Sat, Apr 5, 2008 5:05pm ET

Send to a friend Print Version

On Tim Russert, Hitchens asserted Clinton's actions made her look "sort of alternately soppy and bitchy"

Summary: On Tim Russert, Christopher Hitchens said regarding Sen. Hillary Clinton, "[I]f you think of women who really have been put upon by men and by male supremacy, like Benazir Bhutto, as well, you can't imagine her resorting to this kind of self-pity or suddenly decide to feminize herself in the most clichéd way, of such -- by welling up and sobbing." Hitchens later added: "I just think that if she knew how it made her look, sort of alternately soppy and bitchy, she'd stop it. But she can't help herself, can she? She just can't."

On the April 5 edition of MSNBC's Tim Russert, host Tim Russert asked Vanity Fair columnist Christopher Hitchens if "we [are] seeing the gender card played" by Sen. Hillary Clinton in response to calls for her to drop out of the Democratic presidential primary race. Hitchens replied: "Oh, well, if you call it a card. It's just another side of her terrible self-pity and self-righteousness. If it isn't one, it's the other." Hitchens further asserted that "if you think of women who really have been put upon by men and by male supremacy, like [late Pakistani leader] Benazir Bhutto, as well, you can't imagine her resorting to this kind of self-pity or suddenly decide to feminize herself in the most clichéd way, of such -- by welling up and sobbing." Hitchens later added: "I just think that if she knew how it made her look, sort of alternately soppy and bitchy, she'd stop it. But she can't help herself, can she? She just can't." At the conclusion of the show, which included Atlantic senior editor Andrew Sullivan, Russert stated: "Thank you both for writing and thinking and talking with intelligence."

From the April 5 edition of MSNBC's Tim Russert:

RUSSERT: This last week, we heard Bill Clinton talk about picking on the girl. Former governor of Vermont [Madeleine] Kunin, of Vermont, saying that it was talking down to a woman, in effect, to tell her -- asking her to get out of the race. Hillary Clinton's confiding to -- according to The New York Times -- her advisers that she's not going to be bullied out by a bunch of guys. Are we seeing the gender card played?

HITCHENS: Oh, well, if you call it a card.

SULLIVAN: I mean, I'm a, I'm a --

HITCHENS: It's just another side of her terrible self-pity and self-righteousness. If it isn't one, it's the other.

SULLIVAN: I would -- I could not imagine Margaret Thatcher --

HITCHENS: No.

SULLIVAN: -- ever saying anything close to that.

HITCHENS: Or Golda Meir.

SULLIVAN: When I'm told I don't like Hillary Clinton because I'm a misogynist or whatever, I think, "I admired Mar--" I mean, she was my idol for many, many years. And she never, ever, ever -- when we were on very, very different sides --

HITCHENS: Yes, I know. Yeah.

SULLIVAN: -- extremely, miles apart -- she would never play the gender card.

HITCHENS: It would never occur to her.

SULLIVAN: Never occur to her. Because she is a feminist in the sense that we're post-gender. We're talking about -- you have to sometimes talk about it to some extent, but to use it as a reason to vote for anybody. Of course, Mrs. Clinton has said both. She said, "Don't use it as a reason to vote for me," and, "Please use it as a reason to vote for me," depending exactly on the circumstance. So, as usual, they've said it both ways.

HITCHENS: And if you think of women who really have been put upon by men and by male supremacy, like Benazir Bhutto, as well, you can't imagine her resorting to this kind of self-pity or suddenly decide to feminize herself in the most clichéd way, of such -- by welling up --

SULLIVAN: Or Angela Merkel.

HITCHENS: -- and sobbing, sobbing.

SULLIVAN: Or Golda Meir. I mean, we have examples --

HITCHENS: Or Indira Gandhi. It makes her look --

SULLIVAN: Or Indira Gandhi. The trouble is they were also, many of them -- well, go on, go on.

HITCHENS: No, no, I'd only be repeating myself. Well, no, actually, no. Why don't I do that? I mean, just -- it's -- I just think that if she knew how it made her look, sort of alternately soppy and bitchy, she'd stop it. But she can't help herself, can she? She just can't.

RUSSERT: Another quick break, Andrew Sullivan, Christopher Hitchens, right back.

[commercial break]

RUSSERT: And we're back. John McCain, going along, kind of revisiting the places that were important to him, high school, Naval Academy, and so forth. Raising money, watching this fight on the Democratic side. Are the Democrats going to be able to reunite, Andrew, or are they going to be overwhelmed by debates over gender and race?

[...]

HITCHENS: I very much doubt actually that that's true, that the resentment of foreign occupiers by Japanese people wouldn't be at least as intense as any resentment by --

SULLIVAN: But we didn't have --

HITCHENS: -- Arabs and Muslims. After all, a very large number -- the overwhelming majority of the people of Iraq did welcome the arrival of foreigners.

RUSSERT: To be continued. Thank you very much, both of you.

SULLIVAN: Thank you, Tim.

HITCHENS: It's always a pleasure.

RUSSERT: Andrew Sullivan, senior editor of The Atlantic. He blogs every day for The Daily Bush -- The Daily Dish, excuse me. He's the -- The Conservative Soul: How We Lost It and How to Get It Back. Christopher Hitchens -- Vanity Fair, Slate.com, God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything. Thank you both for writing and thinking and talking with intelligence.

SULLIVAN: Thank you.

HITCHENS: Thanks for having us.

—E.H.H.

Comments (104) - Join the Discussion
Please upgrade your flash player! The video for this item requires a newer version of Flash Player. If you are unable to install flash you can download a QuickTime version of the video.

Embed this video:

Trouble viewing clip? Download: QuickTime

 
Take Action!

Contact information:

Tim Russert
mtp@msnbc.com

When contacting the media, please be polite and professional. Express your specific concerns regarding that particular news report or commentary, and be sure to indicate exactly what you would like the media outlet to do differently in the future.

Issues / Media Tags Help
Issue:
Government and Elections
Sub-Issue:
2008 Elections
Topic:
Hillary Clinton
Person:
Christopher Hitchens
Tim Russert
Show/Publication:
The Tim Russert Show
Personalized Alerts
Show Your Support
County Fair
Radioactive
Media Matters Action Center - Make a Difference!
RSS Feeds

Media Matters uses a taxonomy structure to help readers find information on various subjects. You can view all items by issue (the broadest category), view an issue's subissue, and even drill down to a particular topic. You can also look at items according to the related media personality, show/publication and network/publisher.

Social bookmarking sites allow you to save links to interesting items and share them with other users. Some, like Digg.com, also allow you to discuss these items and promote them to wider audiences by "digging" the ones that you like. To start using these services, simply register with the site in question.