Personal Liberty Digest...
You’ve
Come a Long Way, Baby
by Ben Crystal
July 21, 2011
Bill
Maher recently called Sarah Palin
and Michele Bachmann “boobs.”
Sometime
after June Cleaver turned in
her apron and retired to guest spots on “The Love Boat,” the feminist
movement
took center stage in what some called “the gender wars.” I wasn’t
around during
the nascent years of feminism, but I’ve always thought that the boys
lost to
the girls right about the same time we started pretending we liked
movies with
Sally Field — and without the Trans-Am.
Like
any conservative, I’m of the
opinion that skills and dedication ought to determine merit, and merit
ought to
determine advancement. As an example: When self-described “journalist”
Joe
McGinnis rented the house next door to Sarah Palin in order to conduct
“research” on her family, liberals cheered the move, while reasonable
people
saw it as exceptionally creepy. If someone set up camp next door to
Rachel
Maddow, liberals would shriek “stalker!” or “sexist intimidation!”
while
conservatives would assume the poor sap lost a very big bet.
Unfortunately,
as is so often the case
with socially activist philosophies, one side of the political spectrum
has
convinced itself that it is the only appropriate partner for the
movement. And
as is so often the case with one side of a political spectrum
“claiming” a
social ideology as its own, the cause has been grossly perverted. Thus,
the
message of the current “feminist” movement, co-opted by the left as it
is, isn’t
one of “equal opportunity for women,” or even “gender should not be the
sole
factor in (whatever) decision.” Instead, feminism shouts from the
rooftops
about equal — or superior — treatment for liberal women. And they don’t
mean:
“The dumb broads who think raising a family is empowering are on their
own.”
They mean: “The dumb broads who don’t think the way we do are beneath
scorn.”
And
not only does the
Democratic-feminist cabal despise women who don’t share their
particular brand
of lunacy, they rarely take issue when Democratic men make
spectacularly
misogynist remarks about conservative women. On those oddly frequent
occasions
when a party mouthpiece like Bill Maher (who evidently struggles with
some
serious mommy issues) channels… well… Bill Maher, the liberal community
erupts
in debate. It strikes me that when a conservative mocks Secretary of
State
Hillary Clinton without so much as a nod to her gender, the liberal
community
stands shoulder-to-shoulder in levying sexism charges against him.
Maher
is particularly interesting
given that he relates to women only slightly less dysfunctionally than
Ted
Bundy. For the sake of decency, I will refrain from repeating his
remarks about
Sarah Palin. Suffice it to say, if I used language like that — even
about
Hillary Clinton — my mother would fly down just to smack the fool out
of my
mouth. MSNBC’s morbidly obese lunatic Ed Schultz called Laura Ingraham
a
“slut,” and MSNBC needed 48 hours of navel-gazing before deciding Fat
Eddie
needed some time in the corner. The evening of President Obama’s State
of the
Union speech, Chris Matthews spent the better part of an hour talking
about how
much he hates Representative Michele Bachmann. Given the content of the
speech
Matthews was supposed to be analyzing, he needed something concrete and
defaulted to 45 minutes of woman-hating.
Even
the gals get nasty when the
target isn’t the right kind of “strong woman.” Late last week, Janeane
Garofalo, who manages to make a living as a comedienne despite being
about as
funny as a colonoscopy, took shots at Bachmann by attacking Bachmann’s
husband
— a man who has in no way tried to insert himself in the national
political
discourse. Try to imagine the liberal response should a conservative
commentator make cruel and unfounded remarks about — say —
Representative John
Conyers’ wife… oops, the Federal courts have killed any chance of that.
If
Bill Maher, Chris Matthews, Ed
Schultz, Markos Moulitsas, Lawrence O’Donnell, Paul Krugman or even
Janeane
Garofolo wants to take issue with conservative women on a political
level, then
they’re welcome to it. Their fact-deficient rants usually offer great
material
for our weekly Great Eight. But they should keep the hypocrisy to a
dull roar,
focusing their disapproval on their targets’ politics — not their
genitals.
–Ben
Crystal
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