FOX apparently had a Dean-bashing session according to Newshounds, who watch FOX so you don't have to. I suspected that Howard Dean would be absolutely attacked for saying that Bush did not have the credibility or capability of attacking Iran. I have not seen too much criticism of that. Last night I posted one weird attack on him for saying women would be worse off.
They are really upset with him, especially on FOX, because he said women were in danger of losing their rights there now. It made them furious. Go figure. It is like a threat to them, more so than thinking their leader doesn't have credibility.
Newshounds watching Fox bash Dean for speaking up for Iraqi womenFox Spin Point #422: Bash Howard Dean, Even When He Speaks the Truth
Yesterday (8/15) on Dayside, guest-host Mike Jerrick conducted a short segment discussing a comment made by Howard Dean on the rights of Iraqi women with regular guests Rich Lowery and Ellis Henican.
Mike began: "Some folks questioning progress in Iraq, on CBS? Face the Nation, DNC chairman Howard Dean had this to say:
Dean: "It looks like today, and this could change, it looks like today women could be worse off in Iraq then they were when Sadaam Hussein was president of Iraq."
MJ: "How about that comment? Let's start with you Rich. Whoa! What a comment! Just respond to it!?
RL: "It's pretty outrageous, I mean, no one had rights in Sadaam Hussein's government. It was a totalitarian state, and
women in Baghdad had to fear one of Sadaam's sons, Uday or Qusay, snatching them off the street and raping them. We are going to end up with something better than Saddam Hussein's Iraq. The problem is, Democrats can't seem to get their mind around that."Newshounds refers to a BBC article about the Iraqi women being greatly concerned.
Iraqi women fear for their rights.
BBC: Iraqi women fear for their rights.Women's groups in Iraq are stepping up a campaign to try to ensure that the country's constitution does not restrict their rights. Iraqi women have more rights than most in the region.
With the approach of the 15 August deadline for completing the new constitution, the role of women in society has become a political battlefield. It pits secular Iraqis against newly powerful religious parties who want a greater role for Islam written into the document.
"There's very little time left," says Maysoon al-Damluji, president of the Iraqi Independent Women's Group. "I'm not sure we'll succeed. But we have to keep fighting."
Secular women in Iraq have been through a difficult two years, with relentless violence keeping more and more women indoors and many feeling growing pressure to wear the veil.
"Things have got worse even since last year," says Rafif, a 28-year old bank auditor attending a recent conference on women and the constitution. "I'm now afraid to drive my car. I've changed where I study and work so that I can be nearer to home. But we women have got to get out of the house if we're going to change things." Newshounds ends with pointing out the idiocy of Rich Lowry's comments:
"And all Rich Lowery could come up with was Dean is nuts, and hey! At least they aren't being raped?"Slovenian President Janez Drnovsek (R) speaks with Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean (L) of the U.S. during his one day long visit to castle Brdo in Slovenia August 16, 2005. REUTERS/Srdjan Zivulovic