Mama
Hilary hugs Iowa
When she was little, Hillary
Rodham would sit on a basement bench and pretend she was flying a spaceship to
Mars. Her younger brother Hugh, perched behind, would sometimes beg for a chance
to be captain.
No dice. "She would always
drive, and I would always have to sit in the back," he once told
me.
Through all the years of
sitting behind Bill Clinton on his trip to the stars, Hillary fidgeted and
elbowed, trying to be co-captain rather than just wingman, or worse,
winglady.
Finally, in
She positively glistened as
she talked about how "I" - rather than the "we" of '92 - would run the
world.
Humbly, graciously, deftly,
she offered
Everything.
John Wood, a self-described
"plainsman," Republican and machinery-and-tool salesman from
He said afterward that he was
more worried about her ability to face down villains, "being a lady," but
conceded, "The woman did good today."
(His question was reminiscent
of Ali G's interview of Newt Gingrich, when the faux rapper asked whether a
woman president would be turned on and manipulated by evil dictators, given
that, with women, "the worse you treat 'em, the more they want
you.")
As YouTube attests, Hillary
didn't care about style as first lady; she was too busy trying to get in on
Bill's substance. She showed off a long parade of unflattering outfits and
unnervingly changing hairdos.
In
"I think you look very nice,"
a veteran of the first gulf war told her in
"Thank you!" she answered,
beaming and laughing.
When Geraldine Ferraro made
her historic run in '84, she tried to blend a mother's concerns into her foreign
policy answers, but it did not work so well once she started getting her nuclear
terminology mixed up.
Hillary dealt with the issue
head on - "I'm a woman; I'm a mom" - hoping to stir that sisterly vote that Ms.
Ferraro failed to draw after it turned out that many women were skeptical about
one of their own facing down the Soviets.
Unlike Barack Obama, who once
said he was bored by the suburbs, she introduced herself in the land of bingo
and bacon as a product of the suburbs, wallowing in the minutiae of
kitchen-table issues.
W. and Cheney have lavished
attention and money on
(Though Jon Stewart warned on
"The Daily Show" that her slogan - "Let the conversation begin!" - will not help
her with men. "I think the typical response would be, ‘Now?' " he said, adding
that her new
Thomasine Johnson, a
66-year-old African-American from outside
The Achilles' heel of "The
Warrior," as she is known, is the war. She expressed outrage about
She uttered the most
irritating and disingenuous nine words in politics: "If we had known then what
we know now...."
Jim Webb knew. Barack Obama
knew. Even I knew, for Pete's sake. The administration's trickery was clear in
real time.
Hillary didn't have the nerve
to oppose a popular president on a national security issue after 9/11, and she
feared being cast as an antiwar hippie when she ran. Now she feels she can't
simply say she made a bad decision. And that makes her seem conniving — not a
good mix with nurturing.
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