Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Politics | 05/09/2008 9:06 am

Everything I Hate About Myself I See in Hillary, by Judy Bachrach

EDITOR’S NOTE: Judy Bachrach writes for Vanity Fair, and is the creator of thecheckoutline.org, an online advice column for friends and relatives of the terminally ill.

When I was 25 (okay, 32), I got dumped by my first untrue love. He’d fallen, six years into our relationship, for his next-door neighbor, a really pretty actress with the IQ of an asparagus and the ability to fill many a conversational lull with tributes to liposuction. But I digress.

The point is what happened after I got dumped. There was no stopping me. I wrote the guy letters. Long ones. I wrote articles, nominally on other topics, but really about him and the way he dumped me. These, unfortunately, got published. I phoned him in the pathetic hope of raising my stock by trashing his new girlfriend, along with the caliber of the movies in which she very, very briefly appeared. This was, as you will likely surmise, amazingly easy to do and also totally ineffective. I didn’t – couldn’t — let go of a guy who exchanged me for a moron, and I can’t believe these many years later that I’m telling you all this because the memory of my mortifying, excruciating almost erotic attachment to stone-cold failure haunts me to this day.

I was, in other words, simply a younger version of Hillary Rodham Clinton. I simply could not get out of the race, even though, let’s face it, the race was over.

What can I say? Everything I hate about myself I see in Hillary. It’s not the stuff you might suspect, either. Hillary’s self-absorption; her sense that the election is not about Iraq or defaulted mortgages or Wall Street piggery, or her; her Bosnian strolls down memory lane; her long and eventful relationship with Bill — this is why much of the press dislikes her, maybe with reason. But not me.

I don’t even hate Hillary because she screwed up health care. Frankly, anyone can screw up health care. It’s the other aspects of Hillary that make me squirm. To put it bluntly: they are uncomfortably familiar.

What kills me is the way Hillary deals with men other than her husband, especially powerful men. Whenever Hillary thinks Obama is onto something – a phrase, say, or even a piece of rhetoric, however tedious – she doesn’t do what most politicians do: which is to, say, challenge it. No, what Hillary does is fiddle with a syllable or two and then appropriate the last thing that pops out of her rival’s mouth as though it were her own (Yes we WILL!!).

Whenever Hillary hears a new idea, however stupid – ‘Let’s suspend the federal gas tax for the entire summer, and to hell with the laws of supply and demand! Let’s authorize Bush to take military action in Iraq and sit back and see what happens!’ – she grabs it, devours it, and calls it her own.

Then, if some new powerful guy comes along and disputes the very strategy she’s adopted from a previous powerful guy – like, oh, let’s say, maybe Obama might come along and dispute the wisdom of our military presence in Iraq — Hillary will turn around and repudiate every previous position in order to espouse that one too. In fact she’ll say she completely regrets “the way the president used the authority.” Like she never gave it up, panting and groaning.

I know I’m not supposed to talk about her that way, as though she were a groupie groveling before a rock star. I’m supposed to, as a close friend recently suggested, “understand that Hillary has to pander.” But you know what? One of the wonderful things about getting older is that you can actually stop pandering, and make your decisions clear-eyed, without reference to gender.

I’m voting for a guy.

294 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

zut alors
Greg Neubeck— I googled you and see that you’re a prolific NeoCon Ditto-Head who has been rebuked numerous times by web sites for fact-free statements.
By zut alors on 05/09/2008 9:02 pm
Diana T
Dear Greg, You are talking(and using a lot of space doing it!) about FRINGE ELEMENTS??? Talk about the pot calling the kettle black. Lordy, reading all your words makes me feel very relieved that I became a Democrat many years ago. You need to calm down and do some DEEP BREATHING
By Diana T on 05/10/2008 1:06 am
Meg Umans
Great article, Judy! Most of us have been there, perseverating beyond any hope of satisfaction. This time the cost is too high to indulge a public figure’s temporary loss of logic. Please let go, Hillary.
By Meg Umans on 05/09/2008 7:16 pm
Brett Pedersen
Having read several biographies of Theodore Roosevelt, I can assure you, Hillary Clinton is no Theodore Roosevelt.
By Brett Pedersen on 05/09/2008 7:37 pm
fred bernanke
The following is from a post on my Blog (http://ProteanPerspectives.blogspot.com) written in March. What u think, Judy? Wednesday, March 12, 2008 Hillary’s Game: Reflecting the Starlight of Others HRC’s “lifetime of experience” consists in being married to a CinC during his eight years in office. She never served in the military, of course, and her combat experience probably consists of a pillow fight or two between her Wellesley sorority sisters and perhaps a bunch of fraternity boys. The sheer audacity of equating herself to McCain in the sphere of Commander of the military is exceeded only by her insinuations that Obama is somehow not in the McCain-Clinton league as far as national security/military matters are concerned. Hillary is a professional coattail rider. She’s riding Bill’s, obviously; otherwise she would be as serious a candidate as the junior Senator from Oklahoma (whoever that may be.) But at least Bill is her husband. Now she is trying to attach herself to the coattails of the man she ostensibly is attempting to make her adversary in November. She likes glorying in the reflected light of stars. Stars radiate their own light; and, like them or not, Bill and McCain generate their own light—-they are stars. Hillary lives in the reflection of the light of true stars, being incapable of generating light herself. Unfortunately for her, she currently finds herself up against an opponent—Barrack-who has star power: again, like him or not, he radiates his own light and need not worry about catching the rays from another. So what does she do? She proposes that Barack be her running mate. Why? So she can capture the light he radiates and claim it is her own. Hillary demeans not only herself, but the whole premise of the independent female making a serious run for the presidency when she reverts to the basking in some other individuals glory, especially when she chooses two stars that are male. Obama’s response to this pathetic line of attack against him should drip with sarcasm, but not so much that voters again feeling sorry for poor Hillary. With the singular exception of Dwight Eisenhower, who served as Supreme Allied Commander in WWII (a fairly impressive rank, don’t you think?), no candidate in recent times has ever been patently “qualified” to assume the CinC role, including McCain, Obama and HRC. But to make her “lifetime of experience” the lynchpin of her campaign is one of the great strategic blunders perpetrated by any campaign in recent memory—-the public is just not that dumb. Posted by FredrickBernanke at 7:16 PM Labels: Barack, CinC, Clinton, Commander-in-Chief, election, Hillary, HRC, lying, McCain, Obama, phony, politics, primaries, stars
By fred bernanke on 05/09/2008 7:48 pm
G Owens
Judy: I found your article refreshingly lighthearted. Something we need more of from time to time. There is a point I’d like to add, though. Those undesirable traits you attribute to Hillary - are the very same ones which Bill brought to our attention first years before now. This leads me to believe that the Clinton Political Machine provided this service to Hillary. She was lent the ability to exercise those undesirable traits from the machine, which was created not by her, but by Bill and his associates originally. As she progressed through her campaign, I thought she acted as one being trained by this machine lent by Bill. Ultimately and in the end when all is said and done, she (and I believe Bill) are both responsible for it.
By G Owens on 05/09/2008 7:54 pm
Ms. Dee
Yes. It’s hard for women not to see themselves through a man’s gaze. Maybe somebody knows who said this. I read it in a book somewhere… “Comparing yourself to another woman is like comparing a rose to a gardenia.” There’s no question, we should all repect Senator Clinton. And we must stop berating ourselves. But I’ve been there Ms. Bachrach. You’re not alone.
By Ms. Dee on 05/09/2008 9:46 pm
Mark Hillman
Here’s a statement that’s somewhat less profound than all of the Jungian blah blah regarding Hillary: “Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead!” Something else ladies,you all seem very articulate and erudite so why in the heck is there an ad for Peggy”the psychic” Rometo on this site? - seems like something that one would find on a cork board inside of a laudromat…
By Mark Hillman on 05/09/2008 8:14 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Mark, this is not your website. This is for women over 40, so please find something a little more in keeping with your elevated tastes.
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/09/2008 11:25 pm
Geneva Fields
For the record, I see *nothing* of myself in Hillary. She is and represents everything I never wanted to be: petty, weak, indecisive, bitter, phony, and power-hungry. She’s not even stylish. I think she would do anything and everything to gain and remain in power. Not than anyone ever gets it right, but she would be ruinous as president.
By Geneva Fields on 05/09/2008 8:44 pm
bean
Thanks to all the REAL men on this site. WE NEED YOU AND APPRECIATE YOU.
By bean on 05/09/2008 8:46 pm
bean
Any man voting for a Democrat should just put on a dress.
By bean on 05/09/2008 8:49 pm
Frank Peterson
That would be utterly laughable if it wasn’t so damned mean-spirited.
By Frank Peterson on 05/09/2008 8:58 pm
Ms. Dee
Thanks, Frank.
By Ms. Dee on 05/09/2008 9:50 pm
Frank Peterson
Ms Dee, If a person is going to post here, they better have a civil tongue in their head so to speak and Bean’s post was just plain nasty—so thanks :-)
By Frank Peterson on 05/09/2008 10:17 pm