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Mona Charen
Mona Charen
14 Feb 2012
The Free Lunch Is Back

Leaving aside the blatant assault on religious liberty that the Obama administration's contraceptive mandate … Read More.

10 Feb 2012
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Removing Planned Parenthood's Fig Leaf

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Was Todd Palin Dissed, Too?

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The knives — long, short, and in-between — have come out with particular swiftness searching for Sarah Palin's jugular. Unnamed aides to Sen. McCain have not just dished to the press about the former vice presidential candidate, they've sought to bury her.

For what it's worth, I don't think this backbiting will damage her. Who really believes that she didn't know Africa is a continent? Puh-leeeze! People know that insiders engage in this kind of blame shifting all the time. If Sarah Palin spends the next couple of years using her obvious smarts to bone up on national and international issues, she will be fine. She has a rare combination of charisma, the common touch, and firm values. It would be self-defeating for the Republican Party to toss her aside just because she debuted on the national stage too early.

But a friend (who doesn't always vote Republican) called with an interesting and different perspective on the Palin imbroglio. Not this one. And not the one about her clothes. But the original question as to whether a mother of five should even consider the vice presidency. "There were all these feminists saying 'A woman with children needs to stay at home,'" she noted with wonderment. But what about Todd?

I noticed the same thing. In all the discussion about whether a woman with children should seek an office that would require time away from home, practically no one paid any attention to the fact that Palin's husband, Todd, stood ready and willing to shoulder the lion's share of parenting.

My friend Ellen is an accomplished woman — the main breadwinner for her family. And she attributes much of her success to a wonderful father. Her dad, an electrical engineer, had himself been raised by his dad, an immigrant from Sicily. Just after her father's fifth birthday, her grandmother was placed in a mental institution. She never came home. The Sicilian grandfather was left with six children to raise, one of who was my friend's father.

He must have done a great job because all six went on to have fulfilled lives.

Ellen's father became a chemical engineer. He married a woman who, while not abusive or problematic in any way, turned out not to be great at parenting. It happens. So while dad worked a day job, he was always home by 6 p.m. so that he could spend time with Ellen and her three siblings. Each night he helped all four kids with their homework. He loved to cook and taught all of them. He was the one they went to with their troubles. Ellen sought him out to discuss issues with boyfriends, and decisions about classes and college. When her mother said she ought not to attend the high school prom, her dad gently intervened, and even went with Ellen to pick out a dress.

Ellen became a nurse and then a very successful small business owner. Her sister got a master's degree in math and engineering at Johns Hopkins, and has started three companies. Another sister became a vice president of Fidelity Investments. When she had her third child, which made three under the age of 5, she decided to withdraw from the business world for a while. Fidelity offered her inducements to remain but she turned them aside. Her husband was hired in her place.

Ellen's brother became an electrical engineer. All four siblings are happily married (no divorces) and among them they have a passel of kids.

"Behind every great woman is her dad," declares UC Davis psychologist Dean K. Simonton, author of a book on eminent women. "Women who are eminent are highly likely to have developed very close relationships with their fathers," he claims.

In the past 15 years or so, we've heard a great deal about the importance of fathers — that children raised by single mothers are far more likely to suffer a number of problems and pathologies that do not stalk children from intact families nearly so much. But what Ellen's story illustrates is that, even in intact families, fathers are sometimes — maybe not usually, but sometimes — the more nurturing parent. And as long as someone is there for the kids, why are feminists, of all people, complaining?

To find out more about Mona Charen and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Ma'am;... Sarah Palin is history... The world already has a Pat Robertson in panties, and it does not need another one in drag. As a target; she is like a fly to a fly swatter, and that is why you seldom see flies hanging out in two's... And no one with brains is going to get palin-ed for no gain... She cannot manage more than forty percent nationally, and where she could get more she would be unnecessary because there the voters would elect a mad dog under the republican banner... Leave her to fade into obscurity where in anonymity she can finish her first book...If you worry about anything, think about the possibility of her beating you out of a job... If you think of her as the competition, maybe her hate won't taste so sweet... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Nov 11, 2008 2:15 PM
Ms.Charen,
I am a woman and though I try to give Gov.Palin the benefit of the doubt, it is possible to believe that her knowledge of Geography is abysmal like not knowing if Africa is a continent or a country. There are the disastrous Katie Couric interviews which even though I make excuses like she was not prepared properly, she was thrust into the limelight too early, she had bad advice, she was nervous because she was interviewed by this New York journalist it does not convince me otherwise. It comes down to two things, the McCain campaign and Gov.Palin. The McCain campaign for picking her mostly because they picked someone who was supposedly so unqualified to replace a 72 year old stellar politician with a history of cancer that the minute they lost, it was all Gov.Palin, only Gov.Palin and not their fault. I, for the record assign the blame to them for failure to prepare Gov.Palin and thrusting her into the national spotlight. But Gov.Palin for all her ambition does not seem to want to put in the work necessary to get to places. She seems to want to do it because she is a woman. She is a good looking woman, but I wish her behavior was more professional. The whole winking thing offended me personally. If I want to be considered a serious candidate for a professional job, I would be laughed at if I exhibited the almost flirting behavior Gov.Palin exhibited during the debates which was essentially a job interview for the job of VP. I would vote for her in a heartbeat if she exhibits some of the same intellect like a Hillary Clinton, Meg Whitman, Carly Fiorina, Condeleeza Rice who I am sure worked extremely hard to get where they are. Even like a Katie Couric and a Diane Sawyer who are both attractive women but did the work to get where they are. Gov.Palin's appeal is only to the extreme religious right and I find it interesting to find that she is a member of a group called 'Feminists for life' after the election. Why did this information not come before ? Sounds like she is trying to broaden her appeal to a larger base. Who knows what will happen in 4 years, but until she drastically alters her image, her tag line to the voters would be, 'you lost us at hallo' instead of 'you convinced us to take a second look and we like what we see'.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Lydia
Sun Nov 16, 2008 6:12 AM
Why would we want anyone in the White House who needs to take 4 years to "bone up" on the issues. I prefer someone who has been informed all along. As for her firm values, I don't consider having her daughter and her daughter's boyfriend drop out of high school to begin a family prematurely a decision based on firm values. In my opinion, she should be championing an education, no matter what, as the best value choice one can make in todays society.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Cassandra
Sat Nov 22, 2008 6:32 AM
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