T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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307.1 | Even more relevant to WOMANNOTES... | BCSE::RYAN | One never knows, do one? | Wed May 06 1987 12:18 | 10 |
| Consider how much political fallout there would be if a woman
running for president were caught in the same situation. The
general reaction I'm seeing to Hart's indiscretion is that
it's OK if he's having a little fun, his only mistake was in
getting caught. After all, look at JFK! I suspect there would
be much less tolerance if a woman candidate had a handsome
young actor over to her townhouse for a weekend, went on an
overnight cruise with him, etc...
Mike
|
307.2 | As for Rice's occupation... | BCSE::RYAN | One never knows, do one? | Wed May 06 1987 12:22 | 8 |
| That probably has to do with the image of show business people
as fun-loving types, it gives more of the impression that Hart
was "just" having a little fun rather than carrying on a
serious affair, as would have seemed more likely if she were
more politically active (remember "The Seduction of Joe
Tynan"?).
Mike
|
307.3 | Why not | PARITY::TILLSON | | Wed May 06 1987 13:41 | 36 |
|
...leave the scandal-mongering to the PTL club?
This whole thing seems pretty silly to me. Why does it matter who
Hart spent the weekend with, or for that matter, what he did with
her? Does this _really_ have an impact on how well the man can
run the country? Consider the following:
Susan is a programmer/analyst. She's been doing fine work in her
position for a couple of years, and in fact, has been working at a Sr.
programmer/analyst level for some time now. So she campaigns for
a promotion. Her review is scheduled for the folowing week. But...
That weekend she spends the weekend _unchaperoned_ with Joe, a man
who plays the piano at the bar on the corner...
And on Monday, she hears, "We're not sure you're fit to be a Sr.
programmer/analyst. We hear you spent the whole weekend with Joe
the piano man. Now, maybe if it had been one of the principal
programmer/analysts you work with, that would have been different..."
Now what would you do if you were Susan? Chances are, you'd run
right to your nearest personnel rep and say, "What the H*ll does
this have to do with whether I should be promoted or not? What
bearing does who I spend the weekend with have on how well I do
my job??" And I think most of us would be justifiably outraged
if Susan was denied her promotion for that reason.
Why do we treat politicians as different than the rest of us? I
grow very concerned that we are fast becoming a society which elects
its leaders based on their image, rather than their ability to do
the job.
Rita
|
307.4 | Some differences | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed May 06 1987 14:15 | 16 |
| Susan's job permits her to have weekends off; Gary's job (actual
and prospective) does not.
Susan is not married; Gary is married.
Susan does not claim to provide moral leadership for the entire
country; Gary does.
At the very least, Gary seems a bit shaky on common sense, low on
judgement, and entirely ignorant of the basic concept of avoiding
even the appearance of wrongdoing. These are data points in the
presidential selection process.
But I still wish They'd stop talking about it.
Ann B.
|
307.5 | The basic difference, I think | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Wed May 06 1987 15:05 | 10 |
|
A moment of weakness on Susan's part will not mean the end of the
world. A moment of weakness of the part of a President might.
I don't want to start a nuclear debate here. I am trying to illustrate
what I think the difference is. Susan's position limits the amount
of influence she will have on the lives of others. The president
does not have that luxury.
DFW
|
307.6 | | SAHQ::CARNELL | | Wed May 06 1987 16:09 | 8 |
| A Presidents wife has no life except for his. She is expected to
attend the dinners, have teas, attend openings, etc. and in general
be a model of decorum. I just couldn't handle knowing that while
she can't let her slip show he is off having one night or weekend
stands and people saying it doesn't effect how you run the country.
Maybe I'm too hard on people but I tend to think if you are corrupt
in one area of your life the other areas are suspect. I think thats
a very important area too.
|
307.7 | Is this easier to understand now.... | BEING::MCANULTY | sitting here comfortably numb..... | Wed May 06 1987 16:17 | 6 |
|
I don't think it effects the way he runs the country, but how
the country will react to his running the country....
Mike
|
307.8 | I'm not convinced | PARITY::TILLSON | Max Headroom for President | Wed May 06 1987 17:16 | 89 |
| re .4:
> Susan's job permits her to have weekends off; Gary's job (actual
and prospective) does not.
This is a valid point. However, was there some duty that Gary Hart
neglected on that weekend? If so, that is a valid criticism pertaining
his job performance; otherwise, I think not.
> Susan is not married; Gary is married.
That is an assumption that you made. Nowhere did I mention Susan's
marital status. Should it make a difference in terms of her promotion
even if she is married?
> Susan does not claim to provide moral leadership for the entire
country; Gary does.
Again, a valid point. To spend a weekend unchaperoned with another
person of the opposite sex does not, in my mind, constitute a moral
violation. Why do we automatically assume that such a weekend must
mean that the parties involved did anything amoral? Gary Hart claims
he did not have sex with this woman; why is that so difficult to believe?
> At the very least, Gary seems a bit shaky on common sense, low on
judgement, and entirely ignorant of the basic concept of avoiding
even the appearance of wrongdoing. These are data points in the
presidential selection process.
This is precisely my point. I believe we are judging candidates by
wrong criteria. Is image more important than the man's political
record? Should it be?
re .5
> A moment of weakness on Susan's part will not mean the end of the
world. A moment of weakness of the part of a President might.
Also true. I do not, however, see that Mr Hart spending the weekend
with a woman (and passing the time with her is all that we _know_ he did)
makes him any more likely to press the button than, say, an aging movie
actor. I don't think his weekend activity tells us _anything_ about
his foriegn policy, his stand on nuclear weapons, or much of anything
else, for that matter.
re .6
> A Presidents wife has no life except for his. She is expected to
attend the dinners, have teas, attend openings, etc. and in general
be a model of decorum. I just couldn't handle knowing that while
she can't let her slip show he is off having one night or weekend
stands and people saying it doesn't effect how you run the country.
Maybe I'm too hard on people but I tend to think if you are corrupt
in one area of your life the other areas are suspect.
I think that it is a shame that a president's wife has no life except
for his. No woman should be required to live through her husband.
It is a real pity that we expect this. I wonder what we will do when/if
we finally elect a candidate whose spouse (male or female) has a career
of his/her own, or if we elect an unmarried president.
I also see no hard evidence that Mr. Hart had a "one night stand" or
that he is corrupt (adulterous) in this area of his life. To assume
that two people who are together and unchaperoned for a weekend _must_
have had sex is a rather victorian attitude.
Also, I would like to point out that many other politicians, Richard
Nixon, for example, have given the appearence of being pristine in their
personal lives. This did not stop them from being politically corrupt.
Choosing a candidate based on how little dirt you can dig up on their
personal lives does not guarantee that said candidate will be either
uncorrupt or effective.
re .7
> I don't think it effects the way he runs the country, but how
the country will react to his running the country....
You hit the nail on the head, and I think it's a damn shame.
Rita
Ps: Gary Hart is not a candidate I would endorse, and it has nothing
to do with how he spends his weekends.
|
307.9 | I'm confused...I better talk to Kerry and straighten out.... | BEING::MCANULTY | sitting here comfortably numb..... | Wed May 06 1987 17:27 | 9 |
|
re .8
You think it is a shame, I hit the nail on the head, or
its a shame of how the country will respond to his running....
Mike
|
307.10 | | PARITY::TILLSON | Max Headroom for President | Wed May 06 1987 17:31 | 7 |
|
I think it's a shame how the country will respond to his
running. I _liked_ your analysis, nothing shameful in that
(as far as I know..;-))
Rita
|
307.11 | Another issue... | STAR::TEAGUE | I'm not a doctor,but I play one on TV... | Wed May 06 1987 18:07 | 20 |
|
I guess one could say that my initial reaction is essentially:
"Gary Hart's personal life is none of my business."
However, I'm not quite ready to pass this off and forget about it. Gary
has made a statement about the incident, denying immoral behavior. What
now becomes important to me is:
"Is Gary lying?"
Truthfulness would be very important in the consideration of Susan's
promotion in .3. Presidential candidates? I didn't know they lied until
after they were in office (just kidding -- I'm really not *that* cynical).
Right now I'm undecided. More bits and pieces of the story are certain to
follow in the days to come.
.jim
|
307.12 | Guess I did start it... | TSG::BRADY | Bob Brady, TSG, LMO4-1/K4, 296-5396 | Wed May 06 1987 18:55 | 9 |
|
Well...my original intention in .0 *really was* only to point out
the idiotic assumption that "actress" and "politically minded" were mutually
exclusive...not to crank up a Hart/Rice exchange...but thanks for all the
replies; in particular I agree with .1 that there's obviously a double
standard, any woman candidate in the reverse position would have been
politically DOA ; and with the gist of several other replies, that overfocus
on our leader's private/personal lives will leave us only with leaders who
don't have any...scary.
|
307.13 | Actresses AND Actors | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Thu May 07 1987 07:25 | 14 |
| I think the assumption that an actress cannot be politically minded
is pretty stupid, yes, but I don't think it's limited to *female*
thesbians; *ANY*one in the field of acting seems to be pooh-poohed
when they start "talking political." Ed Asner comes to mind...
If you act, it seems you are not expected to be capable of thinking.
And maybe the fact that Ronbo made it to the presidency is a testimony
to his ability to overcome at least one stereotype. And "dumb actor"
is something used by liberals all the time in pointing out his obvious
lack of qualifications for the job, so he still hasn't completely
gotten away from it. (BTW, I *still* think he is a rotten president,
so these are not the ramblings of a "knee-jerk conservative" :))
Lee
|
307.14 | You tell 'em, Lee. | SNEAKY::SULLIVAN | Beware the Night Writer! | Thu May 07 1987 20:56 | 1 |
|
|
307.15 | It's all over now. | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Fri May 08 1987 10:35 | 5 |
| I heard on the news this morning that Gary Hart is withdrawing from
the race for the Democratic presidential nomination because the
Washington Post (?) has uncovered some information about a longstanding
affair that Hart has been having. The Washington Post will not
print the story now that Hart is resigning.
|
307.16 | ..shall make you free. | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Fri May 08 1987 16:48 | 18 |
| A person's sex life is and should remain personal even if the
person is running for or residing in the White House. However a
person's word is a reflection of personal values. Mr. Hart denied
being a 'womanizer' and challenged the media to '...follow him
around...' He also denied he had changed his name and misstated
his age. Which of his statements, if any, are truthful?
Presidents Nixon and Reagan should have learned the best defense
is the truth. They did not. Mr. Hart is one more person who failed
to learn this lesson. Why he did not simply say his love life is
a matter between him and his wife PERIOD I'll never know.
Would it be worse if a woman whe was running for higher office
was a 'manizer'? Not in my opinion. Would it be as bad if the
woman was shown to deny the truth as much? Yes, remember 1984?
Douglas
|
307.17 | Did he do something illegal too? | TIGEMS::SCHELBERG | | Wed May 13 1987 13:15 | 13 |
| True, none of *US* seemed to care about what Gary Hart does in his
personal life. (Maybe his wife doesn't either) but how come the
government comes up with laws for *US*.....why is it illegal to
live with the opposite sex if your not married, why is adultery
illegal, etc. It seems *THEY* care about what we do.
Example: Two police officers were fired from their jobs because
they were living together without being married and also one of
them was married but getting divorced. How does that hurt the public?
I guess I'm just confused. ......
bs
|
307.18 | Passion a crime only in some states | NSG008::MILLBRANDT | Out of bounds Again | Wed May 13 1987 14:00 | 17 |
|
Re: -1. To my knowledge there is no Federal law declaring either
adultery or co-habitation a crime. In some states, adultery is still
against the law. Here in New Hampshire someone actually had his wife
arrested for adultery recently - part of some nasty divorce bickering.
The state legislature discussed removing the law but voted to keep it.
Whether adultery is against the law in Florida or D.C. I don't know.
But last I heard, people in this country aren't guilty of a crime
until they have been charged and tried and found guilty.
That Gary Hart withdrew from his campaign because he was the issue
instead of his ideas is true as far as it goes. Behind that is
the hard rock of reality: the people who finance these campaigns
no longer saw his candidacy as viable.
- Dotsie
|
307.19 | I thought it turned out okay | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Wed May 13 1987 14:02 | 8 |
| re -1:
I thought that the police officers were able to keep their jobs and
that Mass. rescinded the cohabitation law as a result of the brouhaha.
BTW, cohabitation is not disallowed in *most* states. Less than
10 or so states still have this archaic law on the books.
-Ellen
|
307.20 | | BEING::MCANULTY | sitting here comfortably numb..... | Wed May 13 1987 15:52 | 6 |
|
Correct, Mass does have the cohabition law. They were fired,
because they broke the law. The law either has or will be
recinded any day.
|
307.21 | This is what I remember... | TOOK::LIZBICKI | | Wed May 13 1987 16:39 | 5 |
|
I think I read last weekend that it was rescinded. The two
officers were not fired (or were allowed to return)
|
307.22 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Wed May 13 1987 16:41 | 3 |
| Yes, Gov. Dukakis signed the repeal of the Mass. anti-cohabitation
law last week.
Steve
|
307.23 | In addition, | ULTRA::LARU | full russian inn | Thu May 14 1987 10:49 | 4 |
| The officers got married, and were reinstated in their jobs. I
believe they said they were going to marry anyway.
Bruce
|
307.24 | Not it wasn't me - really! | TIGEMS::SCHELBERG | | Mon May 18 1987 13:53 | 7 |
| re 21: That's true they were allowed to return to work etc. but
look what they had to go through because of an ancient law. Who
wants your life thrown on the six o'clock news with film at 11:00?
:-)
bs
|