By George Neumayr on 3.28.08 @ 12:08AM
A black male is more acceptable to voters than a female candidate, lament Steinem and McGovern.
Comics in the 1970s had a simple explanation for Richard Nixon's
landslide victory over George McGovern: Yes, Nixon looked to voters
like a used-car salesman, but McGovern looked to them like the kind
of guy who would buy a used car from Nixon.
Still a sap, McGovern, having bought Hillary's lemon last year
before the Obama model rolled out, implied this week that her electoral troubles
are due to intractable sexism.
"I have a feeling that in this country where we're at today in
our thinking, it's going to be harder to elect a woman than to
elect a black man," he said to AP. "I wish that weren't true....I'd
love to see Hillary as president."
He explained that men tend to trust black males more than women
to protect the country: "Some guy will say, 'Well, I think that's
too big a job for a woman, I don't think she can handle those
terrorists.'"
McGOVERN IS INADVERTENTLY condemning fellow liberals here, since
they are the ones favoring Obama over Hillary in a Democratic
primary. Apparently, if his pronouncement on the interior state of
their souls is true, liberals are lagging behind Elizabethan
England in their appreciation for female leadership skills.
First Gloria Steinem, then Geraldine Ferraro, and now George
McGovern suggest that Democrats are choosing patriarchy over
progress. Even a black male is more acceptable to voters than a
female candidate, snorted Steinem in the New York Times in
January.
"Gender is probably the most restricting force in American life,
whether the question is who must be in the kitchen or who could be
in the White House," she wrote, arguing that black male candidates
benefit from such sexist cultural factors as:
[A]nything that affects males is seen as more serious
than anything that affects "only" the female half of the human
race; because children are still raised mostly by women (to put it
mildly) so men especially tend to feel they are regressing to
childhood when dealing with a powerful woman; because racism
stereotyped black men as more "masculine" for so long that some
white men find their presence to be masculinity-affirming (as long
as there aren't too many of them); and because there is still no
"right" way to be a woman in public power without being considered
a you-know-what.
Bubbling barely beneath the surface of this Democratic primary, as
left-wing orthodoxies smash up against each other, is a seething
feminist resentment of black males. Gloria Steinem looks up at
Obama and sees Clarence Thomas glaring back.
The resentment in McGovern's case is less visceral, but his
implication is that even liberal Democrats are not yet properly
catechized in egalitarian theory. They will take black patriarchy
at 3 o'clock in the morning rather than gamble on a hysterical
woman who mistakes a Bosnian welcoming ceremony for sniper fire.
(The comic Sinbad, another black male for Steinem to resent, ratted
Hillary out on that one.)
McGovern's suggestion, however, remains mystifying, as the Dems'
system for scoring suffering since the 1960s, which he helped to
set up, has always assigned more points to race than sex, even
taking into account Steinem's angry aside that black males got the
vote before women.
ACCORDING TO Robert Novak, Thomas Eagleton told him that McGovern
stood for "acid, amnesty and abortion" in the eyes of middle
America. Eagleton could have added affirmative action to the list.
Obama's voters are simply enacting this agenda, seeing in Obama a
sturdier vessel for radical liberalism than Hillary could
provide.
It is ironic that Hillary's automatic assumption of sexism on
the part of voters, which led her into hawkish support for the Iraq
war, made her defeat to a male dove possible.
The ideology of the left is based upon identity, not ideas, and
was therefore bound to degenerate into political cannibalism, as
feminists and racialists scurry for power. But to the extent that a
consistent idea is at work in liberalism, Obama represents it
better than Hillary, conclude Democratic primary voters.
To the faux-radical set, who cut their teeth campaigning for
McGovern, Obama is not a reassuring strong male but the
decades-long culmination of pure liberalism.
topics:
Abortion, Iraq