[Mb-civic] Loving to Hate Hillary - Richard Cohen - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Mar 25 05:18:47 PST 2006
Loving to Hate Hillary
<>
By Richard Cohen
The Washington Post
Saturday, March 25, 2006; 12:00 AM
In order to understand what's going on with Hillary Clinton, it helps to
recall a woman who lost her head and therefore her life in 1793: Marie
Antoinette. She is probably best remembered as the spoiled
princess-cum-queen who said, "Let them eat cake" -- a remark (the
"Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job" of its day) that would have
shown how callous and out of touch she was, if she had ever said it. She
did not.
In her own time, though, it was not merely what she supposedly said that
defamed her and made her so unpopular, it was also her alleged behavior.
She was manufactured into an Austrian-born slut who, as Stefan Zweig put
it in his classic biography, was (falsely) "guilty of every crime, every
form of moral corruption, every perversion." It was necessary to have
someone like her to embody the greed and corruption of the upper
classes. It was necessary, in fact, to have a woman because male
sexuality is, let's face it, not all that interesting. Contrast her, in
fact, with her husband. Louis XVI was king and he, too, died on the
guillotine but he, sad fellow, is mostly forgotten.
My feminist credentials have been impeached of late, but whatever I am,
I am struck by the Marie Antoinette-ish treatment of Hillary Rodham
Clinton. More than 30 books have been written about Clinton, some of
them as vituperative and ugly as any written about the late Queen of
France. They have questioned Hillary's honesty, sexuality, parenting,
wifing and just about everything else. Just as Marie came to personify
all that was wrong with the aristocracy, so Hillary has come to
personify all that is wrong with Bill, the Democrats, liberals, working
women, independent women and women of a certain kind -- which is any
kind you don't happen to like. No man could possibly match her in that
department -- or departments.
It is, of course, Hillary's very wifeyness that titillates. All wives
are mysterious to others (even to their husbands, I suspect) since their
relationships to their men are not based on merit, as we know it, or
patronage, as we know it, but on love and sex (at first), children
(after a while) and then something else. Since we do not know our own
marriages, we cannot know anyone else's. This engenders endless
speculation about the distribution of power and the importance of pillow
talk. (Somehow, it's OK for the unelected Karl Rove to advise Bush, but
if Laura did it, some people would go nuts.) Did Nancy Reagan actually
tell Ron what to do? What about Eleanor Roosevelt -- especially Eleanor?
She was even more vilified than Franklin and all she ever did was go
down into a coal mine, invite Marian Anderson to sing on the Mall and
make some speeches in that high, squeaky voice of hers. Hardly worth
hating, you'd think. But, oh, she was certainly hated.
Hillary, of course, is a very famous and very mysterious wife. We need
not enumerate the reasons. They were more or less impeachable. Did she
know? How could she not have known? Was she complicit? Is she an
enabler? And now that she is a public official in her own right, even
more mystery attaches to her. Who is she? What, exactly, are her
politics? Is she a Cubs or a Yankees fan?
It's true, of course, that Hillary is widely considered a presidential
candidate and so a certain amount of attention is warranted. In the last
month alone, though, The New York Times has mentioned her about 60 times
compared to 45 for her more senior colleague, Sen. Charles Schumer, the
uncrowned (but undisputed) heavyweight champion of publicity until
Clinton came along. Some of the Times' stories are merely about her
existence -- they say little more than that -- and in this they are
similar to those in other papers. It's obvious some people think that
Hillary sells newspapers, although as we all know, nothing does anymore.
Some scrutiny of a possible president, even a mere senator, is expected,
even required. But for one person to be so loved, so hated, and of such
compelling interest -- so much more a celebrity than, say, John McCain
-- suggests that more than politics is involved. Like Marie Antoinette,
Hillary has emerged as the repository of so many fears, so much dread,
such aspirations -- so much good and bad -- that we have to look past
her office or her ambitions and suggest, strongly, that something deeply
Freudian is at work. It was Freud, after all, who spoke for all men (and
many women) by asking, "What do women want?" Now -- some fear, others
hope -- we may finally have the answer.
The White House.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/24/AR2006032401279.html?nav=hcmodule
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