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Today Elizabeth Edwards was laid to rest. It's a sad day for her family, her friends and her country.
If there were ever a time in America when compassionate voices are
needed, now is that time. Elizabeth had compassion for children, health
care, equal rights, the poor, and ending war. In today's America, where
corporate media caters to the right, Elizabeth Edwards was that rare
progressive woman who could make her voice be heard. And now that voice
is gone.
In
recent years, the women in America with most access to media have been
shrill, crass, vindictive and right-wing. They've supported war. They've
advocated violence and retribution in far away lands where people are
desperate to survive. Strident voices like Ann Coulter and Liz Cheney
have sullied America's airwaves with demands for vengeance against
nations, absent the most cursory lament for lost lives. They accept
'collateral damage' as designation for dead and shredded children. What
gentility they may have doesn't extend beyond their family and friends.
They're rabidly tribal.
In
2008, when John McCain selected Sarah Palin as his running mate,
stridency in America reached an all new high. Her hostile rhetoric,
character assassinations, and lies, injected animus into their campaign.
Palin, a venal, unworldly woman, was scooped up by corporate media and
sold to America as a viable political force. Even her physical
appearance, just a bit above average, was hyped as mega-beauty.
Corporate media types, like MSNBC's Chris Matthews and those at Fox
News, spewed nightly about Palin's physical attributes. But for what
it's worth, Palin's attributes seem a tad overrated. What may be a
knockout in Wasilla isn't a knockout everywhere else. She'd be a second
rate standout in Los Angeles.
Palin's
entry into the lower forty-eight made her appear more like a foreigner
in America and less a candidate on a campaign. Her language was bizarre
for an American. She'd assign every campaign stop a certain American
relevance. She'd look at each crowd and screech something like, 'Isn't
it great to be in America?' Then she'd dub the city or town 'real America' or 'true America' or 'the best part of America' or 'America's America' or some such silly thing. She sounded more like a visitor to a foreign land than the candidate for its vice-president.
Since Palin's arrival in America,
other vicious and vindictive women have also arrived on her scene. Jan
Brewer, the Governor of Arizona who fabricated beheadings in the desert,
is now denying organ transplants to Arizonans. Sharron Angle, Nevada
Senator Harry Reid's neophyte Republican opponent with a penchant for
guns like Mrs. Palin, declared she was "really looking toward those
Second Amendment remedies" to solve Congress' problems. A shameful
example for children.
Another shameful example for children (and many adults, too) happened this week on Palin's reality show, "Sarah Palin's Alaska,"
when Palin used her own Second Amendment remedy to kill a caribou and
butcher it for fun. This was Palin's exhibitionist ploy to promote her
womanhood to America; her womanhood being bloodlust and mutilation.
Palin,
Angle and Brewer are antithetical to womanhood as I know it. Womanhood,
as I know it, embodies the characteristics of Elizabeth Edwards:
compassion, generosity, kindness and warmth. These right wing women are
dispassionate and cold. They'd send a family to the street in winter
without shelter or food. In the case of organ transplants in Arizona,
Brewer has sentenced her constituents to death by cutting funds for
transplantation.
As
far back as the Vietnam War, which I protested vigorously, I've watched
world leaders take their nations to war. Those leaders were almost
always men, with the exception of England's Margaret Thatcher and
Israel's Golda Meir. I've always believed that most women,
notwithstanding Thatcher and Meir, would seek peaceful alternatives to
war if given the opportunity. I've believed women were more
compassionate and nurturing by nature, and were they the leaders in
charge, they'd make our world more peaceful.
But
that hypothesis crashes when considering Palin, Brewer, Angle, Liz
Cheney and many other right wing women. With them I'd presume the
opposite to be true. In fact, I believe these women, in particular
Palin, Brewer and Cheney, are three of the least nurturing, most
cold-hearted, pernicious women I've seen. Their selfishness is
appalling. Their refusal to provide for those in need is abhorrent.
Their love of war is aberration. Their lies and distortions are
sociopathic.
And these are the women who want to seek and hold public office. What a travesty should they succeed.
Elizabeth
Edwards, champion of health-care-for-all, children's issues, human
rights, ending poverty, and more, was one of few progressive women with
all-access to media who could make her voice heard. She fought valiantly
for those who need health care while she battled for her life. Were she
alive today, I have little doubt she'd still be fighting for the
millions of 'friends' she'd never known. She was an irrepressible force
for good and antithesis to the Palin cabal. Her passing leaves a void
for battling issues that desperately need to be resolved.
Rest in peace, Elizabeth Edwards. You will be missed!
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Today Elizabeth Edwards was laid to rest. It's a sad day for her family, her friends and her country.
If there were ever a time in America when compassionate voices are
needed, now is that time. Elizabeth had compassion for children, health
care, equal rights, the poor, and ending war. In today's America, where
corporate media caters to the right, Elizabeth Edwards was that rare
progressive woman who could make her voice be heard. And now that voice
is gone.
In
recent years, the women in America with most access to media have been
shrill, crass, vindictive and right-wing. They've supported war. They've
advocated violence and retribution in far away lands where people are
desperate to survive. Strident voices like Ann Coulter and Liz Cheney
have sullied America's airwaves with demands for vengeance against
nations, absent the most cursory lament for lost lives. They accept
'collateral damage' as designation for dead and shredded children. What
gentility they may have doesn't extend beyond their family and friends.
They're rabidly tribal.
In
2008, when John McCain selected Sarah Palin as his running mate,
stridency in America reached an all new high. Her hostile rhetoric,
character assassinations, and lies, injected animus into their campaign.
Palin, a venal, unworldly woman, was scooped up by corporate media and
sold to America as a viable political force. Even her physical
appearance, just a bit above average, was hyped as mega-beauty.
Corporate media types, like MSNBC's Chris Matthews and those at Fox
News, spewed nightly about Palin's physical attributes. But for what
it's worth, Palin's attributes seem a tad overrated. What may be a
knockout in Wasilla isn't a knockout everywhere else. She'd be a second
rate standout in Los Angeles.
Palin's
entry into the lower forty-eight made her appear more like a foreigner
in America and less a candidate on a campaign. Her language was bizarre
for an American. She'd assign every campaign stop a certain American
relevance. She'd look at each crowd and screech something like, 'Isn't
it great to be in America?' Then she'd dub the city or town 'real America' or 'true America' or 'the best part of America' or 'America's America' or some such silly thing. She sounded more like a visitor to a foreign land than the candidate for its vice-president.
Since Palin's arrival in America,
other vicious and vindictive women have also arrived on her scene. Jan
Brewer, the Governor of Arizona who fabricated beheadings in the desert,
is now denying organ transplants to Arizonans. Sharron Angle, Nevada
Senator Harry Reid's neophyte Republican opponent with a penchant for
guns like Mrs. Palin, declared she was "really looking toward those
Second Amendment remedies" to solve Congress' problems. A shameful
example for children.
Another shameful example for children (and many adults, too) happened this week on Palin's reality show, "Sarah Palin's Alaska,"
when Palin used her own Second Amendment remedy to kill a caribou and
butcher it for fun. This was Palin's exhibitionist ploy to promote her
womanhood to America; her womanhood being bloodlust and mutilation.
Palin,
Angle and Brewer are antithetical to womanhood as I know it. Womanhood,
as I know it, embodies the characteristics of Elizabeth Edwards:
compassion, generosity, kindness and warmth. These right wing women are
dispassionate and cold. They'd send a family to the street in winter
without shelter or food. In the case of organ transplants in Arizona,
Brewer has sentenced her constituents to death by cutting funds for
transplantation.
As
far back as the Vietnam War, which I protested vigorously, I've watched
world leaders take their nations to war. Those leaders were almost
always men, with the exception of England's Margaret Thatcher and
Israel's Golda Meir. I've always believed that most women,
notwithstanding Thatcher and Meir, would seek peaceful alternatives to
war if given the opportunity. I've believed women were more
compassionate and nurturing by nature, and were they the leaders in
charge, they'd make our world more peaceful.
But
that hypothesis crashes when considering Palin, Brewer, Angle, Liz
Cheney and many other right wing women. With them I'd presume the
opposite to be true. In fact, I believe these women, in particular
Palin, Brewer and Cheney, are three of the least nurturing, most
cold-hearted, pernicious women I've seen. Their selfishness is
appalling. Their refusal to provide for those in need is abhorrent.
Their love of war is aberration. Their lies and distortions are
sociopathic.
And these are the women who want to seek and hold public office. What a travesty should they succeed.
Elizabeth
Edwards, champion of health-care-for-all, children's issues, human
rights, ending poverty, and more, was one of few progressive women with
all-access to media who could make her voice heard. She fought valiantly
for those who need health care while she battled for her life. Were she
alive today, I have little doubt she'd still be fighting for the
millions of 'friends' she'd never known. She was an irrepressible force
for good and antithesis to the Palin cabal. Her passing leaves a void
for battling issues that desperately need to be resolved.
Rest in peace, Elizabeth Edwards. You will be missed!
Today Elizabeth Edwards was laid to rest. It's a sad day for her family, her friends and her country.
If there were ever a time in America when compassionate voices are
needed, now is that time. Elizabeth had compassion for children, health
care, equal rights, the poor, and ending war. In today's America, where
corporate media caters to the right, Elizabeth Edwards was that rare
progressive woman who could make her voice be heard. And now that voice
is gone.
In
recent years, the women in America with most access to media have been
shrill, crass, vindictive and right-wing. They've supported war. They've
advocated violence and retribution in far away lands where people are
desperate to survive. Strident voices like Ann Coulter and Liz Cheney
have sullied America's airwaves with demands for vengeance against
nations, absent the most cursory lament for lost lives. They accept
'collateral damage' as designation for dead and shredded children. What
gentility they may have doesn't extend beyond their family and friends.
They're rabidly tribal.
In
2008, when John McCain selected Sarah Palin as his running mate,
stridency in America reached an all new high. Her hostile rhetoric,
character assassinations, and lies, injected animus into their campaign.
Palin, a venal, unworldly woman, was scooped up by corporate media and
sold to America as a viable political force. Even her physical
appearance, just a bit above average, was hyped as mega-beauty.
Corporate media types, like MSNBC's Chris Matthews and those at Fox
News, spewed nightly about Palin's physical attributes. But for what
it's worth, Palin's attributes seem a tad overrated. What may be a
knockout in Wasilla isn't a knockout everywhere else. She'd be a second
rate standout in Los Angeles.
Palin's
entry into the lower forty-eight made her appear more like a foreigner
in America and less a candidate on a campaign. Her language was bizarre
for an American. She'd assign every campaign stop a certain American
relevance. She'd look at each crowd and screech something like, 'Isn't
it great to be in America?' Then she'd dub the city or town 'real America' or 'true America' or 'the best part of America' or 'America's America' or some such silly thing. She sounded more like a visitor to a foreign land than the candidate for its vice-president.
Since Palin's arrival in America,
other vicious and vindictive women have also arrived on her scene. Jan
Brewer, the Governor of Arizona who fabricated beheadings in the desert,
is now denying organ transplants to Arizonans. Sharron Angle, Nevada
Senator Harry Reid's neophyte Republican opponent with a penchant for
guns like Mrs. Palin, declared she was "really looking toward those
Second Amendment remedies" to solve Congress' problems. A shameful
example for children.
Another shameful example for children (and many adults, too) happened this week on Palin's reality show, "Sarah Palin's Alaska,"
when Palin used her own Second Amendment remedy to kill a caribou and
butcher it for fun. This was Palin's exhibitionist ploy to promote her
womanhood to America; her womanhood being bloodlust and mutilation.
Palin,
Angle and Brewer are antithetical to womanhood as I know it. Womanhood,
as I know it, embodies the characteristics of Elizabeth Edwards:
compassion, generosity, kindness and warmth. These right wing women are
dispassionate and cold. They'd send a family to the street in winter
without shelter or food. In the case of organ transplants in Arizona,
Brewer has sentenced her constituents to death by cutting funds for
transplantation.
As
far back as the Vietnam War, which I protested vigorously, I've watched
world leaders take their nations to war. Those leaders were almost
always men, with the exception of England's Margaret Thatcher and
Israel's Golda Meir. I've always believed that most women,
notwithstanding Thatcher and Meir, would seek peaceful alternatives to
war if given the opportunity. I've believed women were more
compassionate and nurturing by nature, and were they the leaders in
charge, they'd make our world more peaceful.
But
that hypothesis crashes when considering Palin, Brewer, Angle, Liz
Cheney and many other right wing women. With them I'd presume the
opposite to be true. In fact, I believe these women, in particular
Palin, Brewer and Cheney, are three of the least nurturing, most
cold-hearted, pernicious women I've seen. Their selfishness is
appalling. Their refusal to provide for those in need is abhorrent.
Their love of war is aberration. Their lies and distortions are
sociopathic.
And these are the women who want to seek and hold public office. What a travesty should they succeed.
Elizabeth
Edwards, champion of health-care-for-all, children's issues, human
rights, ending poverty, and more, was one of few progressive women with
all-access to media who could make her voice heard. She fought valiantly
for those who need health care while she battled for her life. Were she
alive today, I have little doubt she'd still be fighting for the
millions of 'friends' she'd never known. She was an irrepressible force
for good and antithesis to the Palin cabal. Her passing leaves a void
for battling issues that desperately need to be resolved.
Rest in peace, Elizabeth Edwards. You will be missed!