|
Momentum THE BRIDGE WOMAN by Joyce Marcel American Reporter Correspondent Dummerston, Vt.
Printable version of this story DUMMERSTON, Vt. - Out there in America - yes, still - is a generation of women who were born in the 1940s, raised in the 1950s, and who came to radical consciousness in the late 1960s and early 1970s. I am one of them. Hillary Clinton is one of them. We were raised to be respectful daughters, dutiful wives and doting mothers. We were not to rock the boat. We were to marry doctors, not become them. Most of all, we were cursed with the need to be "nice." Then in fast order came the pill, Betty Friedan, Robin Morgan and second wave feminism. Suddenly we were free to enjoy sex and athletics, have adventures, enjoy careers and lead authentic lives. Unfortunately, we had to build this freedom on the foundation of conventional behavior instilled in us in our youth. I call us "bridge women." We have one foot in the past and one foot in the brave new liberated world we invented for our brave new liberated selves. Over this bridge skipped our daughters and granddaughters, delighting in a freedom that we, ourselves, could never completely enjoy. For them, a career is a birthright and a wire hanger is one way to hang a blouse. As Clinton said in her famous 1969 Wellesley graduation speech, "But we also know that to be educated, the goal of it must be human liberation. A liberation enabling each of us to fulfill our capacity so as to be free to create within and around ourselves." In a profile of Clinton that appeared last year in Mother Jones magazine, Jack Hitt wrote, "Hillary is the real revolutionary: She had a career. She had a family. She had a husband with a career. They were both ambitious boomers - perhaps the most ambitious. They wanted not just good jobs but the very best of all possible jobs." And we know how that played out. Now Obama-mania appears to be sweeping the country, and
Clinton, our first serious female presidential candidate, is poised
to lose the Democratic nomination. (And if she and her husband play
dirty politics with superdelegates at the convention, they will
destroy the Democratic Party and John "Bomb-bomb-bomb, bomba-Iran"
McCain, the man whom, when Chelsea Clinton was still in high school,
Morgan, a brilliant philosopher, has written a polemic in
favor of Clinton (www.womensmediacenter.com). In it she rails against
the sexism that has done so much damage to this candidate: the
discussions of her likability, her ambition, her lust for power, her
sexuality, her pants suits and hair styles, the microscopic
examination of her marriage, the questions of whether she's "strong
enough," the t-shirts that say "If only Hillary had married OJ
instead," the unbelievable "South Park" episode that had terrorists
secreting a bomb in Clinton's vagina.
"This is sociopathic woman-hating," Morgan writes,
truthfully. If it were about Jews or African-Americans, we would call
it for what it is - hate speech. "Hell, PETA would go ballistic if
such vomitous spew were directed at animals," she says.
Yet Clinton is, and always will be, a bridge woman. Her roots
are in her dutiful, conventional upbringing. Her tragedy is that she
never really rebelled. She never really changed.
She has trotted out her husband to campaign for her until it
looks like she is riding on his coattails. Worse, it reminds us of
his terrible arrogance and sense of entitlement, and makes us
realize that we cannot endure another round of him being in the
spotlight.
She has surrounded herself with the worst power-players in
the Democratic Party. Among them, lobbyist and Karl Rove-wannabe Mark
Penn and Terry McAuliffe, who has been the Clinton's bagman for the
past decade or so.
She has burned through $120 million.
She started by having the most money, the best organization
and the most clout. But she blew her advantages in the traditional
old-fashioned Democratic way: lots of network television ads when the
networks are rapidly losing viewers; campaigning only in big states;
spending no money on grassroots organizing; and counting on her
connections and her friends' deep pockets to carry her through. These
are the same inept strategies that cost the Democrats elections in
1980, 1984, 1988, 2000 and 2004.
Barack Obama chose the Howard Dean-Deval Patrick strategy
(the Clintons hate Dean): pay attention to all the states, even the
so-called "red" ones; knock on doors; enlist and inspire young people
to work their butts off; do a lot of grassroots organizing.
If Clinton's old-fashioned strategy hasn't killed her,
certainly her record has. She was on the board at Wal-Mart. Even
though her Senate resume is as thin as Obama's, she voted for the war
in Iraq. She voted to give the president the power to bomb Iran. She
voted for the bankruptcy bill. She refused to support a ban on
cluster bombs.
"Does sisterhood have such a thin veneer that all of those
Iraqi lives are forgotten in order to have a woman in the White
House," wrote a commentator, Kathleen Barry, in response to Morgan's
piece. "Then why not Condoleezza Rice? Is there that much difference
between them?"
Clinton's life resonates deeply with me. I like her. I admire
her intelligence and accomplishments. I have taken many of the same
hits that she has.
Yet her inability to change, admit failure and grow - coupled
with her need to be the good girl, dutiful and obedient to the
conventional realities, strategies and wisdom that have always
surrounded her - make it impossible for me to vote for her.
Mindful, as Morgan says, of the danger of electing "a
handsome, cocky president who feels he can learn on the job," I will
reluctantly vote for Obama.
A collection of Joyce Marcel's columns, "A Thousand Words or Less,"
is available through joycemarcel.com. And write her at
joycemarcel@yahoo.com.
Copyright 2008 Joe Shea The American Reporter. All Rights Reserved.
|