And If It Wasn't For Me, Then Where Would You Be, Miss...

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I know I keep posting stuff about Hillary Clinton, but that doesn't mean I'm voting for her.  Still, I think she's being treated unfairly, and it's causing me physical pain.  This woman withstood the brunt of anti-feminism in the 90s, and, whether you want to admit it or not, she did it for us.  She waged those battles on our behalf.  And she waged them against some of the most disgusting misogynists to ever surface in contemporary mainstream American politics.  And she prevailed!

"People hate Hillary Clinton" has become such a cliché, but look at what she's managed to do in spite of that hate.  She has accomplished so much with her life, and while I don't always agree with her on policy, I have such tremendous respect for her as a citizen and a feminist.

I'm reposting this from the NYTimes Blog:

“Dr. King’s dream began to be realized when President Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act,” Mrs. Clinton said when asked about Mr. Obama’s rejoinder by Fox’s Major Garrett after her speech in Dover. “It took a president to get it done.”

The Obama campaign declined to comment on either of those remarks.

Later, during an appearance in Salem, Mrs. Clinton refined her remarks on Fox:

“You know, today Senator Obama used President John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to criticize me. He basically compared himself to our greatest heroes because they gave great speeches.

“President Kennedy was in Congress for 14 years. He was a war hero. He was a man of great accomplishments and readiness to be president. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. led a movement. He was gassed. He was beaten. He was jailed. And he gave a speech that was one of the most beautifully, profoundly important speeches ever written in America, the “I have a dream” speech.

“And then he worked with President Johnson to get the civil rights laws passed, because the dream couldn’t be realized until finally it was legally permissible for people of all colors and backgrounds and races and ethnicities to be accepted as citizens.

“I’m running for president because I believe that there is not a contradiction between experience and change.”

Love

Dan


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This page contains a single entry by dan published on January 8, 2008 3:34 PM.

There Were Twenty Thousand Girls Called Their Names Out To Me was the previous entry in this blog.

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