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tea blog: curiosity

style, image, and a woman’s right to be true to herself in the 2008 presidential election

As a general rule, I try to reserve judgments on each candidate until I fully understand what they believe in as a political philosophy. I had an uncle who was a state senator, and seeing the way he was treated by the media showed me how democrats, republicans and independents alike are all stereotyped in different ways. I hate to even call myself an independent, because I think that political labels divide us as a country. It is difficult to decide who to vote for without any of the political mudslinging. This year, a new kind of mudslinging seemed to evolve. With two women running for a position at one point or another during the campaign, (Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin), America suddenly cares about style within the political arena. After years watching old, white men with comb-overs win again and again, why do we feel the need to analyze the way women present themselves? Why does this double standard still exist in 2008?

It is discouraging for young girls to see such emphasis on a woman’s appearance in the political arena. Advertisements, movies and magazines promote enough of an unhealthy image; the political arena should be a place where women are allowed to thrive as individuals just as men are. Whether the news is covering Hillary’s cleavage, or ‘desexualized pants suits,’ as Robin Givhan of the Washington Post wrote, one must ask if it is really worth the news coverage. For example, do we really need to paste images of Sarah Palin’s face over scantily clad women on the internet? Is that a healthy view of what the American woman should be? Even the Republican party seemed to treat Sarah Palin as merely an image; they spent plenty of money to make her up like a little couture doll. That must have been a dehumanizing experience in and of itself. They basically gave her the message that she was not worthy; she needed to be changed, upgraded into an Eliza Doolittle of the Republican Party. I beg both parties to stop placing women in this unfair position.

I hope that someday we live in an America where my daughter does not have to concern herself with how others perceive her outside appearance. I want her to simply be herself, whoever that may be. The standard of American beauty should be measured by what is within a person, not by what they look like. Clothing should help us to be ourselves, not inhibit us from becoming who we are meant to be.

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2 Responses to “style, image, and a woman’s right to be true to herself in the 2008 presidential election”

  1. style, image, and a woman’s right to be true to herself in the… at Hillary Clinton On Best Political Blogs says:

    [...] style, image, and a woman’s right to be true to herself in the… With two women running for a position at one point or another during the campaign, (Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin), America suddenly cares… [...]

  2. Democrats On Best Political Blogs » Blog Archive » style, image, and a woman’s right to be true to herself in the… says:

    [...] style, image, and a woman’s right to be true to herself in the… …who was a state senator, and seeing the way he was treated by the media showed me how democrats, republicans and independents alike are all… [...]

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