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nola
09-02-2004, 09:32 AM
He Loves Us Not
For the last four years, George Bush has been waging a stealth campaign against women.

By Molly Ivins

“W. Is for Women,” said the Bush campaign buttons in 2000. True, he didn’t seem to have much to offer women, but the affable, moderate-seeming candidate didn’t seem hostile either. He spent no time railing against feminists, and though known to oppose abortion, he didn’t appear interested in doing anything about it. In fact, he got through the entire campaign without bringing up abortion.

Even after four years in office, George W. Bush’s record on women doesn’t leap out at you. It’s composed almost entirely of little things, small enough to fly well under the media’s radar screen, so few of us have any sense of their cumulative impact. But when you step back, the pattern emerges, and it is large, ugly, and unmistakable. Behind a smoke screen of high-profile female appointees and soothing slogans, George W. Bush is waging war on women.

One reason you may not have noticed is that W’s record on women is getting harder and harder to find. Who knows whether women are doing better or worse? You can’t find the information anymore—the Bush administration has simply stopped counting, stopped keeping track, dropped the records. When you go to the places where the government used to keep the information you find the damnedest things—fake sociology, phony science, erroneous health information, and pathetically bad economics.

Try a different route to the record—who has Bush placed in important posts involving women’s health, education, and employment? Well, darling, according to Bush appointees, when you get PMS, pray. If your husband beats the crap out of you, just agree that wives should be submissive to their husbands, and besides, as everybody in the Bush administration knows, women beat up men just as often as men beat up women. Oh, and if you get breast cancer, it’s your fault because you had an abortion—a conclusion that particularly startled people who study the disease.

Okay, but it can’t be all bad. I mean, look at the man—he’s surrounded by women. Elaine Chao, secretary of labor; Ann Veneman, secretary of agriculture; Gale Norton, secretary of interior, why, that’s almost as many women as Bill Clinton appointed to the Cabinet. Except the women in Bush’s administration have two important traits in common: They’ve sworn their allegiance to the corporate world, and they have connections to right-wing foundations that espouse antifemale policies.

Well, okay, but his momma and his wife are in favor of abortion rights, give him a break. Unfortunate pattern there. Laura Bush, it seems, is used to cast a softer light on her husband, who then proceeds to reverse whatever she’s just promised. Right before the Bush inauguration, many women were greatly reassured when Laura said of Roe v. Wade on the Today show, “No, I don’t think it should be overturned.” Three days later, her husband reimposed the “global gag rule” on groups abroad that receive U.S. funding for family planning. They may no longer so much as mention abortion, even when it is medically necessary.

In April 2001, Laura, the librarian, kicked off the Campaign for America’s Libraries. A week later, her husband cut funding for the Library Services and Technology Act, the Reading Is Fundamental program, and the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science. Oops.

Laura Bush was most famously used to put a female-friendly face on policy before the war in Afghanistan, when she substituted for her husband in his weekly radio address and spoke eloquently about the Taliban’s oppression of women. Unfortunately, the much-heralded Afghan Women and Children’s Relief Act, signed by Bush, had no dollar figures attached to it, and only a tiny amount of money was ever committed. Meanwhile, Afghan women’s groups consistently report that women are almost as badly off under the renewed rule of the warlords as they were before. At least the Taliban did not commit rape as a matter of policy.

Maybe it’s better Laura not stand up for anything.

SunWuKong
09-02-2004, 10:31 AM
“W. Is for Women,”

so his name is George Women Bush?
man, Bush Sr. wasn't very nice when he named Dubya.

Faithless
09-02-2004, 10:38 AM
"George Woman Bush" just sounds so effeminate.

George Girlieman Bush.

hooligan
09-02-2004, 10:38 AM
I think that the administration of this current presidency is filled with tokens. Like Elaine Chao. Under her policies the labor department is one of the most anti-union and anti-worker that there has ever been in some time.

Women, as well as other minority figureheads, have been used by this administration to further their own agenda. They're not looking out for any of us, they never have been looking out for any of us.

In particular, when the article talks about stepping back and looking at the bigger picture. This admin has been one that's been anti-minority and anti-women, it's pretty gross to see people who back them up simply because w has a strong stance on issues. I wonder if anyone has really put thought into the things that have happened these past four years?

SunWuKong
09-02-2004, 12:09 PM
I think that the administration of this current presidency is filled with tokens. Like Elaine Chao. Under her policies the labor department is one of the most anti-union and anti-worker that there has ever been in some time.

i'm not too up to date with news concerning labour, but unions aren't always good and can get out of hand (too powerful).

Faithless
03-02-2005, 07:56 AM
A second term Laura B analysis:

I think she's finally getting confortable being in the White House.

They even recently released her guacamoli (?) recipe. Woo-woo. :rolleyes:

From sfgate.com (http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/02/27/INGLPBGOE11.DTL)

...
There's one final factor to consider, and it's the one that hits closest to home for this president: the first lady and her second-term agenda.

Since the November election, a new Laura Bush has emerged. After two years of diet and exercise, she's reportedly 20 pounds lighter than in the first term. No longer a West Texas librarian who admitted to a matronly style, she's ditched her old designer, Michael Faircloth (who also works with Texas debutantes and the Dallas Cowboy's cheerleader) for Oscar de la Renta, a favorite of Sarah Jessica Parker's.

Earlier this month, the first lady dropped in to take part in New York Fashion Week, which is not to be confused with working the GOP base. Back in Washington, she has hired a new chief of staff and social secretary and, according to the New York Times, "fired the longtime White House chef . . . in the kind of exploding souffle of an exit not normally seen in the orderly reign of Bush II"."

She also reportedly told the East Wing staff that she wants to throw more parties than she did in the first term, when she and the president were notorious homebodies.

It could be the problem that no one saw coming. What happens the first time the president wants to turn in at 10, and the first lady thinks the party's just getting started?

You guessed it: another second-term president with a domestic crisis on his hands.

SunWuKong
03-02-2005, 08:37 AM
shit, if you're the president's wife and living in the White House, you'd want to live it up and throw lots of parties, too.