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The Song of Our New ObamaNation: The Bitch Deserved It


madamab - Posted on 17 November 2008

Our New ObamaNation
Our New ObamaNation

Most people in this country do not know how explicitly misogynistic Barack Obama's campaign was. They don't have time to sit at the computer and read The Daily Kos, or Talking Points Memo, or The Huffington Post. They didn't read the vile, endless hatred spewed at women by Obama's supporters. They believe the lovely stories spun by the corporate media: that Obama was saintly and above all negativity and "unifying," while his opponents rolled around in dirt. And even when Obama or his surrogates did or said something overtly misogynistic, the media either did not cover it, or excused it.

After all, the bitch deserved it. 

As for Obama's followers, they refused to admit that his sexist language against Clinton and Palin was intentional. Oh really? Then why didn't he apologize for it? That's what a smart political operative does when his words are "misinterpreted" to be offensive to a particular group of people.

There is no logical answer to this question, except that yes, he did flip Hillary off, he did mean to call Sarah Palin a pig, he did intend to slam Hillary when he took the stage after a primary victory to the song "99 Problems (And a Bitch Ain't One)", and he did mean to use Clinton's femaleness against her when he called her "likeable enough" and said she was "periodically down" with her "claws" coming out.

But logic has been in short supply when discussing this election. Over and over again, we women have been told not to believe our lying eyes and ears, to participate in our own marginalization "for the good of the country." Well, some of us realized that the election of Barack Obama would legitimize the use of misogyny as a tactic against any woman who dared to challenge the entrenched patriarchy in America. And try as we might, we just couldn't be excited about taking the country in that direction.

This year, many of us finally understood the deep, abiding and totally irrational hatred that our male-dominated culture holds against women. For me, nothing brought this home so much as the sudden proliferation of the attitude that violence against women is no longer automatically horrifying. It used to be unthinkable and shameful for a man to harm a woman.

Not anymore.

From Keith Olbermann's comment that Hillary Clinton should be taken into a room with a superdelegate and only one of them should come out, to the "artist" who hung Sarah Palin in effigy, to the New York man who beat a woman in the face with her McCain/Palin sign, to this unhinged essay in the Philadelphia Weekly, in which, under the guise of speaking about grammar, the male author advocates giving Sarah Palin a forced hysterectomy (bolding is mine):

If you’re speaking, “an historic” is acceptable, but you can’t say the H: It’s gotta be “an ’istoric.” If you do pronounce the H, or if you’re writing it down, go with “a.” You wouldn’t say, for example, “Someone should give Sarah Palin an hysterectomy before she spreads her devil spawn any further.” You’d say “a hysterectomy.” Same with “a historic.”

In another shocker, the good governor herself wasn’t immune to linguistic foibles leading up to the big day. Just before votes were cast Sarah Palin told Fox News’ Sean Hannity she was “very excited and anxious for the 4th.”

I suspect Hannity was too busy drooling to notice, but the word she probably meant was “eager,” not “anxious.” Unless she was trying to tell Fox News viewers she had anxiety about losing—which she didn’t—she made the all too common mistake of confusing “anxious” and “eager.” It’s an important distinction: She was eager for Election Day; she’s anxious about the impending hysterectomy she doesn’t yet know we’ve scheduled for her.

Imagine this vomitous crap being written about Barack Obama or John McCain, and a woman advocating giving them a forced vasectomy. Did your brain explode? Of course, because such an article would NEVER BE PUBLISHED. It would rightfully be seen as sexist, violent and socially unacceptable.

But as the author says later in the article, Governor Palin is a "vindictive bitch." So she deserves it.

And then, of course, there are stories like this. An eighth-grade young woman wearing a McCain t-shirt was repeatedly told she should die for wearing it. A woman in an upscale restaurant was dragged across the floor by her hair and punched in the face, and the cop at the scene told her it was her fault, because she had started the fight by pouring a glass of water on an incredibly obnoxious man who had called her a c*** and refused to allow her to sit in an empty seat he was "saving" for someone, despite her offer to get up as soon as the man's friend arrived.  Yes, of course, she should not have poured the water on him, but don't we think that the man's response was just a tad over-the-top?

Of course not. The bitch deserved it.

I have a feeling that these assaults on women, verbal and physical, are going to proliferate under the Obama Administration. Why let go of a winning strategy? After all, he is President-Elect, and not that c*** Hillary Clinton, or that John McCain, who picked that bimbo sex-doll bitch Sarah Palin for Vice President, right?

Women of America, we do NOT deserve it. We do NOT deserve to be called c*** and bitch just because we want equal representation and rights in the society in which we represent 52% of the population. We must refuse to continue to participate in our own humiliation. We must stand up for all women everywhere, especially those who put themselves into the national spotlight, knowing that they will become a focus for the hatred that dare not speak its name.

We must take the emotion out of our movement and focus on concrete goals, my sistren and supportive brethren. We must not be distracted and divided by the tactics of men who are focused on holding on to power at any cost. My goal is achieving gender parity in government via the 30% Solution, and I will not be turned from it.

After all, equal representation, unlike misogyny, is something we do deserve. And we shouldn't stop until we get it.

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Absolutely-100%. The pressure continues unabated to "just get over it"- but I don't think I ever will.  The misogyny took me by surprise last spring- I think I've been in shock since then- and now this will be my goal for the foreseeable future. 

Somebody's got to write a book about what happened- before history is totally revised.

Me either, madamab.  I'm in for the long haul.

"I suffer from post-partisan depression." ~Barney Frank

and not one minute sooner. I do not accept being a second-class citizen and I do not accept it for my 7 granddaughters. We are fortunate in that many men, the good ones, the secure ones, the decent ones, support us in our quest. They are superior men, why ever would they want inferiors as their loves, their spouses, their children, their sisters or friends.

We may be 52% of the population but 100% of that number are not on board. Too many nasty women attacking, smearing and demeaning other women. Until that issue is met we will forever be held back by the least of us. For the least of us want "theirs" and if it means joining the "boyz" and attacking other women to get it they will gleefully do so.

That enrages me and depresses me and quite frankly scares me. A country where a young woman would proudly wear a tee-shirt that stated another woman was a cu*t is not a country where women have much chance of acheiving equality. Too many fifth columnists working against it from within.

A Dishonest/Biased Media Is A Crime Against Democracy!

A big kiss on both cheeks for you! You are the best madamab!

And thanks to all you fierce men and women here at Partizane, especially Hampster who provided this forum for us!

Cool

That ain't worth squat without wonderful people writing contributions like this one.

Thank you mab!

Don't Blame Me! - I Voted for Hillary
McGovern - Carter - Mondale - Dukakis - Clinton - Gore - Kerry - McCain

As usual. I get so intent on discussing the thoughts and ideas in your essays that I forget to tell you how much I enjoy them and how well written and thought provoking they are. Of the Obamanation is waiting for us to get over it, I hope they hold their damn breath!

A Dishonest/Biased Media Is A Crime Against Democracy!

Evil

by the way, the author of the Philadelphia Weekly piece got his grammar wrong too.  When a word begins with the letter "h", you usually use the article "a" before it.  (like "a history", "a harness", "a horse", etc.  EXCEPT when the word has the accent on the second syllable.  Then it's proper to use "an".  "an historic event" is correct.  (NOT "a historic")  Eye-wink

 

an mi spaling stincks two.

Don't Blame Me! - I Voted for Hillary
McGovern - Carter - Mondale - Dukakis - Clinton - Gore - Kerry - McCain

It was beyond what I usually say - and very angry. (Truth be told, I was up late and couldn't sleep and my superego was too tired to monitor my language.) they contacted me asking of they could publish what I said and I said no. I sounded both angry and irrational in the comment.  But I wasn't irrational. I was enraged.

Last night on "Boston Legal" the misogyny continued.  This women bashing is becoming a national pasttime.

Barf!