THE HUFFINGTON POST
 
 
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kamala-lopez/palin-pales-in-comparison_b_1262
47.html>
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kamala-lopez/palin-pales-in-comparison_b_12624
7.html
 
 <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kamala-lopez> Kamala Lopez
Posted September 14, 2008 
 
 
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kamala-lopez/palin-pales-in-comparison_b_1262
47.html> Palin Pales in Comparison to True Maverick Jeannette Rankin  by
Kamala Lopez
 
"A SINGLE WOMAN" - A new film about the life of Jeannette Rankin, directed
by Kamala Lopez, is screening this Sunday, September 21st, 5:00 PM at the
Culver Plaza Theatre, located at 9919 Washington Blvd., Culver City 90232.
Call: 323-954-9644 or go to:  <http://www.asinglewomanmovie.com/>
www.asinglewomanmovie.com
 
                                                               Jeannette
Rankin              Sarah Palin
 2008-09-14-rankinpalin.jpg
<http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2008-09-14-rankinpalin.jpg> 


On a cold distant November in 1916, a true Republican maverick and reformer
became the first woman elected to the United States Congress. Her name was
Jeannette Rankin and as an indefatigable champion of peace, justice and
equality for all, her ghost stands in stark contrast to the Republican woman
being hailed today as a loveable patriot and agent of change.

Should Sarah Palin be voted into office come this November, ninety two years
after Jeannette's historic election, she may well be responsible for change:
a change back to a time before the struggles of thousands of women and men
succeeded in providing a framework upon which the Women's, Peace and Civil
Rights movements could weave themselves into the fabric of America.

When Jeannette Rankin ran for Congress from Montana, not only were there no
women in the US government - women across the United States couldn't vote.
Three years later the nineteenth amendment was ratified granting all
American women the Federal right to cast their ballot. Today more than fifty
million American women are not registered. Of registered female voters in
the last election, twenty two million of us didn't bother. 

It is the most painful irony to watch Palin stand on Jeannette's shoulders
in order to dismantle that which Rankin gave her life to build. At the time
that Jeannette was campaigning, there were several states in which it was
still legal for a husband to terminate his wife's pregnancy without her
consent. Choice and abortion are not synonyms. Choice is a word with
connotations that reach far and deep into a woman's life - her finances, her
sexuality, her body, her opportunities, her control over her own destiny.
Rankin believed that these choices should be available not only to all
women, but to all peoples.

When asked, because of her concern for the Jewish refugees that Roosevelt
turned away from U.S. shores before our entry into WWII, if she was Jewish,
Jeannette said, "Yes. I'm a Jew. I'm a Christian, I'm Hindu, I'm a Moslem."
When pressed she said, "What difference does it make?" Sarah Palin defines
herself as a "Bible believing Christian" who has "been saved" meaning that
she takes unequivocally both the Bible as the literal Word and Revelation of
God and that Jesus Christ was God in the flesh. 

And while Sarah Palin sees war as a "task from God," Jeannette Rankin stood
up against unimaginable pressure and voted against US entry into both World
Wars. Despite losing the support of her sisters in suffrage, who saw her
vote against entry into WWI as a betrayal that "made women look weak," and
the universal condemnation of the entire country, who said her "no" vote
after the attacks on Pearl Harbor made her a traitor and a Nazi sympathizer,
Jeannette was steadfast in her belief that violence and force are never a
solution. 

She said, "There can be no compromise with war; it cannot be reformed or
controlled; cannot be disciplined into decency or codified into common
sense; for war is the slaughter of human beings, temporarily regarded as
enemies, on as large a scale as possible. You can no more win a war than you
can win an earthquake."

Jeannette Rankin grew up in privilege but gave her life to public service;
starting her career in social work, helping orphans and the poor, then
moving into women's suffrage, labor rights, immigrant rights, civil rights
and always, maintaining her deep concern about the rights of children. She
saw first hand how an unwanted child's life is a cruel reminder of the need
for birth control - more than half the orphans she placed, while working in
the Washington Children's Home in Seattle, were returned. Thirteen died. All
grew up in abject poverty and ill health. Watching this was what helped
propel her into government - she could not stand by and not try to help.

What disturbs me most about Sarah Palin is not that her political positions
are different from Jeannette's but that, despite her identification with
Christianity, I see no humanism in her stances. A direct corollary to her
beliefs is the exclusion and "eternal damnation" of over sixty seven percent
of the global population. How does presidential diplomacy fit into that
paradigm? And, dare I say it, isn't this brand of wholesale intolerance
patently anti-American? Frankly, although Jeannette didn't see herself as a
"religious" person, I see many more similarities between her positions and,
more importantly, her actions and those of Christ than I do with a woman who
shoots defenseless animals from helicopters and denigrates community
activism. 

I hope that my film, "A Single Woman," about the life of unsung heroine
Jeannette Rankin, will help bring to light the strength and beauty of a true
maverick and reformer - an inspirational example of a woman who changed the
American political landscape forever -- and for the better.

"A SINGLE WOMAN" - The story of Jeannette Rankin will be screening at the
U.S. Congress on October 30th hosted by the office of Congressman Dennis
Kucinich. The film is narrated by Martin Sheen, with the artistic
contributions of Jeanmarie Simpson, Patricia Arquette, Karen Black, Peter
Coyote, Frances Fisher, Mimi Kennedy, Margot Kidder, Judd Nelson, Elizabeth
Peña, Cindy Sheehan, Chandra Wilson and a soundtrack featuring the iconic
music of Joni Mitchell.

"A SINGLE WOMAN" is also screening this Sunday, September 21st, 5:00 PM at
the Culver City Plaza Theatre, located at 9919 Washington Blvd., Culver City
90232.

For more information call: 323-954-9644 or go to:
<http://www.asinglewomanmovie.com/> www.asinglewomanmovie.com



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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