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March 22, 2008 at 13:54:37

Dear Hillary, I Read the News Today

by Leslie Radford     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 
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Dear Hillary,

I read the news today, oh boy.

I read the news of your latest defeats and your latest victories, and I read the rest of the stories, and when it came time to vote, I hovered over the line of circles matched up to names, and, slowly, consciously, I lowered the ink dauber onto the little circle next to a man's name. A whole ghostly congregation of women, back past the second wave and the suffragettes to the abolitionists and the temperance movement and earlier, stood over my shoulder and watched. Some of them applauded, others wiped away a single tear rolling down her cheek.

It was the news stories, Hillary, not the news about you, but the other stories, the stories you weren't in. The stories you too rarely speak of, the stories that should have been the heart of your campaign, but aren't. I didn't vote for you because you said so little about the stories, the lives behind the news.

A young man dressed in black shot up a university classroom, killed five people, injured dozens of others, shot himself. It's this millennium's version of "going postal." We've heard the story so often that we skip over denial, anger, and bargaining, and go straight for depression. My local liberal talk show host calls on the federal government to order everyone with a psychotropic prescription to pee in a cup biweekly, so we're sure the "crazy people" are on their meds.

You, meanwhile, couldn't make it back to the Senate floor to see that the telephone companies land in court for handing my telephone records over to Big Brother.

An Illinois cop is convicted of murdering a fetus and, as an afterthought, the woman who was carrying his child-to-be. For the fetus, aggravated murder; for killing the mother of his 2-year-old son, simple murder. A jury of twelve reputedly reasonable people decided that the cop planned to terminate the fetus and for that he should face the death penalty; killing the woman was happenstance, a means to an end. As the cop told the story, the woman lurched into the cop's upraised elbow, ramming it into her throat. He didn't plan on killing her, just aborting the fetus to get out of child support. The jury agreed: she was merely an impediment, an obstacle to his real objective, to the more serious crime.

But you didn't say a word about the Vitter amendment, the one that keeps abortion out of reach of Native American women.

A junior high schooler gunned down another boy. The dead boy had taken to coming to school bravely adorned in jewelry, makeup, heeled boots. The 14-year-old killer will be tried as an adult, no doubt, but what in our homophobic society taught him that it was wrong to kill the "fag"? How many times was the child-killer himself punched in the gut by bullies, smacked by his father, for being a "sissy," a sister, a girl? How many ways was he taught that acting "feminine" is reprehensible, that women are meant to be belittled, that men who wear the trappings of a woman are an abomination? The child-killer knew the rule: don't ask, don't tell, don't discuss it.

What is this story to you, Hillary? Do these children, the child-killer and the child killed, fit into your scholarly articles on children and the law? When you stand next to Madeleine Albright, who spoke of dead children as collateral damage, do you remember the story of the murdering and murdered children from this small farm community?

Staring at my ink dauber and that line of little circles in the booklet, I stamped my mark on a man's name. I didn't hear you talk about any of the day's stories. All I saw, Hillary, were your corporate suits.

I don't think you're cold, sweetie. Just the opposite: you've been hurt too often. The Stoic cast of the jaw, the jewel neckline, crisp military-esque jackets, they're all part of the the armor. We can all read it. No surprise that you chose your wedding dress for the magazine layout touting your most embarrassing wardrobe moments. Once upon a time, you followed your heart instead of your head, but you weren't Guinevere and he wasn't Arthur and there was no Camelot. Too many of us know that story, and you could have embraced us with yours. We should have been your base and your bedrock, but you left your story--our story--untold, so I voted for a man.

The stories are in you. A few have squeezed themselves into a debate or a speech, but then you twist them into points for your political scorecard, and the people get squeezed out. You know what I'm telling you. You told a story once, just the story and what it meant to you, and, up until the very last phrase, you forgot about winning and losing. For that moment, I thought maybe I'd voted wrong.

"And I remember sitting up there and watching them come in. Those who could walk were walking. Those who had lost limbs were trying with great courage to get themselves in without the help of others. Some were in wheelchairs and some were on gurneys. And the speaker representing these wounded warriors had had most of his face disfigured by the results of fire from a roadside bomb.

"You know, the hits I've taken in life are nothing compared to what goes on every single day in the lives of people across our country. And I resolved at a very young age that I'd been blessed and that I was called by my faith and by my upbringing to do what I could to give others the same opportunities and blessings that I took for granted. That's what gets me up in the morning. That's what motivates me in this campaign.

"And, you know, no matter what happens in this contest -- and I am honored, I am honored to be here with Barack Obama. I am absolutely honored.

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www.radiojustice.net

Los Angeles.

It conjures up an asphalt web of insulated individuals occasionally Crashing into each other. It is that, it's designed to be that, but in the spaces between the asphalt and concrete, and sometimes on those hard spaces that shut out the earth, there is life, community, and rebellion. What I write is part of that story.

Me? I'm a middle-aged, middle-class, white woman, residing in Los Angeles. Sometimes I hang out with people who are living and changing life in L.A.

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I'm a 65 year-old disabled/retired psychotherapist who is a proud activist liberal despite my having lived in Pine Bluff,Arkansas amidst extreme conservatives all my life. I was a single father to a now 38-year-old Califonia Energy Policy Analyst and am currently a single father of a 15-year-old budding liberal.Fantasy dinner guests would include Bill Moyers, Albert Einstein, Mark Twain, Mark Morford, Frank Rich, Molly Ivins,Jill Hennesey, Rachel Griffith,Rachel Maddow,Winona Ryder,Mia Farrow, A...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Roy MurtishawI'm a 65 year-old disabled/retired psychotherapist who is a proud activist liberal despite my having lived in Pine Bluff,Arkansas amidst extreme conservatives all my life. I was a single father to a now 38-year-old Califonia Energy Policy Analyst and am currently a single father of a 15-year-old budding liberal.Fantasy dinner guests would include Bill Moyers, Albert Einstein, Mark Twain, Mark Morford, Frank Rich, Molly Ivins,Jill Hennesey, Rachel Griffith,Rachel Maddow,Winona Ryder,Mia Farrow, A...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Beautifully Written Eulogy To A Promise Unfulfilled

Wonderfully written, Leslie. As a proud Arkansan, I was unaware how treacherous Bill and Hillary were during their Arkansas years. We Arkansans never knew how protected they were by a corporate press controlled by monied interests here in Arkansas that is nearly unrivaled throughout the entire world. The Waltons, Stephens, Tysons, Rockefellers have been and will continue to be unchallenged here in Arkansas and Truth will will be available only to those courageous and diligent enough to search for it.Before Bill and Hillary were " shown the error of their ways " in 1980 when the laughably inept investment banker stooge, Frank White, upset the young idealistic Clintons;they had an opportunity to champion the people but they forever caved during their two years in the wilderness of an " ordinary life " . In 1982 the Clintons were allowed back upon the " ruler elite's " stage for the measly price of their honor.It has remained thus since!

by Roy Murtishaw (14 articles, 0 quicklinks, 9 diaries, 77 comments) on Sunday, March 23, 2008 at 9:26:03 PM
 


Terry is a former professional actor who later developed an independent career as a computer consultant. He has appeared on stage professionally, as well as television and film. He spent time as a radio announcer and commentator. He has written poetry, theatrical performance pieces, radio commentary, and a science fiction series for Irish national radio. An American, he has resided for some time in the Republic of Ireland and at this stage sees himself as an expatriate, although he remains highl...

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TerryTerry is a former professional actor who later developed an independent career as a computer consultant. He has appeared on stage professionally, as well as television and film. He spent time as a radio announcer and commentator. He has written poetry, theatrical performance pieces, radio commentary, and a science fiction series for Irish national radio. An American, he has resided for some time in the Republic of Ireland and at this stage sees himself as an expatriate, although he remains highl...

to see more of bio, click on member name

I can't agree with you

I do agree with the other comment that this is a very well written piece. You have a real skill with style and much written in this piece is powerful and evocative.

However, I feel like I have to say that I can't accept what seems to be the basic premise. I think it reveals a sentimental vision of women and then rejects Hillary for not living up to it - for not living up to something that doesn't exist in the first place.

I don't much care for voting for someone because of their gender in the first place, so of course I'm not too sympathetic to not voting for them because they don't live up to some image of what that gender should be. Female leaders have proved to be every bit as warlike or insensitive to people's needs as male leaders.

Other than that, I cannot reject your basic portrayal of Hillary. Unfortunately, I think her democratic opponent doesn't offer anything better - both these candidates are party machine candidates, politicians whose primary purpose is power and self-aggrandizement. But then, I'm one of the few it seems who thinks Obama's presentation is nothing more than performance - better performance, perhaps, than Hilary, as a campaigner, but as a politician, I think it's much of a muchness. Neither of them represent change.

As for the arguments about bodies being one's own - well, it's old and it's groundless. Obviously I don't disagree with the absurdity of putting a fetus ahead of the mother. And I do believe this is a complex question that doesn't have any easy answers. But the argument about it being one's own body never was really a rationale argument, just an ad slogan, a minor exercise in sophistry. Personally, I believe abortion is bad for one, especially the mother, but the mother in the situation deserves empathy and nurturing for being in a terrible dilemma. I find a society which pretends to value the life of the unborn and then vehemently supports the turning that life into cannon fodder when he/she is born has a terrible mental ailment. We'd probably find common ground in rejecting that particular hypocrisy.

For all that, I would hope you will continue to write extensively, because you have a gift. 

by Terry (1 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 34 comments) on Monday, March 24, 2008 at 5:11:29 PM
 

 

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