Where would we be without Camille Paglia? Well, we'd be without someone who'd write sentences like this:
Now that's the Sarah Palin brand of can-do, no-excuses, moose-hunting feminism -- a world away from the whining, sniping, wearily ironic mode of the establishment feminism represented by Gloria Steinem, a Hillary Clinton supporter whose shameless Democratic partisanship over the past four decades has severely limited American feminism and not allowed it to become the big tent it can and should be. Sarah Palin, if her reputation survives the punishing next two months, may be breaking down those barriers. Feminism, which should be about equal rights and equal opportunity, should not be a closed club requiring an ideological litmus test for membership.
That's from her new column, and it's a lollapalooza. It's mostly about Sarah Palin and the presidential race. Obama's got Camille's vote, but Palin's got her heart.
The gigantic, instantaneous coast-to-coast rage directed at Sarah Palin when she was identified as pro-life was, I submit, a psychological response by loyal liberals who on some level do not want to open themselves to deep questioning about abortion and its human consequences. I have written about the eerie silence that fell over campus audiences in the early 1990s when I raised this issue on my book tours. At such moments, everyone in the hall seemed to feel the uneasy conscience of feminism. Naomi Wolf later bravely tried to address this same subject but seems to have given up in the face of the resistance she encountered.If Sarah Palin tries to intrude her conservative Christian values into secular government, then she must be opposed and stopped. But she has every right to express her views and to argue for society's acceptance of the high principle of the sanctity of human life. If McCain wins the White House and then drops dead, a President Palin would have the power to appoint conservative judges to the Supreme Court, but she could not control their rulings.
It is nonsensical and counterproductive for Democrats to imagine that pro-life values can be defeated by maliciously destroying their proponents. And it is equally foolish to expect that feminism must for all time be inextricably wed to the pro-choice agenda. There is plenty of room in modern thought for a pro-life feminism -- one in fact that would have far more appeal to third-world cultures where motherhood is still honored and where the Western model of the hard-driving, self-absorbed career woman is less admired.
But the one fundamental precept that Democrats must stand for is independent thought and speech. When they become baying bloodhounds of rigid dogma, Democrats have committed political suicide.
Read the whole thing. Trust me on this.

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Watcher wrote: What is this nonsense about INSURANCE being "health care"?
Insurance is not health care. Insurance is a shared risk to prevent catastrophic loss. Insurance, BY DEFINITION must cost more than the care you would normally get.
It seems to me that the clowns who confuse insurance and health care are deliberate in their attempts.
Some people who can't afford health insurance are sometimes unable to get quality health care. I know many people in this situation.
You are right, Rod. That is a heck of a brilliant column by Paglia, and I agree with almost every point she makes. I guess I owe it to myself to start reading more Camille Paglia.
Regarding Sarah Palin's church, my brother attended a church with a very conservative pastor and views (somewhat similar to Palin's) for a number of years without losing either his good judgment or his capacity for independent thought.
I attend a very liberal church, and frequently find myself in disagreement with some of the statements made by both members and clergy. We shouldn't judge Palin solely on the basis of her church, though we certainly have every right to be curious about the tenets of that church. According to an NBC News Investigates piece I saw yesterday, Governor Palin has governed like a pragmatist, not an ideologue.
Props to Erin--I take it back about the hankie. You wouldn't be wringing it, you'd be waving it. And it wouldn't be a white hankie of submission. It would probably be a red bandanna. Keep it flying!
A note on class issues here. Most jobs outside the home available for women of the lower classes are not exactly exciting or fulfilling. Most women I know are not grateful for the chance to work at WalMart instead of being home with their kids, and blame "feminists" and the "sexual revolution" for creating a culture where it is only possible for the wealthy to have the option to stay home.
Can I just insert one more reality into this health care issue? The fact of the matter is that most people who do not get insurance through their work or the government cannot get insurance in the private sector due to out-of-control "pre-existing condition" rules. In my state, the subsidized cost to get high risk insurance after being turned down by at least 3 insurers runs about $2700 a month for an individual. Since people with pre-existing conditions (including many like allergies, type 1 diabetes, decades earlier bouts of cancer, etc which are unrelated to lifestyle choices) are those who are most likely to need expensive medical care, not having insurance is essentially the same as not having health care. Unless you're taking all of this into consideration, you may want to keep your mouth shut about insurance/health care issues because you're making yourself look reeeeeeeeally dumb.
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