REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Hilary Rosen was right: Ann Romney IS out of touch with most women

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Thursday, April 19, 2012 06:22
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 920
PAGE 1 of 1

Thursday, April 19, 2012 6:22 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

The strangest, and most disheartening thing about the Twitter firestorm that erupted this week after Democratic strategist Hilary Rosen pointedly questioned Ann Romney’s fitness to serve as her husband’s ambassador on women’s economic issues was the speed with which her own party rushed to denounce her. Noting to CNN’s Anderson Cooper that Romney — a daughter of privilege who became wealthier still while married to Mitt — had “never worked a day in her life,” Rosen voiced the suggestion that she was, perhaps, less than ideally suited for relaying the financial worries and stresses of most American women to her husband’s presidential campaign. “She’s never really dealt with the kinds of economic issues that a majority of the women in this country are facing, in terms of how do we feed our kids, how do we send them to school, and why do we worry about their future,” Rosen said.

Republicans counterattacked, as to be expected. But Democratic Rosen-bashing was every bit as vigorous.

Democratic strategist David Axelrod called Rosen’s words “inappropriate and offensive.”

Obama campaign manager Jim Messina tweeted: “She should apologize.”

Deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter added on: “Families must be off-limits on campaigns,” she said, “and I personally believe stay-at-home moms work harder than most of us do.” With even the Obamas eventually weighing in, Rosen, by the end of the day, had no choice but to apologize.

Why did Democrats feel such an urgent need to distance themselves from a comment that was 1) accurate — Romney doesn’t exactly have much in common with the 75% of women who now work for a living — and 2) frankly inoffensive? (I happen to agree with the Washington Post‘s Ruth Marcus that Rosen’s only real fault, in the Anderson Cooper exchange, lay in forgetting to use the politically correct phrase “work outside the home” instead of the politically toxic word work to describe the remunerative activity Romney didn’t have to engage in.)

That the Democrats felt such a need to throw Rosen under a bus suggests to me that they, like the Romney campaign itself, are guilty both of knee-jerk cynicism in regards to female voters and of being out of touch. We all know, on the one hand, that there’s a certain portion of the population that feels not just left behind but generally dissed by what they identify as the evolution of attitudes and mores in our era: they’re the Sarah Palin constituency. But these conservative women were never going to vote for Obama anyway. If you widen your sights beyond them, the larger truth about American women (and men) reveals that the deep-seated attitudinal divisions that once underlay our great national drama over women’s roles, and over working motherhood in particular, are now largely a thing of the past.

The “mancession” of recent years has made more mothers than ever before responsible for the lion’s share of their children’s economic well-being. Attitudes tend to follow behavior change: in 2010, according to the General Social Survey, which has collected data on social trends and attitudes since 1972, fully 75% of Americans agreed that “a working mother can establish just as warm and secure a relationship with her children as a mother who does not work.” Sixty-five percent of the public even now believes that preschool children are not likely to suffer if their mothers work outside the home.

The “mommy wars” may be alive and well on playgrounds and school pickup lines in well-off areas. But they can’t any longer truly serve as a meaningful wedge to divide and conquer American women.

The Democrats owe an apology to Hilary Rosen. She made a sloppy semantic error but issued no actual slap in the face to Ann Romney or the small percentage of privileged women who can truly, realistically, identify with her. All the rest is just a distraction. http://ideas.time.com/2012/04/13/hillary-rosen-was-right-ann-romney-is
-out-of-touc/?iid=op-article-mostpop1

In a nutshell, I agree. It's only because Rosen left out those all-important words, "work outside the home" that the right was able to make such a fuss over this.

Added to Romney's previous statements that POOR mothers should go to work to gain "dignity", the whole made-up "scandal" is a joke.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

YOUR OPTIONS

NEW POSTS TODAY

USERPOST DATE

OTHER TOPICS

DISCUSSIONS
A.I Artificial Intelligence AI
Thu, June 19, 2025 11:50 - 316 posts
Israel about to get its ass kicked
Thu, June 19, 2025 09:51 - 216 posts
CNN's Bash: Trump Says Iran Should Make A Deal Now That "Hardliners" Are Dead; "They Didn't Die Of Covid"
Thu, June 19, 2025 09:49 - 3 posts
Trump Changes NASA Focus From Junk/Climate Science To Real Science
Thu, June 19, 2025 09:17 - 47 posts
IRAN: Trump's war?
Thu, June 19, 2025 09:01 - 258 posts
Do you feel like the winds of change are blowing today too?
Thu, June 19, 2025 08:53 - 2362 posts
Isreal bombs Syria
Thu, June 19, 2025 08:27 - 55 posts
Korean War?
Thu, June 19, 2025 08:18 - 25 posts
Those who fail to learn from history are idiots.
Thu, June 19, 2025 08:12 - 22 posts
PREDICTIONS THREAD (v.2)
Thu, June 19, 2025 08:05 - 164 posts
Is Elon Musk Nuts?
Thu, June 19, 2025 08:02 - 483 posts
All things Space
Thu, June 19, 2025 07:59 - 325 posts

FFF.NET SOCIAL