October 20, 2008 • Vol. 14, No. 6 Download Now! (pdf)

 

EDITORIAL
Viva McCain!
by William Kristol

SCRAPBOOK
Varieties of Anti-Palinism

ARTICLES
Twits on Parade
by Andrew Ferguson

Manhattan Project as Metaphor
by Ari Rabkin

To Attack, or Not to Attack?
by Stephen F. Hayes

Will It Be a Blue Bluegrass State?
by John David Dyche

No Shore Thing
by Whitney Blake

A Faltering Big Red Machine
by David Wolfford

FEATURES
The Fog
by Frederick W. Kagan

The Cabinet of Dr. Obama
by Yuval Levin

Invasion of the Wallet Snatchers
by Matthew Continetti

Night of the Living Constitution
by Terry Eastland

BOOKS & ARTS
She's Come Undone
by Katherine Mangu-Ward

Game Over
by Joe Queenan

Red Aussie
by Paul Hollander

Safety First
by Susanne Klingenstein

Village Vanguard
by Ronald Radosh

The Joke's on Him
by John Podhoretz

CASUAL
Bedtime Stories
by Matt Labash

PARODY
Trump Buys Iceland


« Quote of the Day (So Far!) | Main | Prescient Analysis »

This Isn't Right

laura-scarf3.jpg

When, earlier this week, I saw the pictures of the first lady sitting on a pink couch bracketed by, well, you couldn’t quite tell what they were, because they're wearing head-to-toe burqas, I thought she was making a powerful statement. Americans don't force their women to wear those ridiculous outfits, and by all rights they shouldn’t be forced to do so just because they are visiting a Muslim country. We live in a free country--if Muslims (or anyone else trying to go incognito) want to wear those things over here, that’s their prerogative. By the same token, any American woman wishing to brazenly flash a little ankle is also free to do so.

Most Americans traveling the Middle East have little recourse but to don the black sheets, but the first lady certainly does. She can dress as she likes. Which is why I find the image (at right) from Saudi Arabia so disturbing. The first lady represents the American people, she is not a private citizen, and she certainly isn't acting as a private citizen in her tour of the Middle East. That she would oblige her hosts by wearing a shmata on her head is a tacit endorsement of Islam's subjugation of women. Do I expect a visitor to a synagogue to wear a yarmulke? Yes, though I wouldn't force them, and a yarmulke isn't a sign of subordination to another group of people, but to God. And also, radical Jews didn't attack this country, radical Saudi Muslims did. This isn't merely a question of being a polite guest.

And what will happen if Hillary wins the White House in 2008? Will she be expected to don the burqa on her trips to Saudi? One would hope not. Sitting presidents don't take fashion commands from foreign dignitaries, and neither should first ladies. Where are the feminists when we actually need them?

20071023LauraBushSaudi.jpg
HT Hot Air, LGF
Email the article This Isn't Right to a friend:

Send this article to:


Your email address:


Message (optional):


 
Contributors
Editor (on leave):
Michael Goldfarb

Deputy Editors:
John McCormack
Samantha Sault

Contributors:
Dean Barnett
Jennifer Chou
Brian Faughnan
Ulf Gartzke
Reuben F. Johnson
Thomas Joscelyn
Stuart Koehl
John Noonan
Bill Roggio
Jaime Sneider
Search
Archives
Contact
wws@weeklystandard.com
Categories
Feeds: Atom | RSS
[What is this?]
Powered by
Movable Type 3.2