Friday, April 20, 2012

ANS -- Girls Heart Republicans and other short notes

This is also from The Weekly Sift -- it's a bunch of short stuff, all good, but if you don't want to look at it all, just look at the short part I have highlighted in red, because it offers a good suggestion as well as analysis. 
Find it here:  http://weeklysift.com/2012/04/16/girls-heart-republicans-and-other-short-notes/   
--Kim


Girls Heart Republicans and other short notes

In case you were having trouble figuring it out, Herman Cain explained the Obama/Romney gender gap to the Fox News audience:

Yes, President Obama is very likable to most people, if you just look at him and his family. But if you look at his policies ­ which is what most people disagree with ­ it's a different story. And I think many men are much more familiar with the failed policies than a lot of other people.

Which leads Digby to ask: "Who are those 'other people' (besides men) you speak of?"

You know, Digby: Girls. Those darling little ladies who swoon at pictures of Obama's cute kids and don't worry their pretty little heads about manly subjects like health care or the trade deficit. They say all kinds of silly things to pollsters, but come November their menfolk will set them straight and they'll vote for Romney. (They'll probably pout about it for a week or two afterwards ­ and their heads-of-household might want to be careful about eating the meatloaf on Inauguration Day ­ but they'll do what they're told.) []

I'm glad Cain explained it so clearly. Otherwise, I'd have no idea why girls might not like Republicans. Well, there's the whole we-want-you-to-carry-a-dead-fetus-to-term thing. But that's yucky. I'm sure girls don't think about stuff like that.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is another Republican girls ought to love. He dismissed the whole war-on-women theme by pointing to female Republican senators who agree with him:

There is no issue. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison and Kelly Ayotte from New Hampshire and Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe from Maine I think would be the first to say ­ and Lisa Murkowski from Alaska ­ 'we don't see any evidence of this.'

Except … well, they actually say the exact opposite. ThinkProgress observes:

Three of the four women McConnell names have already come out against the GOP's war on women ­ Sens. Olympia Snowe (R-ME), Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX), and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK). [] In fact, Murkowski specifically pushed back on claims like McConnell's, saying, "If you don't feel this is an attack, you need to go home and talk to your wife and your daughters."

Doesn't that make you want to elect some more Republican senators so that McConnell can be majority leader?

You might think that a Republican woman who gets herself elected senator (like Murkowski or Snowe or Hutchison) might finally get some respect, that the men might listen to her (on women's issues, at the very least) and not just use her as cover in a some-of-my-best-friends-are-dames way.

Think again.

A new study links conservatism to "low-effort thought".

when effortful, deliberate thought is disengaged, endorsement of conservative ideology increases.

It makes a certain amount of sense. In situations where you don't have two brain cells to rub together, you default to stereotypes and justifying the status quo.

If I'm stressed or tired, it's much harder to think compassionately or generously. Much easier to think like this: Is there a problem? Somebody ought to find out whose fault it is and kick their butts.

As ego-boosting as this study is for liberals, there might be more to learn than that: When somebody who ordinarily seems to be a good person repeats some ridiculous conservative talking point, maybe the right response is just to say: "Seriously?" Don't slap them down, just encourage them to think a little harder.

Jim Robinson, founder of the conservative community blog Free Republic, announces an anti-Romney revolt.

I've stated many times since Romney started running for the presidency way back when that I'd never vote for him and I will not. … There will be no campaign for this Massachusetts liberal liar on FR!!

Uh, Jim, why?

Romney is a pathological compulsive liar. Lie after lie papered over with more lies. Doesn't even flinch when caught in bald faced lies, simply tells another big whopper to cover up or dodge the issue. Funny thing, the man actually seems to believe his own latest lies and simply ignores the glaring record of his past actions/lies.

Check out the comments Robinson gets: overwhelmingly positive, with only the occasional "Are you nuts?" thrown in.

That "liar" meme is catching on. Steve Benen is up to #13 in his ongoing series Chronicling Mitt's Mendacity. Most of it isn't spin or shading; it's real that-never-happened stuff.

Crazy Congresspeople #1: Missouri's Todd Akin explains to a constituent why his fellow Republicans in Congress hasn't impeached President Obama yet:

I can't speak for the other 400 and some congressmen, but I believe when they take a look at impeachment the question is do you have the votes to do it?

You don't need, like, grounds to impeach a Democratic president, just (as Hunter at Daily Kos summarizes): "You know, stuff."

Crazy Congresspeople #2: Florida's Rep. Alan West knows how many "card-carrying Marxists" are in Congress: 78 to 81. He later clarified that he was referring to every member of the Progressive Caucus.

Hey, Alan: They did away with cards years ago. It's all biometrics now. And sub-dermal computer chips. Have you checked for those? Communists have their alien allies insert them into your body while you're asleep.

Crazy Congresspeople #3: North Carolina's Virginia Foxx, who has

very little tolerance for people who tell me that they graduate with $200,000 of debt or even $80,000 of debt because there's no reason for that.

She knows there's no reason for it because she and her husband graduated with almost no debt back in the 60s, when states gave more support to schools like her alma mater UNC and tuition was much lower. (I've already told you what I think about student debt.)

[]

Let's add a crazy state legislator to the list: Iowa's Mark Chelgren proposed that child-support-paying Dads should be able to demand that their ex-wives take a drug test. (No War on Women here.)

You know who's not conservative enough now? Orrin Hatch. Not so long ago he held down the far-right end of the Senate, but the Tea Party has moved past him. " I despise these people," he says.

Teen pregnancy is down, but it's still highest in the states that encourage abstinence-only sex education.

A 72-year-old grandmother tells the story of her abortion in 1978 in No One Called Me a Slut. It was a difficult decision, but she was treated with respect and she hasn't regretted what she did.

I have five grandsons and three granddaughters, and I passionately want each one of them to be responsible and have the same legal right to choose that I had.

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