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And when it comes to International Women's Day--founded March 8, 1911, in Copenhagen as part of a socialist movement supporting women as voters, workers and people entitled to safe workplaces--a woman's voice has larger meaning. It's a metaphor for women's equality and responsibility in the world.
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Vocal Problems
Yet even many supporting Barack Obama are aghast at the difficulty Hillary Clinton's female vocal chords have caused her. Reporters have characterized her voice as "grating," "shrill," "like a scolding mother." TV's Comedy Central host Jon Stewart compared Hillary's laugh--or "cackle"--to the Wicked Witch of the West from "The Wizard of Oz," joking that "she'll be our first president you can't spill water on."
Even though Obama has been taking more media heat in recent days, studies by Media Matters, the Center for Media and Public Affairs, and media outlets themselves find Clinton gets substantially more scrutiny. She also sustains vitriolic gender-based attacks such as the Hillary Nutcracker and Roger Stone's (remember him for Nixon's dirty tricks?) Hillary-bashing Web site, Citizens United Not Timid, with an acronym that Jane Fonda discovered can't be spoken on national TV.
These are all classic ways to disregard a woman's voice, literally and symbolically, and by extension deny social and political equality.
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http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3518