Boston Herald

Eager for female prez, but not her

- By CAL THOMAS Cal Thomas is a syndicated columnist.

Have you heard that Hillary Clinton is the “first woman” ever to be nominated for president by a major political party? Of course you have. The media have repeated the line so often it is broken news.

Hillary Clinton’s nomination and the euphoria in the press (one NPR female reporter said she has seen women weeping over the possibilit­y of Hillary becoming president) eclipses any discussion about the real issues facing the country.

To quote Clinton in another context, “what difference does it make” that she is a woman? A liberal is a liberal, regardless of gender, race or ethnicity.

Must we go through an entire list of “firsts” before we get to someone who can solve our collective problems, instead of making them worse? Many of those cheering this supposed progress in American culture, which follows the historic election of the “first African-American president,” are insincere, if not disingenuo­us. Otherwise, they would have applauded the advancemen­t of African-Americans like Gen. Colin Powell, Justice Clarence Thomas, former one-term U.S. Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.), Sen. Tim Scott (RS.C.) and conservati­ve women like Sarah Palin, Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), former presidenti­al candidate Carly Fiorina, Rep. Mia Love (RUtah) and many others.

The reason for this disparity in attitude and coverage is that conservati­ve blacks, women and Hispanics hold positions anathema to the left.

When it comes to accomplish­ed conservati­ve female leaders, one of the greatest and smartest of our time was the late Jeane Kirkpatric­k, Ronald Reagan’s consequent­ial U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. As Jay Nordlinger wrote in his review of Peter Collier’s book “Political Woman” for National Review, “In a saner world, Jeane Kirkpatric­k would have been lionized by feminists. She had risen from the oil patch to the commanding heights of U.S. foreign policy. But her views were ‘wrong.’ ”

Collier writes that Kirkpatric­k, who was a Democrat most of her life, recalled feminist icon Gloria Steinem once referring to her as “a female impersonat­or.”

Conservati­ve columnist Michelle Malkin, born in Philadelph­ia to Philippine citizens, has written about some of the printable things she’s been called — “race traitor,” “white man’s puppet,” “Tokyo Rose,” “Aunt Tomasina.”

As the cliché goes, if liberals didn’t have a double standard, they would have no standards at all.

There’s an old joke about a woman with five children who was asked if she had it to do over again would she have five kids. “Yes,” she replied, “just not these five.”

As the husband of a successful woman with a master’s degree and accomplish­ed daughters and granddaugh­ters, that’s how we feel about Hillary Clinton. We’re all for a female president, just not this one.

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