SalmonGod and Bauglir, you mind find
this interesting reading.
Sorry for all the links to the same place, by the way. I've started looking for other blogs I like now that it's summertime, but so far this is the best thing I've managed to wrassle up.
Truean, could you possibly take Siquo's stuff out of my quote box next time? I nearly jumped out of my seat, wondering how your reply related at all to what I'd posted. Thanks.
Yeah, yeah I do. Why do I not feel bad about it? See Aqizzar's comments on "hysterical."
I'm going to say that, given that the root of "bitching" is much more
recent, obviously female-based, and much more applied to women, this is absurd.
The term "mansplaining" is employed in that woman's particular blog to:
Men who dodge women's questions in order to waste time "educating" the woman in question about something obvious.
Not men in general. Just people acting in an oppressive way and abusing power they possess.
"Bitching," however, is a general term for that thing all women do. Complaining. Like a bitch. A female dog. An animal.
Snide isn't necessarily bad. It was more her tone of complete contempt and enjoying railing on a guy for being a misogynist rather than examining the conversation as you would approach any conversation with a political spokesman. "War on women" is a loaded phrase regardless of its validity.
He treats women in general with contempt. She treats his argument with contempt.
I don't see a double standard here at all.
The term "War on terror" is perfectly valid in standard parlance, but the term "war on women" isn't--given all the states where abortion is currently being banned, and women's rights slowly chiseled down? Really?
That is what he should have said, but once again, he's trying to do his job without digging himself and people he's reporting to into a bigger hole, not to oppress women. There are entire news networks out there that exist to make his bosses look bad by taking things out of context, he's not trying to give them any extra ammunition.
The point is that there was a way to do it easily without engaging in the usual sexist argumentation style, which she deconstructed and you seem to find annoying because it actually addressed women's problems... rather than standard political analysis, which ignores misogyny in general in favor of considering "important" stuff.
If you want to look at it that way, go ahead. Or you could look at it as what I said, which is, Democrats aren't worried about women doing a mass exodus to a MORE sexist party, and so yeah, they're going to be pursuing other issues with a lot more fervor. Like, for example, swing voters who may well go vote for the other party because they don't like the economy. Good or bad, that's politics, and politicians do it, be they male or female.
I thought politics was about passing bills, not collecting as many votes as possible and then saying "I won."
I'm also not sure what was so despicable about the position the guy articulated. He said Obama is concerned about it and is going to work on it. OK, so maybe it's a line of bull? It's the same line of bull every politician feeds to any interest group they talk to. It's not a special attack against women. The guy was trying to avoid linking the administration with a loaded phrase, is all.
Sometimes it's more about the way it's said than the contents of the message in and of itself.
Again, that's why I linked to her analysis, rather than just the video.
I don't care what the explanation is. He acted in a particular way. End of story.