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The ‘Bitch’- Bashing Begins…

The little-willied big-bellied ones in the US media are already sharpening their tiny, tiny knives to cut down those uppity women who have the nerve to think they can rule big butch manly men like them – but Hecate is having none of it :

Thursday, November 09, 2006

You Want To Drop The Sexist Language Right Now, Bub. You Can Leave It At The Door With Your Unresolved Mommy and Wife Issues.

Yesterday, I had lunch with five really smart men, moderate to serious political junkies and moderate liberals all of them. I was, as is fairly common in my work life, the only woman at the table. After doing a post mortem of the midterm election, the talk turned to the 2008 election. Hillary Clinton’s name was mentioned and, with the exception of the one twenty-something guy, there was so much head shaking and groaning you couldn’t believe it. “She’s so political,” was what it came down to. One of the nicest guys there said to me and the twenty-something, “It’s not so much the gender issue . . . .” at which point I interrupted and said, “Oh yes it is. You all don’t want to admit, even to yourselves, that it is the gender issue, but it is. Listen to you: ‘She’s so political.’ WTF? She’s a politician. Name me a male politician who isn’t ‘so political.'” Crickets. And, it IS (as my lunch partners grudgingly admitted) the gender issue. We’re used to men being “political,” but it still sort of upsets us when a woman is because we’re not yet used enough to seeing it. Even when women are “political” they’re supposed to hide it, to pretend that they’re really not trying to influence things.

However, this post isn’t really about Hillary; I’m using my lunch conversation for illustration. This post is about the fact that men, even many liberal men who would decry sex discrimination sincerely and loudly, really don’t like to listen to women be forceful and assertive.

Take, for example, today’s David Broder column in the WaPo. Broder, after spending most of his column attempting to convince everyone that he knew this Democratic victory was coming (imagine how it would sound if a woman did that!), really shows his colors when he turns to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi: Pelosi’s performance at her debut as leader of a congressional majority was pitch-perfect, calm, confident and blessedly free of the screeching tone of some of her stump speeches. Ever been damned with faint praise? Every single powerful woman has. Geez, Nancy, could you not, you know, “screech” so much? You sound all “shrill” and “strident” when you do that. It’s so much nicer if you’ll play the woman’s role and be “conciliatory.”

Lest you think that Broder’s is an isolated example or perhaps just made a poor word choice, consider this from Chris Matthews, whose id is always under much less control than almost anyone else’s: Discussing the victory speeches of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) and House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (CA) during MSNBC’s special election coverage on November 7, co-anchor Chris Matthews told Republican pollster Frank Luntz that Clinton gave a “barn-burner speech, which is harder to give for a woman; it can grate on some men when they listen to it — fingernails on a blackboard.” Matthews then noted that Pelosi, who will likely be elected House speaker now that the Democrats have gained control of the U.S. House of Representatives, will “have to do the good fight with the president over issues” such as the minimum wage and prescription drugs. He then asked: “How does she do it without screaming? How does she do it without becoming grating?” Matthews later returned to criticizing Clinton, when, during a conversation with co-anchor Keith Olbermann and with a clip of Clinton’s victory event playing in the background, Matthews stated that Clinton’s “clapping” was “not appealing” and that “it’s Chinese or something,” as Salon.com’s weblog The War Room noted. Matthews added that former President Bill Clinton, who was standing behind Sen. Clinton at the podium, was a “gigantic guy behind her and he’s just there,” adding: “It’s a strange sight.” Media Matters has the transcript.

Look, men. We get it. You really, on some primal level, don’t like to hear women talk. You wish we’d shut up and just look pretty. And you REALLY don’t like to hear us talk about important issues because you grew up believing that those were YOUR affairs. And you REALLY, REALLY don’t like powerful women and you REALLY, REALLY, REALLY don’t like it when powerful women give powerful speeches and deliver them with force. We know.

And you know what? We don’t fucking care. You’d better get fucking used to it.

posted by Hecate @ 5:57 PM

Go Hecate…. This post gets my vote for title of the day too. ( Though Amanda’s Worms! Cans! Worms who like unclothed cans on film! Non-worms who like the same! has to get a honourable mention as well.)

Read more: US politics, Democrats, Women, Sexism

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It’s (Second) Life Jim, Just As We Know It

The Minds had long ago come up with a proper name for it; they called it the Irreal, but they thought of it as Infinite Fun. That was what they really knew it as. The Land of Infinite Fun.

It did the experience pathetically little justice.

— Iain M Banks, Excession

Gwendolyn Kronsage and Wild Winger, advance team for RL Dutch Parliamentarians, in SL Amsterdam* [Looks like Centraal Station, without the endless building works]

Via Perspective‘s excellent post on those suburban loonies UKIP’s foray into the online environment Second Life I found that the Dutch Socialist party (who both Martin and I support) are doing the same:

Second Life Amsterdam, Real life Dutch parliamentarians:

[Centraal Station again, but with a lot of geographical changes]

Event publicist Wild Winger (seen above in rainbow-hued wings) sends along the details: “In the following three weeks, Dutch politicians Zsolt Szab? (VVD), Arda Gerkens (SP), Bert Bakker (D66) and Ad Koppejan (CDA) will be campaigning in Second Life as well as in real life. With the elections to be held on November 22, they are visiting locations in SL that are frequented regularly by Dutch people, from where they will hand out election flyers. The Members of Parliament will also tour projects in SL dealing in the field of health care and education. All of the participants recognize the importance of virtual worlds like SL: ‘Such worlds are becoming more and more realistic and, consequently, the impact they have on people and society increases, too. Politicians should be aware of this development.'” Their appearance in Dam square appearance is scheduled for 4:10-4:30am SLT.

These developments may be inevitable, but I doubt I’m ever going to get my head around why anyone thinks it advantageous in any way to exist in a virtual world like Second Life when all it is is a simulacrum of this one. What is the point of having a virtual world in which the conditions can be anything, anything at all that mathematical modelling allows, but which just replicates the meatworld you’re actually existing in? What a bloody waste of time, effort and bandwidth.

To bring RL money and politics into such a virtual world seems to negate the whole point of the exercise. If a socialist party wants to experiment in virtuality, why not create a socialist world on their own server somewhere to see how theory works in practice? Seems to me that’d be a lot more productive than canvassing Second Life denizens, most of whom can’t vote for them anyway. I’d’ve thought any actual electoral returns the SP get from SL’d be minimal. The only pointof it is for the PR value, but who wants to get lumped in with xenophobic losers like UKIP?

I can see why they’d canvass in SL if it were for a SL election: I suppose even virtual worlds must have a government – but the campaigning in SL is not aimed at SL government, it’s meant to affect a RL election. If it’s leftist geeks they want to reach, there must be better ways than this.

Personally I’ve never been a big MUD fan and Second Life does not appeal at all so perhaps I’m biased. I’ve always though that if I want greed, crime and political shenanigans I can get them here in spades.

Mind you, if someone wants to create a real human-accessible Infinite Fun Space, I might be persuaded to reconsider that stance.

Read more: Netherlands, Holland, Amsterdam, Dutch politics, Dutch elections, Second Life, Socialist Party, Political campaigns

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Mehlmania: Did He Jump, Or Was He Pushed?

The Blue State isn’t sure, but the timing seems a little too conveniently co-incidental to me. Mind you, I was born wearing quite a fetching tin-foil hat.

Mehlman to retire, one day after outing by Maher

Conveniently following Bill Maher’s outing of Ken Mehlman as a gay Republican last night on Larry King Live, a source confirms that Mehlman will likely step down as Chairman of the Republican National Committee:

Two sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Mehlman has made clear to close associates for some time he was likely to leave after the 2006 elections — and that there is no dissatisfaction with his performance in the midterm cycle. A third source confirmed Mehlman’s leaving is a good possibility but said a final decision has not been made. “It would be wrong to call it a done deal,” this source said.

Although it seems like Ken Mehlman was going to leave anyway, it is really interesting that this comes just one day after Maher said this about Ken Mehlman.

I don’t blame Bill Maher for saying that about Mehlman last night because he was really put on the spot by Larry King, if you listened to the context of the interview. At the same time, it might be a dangerous precedent to set if we use people’s sexuality, gender or race as tools to attack one another. I have no idea what it is like to be gay, but I know some people who are and want it to be their own business. Yeah, some, including myself, already heard that Mehlman was gay a long time ago, so I am don’t really condemn Maher for saying that. In fact, I find myself agreeing with Bill Maher these days more so than in years past when he had his show on ABC. I just think that we need to be careful about what kind of precedent we set, especially if we want to change the tone in Washington.

It’s satisfying to see Mehlman go, though I disagree with Blue State completely about being careful what precedent is set in outing gay Republicans: they set the precedents for hypocrisy, by all means let’s see them hoist by their own petards. ‘Sunshine is the best disinfectant’ and all that.

Your mileage may vary, of course.

Read more: US politics, Gay Republicans, Outing, Mehlman

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Now I Know What To Put On My Christmas List

This is Jean-Yves Blondeau, aka Rollerman, in his 31-wheeler rollersuit zooming around Paris on various parts of his anatomy.

I’d’ve killed for one of these suits when I was 12, but only if I could’ve got one with a less unfortunate resemblance to a Lawnmower Man costume. Wheee!

The video has a nice Daft Punk soundtrack too.

Read more: Internet, Weird stuff, Video, Youtube, Rollerman Paris