Yes We Can?

Yes we did.

November 5, 2008. Campaign-ger management. 2 comments.

Election Daze

Critical Darling awoke today with a good feeling. And it wasn’t morning wood.

For all intensive purposes, I was still a zygote during the last presidential election. (Would you shun me if I told you I didn’t even vote in’04?) I was excited to send in my absentee ballot about a week ago, but as I watch the coverage of the election today, I wish I could be home to stand in line and vote with my fellow San Antonians.

On a number of occasions, I began composing a “Sarah Palin post,” but as friends know, I get pretty emotional. It’s late now, but I’m going to try to put it into words I’m happy with.

I think it boils down to the fact — and just this once I’m going to apologize for my crudeness — that she shat on feminism, journalism, and spirituality.

In the now legendary Katie Couric interview, Palin said she considered herself a feminist. However, on NBC Nightly News more recently, she refused accept such a “label.” (I wonder how she feels about being “labeled” as a Republican.) I don’t want to speak on behalf of all liberal feminist pinko lesbo elites here, but, um,  don’t let the door hit you on your way out. I don’t think there’s such a thing as a bad  well-reasoned feminism — there are many iterations, after all — but I can’t imagine a genuine, intelligent, feeling feminist who would refuse to think outside her own bubble by charging for rape kits, by desiring to make safe and rare abortions illegal, and by insinuating that abortion clinic-bombers are not terrorists as Palin did on Nightly News.

I also can’t imagine a feminist who would deal with the fallout of the Couric interview as Palin did. I was appalled by the way she lashed out at a woman she surely could identify with. Widely thought of as a walking joke in a traditionally male job, Couric, one of the few journalists allowed access to Palin, took the opportunity to practice good journalism. She was well-researched; she demanded answers to follow-up questions; she wasn’t intimidated by her high-profile interviewee. (Yep, all that from a woman who used to dress up for Halloween on the Today Show.) McCain-Palin reacted by holding her up as a “gotcha” journalist and a “filter” for their message (as though she had been expected to corroborate or something).

With the exception of Sean Hannity, journalists have been treated like a big elitist blob not worth talking to by the Republican presidential campaign, and some folks wonder why we seem to lean left.

My family always leaned right, incidentally. (Well, until recently.) I was raised by two intense, obstinate, good-hearted, amazing women who identify as Christians, my mother and my grandmother. They nurtured my creativity, encouraged my continued study, and promoted empathy as a positive value. It was painful for me to watch Palin make a mockery of their faith by wearing it on her sleeve as she lied, said mean-spirited things (such as misappropriating Madeleine Albright’s “There’s a special place in hell” quote), and promoted ignorance.

Here’s hoping the vote is successfully Barack-ed.

I’ll leave you with this, because I find Amy Poehler’s fearlessness inspiring.

November 5, 2008. Tags: , , , , , , , , . Campaign-ger management. Leave a comment.

Tina Fey: Sexist?

Yep, and I’m a marmot.

So, if it’s sexist to portray someone as lacking substance, I guess I’m wondering why no one ever accused Will Ferrell of misandry:

If you haven’t seen the Fey-as-Palin skit in its entirety — and would like to make up your own mind, thank you — take a moment to view it here. (I’d embed it, but WordPress won’t let me).

XO.

September 16, 2008. Tags: , , . Campaign-ger management, tv. 1 comment.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.