TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! ANSI
echo: mens_issues
to: All
from: `mcp` gf010w5035{at}blueyon
date: 2005-02-23 09:51:00
subject: Schwarzenegger Remarks on Women Anger Many

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=519&ncid=519&e=6&u=/ap/20050222/ap_on_re_us/schwarzenegger_women_1

By BETH FOUHY, Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO - Could Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (news - web sites) have
another "woman problem" on his hands? Schwarzenegger made headlines in
recent months by deriding political opponents as "girlie men" and
ridiculing
a group of nurses at a women's conference. Now, an effort to paint the
state's teachers as little more than a balky special interest group has
angered many critics, who have begun to question why constituencies
dominated by women have been subjected to such tough talk.

He behaves like an arrogant patriarch with respect to women's occupations,"
said Rose Ann De Moro, executive director of the California Nurses
Association. "Nurses, teachers, home health workers - it's vulgar how he's
run roughshod over them. He's arrogant, and he's a bully."


As a candidate, Schwarzenegger was dogged by allegations that he had groped
and humiliated women on movie sets. Since then, he has won over many
skeptics by appointing women to key staff positions and relying on his wife,
journalist and Democrat Maria Shriver, as his closest adviser.


But recently, as he has pressed for budget cuts and a broad package of
government reform proposals, some of his turbocharged rhetoric has opened
him to charges that his views on women are demeaning and macho.


In December, a small group of nurses gathered at a state women's conference
to protest Schwarzenegger's decision to side with hospitals and delay
changes to the state's nurse-to-patient ratio. With Shriver in the audience,
Schwarzenegger responded to the protesters by saying, "The special interests
don't like me in Sacramento because I am always kicking their butts."


The nurses union denounced his comment, and the attacks on the governor have
only escalated since.


"The arrogance of taking on teachers, nurses and other professions where
women are underpaid, overworked and vital to society is beyond the pale,"
said Jamie Court, president of the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer
Rights and a frequent Schwarzenegger critic. "But Arnold is someone who
treats women as objects, so it's natural for him to have a tendency to
disregard and devalue professions that are made up of women."


The California Teachers Association and the California Nurses Association
recently showed a willingness to take on the governor, staging protests and
buying ads critical of his policies and proposals.


Schwarzenegger has denounced teachers for blocking improvements to education
and has made merit-based pay for teachers a centerpiece of his government
reform plan.


The teachers union is running radio commercials statewide criticizing the
governor's proposals. Top officials of the organization, as well as some
school administrators, also have accused Schwarzenegger of reneging on a
promise to deliver $2 billion in revenue to schools.


The nurses uinon has taken out full-page newspaper ads suggesting
Schwarzenegger's corporate campaign donors are the real special interests.


Last week, some 300 nurses and their supporters disrupted a movie premiere
in Sacramento, booing Schwarzenegger as he posed with actors Vince Vaughn
and The Rock.


"A mass movement is developing, and it's fascinating to see women coming
together," DeMoro of the nurses union said.


Schwarzenegger supporters dismiss the notion that either his rhetoric or his
reform efforts are overly harsh toward women or women's professions.
Instead, they accuse unions of using the controversies to generate
publicity.


"To say that women voters perceive Arnold Schwarzenegger as a bully because
he's taking on a reform agenda belittles women," said Karen Hanretty, a
spokeswoman for the California Republican Party.


"This is not about any individual profession. It's about exposing organized
labor unions who have used their influence and set policies that have
created multibillion-dollar deficits both statewide and nationally."


Political analyst Tony Quinn said the danger for Schwarzenegger lies in the
widespread public fondness for teachers and nurses.





"Their strength lies in the fact that people genuinely like their teachers
and like nurses, even if they don't necessarily like their union," Quinn
said.


-- 
Men are everywhere that matters!





--- UseNet To RIME Gateway {at} 2/23/05 9:50:43 AM ---
* Origin: MoonDog BBS, Brooklyn,NY, 718 692-2498, 1:278/230 (1:278/230)
SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 5030/786
@PATH: 278/230 10/345 106/1 2000 633/267

SOURCE: echomail via fidonet.ozzmosis.com

Email questions or comments to sysop@ipingthereforeiam.com
All parts of this website painstakingly hand-crafted in the U.S.A.!
IPTIA BBS/MUD/Terminal/Game Server List, © 2025 IPTIA Consulting™.