COMMENTARY Another year, several more feet in mouth By Ellen Goodman |
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And now let us pause to celebrate the anniversary of women's suffrage. It was 85 years ago yesterday that Harry Burn, a young Tennessee legislator, followed the advice of his mom and cast the deciding vote ratifying the 19th Amendment.
We not only honor Harry, his mom and generations of suffragists. We also remember the hostile foes who chased Harry onto the third-floor ledge of the state capitol after his vote. Since 1920, we've not only had decades of progress, we've had generations of adversaries trying to force women's rights out the window.
In this spirit, our one-woman committee met again this year to dispense prizes to those who labored mightily throughout the past year to set back the cause of women. Without further ado, we present the Equal Rites Awards.
We begin, as we must, by going overseas where so many compete so hard for the International Ayatollah Prize. This year it goes to the Islamic clerics in northwest India who ruled that a woman raped by her father-in-law not only had to leave her husband but had to marry his rapist father. To those pro-family clerics, we issue a fatwa: Don't Just Blame the Victim, Marry Her.
While we are abroad, the Double Standard Bearer Prize goes to our allies, the Saudis, who still refuse to give women the keys to the kingdom. The latest petition opposing women drivers explained "women are less decisive than men and less capable of dealing with difficult situations." To the oil-rich and common-sense-deprived Saudis, we send Indy Racing League sensation Danica Patrick to chauffeur them to the 21st century.
Speaking of Danica, it was Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone who sneered at her, saying: "Women should be dressed in white like all other domestic appliances." To Bernie we award Our Superstar in Sexism Prize, and a two-week vacation in our favorite appliance: a deep freezer.
Could Tom Cruise chill out too? He wins the Raging Hormonal Imbalance Award for trashing Brooke Shields because she took medication for post-partum depression. We send him our home-brewed antidote for testosterone poisoning.
As for sexism education, how 'bout them bureaucrats? We give the Male-practice Award to those folks who approved Medicaid payments for Viagra, etc., to 800 sex offenders. Our gift to them: all the side effects on the Viagra label.
Warnings, anyone? Give Clear Channel Communications the Post-Feminist Booby Prize for their quartet of radio stations that promoted the "Breast Christmas Ever," giving away breast implants to winners. We put a lump of coal in their FCC stocking.
Ah, but what do we say to rappers offending our ears? The lyrics of the illustrious 50 Cent are mostly unprintable in this space. Among the mildest? "I tell the hoes all the time, bitch get in my car." We give his love songs our Misogyny in Music Award, a baton suitable for hitting him upside the head.
Could we also use it on Oscar B. Goodman, mayor of Las Vegas? Oscar wins the Boys will be (Play)boys Prize for his gig as an amateur photographer for Playboy.com. Dear Oscar, what happens in Las Vegas does not always stay in Las Vegas.
Nor is every centerfold a playgirl. Our Media Mis-Adventuress Award goes to nude newsbabe Sharon Reed, a Cleveland reporter who stripped while reporting on a nude photo exhibit. Dear Sharon, this is not what your journalism school professors meant by an undercover story.
Can you advance backward? The Dubious Equality Award for the most unwanted parity goes to the Runaway Bride, Jennifer Wilbanks. She proved that women, too, can be commitment-phobic — only they get famous for it.
Justice, wherefore are thou? The Blind Justice Award goes this year to Judge Paul Bastine of Spokane, Wash. The good judge refused to give Shawnna Hughes a divorce because she was pregnant and he didn't want her baby born illegitimate. Never mind that husband Carlos was in jail for domestic violence. We simply bench the judge.
But guess who is next at bat? We award John Roberts, nominee for the Supreme Court, the Let's Hope He Grew Out of It Prize. As a teenager, Roberts editorialized against admitting women to his parochial school because he didn't want to study Shakespeare's racy passages with "a blonde giggling and blushing behind me." Ruth Ginsburg, beware!
Finally, our Knight in Shining Armor Prize goes to George Bush for so many reasons, but especially this one: He didn't follow his wife's advice to nominate a woman to the Supreme Court, but he did let her appoint the first woman chef to rule the White House kitchen. Who said there wasn't progress?
Ellen Goodman is a Boston-based writer on modern social issues.