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Jul. 13th, 2008

  • 5:10 PM
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Your result for The Camelot Test...

Lady of the Lake

Mistress of the Enchanted Isle (Avalon), you are beautiful, poised and very powerful. You strike fear and love in the heart of your peers.

Take The Camelot Test at HelloQuizzy

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Your result for The Attachment Style Test...

The Player

31% Anxiety Over Abandonment and 69% Avoidance Of Intimacy

You are most comfortable without close emotional relationships. It is very important to you to feel independent and self-sufficient, and you hate the idea of having to depend on others or having others depend on you. The very few times you have fallen in love, it was probably with someone unattainable and disinterested. You know how to have a good time with your friends, but when it comes time to bare your deeper feelings, you tend to laugh nervously and change the subject.



Fictional character with whom you might identify: Captain Jack Harkness (Doctor Who/Torchwood), Holly Golightly (Breakfast at Tiffany's)



CaptainJackHarkness.jpg HollyGolightly.jpg




Other Attachment Types:
Secure: The Unicorn | The Cuddleslut | The Free Agent
Preoccupied: The Cling Wrap | The Squid | The Insect
Fearful: The Doormat | The Leper | The Exile
Dismissing: The Hermit | The Stone | The Player
Confused: The Waffler

Take The Attachment Style Test at HelloQuizzy

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I call on She Who (Sometimes) Gives And Saves Life with a Humble Plea:

Please.  I've had every other fucked up side effect.  I can't even tell the difference any more between the fatigue, depression, and general malaise that comes with my sleep disorder and the bone crushing exacerbation of fatigue, depression, and general malaise that comes from being poisoned by the wrong sedative.  Every fucking one.  So please, please let the fucked up side effect for this newest foray into Your Sacred Gifts be breast enlargement.  I need new bras anyway, and I'm used to the big boob back pain, and I absolutely can't be depressed and forgetful any more.  I'm taking this stuff so I can have a life. 

Yours in Devotion (or is it Exhaustion?),
P.

And while I'm here

  • Jul. 4th, 2008 at 8:29 PM
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....it's Independence Day, of course.  And I have little to say.  Except that this blog, and my commitment to the issues and ideals that I talk about here, is a labor of love for the idea of this country, and what it means at its very best.

I don't like fireworks or parties much, so it's simply been a restful, reflective Friday off for me.  But I do wish everyone a very happy Fourth of July.

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I knew I trimmed my blog habits for a reason.  But I didn’t have a whole lot of work to do today yesterday, so I stumbled on this utter nonsense.

First of all, this doesn’t come close to a Swift Boat analogy, and it’s disingenuous for anyone to pretend that a group of bloggers who’ve announced their voting preferences and reasons for those preferences are in any way comparable to the hateful, mendacious, merciless campaign to trivialize Senator Kerry’s service to his country.  Second of all, NOT ALL PUMAS ARE FEMALE.  Funny how assuming all women lined up behind Senator Clinton was stupid when it was other people deriding women as lying, deluded simpletons, but now that it’s a feminist Obama supporter doing so, those inconvenient people need to be ridiculed as much as possible, and the easiest way to do so is to ensure your audience knows they’re all women.

But hold on to your hats, kids.  It gets better. Because she found one contribution, during one quarter, to McCain, all PUMAs are McCain ratfucking Republican operatives.  Never mind the ones who are life long feminists, who were harassed off DKos for their support for a Democratic candidate, never mind some of the most powerful voices in left blogistan for intersectionality in the feminist movement.  They don’t exist, if they do they are stupid.  This especially hurts coming from someone who has worked hard to carve a career out of the damned near impossible work of explaining to a reluctant world that women are real people who are not fucking stupid.  There are reasons not to support the Democratic nominee.  There are a lot of good, rational reasons not to support him.   There are good rational reasons to support and even like him, too, and since women are people who are generally (a) different and (b) still rational, it’s really not totally unreasonable to assume that some women will come to different conclusions than others.

For that matter, where the fuck was this outrage a year ago, when Obama so very seriously informed everyone that he’d get all her votes, but she wouldn’t get all of his - read “vote for me or my people walk.”  A candidate running for the Democratic nomination surely deserves more criticism for his outright embrace of a potential split in the party than do a group of private citizens.

For that matter, the PUMAs have done exactly what focus groups have spent generations wishing the American public would do.  They’ve explained what they believe in and what a candidate would need to do to gain their votes, if it’s possible at all (and for some of them it’s not, and guess what, that’s their decision to make, not anyone else’s).

And again, this exposes some fundamental problems between the “Obama candidacy” and the actual Obama candidacy.  The blogger in question slings around all kinds of loaded emotional language - again, from someone who’s spent years righteously howling into the wind that women are no more or less emotional than any other humanoid type creatures, and especially at the myth that women working in support of women’s causes have just had our feelings hurt, rather than having made reasonable decisions towards our actions, it’s both ironic and painful - to obfuscate any legitimate concern the PUMAs have, make it all about the individual’s actions rather than the collective injustice, and then dismiss those emotions as over the top craziness.  Shameful.   And It’s especially ironic coming in support of Obama’s candidacy.  He chose to run a campaign which appealed heavily to emotions.  That’s fine.  It’s not to say that I think he’s an empty suit (I don’t) or that I find him in any way intellectually lacking (again, I don’t).  It’s a morally neutral decision the campaign made in order to capitalize on the strengths of the given candidate.  That’s the game (the game he says he loathes, oh, how it pains him to do so ruthlessly and unscrupulously, but I digress).  But when people appropriately respond to an emotional campaign with emotion, it’s pretty crummy to try to bully them into supporting that campaign by telling them that their feelings are stoopid.

And if these Clinton supporters, as Obama supporters suggest, are at best tepid Democrats, or DINOs - aren't we supposed to think that's a good thing?  Wasn't Obama going to be the One that reached across the aisle or whatever to bring moderates and conservatives into the fold?  It's a good trait in his appeal to voters, but a pernicious one in hers?  Huh, there's a word for that, I can't quite reach for it.

And while Amanda and I were pecking away at our respective keyboards (hers more respected and well-known, but mine no less valid or feminist), Barack Obama was off proving himself hugely worthy of feminist criticism.  (As of this writing, Pandagon has reported on the Very Important Matter of Governor Crist’s engagement, but not on a major presidential candidate’s crass disgust for female human life.  And Pandagon used to be one of my favorite RJ advocacy blogs.)

Since I’ve started writing this post, the PUMA post has, apparently, “blown up.”  Well, no, not so much as the blogger’s erroneous assumptions were pointed out to be such, and she responded by writing another post about how stoopid and irrational PUMAs and all their filthy associates are.  Which is where the title of this post comes in.  A commenter quoted large portions of the post I wrote after the primaries,+ and other commenters responded by claiming that I’ve only been writing about politics since February (O RLY?), that I’m a member of the PUMA movement (which has actually appeared nowhere on this blog), and that it was my only post of substance or some such rot.  Yup.  Because I disagree with these commenters, I don’t exist and never have, and if I do, it’s only because I’m just too silly to understand big kid politics!

I know I shouldn’t care what some nonsense commenters on some blog I rarely even read any more had to say about me, and on a personal level, I’m ashamed to admit it did bother me, but relieved that it only lasted for a couple of minutes.  But this is part and parcel of some very problematic treatment of Clinton supporters in the Librul (TM) community, and especially at the hand of the Obama campaign.  Lump all dissenters into a group, turn that group irrelevant, and then everyone agrees with you!  See?  Unity!  Someone needs to hold Obama accountable for his unending sprint to the right.  Large numbers of people who supported him vocally during the primaries have decided that no criticism of Obama (no matter how much they disagree) is the way to go, or finding a way to blame someone else, or simply to pop up on threads all over Left Blogistan, Roe stick in hand.  All criticism is then dismissed as griping by emotional sour grapes Clinton supporters.  Neutralizing all criticism from the left won’t get Obama elected, it will just allow the criticism from the right to drown us out, and he’ll continue to run that way, and then people who claim they see no difference between Obama or McCain, or that they prefer McCain, will feel more and more vindicated, thus getting more vocal, and Obama will continue to lose lefty voters to McCain, McKinnon, or write-in candidates.  And using sexist stereotypes to do so - bitter, emotional, resentful - is sexist no matter who you are.  Voters are angry, and they don’t owe anyone anything.

Are there McCain operatives taking advantage of this situation for all it’s worth?  CLEARLY.  That’s politics, sweetie, if votes are up for grabs, you go for them.  It’s not any different than Obama’s outreach* to evangelicals skeptical of McCain.  It’s fucking politics.  But there are lots of lifelong Democrats who are gasping for air under the weight of betrayals small and large, and it’s mean and small and really not helpful to anyone except McCain to tell them that they don’t exist.

*Outreach:  OFB for “caving in at every opportunity.”

+Bunny, if you’re reading this, I can’t stress enough that I don’t blame you for the behavior on that thread; I’m quite flattered that you took the time to read and share the post.  This seems an appropriate time to mention that that post has gotten more attention than I’ve ever expected - thank you, everyone who read and linked and commented, I’m humbled and honored that you’ve found solidarity and solace in my words.

Jul. 4th, 2008

  • 1:09 AM
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Anyone know progressive FL politics, and can give some useful advice to a friend and ally?

we fucking told you so.

  • Jul. 4th, 2008 at 12:40 AM
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“I hate to say I told you so” is, of course, a polite social fiction. Nobody hates to say I told you so, and if someone did actually hate to say I told you so, they’d keep their fucking mouth shut. I, personally, love being right.

But even I wish I wasn’t right about this.

This, in a nutshell, is everything frustrating about Barack Obama.

This is why Roe is not a threat anyone gets to make in this presidential election. This is a dangerous position to take. If I need to explain to someone that abortion is a constitutional right, and one as inviolable and necessary as any and all others, that someone is on the wrong fucking blog. I do not need to explain that nobody, and especially not some smarmy law professor, can always distinguish between mental and physical health. I do not need to explain that all Barack Obama needed to do was stay away from the subject, or tell the fucking truth and say that he’s not anyone’s fucking doctor, he could have actually done what the fauxgressive blogosphere swore up down and all around he was going to do and TAKE A STAND FOR SOMETHING, but instead he chose to announce to the AP that he literally does not give a damn if we live or die.  Which - make no fucking mistake - is exactly what this statement is.  A restriction on abortion is not just a statement that you think women are not human enough to be more than breeding vessels, it means that you think that women’s health and lives are an acceptable price for your comfortable knowledge that no one in the country is doing anything that makes you feel icky.

It’s not just that this statement buys into right wing frames about abortion. All that does is place reproductive justice in the realm of church and state, the Fourth Amendment, the Eighth Amendment, and liberalism itself - causes in which Obama does not believe, but the fauxgressive “left” has deluded itself into thinking that he does.

It’s that there is no position, no matter how extreme, towards which Senator Obama will not eagerly run, seeking a “middle ground.” He looks at politics not as a complex, multifaceted interplay of cultural mores, economic and geopolitical security needs, and social goals, but as a flat, one dimensional continuum that no matter how far or long he must run, no matter what he must sacrifice along the way, he must find the mythical center. Nothing is worth taking a stand for, not even the basic human rights of his children.

And it’s another way in which we can see that one of the OFB’s major charges against Senator Clinton - that she would do anything, no matter what principal it violated, to win - was merely a projection of Obama himself. This is not a burning statement of principle. This is a political ploy in order to continue the battle of the primaries. By the vaginal transitive property,* HRC=all women, and so any whining+by feminists (even feminists who support Obama, and folks, I really hope y’all stretched tonight, because you will be doing some backbends tomorrow) can safely be portrayed as sour grapes by Clinton supporters, thus keeping Senator Clinton in the equation and allowing Obama to continue in his role of Long-Suffering Male Beset by That Bitch Who Won’t Die.  This allows him to continue to navigate the gender issue as being “man versus evil woman” rather than “man versus manlier man.”  Buying into the tattered, ancient idea of “leadership=masculinity” is, my friends, the very definition of politics as usual, as it has been throughout what we now recognize as the canon of Western history.

Cue the asshole Obama supporters. Oooooh, he’s better than McCain, you know Clinton would be worse, plus you irrational bitches just need to learn that abortion rights aren’t just about you, you selfish bitch, wanting to live and shit, it’s about the BAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYBEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE. Allow me to explain this in terms you will understand: shut the fuck up. You get to make this decision for me when I get to decide whether or not to spend the next ten months hacking off your shriveled sac with a dirty plastic knife.

Oh. And nice work, NARAL, you fuckers.

We fucking told you so.

*A complicated sociological theorum, in which one woman = all women, except in case of a positive trait.

+Technical term for pointing out the imminent violation of one’s own human rights, especially if one happens to be female.

Via.

ETA:  Pls see Liss.

Edited again, thanks to Kyra at Shakes for pointing this out:

Kyra:  Also, does anybody happen to know whether most depression/other mental-health-treating drugs are approved for use by pregnant women?


P:  In a lot of cases we don't know, because how the fuck can someone ethically do that study? (I've been on a lot of sleep drugs lately and so have been reading obsessively.) So not only is mental health no longer health, but you don't deserve treatment for it, little lady, 'cuz of the fetus we're forcing you to carry!

BUT ROOOOOOOOEEEEE! THE COOOUURRT!!

  • Jun. 26th, 2008 at 12:58 AM
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Today, the Roberts Court did the right thing, and limited the death penalty to cases where a victim dies.

Barack Obama disagrees. 

Let's be clear.  This may well be the most conservative SCOTUS there has been since Roosevelt had to ram through the New Goddamn Deal with a sledgehammer.  And Barack Obama doesn't think they support the death penalty enough.

Hope!  Change!  Unity!  NO RLY YOU GUIZE.

Oh, and hiding behind "state's rights" to justify gross violations of human rights is sooooo last century.  And yes, it is different than saying that federalism prevents aggressive federal action towards marriage equality, because that position (while I disagree with it) is at least defensible on the grounds that five of the Nine believe marriage is an issue of state law, whereas in this case, five of the Nine have decided that the Eighth Amendment takes precedence.  One position acknowledges an unfortunate reality, the other one stakes out a position against a progressive and correct reading of the Constitution. 

It's ironic.  I've spent my entire adult life feeling totally screwed by those few hundred Nader nuts in Florida who just FUCKING HATED BOTH PARTIES.  And now I feel quite a bit of sympathy.  I'm not really like them, though, I JUST WANT TO BE ABLE TO VOTE FOR A FUCKING DEMOCRAT.  More and more I'm with fellow Yellow Dog Anglachel.  Lower than that, ye shall not drag me.

Via.

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warsaw mermaid
I can't leave you people alone for one second! THIS IS WHY WE CAN'T HAVE NICE THINGS!

Leaving aside my perpetual astonishment that the world, in fact, goes on when my internet goes down and I spend the weekend engrossed in third wave theory and Japanese feminist crime fiction, oh, sweeties, I didn't think anyone would actually pour a whole bottle of detergent into the dishwasher, but now you've gone and done it.



LEAVE MICHELLE OBAMA ALONE

  • Jun. 20th, 2008 at 2:23 AM
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Vile.

If her image matters at all, it's not something wrong with her, IT'S SOMETHING WRONG WITH US.  I'm really, really hoping that the article is making fun of the bullshit that gets thrown at her, but somehow, I doubt it.

(H/t)

so what happens now?

  • Jun. 20th, 2008 at 1:32 AM
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Cut for major, major ramblage - started this post about a week ago

all you need is....

  • Jun. 18th, 2008 at 1:05 PM
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love (and maybe a hanky, but not me, I'm tough like that.)

Via Shakes.

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Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon are not just some sweet little old ladies who waited around for five and a half centuries before some white knight on a horse came and granted them their rights.  This isn't to disparage the work of gay rights activists in government - Gavin Newsom deserves praises most high for his eagerness to lead on this critical civil rights issue.  He is an ally which every civil rights movement needs and deserves.  But this story is about them.

Some more biographical history, from the SFGate (Via PD)

They founded the Daughters of Bilitis in 1955, the first national lesbian organization. In 1964, they helped launch the Council on Religion and the Homosexual, bringing together national religious leaders and gay and lesbian activists to discuss homosexual rights. Lyon, in a challenge to the leadership of the feminist movement, was the first open lesbian on the board of the National Organization for Women in 1973. Martin, meanwhile, helped lead a successful campaign to get the American Psychiatric Association to take homosexuality off its list of mental illnesses.

Let's just honor that as it deserves, shall we?  They founded the first national lesbian rights organization at the height of the Red Scare - they could have backed off in fear of being blacklisted, or seeing their friends called before HUAC, and instead, they chose courage.

They could have just fought for gay rights, and instead, they chose to take their life experiences and join the fight for the rights of all women, at a time when that movement was not fully accepting of lesbians.  They chose humanity.

They could have accepted that they and everyone like them were labeled as "sick" and instead they chose rightousness.

They did not ask, or expect, anyone to do for them what they set forth to do for their country.

These women are heroes.  They are deserving of their names in the history books, over and over again.  The state recognition of their marriage - while it is a necessary option for many same-sex couples - is but the least of what the community they call home, the state of California, can do for them. 

For their marriage, I wish them unremarkableness.  I wish that as married women they live as they have always lived - with joy in life, with faith in humanity, with the courage and steadfastness of their own convictions.

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but it wasn't JUST sexism!

  • Jun. 17th, 2008 at 1:36 AM
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Whenever the topic of sexism in media comes up, there are any number of Obama fen who will trip over themselves to inform everyone that YES THERE WAS SEXISM BUT HILLARY LOST B/C OF XYZ OTHER REASONS. On the lowest level - we’re talking sub-human decency levels, but still - this is a good thing, as it forces the Librul Boyz to use the S-Word, though O! How it burns their souls. However, it’s still a crap dodge. From trogledyte commenters on some blog, maybe. But from anyone who actually follows and knows anything about politics, it’s inexcusable. There is never “just one cause” for political victory or defeat, and the only common variable is luck.

There’s a reason politicians have focus groups, and image specialists, and have people help with their haircuts and ties. It’s because even subtle things about politicians set off cues - conscious and subconscious - in voters, media, colleagues, potential donors alike. These intricate cues are synched up to our expectations of masculine-presenting, able-bodied,* heterosexual, white, wealthy male. Femaleness, even white femaleness, is in a great many ways the opposite of this image. It is not “just sexism” in its gloating, unshackled Daily Kos glory. It is sexism in terms of the different measuring sticks we use for men and women; sexism in the way Barack Obama’s past is respected (as it should be; I am not arguing otherwise) but Hillary Clinton’s decades of hard and distinguished work is subsumed under the banner of “former First Lady” - read “just wife.” It is sexism not just in enormous bricks, but in a hundred thousand tiny shards of glass.

Part of the beaut of politics is that it’s so fucking bizarre there’s no One True Analogy. But in this case, there’s a damned close one. This is an exercise in thought, and I don’t know a whole lot about cars, so just assume no externalities.

Say you’re driving a car. What you do know is that the brakes are a bit stiff; what you don’t know is that they’re actually defective. So you’re driving one day, you go to make a relatively sharp turn - like you, and other people, do all the time - and move your right hand down to switch the radio station - like you, and other people, do all the time. Nothing statistically unsafe, but nothing you’d find recommended in a driver’s manual, either.

You crash.

Is the relevant question:

(a) Was it just the faulty brakes?

(b) Would it have happened but for the faulty brakes?

(a) is, of course, the question that will be used by the manufacturer of the faulty car, while trying to duck responsibility. Not only is their credibility on the line, as well as the money that they owe you, but they’re also trying to duck their moral responsibility for the accident.

But really, do you really believe that you would’ve crashed if you’d had working brakes?

Oh, sure, sexism wasn’t the only drawback of the Clinton campaign.  But the Blogger Boyz/MSM’s desperate cast for reasons other than sexism to explain Clinton’s eventual coming up slightly short for the nomination reads to me, at least a little, like an excuse to duck any responsibility on the part of themselves or Barack Obama.  Because if Obama won, even a little, based on these unfair biases, then he didn’t win the great coup over the Dragon Lady they have been screaming for these many months.  Moreover, they would have to examine their own motivations.  Even if they were Pure as the Morning in their motivations - and the idea that they’re not doesn’t seem to have occurred to anyone - they’d have to question all of the narratives they bought into over the last year and a half.  They have to discount sexism as the reason for Clinton’s loss, or Obama’s win isn’t what they want it to have been.  It means Obama, just like a morally average though exceptionally intellectually gifted politician, saw that he had an unfair advantage and squeezed every drop of usefulness out of it.

Sure, it wasn’t just sexism.  It was Patti Solis Doyle not being up to the job.  It was, oddly, underestimating, the sexism that they did know was going to exist, and only seeing the ripple effects halfway through the campaign.  It was underestimating the Obama faction at the DNC.

But even factoring in all of that, do you really, really believe that without the assistance of the Clenis-obsessed media, a cultural zeitgeist willing to believe anything of an intelligent, ambitious woman, without the endless snide comments about nasty old ladies and pantsuits and frigidity and duplicity and ballbreakers and madams and whores and periodically feeling down and WWTSBQ and on and on into sinking oblivion -

do you really think you would have crashed?

*I’m aware that we’ve had a wheelchair-using president, but FDR never presented his disability to the public.

marking a happy moment

  • Jun. 16th, 2008 at 8:02 PM
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Congratulations Phyllis Martin and Del Lyon!

And to everyone else in California whose human rights are finally recognized today.

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As Riverdaughter pointed out so clearly, the guilt end of the bullying corralling convincing Clinton supporters into line is predicated on a very basic assumption - women are socialized to put others first, and that’s why they are so confident that their “McCain will do XYZ and it will be ALL YOUR FAULT” will work.  I mean, it must be our fault if something goes wrong.

Female assertiveness is assumed to be a bad thing. Not only is this the central point of much of the primary coverage (or the Obama campaign’s tactics against Clinton), it’s also the way in which the Democratic Party has gained its choke hold on single women’s votes.  Something else is always more important, girls, but in the meantime, LOOK AT THE BIG SCARY REPUBLICAN.  This is particularly the point behind the blog post taken apart so brilliantly here.

It’s also, nauseatingly, the point behind this post. (Disturbingly and surprisingly linked to with approval by Feministing.) I have a lot of problems with the VOTE FOR OBAMA OR ELSE argument, but this one, because it’s written by a liberal woman and apparently approved of by one of the more influential feminist voices on the intertubes, is particularly upsetting. First of all, it’s predicated on the Roe stick, which I find to be reprehensible. Secondly, of course, it relies on the assumption that to vote for a candidate means one approves of all of the policies of that candidate. Clinton supporters, no matter what, are weighing our second, third, and fourth choices, and (unlike many Obama supporters) were already supporting a candidate we acknowledged from the start was less than perfect.  We’re not going to be signing any loyalty oaths in the near future - if we agreed with McCain or Obama  on all of our most important issues, WE’D HAVE VOTED FOR MCCAIN OR OBAMA.  Since we didn’t, it’s pretty clear that we’re going to be compromising regardless - YES even if we vote Green or abstain from the top of the ballot - so this “loyalty oath” crap is trivializing of the complexity of our decisions.  If it were true that a vote for a candidate involved unquestioning endorsement of that candidate, and those poor fools really need such things written out for them, I’m more than willing to write up similarly infuriating loyalty oaths for female, feminist, working-class, rural, sick, older, queer, brown, partisan Democratic, and/or non-Christian Obama supporters. Point being not that those people shouldn’t vote for Obama, but that they are compromising on something that government can or should do for them with their support for him.

Oh, and cupcakes, aren’t our Clinton-supporter-stereotypes shifting with the winds! First Clinton’s base was made entirely of geriatric post-sexual DINOs, but now all of a sudden we are fecund young things, whose entire political involvement revolves around our baby-making-parts! We can barely keep them in control!  They were obviously lying when they said they wanted an experienced candidate!  After the eight-year Bush Administration clusterfuck, a reasonable person could IN NO WAY come to the conclusion that someone who's been in national politics for a while is the best choice to lead the national government!  I understand that in some cases, this was a pretext for racist voting.  But - just like lateness is sometimes a pretext for unjustified firing, and that's never defensible but sometimes a person's actually late all the time, in which case it's up to the boss - some people really were voting on experience.  Or confidence in national security issues.  Or any number of other issues.  The presumption of bad faith which is projected onto Clinton voters is a way to alienate this enormous base of people.  It's NOT the way to unify. 

Most importantly, though, is the snide condescension towards female voters - that women do not understand who we are voting for. I can’t speak to the original author, but I do know that Feministing has earned its place in blogland at least in part based on its righteous fury at the idea that women are silly, irrational actors who should just be patted on the head and told what’s best for us. And yet, here at least one of them is, doing just that. Those silly wimminz can’t possibly know what it’s like to have an abortion what John McCain stands for! Here’s a clue - if the media is right, and these women who proudly supported a female feminist candidate so energetically are willing to jump ship from Obama and the Democratic Party to the famously anti-woman McCain, then there's something seriously fucked up going on with Obama and/or the Democratic party.  And if these angry women (whether or not they even exist in significant numbers) are so important, then Obama and/or the Democratic party should damned well be listening if they actually want to win.  All the demonization of little old ladies in the world isn’t going to change that; in fact, all it does is locate a convenient scapegoat should the party lose in November - blame those irrational women! - and further excuse the unending trivialization of feminist issues within the party, not to mention absolve the fucked-up nomination process that got us a nominee who may well not have been our strongest GE contender. And it buys into the misogynist media narrative, which (now that the Dragon Lady is safely slayed, of course) even the media, in grudging and IQ-lite forms of course, is willing to admit is bullshit.

Feminist liberals can support Obama, remain in the Democratic party, and still fucking hold both accountable when they show signs of sell-out take women for granted bullshit.  Join in the HRC-voter scapegoating, and you’re (a) pushing us [further, for some women] away and (b) buying into the Blame Women First narrative of, oh, I don’t know, EVERYTHING ELSE that keeps our culture so fucking misogynist.  I’m trying to be better than that.  I’d like to think I’m not alone.

Oh.  And no, this post is not an endorsement or criticism of Obama, McCain, McKinney, or abstention.  It’s a criticism of an aspect of electoral politics which is bad for women, and is going to continue to be bad for women as long as we think it’s “funny” and refuse to criticize it.  However, if my smart-ass low-traffic blog is more convincing than your candidate’s millions of dollars and supporters, YOUR CANDIDATE DOESN’T DESERVE TO WIN.

post-primary thoughts

  • Jun. 12th, 2008 at 9:23 PM
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Warning:  this post rambles, and will probably be updated and revised.  I’ve been writing it since very early last Wednesday morning, but it came out slowly, like cheap vodka that has started to freeze, and burns just as badly going down.  I’m hoping to be up and writing again soon, though.

I’m of the generation who came of age in the 1990s, and I’ve always been interested in politics. It’s been interesting, particularly over the last few months, to untangle how those years shaped my views of politics and ethics.  Those views on politics, that sense of ethics, has been violated to its very core, by those who I thought shared those views and ethics. I won’t deny that the disappointment is partially about Senator Clinton’s suspension, but the sense of betrayal goes far beyond that.  Y’all know I’m usually pretty anal about my sourcing and backup links, even in comments. However, I’m making an exception and not using this post to link to people who I think have made reprehensible comments, both because I generally respect them and am trying to let the wounds of this season heal, and because I don’t want to drive up traffic to those mean-spirited posts.

 

I have the awesomest future EVER.

  • Jun. 10th, 2008 at 10:10 PM
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Behold... My Future
I will marry Hillary Rodham Clinton.
After a wild honeymoon, We will settle down in cairo in our fabulous Apartment.
We will have 314 kid(s) together.
Our family will zoom around in a blue limo.
I will spend my days as a speaker, and live happily ever after.
whats your future



Snagged from [info]pixxelpuss

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[info]pocochina
The Raging Prosecutrix
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