A Female President: Sooner or Later?

Larry Elder recently wrote an article, Feminization Mania wondering whether the main obstacle preventing women from reaching the highest levels of power in business or government in large numbers is due to sexual discrimination or rather by the choices women make.

He notes that Madeline Albright believes there will be a woman president soon, but given the pattern in business, Elder is more skeptical.

According to a study by Korn Ferry, the international executive recruiting firm, only 14 percent of women in corporations aspire to the position of CEO. Contrast that with nearly half of the men. If given sufficient financial resources, many women choose stay-at-home mothering over working outside the home.

Of course there will be plenty of women (14 percent at least) who want to be the CEO, so I’d imagine we’re likely to see far more female CEOs and politicians — it is the general distribution from middle management on up where we’re never likely to see the neat 50/50 division feminists would like, largely because of the work decisions that women tend to make (such as taking time off to have a child).

John Rocker Should Have Recorded An Album

One of the things I really hate is the level of hypocrisy in the media. When John Rocker related his repugnant views about homosexuals and minorities to Sports Illustrated it created a national firestorm, with many questioning Rocker’s psychological fitness and calling for him to be suspended. Hundreds and hundreds of articles were written on the topic.

Now we learn Allen Iverson went ahead and recorded a gangsta rap album over the summer, complete with the obligatory lyrics glamorizing violence and insulting women and homosexuals. Nationally, however, it is pretty much a nonstory outside of the sporting press. The bottom line is there is a hypocrisy at work that holds white athletes to a different standard than minority athletes (my view, by the way, is that most athletes are hardly the sort of people I look to when setting my moral compass. They get paid to do a job, and I try to ignore their views on anything beyond their sport).

When Rocker ripped on gays he made the nightly news. Don’t hold your breath waiting to see Iverson there.

Microsoft Sez: Don’t Go Naked!

Slashdot.Org provide a link to this unintentionally hilarious page on Microsoft’s website urging independent computer stores not to let consumer’s walk out of the store with a “naked PC” — i.e. a custom PC that doesn’t have Windows installed.

The site opens up by saying that, “Machines are useless until customers install system software themselves.” Okay, I want my PC pre-installed with Windows, but I have plenty of friends who consider a PC with Windows installed to be “useless.”

Microsoft goes on to say that by not installing a version of Windows, “you expose them [customers] to legal risks, viruses, and frustrating technical troubles.” Frustrating technical troubles? Isn’t that a synonym for Microsoft Windows? (Currently both of my Windows PCs give me a warning message telling me they don’t have the proper drive installed for my printer, even though they actually do, and reinstalling the driver does no good — if Microsoft wants frustration, they need look no further than the Windows registry).

Isn’t there anyone at Microsoft who realizes that this sort of nonsense really alienates pretty much everyone? It’s precisely this sort of stuff that makes people have such negative attitudes toward Microsoft.

If I go to buy a computer and I don’t want an OS installed, I don’t want an OS installed. I don’t want the salesman spending 10 minutes explaining to me why I really do want an OS, and I don’t want a lecture from Bill Gates on the topic either.

BrikWars

Why do you spend hours and hours building cool Lego models? To see how well they fight, of course.

BrikWars is the definitive plastic building brick miniatures war game. Some of the chapters and rules are still under construction, but it’s playable and very cool — especially the giant robot rules.

Conservatives Attack Cheney for Tolerance Message

Before the presidential campaign really got going, liberals were speculating how the George W. Bush/Dick Cheney ticket would handle the inevitable questions about Cheney’s daughter, who happens to be a lesbian and used to work for Coors as part of efforts to improve that company’s reputation among gays and lesbians (where it is known for funding anti-gay groups).

I didn’t watch the vice-presidential debate, but when asked about his daughter, Cheney said he wouldn’t talk about her out of respect for her privacy, but did say, “people should be free to enter into any kind of relationships they want to enter into.” Issues of same-sex marriage should be left up to the states, Cheney added — a position that is directly at odds with many conservative pro-family groups. Conservative anti-gay groups correctly reason that once, say, Michigan decides to recognize same sex marriages, inevitably controversy and legal action will ensue as to whether, say, Alabama has to also recognize a same-sex marriage preformed in Michigan much as it has to recognize a heterosexual marriage performed in Michigan (this is because of the full faith and credit clause in the Constitution). The odds are very high that a federal court will rule that once one state recognizes same sex marriage, all states have to recognize same sex marriages performed in that state, hence effectively recognizing same sex marriage nationally.

The American Family Association’s Tim Wildmon posted a statement on the group’s web site saying, “Live and let live is a fine policy for people’s private lives, but Secretary Cheney should have been much stronger in saying that same-sex marriages are wrong.”

This is an interesting tactic. Cheney, and especially George W. Bush, are clearly part of the cultural right but they are far closer to the center of that movement than Republican candidates in the past, preferring to moralize while simultaneously eschew legal solutions. Witness Bush’s comments that abortion opponents need to change people’s minds, or Bush’s admonishing of Hollywood while at the same time stopping short of calling for legislation to punish Hollywood (unlike Al Gore who has suggested a federal lawsuit against media companies similar to the ongoing federal efforts to sue tobacco companies).

Source:

Cheney, gay rights crusader? Alicia Montgomery, Salon.Com, October 10, 2000.

Peter Jennings Pro-Gun Control Ad

In case you missed it last night, ABC ran an hour-long pro-gun control commercial disguised as a news broadcast. The most hilarious part was a profile of the National Rifle Association’s disagreement with Bart Stupak, a Michigan House Democrat who until recently voted with the NRA 100 percent of the time. Then he voted for an inane anti-gun show bill that would have required all gun sellers at gun shows to run 72 hour background checks.

The NRA argued 72 hours checks would have killed gun shows; Stupak says they wouldn’t. Either Stupak doesn’t understand the bill he voted for (which failed, thankfully) or he doesn’t understand gun shows.

Anyway, the interesting thing was how Jennings and ABC chose to portray this as the big, bad horrible NRA vs. the likable, reasonable Stupak. While they gave Stupak plenty of air time to make his case, and spent time debunking the NRA’s claims, it gave almost no time to the NRA to offer an alternative position (in fact ABC simply assumed Stupak was right). Jennings intoned about how Stupak lost the NRA’s support even though he disagreed with them on only “a single vote” to lose their support.

It is hard to imagine ABC giving similar treatment to another civil rights organization. Imagine a member of Congress receiving money from a pro-abortion group, who at some point decides to vote in favor of banning partial birth abortions. Does anybody think for a second that if women’s groups decide to stop giving this Congress person money because of this single vote that this would even make national news, much less be the centerpiece of a pro-life screed in prime time attacking the pro-abortion lobby?

I think not.