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Nasty Women

January 25th, 2017 1:27 am

"I'm tired of one-percenters like Mark Zuckerberg lecturing us on 'who we are'." David Clark, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin Sheriff

 

January 25, 2017

 

By: Linda Case Gibbons

 

          Some said The Women's March 2017 was disgusting. They have a point.

          People wearing vagina hats, celebrities spewing four-letter words, marchers holding X-rated signs, some of them mothers who brought their kids along for the ride.

          This made the March's theme, "Nasty Women," an appropriate one.

          It was the Left at its worse. The Democratic Party's refusal to accept their loss at the polls has opened the door to every leftist-crackpot-anarchist-dissident to join their ranks. 

          Democrats are still angry that President Trump won, won't admit it was their fault they lost, and refuse to accept that the People spoke, and what they said was, "We don't want your Party, your candidate, and Barack Obama."

          Anger was the real reason for the march. It's why we saw Madonna and Ashley Judd in D.C. None of it had anything to do with anyone's rights.

          It's possible the rally was to propagate Sharia Law, a core value of one of the March's organizers, Linda Sansour.

          Or to spread the greatness of Communism, with Angela Davis on deck, a Communist from way back.

          Marchers didn't seem to know Sarsour's pedigree. Or maybe they did.

          They might not have known 73-year-old Davis' resume, either. Or maybe they did:

          That Davis was a member of the Black Panthers. That she was implicated in the 1970 armed takeover of a Marin County courtroom, which left four people dead, including Judge Haley, the presiding judge;

          That Davis owned the weapons used in the shootout.

          Nowadays she's teaching your kids at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

          Time magazine coverage placed The March on a par with the second coming of whatever religious figure you care to name.

          The article featured a lovely, full-page photo of honorary chairs, Harry Belafonte, age 89, a bitter critic of the U.S., and fabled feminist, Gloria Steinem, age 82, whom you may recall seeing at a Hillary campaign event, and who called Trump's sanity into question during her Women's March speech.

          The speakers were a decidedly older bunch, Cher, 70, and speakers, Madonna, 58, and Judd, 48, but their age wasn't the problem. It was their attitude and the message they didn't deliver to women.

          Since older, single women are among the country's most numerous in poverty, because many, if not most of Millennials live in their parent's basements, and since unemployment is at an all-time high, the Material Girl could have advised people on how to succeed in business by really trying. The way she did.

          A hardworking, excellent businesswoman, Madonna has the results to prove it. She's worth $550 million.

          She could have presented an optimistic view of a country that has given her the opportunity to be so successful, something she would not have had under Sharia or Communist rule. She could have applauded the new president's promise to bring back jobs and boost a flagging economy.

          Instead she recounted how she often entertained thoughts of blowing up the First Family's home. The White House.

          Belafonte could have told the audience how he became a millionaire, racking up $28 million singing about bananas in this great country.

          And Cher, a mature woman and the mother of a transgender daughter, could have told the audience how this wonderful country, her country, made it possible for her to earn $305 million to support her family, and how her country made it possible for her daughter to be the person she wanted to be.

          But they didn't.

          It was ironic. Madonna, who has done it all, and most of it onstage, trashed President Trump for comments he made in a locker room environment, to sneaky Billy Bush. Yet, in their angry rants, she and the rest of the Nasty Women said nothing about Ted Kennedy and Bill Clinton. Kennedy, who was responsible for the drowning death of a young campaign worker, Mary Jo Kopechne, at Chappaquiddick, and Clinton for disgracing the office of the president.

          Conversely, there was no mention of the women holding high positions in the new administration, nor the diversity of the president's cabinet.

          The March was an event worthy of Hollywood. It was an anti-Trump rally, lewd, crude and rude. The people who sponsored it, don't like America very much. The people who spoke were aging, wealthy, spoiled women, who are not grateful for the rights women have in our culture, and who are out-of-touch with the world that elected Donald Trump.

          It was a political rally, another Hollywood spectacle, another Democratic, Leftist event, and it wasn't heroic. It was tragic.

          The most tragic of all was the behavior of older women who should have had something better to share after their journey through life. But they didn't. Madonna cursed her little head off. Could that be why her son prefers to live with his father and not her?

          And Ashley Judd, who recounted in her memoir, an abusive childhood, seemed to be channeling that vision of womanhood, and a cold, loveless world, through that sad child's eyes.

          It was heard by impressionable young women everywhere, as Judd recited an ugly-spirited poem, written by an unhappy 19-year-old girl, who didn't seem to like being a woman very much at all.

          The whole event wasn't heroic. It was tragic.

          Hold the line, America.

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