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
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The following title was rejected: America Not Completely Grossed Out By Al Gore Making Out With Tipper In Public.
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2
posted on
04/14/2003 9:25:00 AM PDT
by
Support Free Republic
(Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
To: WaveThatFlag
There are no facts in this entire piece. Not one supported fact.
3
posted on
04/14/2003 9:25:41 AM PDT
by
Huck
To: WaveThatFlag
Anyone with eyes can see that George Bush respects his wife too much than to make her an item for political advantage. Respect and honor your wife, not politicize and objectify her...
4
posted on
04/14/2003 9:28:35 AM PDT
by
smith288
(Visit my gallery http://www.ejsmithweb.com/fr/hollywood/hollywood.php)
To: WaveThatFlag
This story smells of broken wind. Shows how well the Russkies understand us.
5
posted on
04/14/2003 9:29:35 AM PDT
by
Conspiracy Guy
(Saddam's Hiding In Tikrit)
To: WaveThatFlag
This article is hilarious. I'm not sure I've ever seen anyone so completely miss the concepts of freedom that we have here. This is a blatant projection of the Russian (and "Soviet") national personality onto the American culture and totally misses the mark.
To: WaveThatFlag
Good Gawd. Do they really expect things to be this way? Are they really trying to turn that kiss and the EMBARRASSINGLY huge emotional response it garnered from women into a political plus?
I always thought you were supposed to vote with your head, not your heart. I was under the impression that rationality and not passion was supposed to guide the leaders of my nation.
I cannot even imagine the horrors that would come from trying to face the world's problems with a FRENCH kiss.
To: WaveThatFlag
this makes for pretty good saturday night live commentary.
8
posted on
04/14/2003 9:30:33 AM PDT
by
ckilmer
To: WaveThatFlag
I guess if Al and Tipper had proceeded to the next stage of love-making, he would have gotten more votes, and if they'd gone all the way on TV, he would have been elected. (Or mistaken for Clinton) This is series opinion for morons.
9
posted on
04/14/2003 9:31:42 AM PDT
by
3AngelaD
To: WaveThatFlag
What a juvenile article! The Communist forgets to mention that Democrats deplore long-term heterosexual relationships - it's only public homosexual expression that they have put into their platform. As to what that says about Al and Tipper, I'll leave you to draw your own conclusions...
To: WaveThatFlag
We must heed their advice. We KNOW the Pravda has nothing but the best interests of the US in mind!
To: smith288
What you said...
12
posted on
04/14/2003 9:34:08 AM PDT
by
Search4Truth
(When a man lies, he murders part of the world.)
To: ckilmer
this has to be a joke.
I think anyone with any intelligence at all knows that republicans (and most free-thinking logical people) were amused by that kiss, certainly not horrified by it.
if using your wife to prove that you are a human being to the voters in a ridiculously un-tender kiss somehow makes you daring, I think I'm going to run for president.
To: WaveThatFlag
Pravda: America's Cultural Values Are Determined By Man Holding Presidential TitleAnd Russia's cultural values are established by ?????
14
posted on
04/14/2003 9:37:02 AM PDT
by
_Jim
( // NASA has a better safety record than NASCAR \\)
To: WaveThatFlag
"Naturally, many women loved the Gore kiss. In clear view was a sensitive, caring candidate who, if elected President, would help create a more loving and tolerant America, where individuals may feel unafraid to openly show their feelings for one another." Huh? Sorry, but this article must be late by 13 days!
15
posted on
04/14/2003 9:38:52 AM PDT
by
FryingPan101
(I love Rummy!)
To: smokinleroy
Russia and socialist governments everywhere strongly endorse the Democrat Party. I wonder who we'd vote for if we could vote in Russian elections. It wouldn't be a strong-military conservative.
16
posted on
04/14/2003 9:38:57 AM PDT
by
Reeses
To: WaveThatFlag; dighton; aculeus; general_re; L,TOWM; hellinahandcart; Constitution Day
"...the emotions of women have consistently been captured, and led to the ballot box by the red-hot dashing Democrats."
Okay, girls, get your red-hots here ...
17
posted on
04/14/2003 9:38:58 AM PDT
by
BlueLancer
(Der Elite Møøsenspåånkængruppen ØberKømmååndø (EMØØK))
To: WaveThatFlag
I remember Yeltsin foolishly trying to dance on a stage with a young girl who was fronting a bad Russian rock band. Made him look ridiculous. But it didn't change my opinion of Russia or Russians generally.
Any foreigner who witnessed Al Gore's schmaltzy kiss and thereby came to a great understanding of America's psyche is simple delusional.
To: Huck
"There are no facts in this entire piece. Not one supported fact."
That's because its PRAVDA.......it makes the Village Voice look like the Wall Street Journal!
To: johniegrad
Arwe we sure the Iraqi Information Minister didn't write this?
20
posted on
04/14/2003 9:42:47 AM PDT
by
ewing
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