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american idol…or it is the amazing RACE ?

Posted on July 31st, 2008 in Closeted by hireheels

It appears that the race card is the only one that Obama has in his deck. The AP has reported that Obama made the following comments in Missouri yesterday:

“Nobody thinks that Bush and McCain have a real answer to the challenges we face. So what they’re going to try to do is make you scared of me,” Obama said. “You know, he’s not patriotic enough, he’s got a funny name, you know, he doesn’t look like all those other presidents on the dollar bills.”

Precious can’t be talking colonial-era fashion vs. his sleek Beatles style (to match his Beatles persona). He obviously means that the GOP will use Obama’s skin color as a scare tactic…piper_in_pucci_byline

This claim may not be totally unjustified. After all, we saw what Repubs did to John McCain in South Carolina during the 2000 primary when anonymous pollsters (Karl Rove) asked supporters if they would be more or less likely to vote for McCain if they knew he had fathered an illegitimate black child. (We now know, of course, that he hadn’t. The child in question was adopted from Bangladesh. Still, McCain lost South Carolina by 12 points that year. Mission accomplished.)

But during this election cycle, the only race baiting that I have seen has come from the Democrats, and mostly from the bi-racial candidate himself. Remember the remarkably similar statement at a Florida fundraiser in June, where he added “And did I mention he’s black?” Yep, he went there. No lame comparisons to our founding fathers or shapers of our nation needed. Everyone got the message: RNC=Racist National Committee.

And then there are his groupies, like Kansas governor Kathleen Sebelius, who conveniently predicted that Republicans would undertake “a major effort to try and frighten people…” about Obama’s race and any such challenges to Obama as being too inexperienced or liberal would be “code words” for racism. Howard Dean told FOX News’ Chris Wallace that any mention of Jeremiah Wright was tantamount to race baiting and compared it to the infamous Dukakis-era Willie Horton ad.

New York governor David Paterson took the racism charge even further by suggesting that if Obama loses in November, it will be because Americans aren’t enlightened enough to elect an African-American president:
“Can America reject the crucible of race that has dictated and pervaded all of our history to embrace an African-American man who has the right policies for the next decade in this country? Can America go past the crippling way that we’ve shot ourselves in the foot over and over, denying opportunity to people who are bright, to people who are qualified, to people who are able because they didn’t look like us, or they didn’t come from where we came from, or they are from a different gender, or they are from the African continent? Can America push that away and find new leadership? We’ll find out in the next few months what America can do.”

Does anyone else see a pattern here?

If mentioning Obama’s race is so awful, why do the Dems keep doing it? Is it to inoculate Precious from legitimate questions about his weak legislative record and shady associates? Are they trying to capitalize on white guilt by playing the victim of unscrupulous (and so far, non-existent) Republican campaign tactics? Or is it because the Hope and Change™ strategy isn’t working anymore, and the race card is all they’ve got left?

I suspect that it’s a combination of the three. I also suspect that if the Dems aren’t careful, they’ll soon overplay their hand, if they haven’t already.

hireheels says NO DEAL to shady moves from slickly-shod bad boys

Posted on July 29th, 2008 in Sista Christian Louboutin by hireheels

Sista received another slippery missive from the DNC yesterday. Wow, they really must be desperate for cash… I mean didn’t Howie receive that “Dear John” letter that I sent a while back? The guy must be a masochist. Well he does like to scream.

Yesterday’s little beauty was entitled “Special Invitation from Barack Obama.”
As you might imagine heels— I was so very titillated to receive a “party” invite
from the Anointed One.

Here’s an excerpt:
One month from today, more than 75,000 Americans will join Barack Obama at the first truly open Democratic National Convention in a generation.
If you make a donation in any amount before midnight this Thursday, July 31st, you could join Barack backstage before he accepts the Democratic nomination.

My dear Howard let me remind you that —an open Convention is about NOMINATIONS not open-air stadia! Natch HireHeels and the rest of the Just Say No Deal Coalition welcome the concept of a “truly open Democratic National Convention.” Sadly, Sista thinks it would be more likely for Saks to host a sidewalk blowout on 5th Ave with their entire fall 2008 line of Gucci stilettos on sale for $5 a piece. But… if Hell were to freeze over… Precious just might acknowledge that there is no democratic candidate for president until the roll call vote on August 27, 2008. He might even allow both his and Senator Clinton’s names to be placed in nomination. Yeah… Dream on dissed dems… Don’t let that “open” door policy hit you on your18 mill arses as you exit Invesco and the Democratic Party!

It would serve you well to realize Mr. Chairman, that obscenely funded smoke-and-mirror marketing tactics won’t win us over. The American Idolization of this election isn’t gleaning your expected ratings is it? Have you seen the polls? Your wonder boy Barry should be up double digits— instead he’s down by four… Why is that? Did the cameras not capture his “good” side? Or is it that the voters just don’t take to manipulation of sacred traditions and Democratic Party principles for marketing or fund-raising purposes? And we really don’t like false advertising, so stop calling your Convention “open” if it’s as tightly closed as a steel-toed pair of Dr. Marten’s.

Dirty Words and How They Feel On Clean Skin

Posted on July 28th, 2008 in On Consignment by hireheels

When I awoke the morning of June 4, 2008, I thought I would be bitterly disappointed. After all, the nominating contest between Senators Clinton and Obama had been decided the night before by a march of cowardly Super Delegates, bowing to pressure from the party leadership to forcibly shut down the process. Surely I would be furious or curled up in the fetal position crying my eyes out. That would be only natural since I worked harder for Hillary than I had for any presidential candidate – ever.

Did I want her to win so badly because she is a woman? No. Did I want her to win because she is an eminently qualified woman with a spine of steel, one who offers bold, progressive policies, is ever prepared, energetic, a worker bee and a visionary who is willing to roll up her sleeves to get the job done? Yes.

She’s my candidate.

The truth is I was relieved the morning of June 4th, even serene. I thought, since the race has been declared over, at least she won’t get flogged today. For the first time in six months, I wouldn’t have to watch, or avoid watching, the frat-boy media hit squad trash her mercilessly, simply because they knew they could get away with it. With very rare exception, no one, save her own husband, stood up to declare anything was wrong with that disgraceful practice.

But I was wrong in my assessment that the honor killing, the gang attacks and unforgivable disrespect to a sitting United States Senator were over. Pundits were wringing their hands, alternately furious and mystified as to why Hillary hadn’t just collapsed to the floor in a puddle the night before. Why hadn’t she gotten out of the way of the DNC power elite’s chosen messiah so he could have his historic moment on the stage to claim his crown?

Her historic moment was completely ignored.

Suddenly everyone wanted to kick Hillary off the stage. Actually, it was not sudden. The Democratic elites and misogynist male media, along with hopeless females like Andrea Mitchell and Maureen Dowd, who bond with their male offenders, either out of a need for self preservation, jealousy or self-loathing, had been trying to get rid of Hillary since before the New Hampshire primary in January. They rubbed their hands together gleefully after Iowa, waiting for her to be declared dead. Then she won – and kept winning.

Ironic that Hillary convincingly won two out of three primaries even in the last week of the contest. She did this with a false Associated Press story being released early Tuesday morning reporting she had already conceded – while voters were just going to the polls in South Dakota and Montana. Yet these media blowhards were telling us she hadn’t even earned a moment to celebrate her victories with her supporters who had been working for her faithfully for sixteen months. None of us, male or female, could contain our rage at this last stroke of disrespect. How politically idiotic, never mind thoughtless, that Senator Obama couldn’t wait one more day to have the news cycle to himself. Why ignore her? Why ignore the millions of voters whose help he would need to win the election in the fall?

The DNC, suffering from Clinton Derangement Syndrome, cannot understand why we hold her in such esteem and want her to lead us. Certainly we cannot understand why she would be tossed out like so much garbage. I have seen many women treated this way in my lifetime and been on the receiving end of some of this myself. The hurt is not lessened by time or age.

Senator Clinton’s candidacy is just as historic as his. Why is this never spoken of?

She is not only the first woman to ever win a primary, she won the votes of 18,000,000 people, more than any primary candidate in history. She won almost every large state, all the swing states and arguably had the electoral map in her pocket, yet the berating, belittling drumbeat grew ever louder for her to just sit down and shut up like a good little girl and get out of the way.

Hillary, will you for the love of God just get out of the way? Your success is but a mere inconvenience. And your 18,000,000 voters should sit down and shut up, too. Just pretend you didn’t notice that fair reflection and democracy were thrown out the window. Just pretend you didn’t notice that the far stronger candidate was kicked to the curb. Just shut up and sit down, will you, for the good of the party.

Perhaps you think I have taken this campaign too personally. Well, what is the correct response then, watching grown men, who presumably have wives, daughters, sisters and mothers, making comments about Hillary such as “it cries,” or the collection of quotations I will never be able to get out of my head:

A Super Delegate needs to take her into a room and only he comes out, that kind of scenario. (Olbermann) The only reason she was elected to the Senate is that people felt sorry for her because of her husband. (Matthews) When she is on camera, I involuntarily cross my legs. (Carlson) Doesn’t it seem like the Clinton’s are pimping their daughter Chelsea out in some weird way? (Shuster) We don’t want to have to watch a woman grow old in the White House. (Limbaugh) If she had any dignity, she’d just bow out. (Alter) Some women deserve to be called bitches. She’s Alex Forrest in “Fatal Attraction.” She sounds like your nagging mother-in-law. She’s like your ex-wife waiting for her alimony check on the courthouse steps. She-Devil. The psycho ex-girlfriend of the Democratic party. What does she want anyway? She has unpleasant ankles. That cackle!

And my all-time favorite: Someone needs to take her out behind the barn.

Even more unforgivable to the media it seems, is that she would actually stand before voters on flatbed trucks and in town halls across America and offer specific policy solutions. Why couldn’t Hillary understand this was not nearly as important as the myriad comments we had to endure about her pantsuits?

I remember waking up early in the morning of each successive primary, terrified at what negative press the day would bring, how they would spin the exit polls, what awful things they would say. The day of the Pennsylvania primary, where she was outspent 3:1 yet still won by ten points, listening to Wolf Blitzer and company, you would have thought she was getting trounced to the tune of double digits.

But Senator Clinton was not the only one done dirty in this contest. Her voters bear the scars as well. We were and are called racist, bitter, Archie Bunkers, over the hill, uneducated, clueless, shoulder-pad feminists and sweeties and much worse. Wow. We were painted with the same dirty brush they used on her.

Lou Dobbs and Greta Van Susteren stand alone as journalists who reported fairly.

I watched my own mother receive daily abuse in our home, a non-stop barrage designed to make her feel small despite the fact that without her strong work ethic and fortitude, we would have all been out in the street. Perhaps that’s why it was harder for me to witness a more qualified woman be figuratively defecated on in favor of an affable younger shape shifter with no discernable experience. Hillary Clinton actually won this contest by any reasonable metric and yet was declared the loser.

It is cold comfort at this moment, but I am heartened by the fact that millions of women and progressive men in this country are outraged that the stronger candidate was treated like the scullery maid, an inconvenience who should be brought to heel so she could drag this particular man’s inexperienced, unqualified behind across the finish line. Senator Obama was certainly limping to that line and if not for the mercy of the Super Delegates, he would not be able to claim the nomination even today. But for their weakness and lack of good judgment, this contest would, and should, be decided at the Convention. With everything in my power, I work to make sure that is still a possibility. Remote or not. To those who wish me to abandon my principles in the name of a convenient party unity, I say no deal.

How can I reconcile what feels like an injustice on so many levels? Are we to be deprived of excellent leadership because it does not fit in with the DNC’s back room fix and the media’s cozy little narrative?

Most painful is that we were all fooled into thinking sexism was a thing of the past. We have discovered these last months just how false a notion that is.

What kind of a message are we sending to our daughters when we tell them, you can reach as high as you want – as long as you don’t reach that high. What are we teaching our sons when they watch how this woman was treated and see no punishment meted out for such behavior.

When you demean one woman, you demean us all. Surely if the racist equivalent had ever been leveled at Senator Obama, there would have been hell to pay and many of these self same pundits would now find themselves on the unemployment line.

On the night of her victory speech in Ohio, Hillary Clinton said, “For everyone who’s been counted out, but refused to be knocked out; for everyone who has stumbled and stood right back up; for everyone who works hard and never gives up — this one is for you!”

Hillary stood tall in the face of ridiculous odds and opposition, undeterred by attacks that never would have been leveled at any male candidate. She taught boys and girls everywhere to speak up for their beliefs, to fight on till the buzzer sounds. I will ignore voices that wish to take away her triumph. It was and is an amazing victory. Those who deny or diminish it, or turn a blind eye to the injustice of the outcome, do so to their eternal shame.

Hillary Clinton will always be my Joan of Arc in a pantsuit. I know she will continue to stand up and work for the ideals and causes that belong to all of us.

The men and women of this country deserve nothing less.

the Rock Star’s bender is making ME sick!

Posted on July 26th, 2008 in Manolo Minx by hireheels

So the Rock Star Messiah’s enjoying his European trip and lapping up the luuuuuv from the crowds like Jim Morrison on a three-day bender. Only I’m the one clutching the porcelain god and suffering bed-spins. Seems that Mr. Rock Star won’t be visiting wounded U.S. soldiers at our military hospitals in Germany …is it because they won’t let him bring in his campaign paparazzi?
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Obama cancelled a request to visit wounded U.S. servicemen and women in hospitals at Rammstein and Landstuhl. The official word from the rock star’s spokespeople is that he decided it would be inappropriate to visit them on a trip paid for by campaign funds.

But NBC’s Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube (big hat tip to Riverdaughter and Grayslady) reported that U.S. military officials told the Obama camp they could bring only two or three Senate staffers and absolutely no campaign photographers or campaign staff. The way NBC reports it, it’s hard not to conclude that Obama and friends withdrew their request to visit after they discovered they couldn’t treat it like a red carpet photo op. (What, Paris Hilton wasn’t available?)
If you actually care about wounded U.S. troops, you go visit them whenever you’re in the neighborhood, with or without your entourage. Punk-rocker-turned-author-and-speaker Henry Rollins does it. So can Obama. (I’d give up a few years of spa pedicures to see Henry take down Obama in a debate. You WILL NOT wrest me from my front-row seat.) Perhaps the campaign finance lawyers advised him to pull the plug on it. Sometimes you have to do what the lawyers tell you to. But that’s not what the campaign said.

I can’t decide if I’m more sick to my stomach or frightened by Obama’s European jaunt. We all know how much we need to rehabilitate our image in the world community, thanks to the “up yours” attitude of our present clown-in-chief, but it’s not Obama’s job to speak as America ’s leader yet. (If we HHers have our way, it never will be.) Yes, I know politicians running for office do these kinds of things—McCain has been to Canada , Mexico and Colombia lately, and I believe the campaign paid for all of them. I don’t consider such trips to be bad by definition (tacky and transparent plays for power, occasionally, but not necessarily dangerous). But Obama’s over-the-top media coverage, the stage craft and message control amping up his messiah-tude, and now the apparent phoniness of the cancelled hospital visits, contribute to my growing sense of dread that he’s becoming a rock star who believes his fans when they tell him he’s a god.

The trouble with rock stars is that they get so high off the uncritical luuuuv of the crowd that, if they’re not careful and strong and grounded, they’ll do anything to get that buzz. When they can’t get it from the crowd 24/7, they turn to drugs and booze and orgies to fill the gap, and we all know how that turns out. Obama’s not a substance-abusing rock star and he’s not going to need a stint at Betty Ford, so don’t anybody take me literally. For me, however, this trip is the latest sign that he’s getting drunk on his own press, his own spin, and his own worshippers. Another reason to say: No Deal! We’ve had nearly eight years of a leader so drunk on his own righteousness that he eviscerated the Constitution, led us into an ill-conceived and unnecessary war, gutted our economy for generations to come, and ruined our reputation around the world. This time out, I’d much prefer a sober leader.

show me the bounce for Messiah, The Rock Star

Posted on July 25th, 2008 in Princess Wears Prada by hireheels

With the Euro pushing 1.60, I’m guessing most Americans aren’t rushing to the Lufthansa and Air France Terminals for a culture-injecting summer vacation.  I’ve already declined 2 weddings in Europe for this very reason.  The economy here at home seems beyond repair. If you’re not feeling it, your last name is
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Buffet.  Maybe that is why the only bounce Senator Obama is seeing on his summer abroad is a bunch of screaming bra-less German girls.

QUESTION: Why do you think Barack Obama is in a “dead heat” (Chris Matthews words, not mine!) with the 71-year old presumptive Republican nominee?

I’d rather cocktail with Riverdaughter than Taylor Marsh, anyway!

Posted on July 23rd, 2008 in Princess Wears Prada by hireheels

Just how many times must HireHeels sharpen its stilettos this week?!? Rumor has it that Hillarista-turned-Obamanista blog Taylor Marsh is talkin’ some trash about PUMA chicks.

Blame it on too many Sex and the City episodes, but I pride myself in being a real girl’s girl. Sure I like mud, but only when it’s from the dead sea and being applied to my bod in a Caribbean spa. Slinging it at former galpals and other accomplished women feels kinda Pelosi-esque and most certainly McCaskillian. What have we PUMAs done to Taylor & Company, other than speak up for what we believe? Why must they resort to character assassination on mere supporters??
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Clearly these ‘mean girls’ have taken a page straight out of the Obama playbook. If so, why? HireHeels didn’t ask the fleeing ex-Marshians to join the land of PUMA. They ran to us when they realized they could not support Ms. Marsh’s knee-jerk shift to, well, the jerk. And what they found was a sassy, safe haven where they could continue to support Senator Hillary Clinton and exercise their freedom of ‘choice’ for the remainder of this election.

Apparently that position is not respected at Taylor Marsh. Funny, I don’t ever recall criticizing former Hillary supporters who chose to throw their support behind Senator Obama and fall in line with the Democratic Party. That is their prerogative and ours is ours.

But hireheels gals know full well that principles don’t simply fall in line. Values don’t fall in line. Conviction doesn’t fall in line. People fall in line. Indeed, PUMAs start the line…and that line is snaking all around the blogosphere as it continues to welcome Marshians, Obamabots and any other creature alienated by Obamanation.

A few months ago I called and emailed Ms. Marsh to invite her to appear at an event HireHeels was planning in Philadelphia during the Pennsylvania Primary. As one of her biggest admirers, I wanted to headline and promote her appearance at a cocktail party called “Hilladarity” for gathered pro-Hillary bloggers. I offered my P.R. services to further promote her show, because I knew how many women would have cherished the opportunity to dish with her “live.” I did not take it personally that she didn’t return my communications.

Two months later, Just Say No Deal boasts well over 200 pro-Hillary sites and has created its own haven within a vitriolic blogosphere. Our media coverage has been so continuous and extensive, it has overwhelmed our modest volunteer organization. We are resonating with millions of disaffected voters and Senator Obama struggles to remain in a statistical tie with John McCain in many recent polls.

Don’t blame PUMA for having the insight to sense the troubling signs within the Democratic Party. We didn’t fracture the party. We’re simply revealing its fault lines.

I hope Taylor Marsh will let me buy her that drink one day. But ‘til then, my blog diva of choice is RiverDaughter, the ever-eloquent PUMA who blogs true to her convictions regardless of the backlash. I’ll be joining other PUMAs this Thurday eve at her virtual cocktail party. She’ll be serving up “Causmos” (for a $10 donation to HRC) and her usual sageness. No doubt we’ll all be a bit more shaken and stirred on the way home.

kiss my “ahss”

Posted on July 21st, 2008 in Closeted by hireheels

We PUMAs continue to strike a nerve and shatter the DNC’s carefully crafted illusion of party unity with the stiletto heel of dissent and democracy!

Yesterday, fearful that our coalition may swing the election away from their Chosen One, DNC mafia members Don Fowler and Alice Germond exercised more thuggery and issued -gasp- a strongly worded e-mail (as posted on PaganPower) demanding that we STFU and fall in line behind their Messiah.

I become more surprised by the day that those who demand that we support Obama simply because he’s a Democrat had ever gotten laid. Seriously, calling me immature and telling me to get over it doesn’t make my ballot box tingle with excitement.
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So I decided to respond to their ‘Unite Now or Else’ rant with an e-mail of my own:

[here's my strongly worded reply]

Dear Don and Alice,

2008 is a democratic year-at all levels in all the states. The opportunity is ours. We just have to seize it.

We experienced an exciting, intense, sometimes difficult, campaign to nominate our presidential candidate. And it’s not over yet. The nomination should be decided by automatic, or super, delegates at this year’s Democratic National Convention.

I supported Hillary Clinton and am proud and pleased that I did. But neither she nor Barack Obama received enough pledged delegates to secure the nomination. It’s not over.

It’s time for all Democrats, supporters of Senator Obama, and all other contenders for the nomination to stand and allow a floor fight in Denver.

I must confess a bit of fatigue and irritation with people who continue to carp, complain, and criticize PUMAs for wanting the democratic process to play out as it was intended. And since when should voters not lay down conditions for their support? I also lament the use of sports analogies when describing the 2008 Democratic primary. These comparisons are without merit. The NBA did not arbitrarily give the Boston Celtics points they did not earn, and the Association of Tennis Professionals didn’t spot Rafael Nadal two sets at Wimbledon.

It is time to act in a fair and democratic fashion. It’s time to put the coronation behind us. It’s time to support placing Senator Clinton’s name into nomination without symbolic gestures or hand-wringing.

It’s time to WIN for the voters, our democracy, America, and our future. We have an unparalleled opportunity. I hope we will all do everything we can to seize the moment.

See you at the Convention.

Sincerely,
Piper in Pucci
Proud to be a PUMA

Shorter me Don and Alice: Kiss my Seven for All Mankind clad ass. I Just Say No Deal!

Seneca Falls: celebrating 160 years of women’s rights

Posted on July 19th, 2008 in On Consignment by hireheels

Written by Guest Blogger & Just Say No Deal Coalition Member Heidi Li Feldman, J.D., Ph.D.Please Visit Her Blog : HeidiLi’s PotPourri

Below appears a chapter from: Eighty Years And More: Reminiscences 1815-1897 by Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) New York: T. Fisher Unwin, 1898. I have made some cuts and emboldened the parts I found especially fun, interesting, or both.

When I finished reading the chapter below, I thought about the many wonderful speeches I have heard Senator Clinton give about women who work and who raise children.

In honor of Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s record of her life, let’s use the upcoming 160th anniversary celebration of the First Women’s Rights Convention as an occasion to assist Senator Clinton while she works to retire her debt.

Celebration of the 160th anniversary of the First Women’s Rights Convention occurs this weekend. For more information on that and related activities go here.

CHAPTER IX.
THE FIRST WOMAN’S RIGHTS CONVENTION.

IN the spring of 1847 we moved to Seneca Falls. Here we spent sixteen years of our married life, and here our other children–two sons and two daughters–were born.

Just as we were ready to leave Boston, Mr. and Mrs. Eaton and their two children arrived from Europe, and we decided to go together to Johnstown, Mr. Eaton being obliged to hurry to New York on business, and Mr. Stanton to remain still in Boston a few months. At the last moment my nurse decided she could not leave her friends and go so far away. Accordingly my sister and I started, by rail, with five children and seventeen trunks, for Albany, where we rested over night and part of the next day. We had a very fatiguing journey, looking after so many trunks and children, for my sister’s children persisted in standing on the platform at every opportunity, and the younger ones would follow their example. This kept us constantly on the watch. We were thankful when safely landed once more in the old homestead in Johnstown, where we arrived at midnight. As our beloved parents had received no warning of our coming, the whole household was aroused to dispose of us. But now in safe harbor, ‘mid familiar scenes and pleasant memories, our slumbers were indeed refreshing. How rapidly one throws off all care and anxiety under the parental roof, and how at sea one feels, no matter what the age may be, when the loved ones are gone forever and the home of childhood is but a dream of the past.

After a few days of rest I started, alone, for my new home, quite happy with the responsibility of repairing a house and putting all things in order. I was already acquainted with many of the people and the surroundings in Seneca Falls, as my sister, Mrs. Bayard, had lived there several years, and I had frequently made her long visits. We had quite a magnetic circle of reformers, too, in central New York. At Rochester were William Henry Channing, Frederick Douglass, the Anthonys, Posts, Hallowells, Stebbins,–some grand old Quaker families at Farmington,–the Sedgwicks, Mays, Mills, and Matilda Joslyn Gage at Syracuse; Gerrit Smith at Peterboro, and Beriah Green at Whitesboro.

The house we were to occupy had been closed for some years and needed many repairs, and the grounds, comprising five acres, were overgrown with weeds. My father gave me a check and said, with a smile, “You believe in woman’s capacity to do and dare; now go ahead and put your place in order.” After a minute survey of the premises and due consultation with one or two sons of Adam, I set the carpenters, painters, paperhangers, and gardeners at work, built a new kitchen and woodhouse, and in one month took possession. Having left my children with my mother, there were no impediments to a full display of my executive ability. In the purchase of brick, timber, paint, etc., and in making bargains with workmen, I was in frequent consultation with Judge Sackett and Mr. Bascom The latter was a member of the Constitutional Convention, then in session in Albany, and as he used to walk down whenever he was at home, to see how my work progressed, we had long talks, sitting on boxes in the midst of tools and shavings, on the status of women. I urged him to propose an amendment to Article II, Section 3, of the State Constitution, striking out the word “male,” which limits the suffrage to men. But, while he fully agreed with all I had to say on the political equality of women, he had not the courage to make himself the laughing-stock of the convention. Whenever I cornered him on this point, manlike he turned the conversation to the painters and carpenters. However, these conversations had the effect of bringing him into the first woman’s convention, where he did us good service.

In Seneca Falls my life was comparatively solitary, and the change from Boston was somewhat depressing. There, all my immediate friends were reformers, I had near neighbors, a new home with all the modern conveniences, and well-trained servants. Here our residence was on the outskirts of the town, roads very often muddy and no sidewalks most of the way, Mr. Stanton was frequently from home, I had poor servants, and an increasing number of children. To keep a house and grounds in good order, purchase every article for daily use, keep the wardrobes of half a dozen human beings in proper trim, take the children to dentists, shoemakers, and different schools, or find teachers at home, altogether made sufficient work to keep one brain busy, as well as all the hands I could impress into the service. Then, too, the novelty of housekeeping had passed away, and much that was once attractive in domestic life was now irksome. I had so many cares that the company I needed for intellectual stimulus was a trial rather than a pleasure.
….

Up to this time life had glided by with comparative ease, but now the real struggle was upon me. My duties were too numerous and varied, and none sufficiently exhilarating or intellectual to bring into play my higher faculties. I suffered with mental hunger, which, like an empty stomach, is very depressing. I had books, but no stimulating companionship. To add to my general dissatisfaction at the change from Boston, I found that Seneca Falls was a malarial region, and in due time all the children were attacked with chills and fever which, under homeopathic treatment in those days, lasted three months. The servants were afflicted in the same way. Cleanliness, order, the love of the beautiful and artistic, all faded away in the struggle to accomplish what was absolutely necessary from hour to hour. ….

I now fully understood the practical difficulties most women had to contend with in the isolated household, and the impossibility of woman’s best development if in contact, the chief part of her life, with servants and children. Fourier’s phalansterie community life and co-operative households had a new significance for me. Emerson says, “A healthy discontent is the first step to progress.” The general discontent I felt with woman’s portion as wife, mother, housekeeper, physician, and spiritual guide, the chaotic conditions into which everything fell without her constant supervision, and the wearied, anxious look of the majority of women impressed me with a strong feeling that some active measures should be taken to remedy the wrongs of society in general, and of women in particular. My experience at the World’s Anti-slavery Convention, all I had read of the legal status of women, and the oppression I saw everywhere, together swept across my soul, intensified now by many personal experiences. It seemed as if all the elements had conspired to impel me to some onward step. I could not see what to do or where to begin–my only thought was a public meeting for protest and discussion.

In this tempest-tossed condition of mind I received an invitation to spend the day with Lucretia Mott, at Richard Hunt’s, in Waterloo. There I met several members of different families of Friends, earnest, thoughtful women. I poured out, that day, the torrent of my long-accumulating discontent, with such vehemence and indignation that I stirred myself, as well as the rest of the party, to do and dare anything. My discontent, according to Emerson, must have been healthy, for it moved us all to prompt action, and we decided, then and there, to call a “Woman’s Rights Convention.” We wrote the call that evening and published it in the Seneca County Courier the next day, the 14th of July, 1848, giving only five days’ notice, as the convention was to be held on the 19th and 20th. The call was inserted without signatures,–in fact it was a mere announcement of a meeting,–but the chief movers and managers were Lucretia Mott, Mary Ann McClintock, Jane Hunt, Martha C. Wright, and myself. The convention, which was held two days in the Methodist Church, was in every way a grand success. The house was crowded at every session, the speaking good, and a religious earnestness dignified all the proceedings.

These were the hasty initiative steps of “the most momentous reform that had yet been launched on the world–the first organized protest against the injustice which had brooded for ages over the character and destiny of one-half the race.” No words could express our astonishment on finding, a few days afterward, that what seemed to us so timely, so rational, and so sacred, should be a subject for sarcasm and ridicule to the entire press of the nation. With our Declaration of Rights and Resolutions for a text, it seemed as if every man who could wield a pen prepared a homily on “woman’s sphere.” All the journals from Maine to Texas seemed to strive with each other to see which could make our movement appear the most ridiculous. The anti-slavery papers stood by us manfully and so did Frederick Douglass, both in the convention and in his paper, The North Star, but so pronounced was the popular voice against us, in the parlor, press, and pulpit, that most of the ladies who had attended the convention and signed the declaration, one by one, withdrew their names and influence and joined our persecutors. Our friends gave us the cold shoulder and felt themselves disgraced by the whole proceeding.

If I had had the slightest premonition of all that was to follow that convention, I fear I should not have had the courage to risk it, and I must confess that it was with fear and trembling that I consented to attend another, one month afterward, in Rochester. Fortunately, the first one seemed to have drawn all the fire, and of the second but little was said. But we had set the ball in motion, and now, in quick succession, conventions were held in Ohio, Indiana, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and in the City of New York, and have been kept up nearly every year since.

The most noteworthy of the early conventions were those held in Massachusetts, in which such men as Garrison, Phillips, Channing, Parker, and Emerson took part. It was one of these that first attracted the attention of Mrs. John Stuart Mill, and drew from her pen that able article on “The Enfranchisement of Woman,” in the Westminster Review of October, 1852.

The same year of the convention, the Married Woman’s Property Bill, which had given rise to some discussion on woman’s rights in New York, had passed the legislature. This encouraged action on the part of women, as the reflection naturally arose that, if the men who make the laws were ready for some onward step, surely the women themselves should express some interest in the legislation. Ernestine L. Rose, Paulina Wright (Davis), and I had spoken before committees of the legislature years before, demanding equal property rights for women. We had circulated petitions for the Married Woman’s Property Bill for many years, and so also had the leaders of the Dutch aristocracy, who desired to see their life-long accumulations descend to their daughters and grandchildren rather than pass into the hands of dissipated, thriftless sons-in-law. Judge Hertell, Judge Fine, and Mr. Geddes of Syracuse prepared and championed the several bills, at different times, before the legislature. Hence the demands made in the convention were not entirely new to the reading and thinking public of New York–the first State to take any action on the question. As New York was the first State to put the word “male” in her constitution in 1778, it was fitting that she should be first in more liberal legislation. The effect of the convention on my own mind was most salutary. The discussions had cleared my ideas as to the primal steps to be taken for women’s enfranchisement, and the opportunity of expressing myself fully and freely on a subject I felt so deeply about was a great relief. I think all women who attended the convention felt better for the statement of their wrongs, believing that the first step had been taken to right them.

Soon after this I was invited to speak at several points in the neighborhood. One night, in the Quaker Meeting House at Farmington, I invited, as usual, discussion and questions when I had finished. We all waited in silence for a long time; at length a middle-aged man, with a broad-brimmed hat, arose and responded in a sing-song tone: “All I have to say is, if a hen can crow, let her crow,” emphasizing “crow” with an upward inflection on several notes of the gamut. The meeting adjourned with mingled feelings of surprise and merriment. I confess that I felt somewhat chagrined in having what I considered my unanswerable arguments so summarily disposed of, and the serious impression I had made on the audience so speedily dissipated. The good man intended no disrespect, as he told me afterward. He simply put the whole argument in a nutshell: “Let a woman do whatever she can.”

With these new duties and interests, and a broader outlook on human life, my petty domestic annoyances gradually took a subordinate place. Now I began to write articles for the press, letters to conventions held in other States, and private letters to friends, to arouse them to thought on this question.

The pastor of the Presbyterian Church, Mr. Bogue, preached several sermons on Woman’s Sphere, criticising the action of the conventions in Seneca Falls and Rochester. Elizabeth McClintock and I took notes and answered him in the county papers. Gradually we extended our labors and attacked our opponents in the New York Tribune, whose columns were open to us in the early days, Mr. Greeley being, at that time, one of our most faithful champions.

In answering all the attacks, we were compelled to study canon and civil law, constitutions, Bibles, science, philosophy, and history, sacred and profane. Now my mind, as well as my hands, was fully occupied, and instead of mourning, as I had done, over what I had lost in leaving Boston, I tried in every way to make the most of life in Seneca Falls. Seeing that elaborate refreshments prevented many social gatherings, I often gave an evening entertainment without any. I told the young people, whenever they wanted a little dance or a merry time, to make our house their rallying point, and I would light up and give them a glass of water and some cake. In that way we had many pleasant informal gatherings. Then, in imitation of Margaret Fuller’s Conversationals, we started one which lasted several years. We selected a subject each week on which we all read and thought; each, in turn, preparing an essay ten minutes in length.

These were held, at different homes, Saturday of each week. On coming together we chose a presiding officer for the evening, who called the meeting to order, and introduced the essayist. That finished, he asked each member, in turn, what he or she had read or thought on the subject, and if any had criticisms to make on the essay. Everyone was expected to contribute something. Much information was thus gained, and many spicy discussions followed. All the ladies, as well as the gentlemen, presided in turn, and so became familiar with parliamentary rules. The evening ended with music, dancing, and a general chat. In this way we read and thought over a wide range of subjects and brought together the best minds in the community. ….

….

My nearest neighbors were a very agreeable, intelligent family of sons and daughters. But I always felt that the men of that household were given to domineering. As the mother was very amiable and self-sacrificing, the daughters found it difficult to rebel. One summer, after general house-cleaning, when fresh paint and paper had made even the kitchen look too dainty for the summer invasion of flies, the queens of the household decided to move the sombre cookstove into a spacious woodhouse, where it maintained its dignity one week, in the absence of the head of the home. The mother and daughters were delighted with the change, and wondered why they had not made it before during the summer months. But their pleasure was shortlived. Father and sons rose early the first morning after his return and moved the stove back to its old place. When the wife and daughters came down to get their breakfast (for they did all their own work) they were filled with grief and disappointment. The breakfast was eaten in silence, the women humbled with a sense of their helplessness, and the men gratified with a sense of their power. These men would probably all have said “home is woman’s sphere,” though they took the liberty of regulating everything in her sphere.

it’s good to be green, if your name is cynthia mckinney

Posted on July 16th, 2008 in On Consignment by hireheels

For some of you considering a protest vote against Obama, John McCain might seem to be the most obvious choice. Some of you might think staying home is the only option… Here is good news for you, especially if you’re a progressive or a feminista. Her name is Cynthia McKinney, from the Green Party. If you have never heard of her, it’s not your fault. The mainstream media is suppressing what she has to say, or even that she is running at all.

McKinney, a former Democratic Congresswoman from Georgia, is the only candidate in the race that proposes to provide healthcare for all. She is a fighter for American workers; she authored a living age bill for the workers. Just as Hillary has been a tireless advocate for global human rights, as she eloquently expressed in her 1995 “Women’s Rights are Human Rights” speech, McKinney is also dedicated to international human rights issues. As the highest-ranking Democrat in the House Human Rights onconsignment bylineSubcommittee, she dedicated herself to end human rights abuses in many countries, most notably in the Congo and Rwanda. While Hillary has been a staunch advocate for veterans on the Armed Service Committee, McKinney was instrumental in enacting many policies for veterans, including health benefits for Vietnam War veterans and increased support for homeless veterans. Despite being a longtime Democrat, she left the Democratic Party last year, due to the Party establishments’ maltreatment of her. She served for 12 years in the Congress as well as 4 years in the Georgia state legislature, giving her a wealth of experience— the kind that actually facilitates real change.

Cynthia McKinney was officially nominated as Presidential candidate at the Green Party Convention this past weekend. She chose Rosa Clemente, journalist and youth activist from New York, as her vice-presidential nominee. Her pick of VP marks the first time in American history that two women will run together on the same presidential ticket.

Why do we have to be forced to choose between two men every four years to lead our nation? If you are sick and tired of this, like me, it’s time to consider an alternative. Hillary ran a genuinely historical campaign that made 18 million cracks in the glass ceiling, only to be defeated by a systematic force that harasses and hampers any woman who wants to lead our nation. Hillary conceded, but it’s not the end of our struggle; it’s time to beat the ultimate patriarchal structure at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. The best way to do it is to VOTE FOR THE WOMAN candidate running, come November 4th. Ideally, not just any woman, but a woman who is committed to the same ideals Hillary has been dedicated to and fighting for, for decades.

You might say that a McKinney vote will be a wasted one. But a vote for McKinney is an infinitely better option for a protest vote than anything other choice (such as John McCain— who Hillary believes needs to be defeated). Perhaps, if it becomes clear that a considerable number of Hillary Democrats’ votes went to McKinney, the Democratic Party might be forced to acknowledge their mistakes. A vote for Senator Obama shows that we either approve of or turned a blind eye to the sexist treatment Senator Clinton endured during this primary. A vote for McCain is another one that will continue to uphold the status quo that has traditionally kicked women out of the power structure.

I say, “Just Say No Deal to the boy’s club and check out what Cynthia McKinney has to say.” Visit: gp.org … I think you might find that voting for her is far better than voting for McCain or staying at home— which essentially amounts to an abandonment of our democratic ideals. So, spread the word, she deserves a chance to be considered. Such action, regardless of whether you vote for her in November or not, serves as an act of rebellion against the old boys’ establishment and the mainstream media that has consistently undermined intelligent and ambitious women.

msm & bho: was it just puppy love?

Posted on July 14th, 2008 in Manolo Minx by hireheels

Poor precious. I know you’re hurting.

It can’t be easy going from annointed media darling to target of vile attacks disguising as “satire” seemingly overnight. For the record, this PUMA thinks the New Yorker cover stinks like last week’s catch of the day.
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Why, you are probably thinking, would someone so dedicated to derailing my coronation nomination be defending me? Well, Sen. Obama, PUMAs know a thing or three about faux satire. We are all too familiar with people saying hateful things about us and our candidate, then pretending it was all a joke. (If I had a dollar for all the times I’ve heard the complaint, “But I was only joking! You’re too sensitive!” I’d have the kind of wardrobe and shoe collection that would make Carrie Bradshaw seethe with envy.) When you’re on the receiving end, however, you know the difference between a joke, no matter how awkwardly delivered, and a hit. It’s not fun, is it?

We feel your pain, really. Jokes and jabs involving your genitalia just aren’t funny, either, are they?

The kind of tripe now masquerading as serious satire on the New Yorker cover does PUMAs no favors. First, real PUMAs don’t fall for silliness like that. And second, it makes it far too easy for your more vociferous supporters to lump any legitimate criticism of you together with racist, hateful effluvia. Enough PUMAs have been falsely accused of racism that I take any false, baseless accusations seriously. If the mag really wanted to satirize the rumors now vexing you and your wife, they could have, oh, let’s see, run a pointed headline with the cartoon? Or better yet, run a different cover??

Even though I think you should have expected things to get this ugly, it must still be a shock when the true ugliness falls on you like an anvil falling on Roger Rabbit’s head. Anybody familiar with Hillary Clinton’s public life can sympathize with you on that. That poor woman was excoriated for her alleged hidden sexual orientation—except when she was supposedly sleeping with Vince Foster, whom she later had killed. She was called every name under the sun and a few new ones for having the temerity to use her First Lady role to do more than host White House teas. And let’s not forget the stories about how she breathed fire and ate live babies for breakfast. And that’s all before she started running for president!

Funny, though. Despite living through one of the most ugly, sustained smear campaigns in American public life, Hillary Clinton still commanded the respect of 18 million voters in the primaries. She let it roll off of her with grace under fire and inner strength, impressing voters in states Democrats need to win the White House in November (you know, those states where you didn’t do so well?). As you just barely amassed enough delegates to claim you’d won the nomination,* Hillary’s trend was surging upward. Even funnier, her fundraising has been remarkably strong during the “suspension” of her campaign, especially compared to yours as the presumptive nominee.

Maybe that’s because while you’re only now dipping your toes into the crucible of American presidential politics, Hillary’s already survived it over and over again. Come to think of it, that’s one of the big reasons I supported her: her demonstrated ability to stand tall and proud against the ugliest politics imaginable.

Good luck with that.

* I’ll believe it when the votes are tallied

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