Beat the Bitch? Straight Talk on the B-Bomb
John McCain wants to be the next leader of the free world, and he gives a free pass to someone calling his opponent a "bitch", calls it "an excellent question"? And it took him endless obfuscating just to be able to rally to say, "I respect Hillary Clinton"! Never confronting the dropping of the B-bomb? Are you kidding me?
Monday, November 12. A small
political gathering in South Carolina, captured by the local Fox
affiliate: A female supporter asks John McCain,
“How do we beat the bitch?”
Massive chuckles all around,
including from McCain, who looks a tad
uncomfortable even as his shoulders shake with mirth. He jokingly offers,
"May I give the translation?"
"I thought she was talking
about my ex-wife!" pipes up a male supporter, convulsing the group again.
As the laughter subsides, McCain
says, "But that's an excellent question."
He launches into some poll
results that put him a few points ahead of Democratic presidential rival Hillary Clinton. Finally, finally, he
says, "I respect Senator Clinton."
Click here to see for yourself how long it
takes him to come up with that anemic response:
McCain On, "How Do
We Beat the Bitch?"
Okay, so I'm pissed off. (Does
that make me a bitch?)
This is the latest
"straight talk" from McCain?
This guy wants to be the next
leader of the free world, and he gives a free pass to someone calling his
opponent a "bitch", calls it "an excellent question"? And
it took him all that obfuscating just to be able to rally to say, "I
respect Hillary Clinton"! Never confronting the dropping of the B-bomb?
Are you kidding me?
Maybe you're thinking,
"Don't be so sensitive; McCain just didn't want to slam a supporter on
camera."
That doesn't cut it with me.
This guy endures years of torture
in a POW camp but he doesn't have the stones to say, "Look, I want to beat
Clinton
Buddy, if you can't even
stand up for respecting women among your own supporters, you're not getting my
vote.
Of course, McCain would never
have tolerated a booster referring to Barack
Obama using the N-word (not to mention, the booster would have been stoned
on the spot--and all would have been right with the world, at least in that
moment, on that (racism) count. And McCain certainly wouldn't have ignored a
supporter referring to Barney Frank
with the F-word.
And just imagine the firestorm
that would have ensued had McCain responded in a similar way to use by a
supporter of those other egregious labels above.
So tell me, why should
the B-word be any less taboo?
Where's the national,
international, outrage over calling any woman--and, no less, someone
of Clinton
Calling powerful women
bitches--and laughing about it or refusing to take a stand to confront
it--reveals just another buried prejudice we need to dig up, air openly, and
get rid of.
Instead, too many people,
just like McCain, look the other way.
In my book Ambitchous,
I argue that women need to reclaim ambition for the positive attribute it is;
that we as a society need to stop regarding ambitious women who want to succeed
as...what else?....bitches; and that women, ourselves, should stop
consciously--or unwittingly--buying into society's double standard that
celebrates ambitious men as go getters, but marginalizes ambitious women as
bitches.
Socially Sanctioned
Self-Sabotage
Because of socially sanctioned
self-sabotage, women absorb this culturally condoned vilifying of ambitious women,
tamp down our natural drive and desire to achieve, and instead pacify ourselves
with ideas spoon-fed to us by the culture about what a "real, decent
woman" is and does.
Your ideal gal? She's
cooperative, fair-minded, eager to give everyone a hearing. Yes, she values
success and it's okay for her to say that.
But admit to being that dirty
word "ambitious", to having really big dreams? Well, that's over the
top.
And if she's tenacious,
determined, stubborn, aggressive, committed to excellence in her field,
confident--and especially if she's competing against like-minded male peers and
feels entitled to earn her worth, power, and recognition? We swiftly unsheathe
the B-word to bring her down hard, to put her in her place.
The fact that it was a
woman who dropped the B-bomb at the McCain event is the perfect example of
socially sanctioned self-sabotage.
I'm sure this McCain supporter
thought she was being edgy and funny.
She's really just buying into the
same pap that says a woman isn't allowed to be a strong, powerful leader. And
this booster is also denigrating her own right, as a woman, to think and debate
critically, to be ambitious, strong, competitive, and to make the contribution
she has it in her to make.
She, too, has bought into the
socially sanctioned idea that the world doesn't deserve to hear from a smart,
opinionated ambitious woman who is trying to lead, to challenge our thinking,
and to encourage creative solutions and substantive debate about confronting
the fiasco in which we find ourselves. This booster has swallowed the notion
that a woman has no business trying to make a difference--not because of
disagreement with that person's views or positions, but because she's a bitch
(code for ambitious woman who is too big for her breeches).
Unease and ambivalence about Clinton
Well, it's a step in the
right direction, but we can do better.
I disagree that strong woman=bitch. And I disagree that we, as ambitious women,
should seize the bitch label as a virtue--that's not what I'm advocating.
What I am saying is that we, as
women, can and should reclaim our ambition as a virtue, not a dirty word. Our
ambition doesn't make us bitches. Our ambition is the best of who we are. It
makes us better, happier, and more fulfilled individuals. It makes us better
lovers, partners, spouses, friends, and community members. It makes us better
mothers--because we are happier and because we are modeling for our children a
life lived with passion for one's big dreams and dedication to developing our
talents and intellect.
As ambitious women, we owe it to
ourselves and the world to make the contribution we were born to make. The
world deserves to hear from us.
And the world ought to value at least
considering, seriously, what we have to say rather than dismissing our ideas
based on our gender.
All of us--men and
women--can and should do better when it comes to refusing to look the other
way.
Hey, we've all been there, at the
party where someone we know or like suddenly makes a racist or anti-gay comment
or a sexist or an anti-Semitic joke. Maybe we don't say anything, maybe we
guiltily join in the chuckles. We want to say something, but we don't want to
hurt anyone's feelings or embarrass someone. So we do nothing, we go along,
under social duress, which only ratifies the harmful language, bias, or
outright hatred.
No more, okay? It's a weasel
move. Let's own it, and let's stop it. And let's stop vilifying powerful women
as bitches, and step up and correct others when they say it.
Senator McCain, that's my straight talk. Hope you're listening.
Cross Posted with HuffingtonPost.com. Click to view 108 comments






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