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The Thinking Housewife tries to tarnish the legacy of Sally Ride with a surreally homophobic eulogy

Sally Ride and her partner Tam O’Shaughnessy

Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, died last week, as most of you no doubt know.  On The Thinking Housewife, Laura Wood uses the occasion as an opportunity to bash lesbians, feminism, and Ride herself. Wood begins her most unusual eulogy by quoting Gloria Steinem, who once said of Ride:

“Millions of little girls are going to sit by their television sets and see they can be astronauts, heroes, explorers and scientists.”

Wood scoffs at the very notion, suggesting that

Steinem’s real point, in keeping with her intense dislike of women, was that women should want to be astronauts and there was something wrong with them if they didn’t.

So we’re off to a great start here. Wood then offers this patronizing assessment of Ride’s life – which nonetheless turns out to be the nicest thing she says about the legendary astronaut.

Ride, who had a warm, radiant smile and is said to have served ably in her two missions in space, died Monday at the age of 61.

After this bit of faint praise, Wood moves on to her main point: Ride was lesbian, and therefore a terrible person, so she’ll quickly be forgotten.

For all the fanfare that once surrounded it, Ride’s story will likely fade into history and her life ultimately inspire very few girls. This will be so not only because women do not excel at space science or the physical demands of space travel as men do but also because, as Ride’s obituary proved, she did not lead a full life. Ride was in a lesbian relationship with a childhood friend for 27 years.

Yep, apparently lesbians don’t live “full lives,” whatever that means. Are women only living “full lives” if they are filled up on at least a semi-regular basis with their husband’s penis?

Wood continues:

To her credit, Ride did not make her lesbianism public and was private about her personal life in general. Her sister and the woman with whom she had a relationship, Tam O’Shaughnessy, have released the information to the world and now Ride has the double distinction of being both the first woman and the first lesbian in space. O’Shaughnessy was Ride’s friend since the age of 12. Ride was briefly married to another astronaut, but they were divorced. So while Ride accomplished much in her career, thanks in part to the spirit of affirmative action, she seems to have never fully emerged from childhood.

Huh? Are lesbians inherently childish, or is Ride supposed to have been a perpetual “child” because she married her childhood friend?

Then Wood says one of the strangest things I’ve ever heard:

The only good reason for a normal woman to go through the grueling rigors of becoming an astronaut is that NASA is a great place to meet men. 

Sorry, but I’ve got to pull out the Don Draper gif again: What?

 

Wood elaborates:

Ride’s life, however, does not even offer that slim hope to little girls, that wonderful compensation for dreary days in a control cabin. Ride flew into space but never experienced other thrills that are as great or far greater. She never gave a man such necessary and life-sustaining love that he was able to do great things, such as fly into space.

So apparently the real, true purpose of becoming a female astronaut isn’t to fly into space, but to inspire the dude you’ve married to fly into space?

She never looked up at the stars with her own children and encouraged their wonder. She did not pass on her love of space to a son or daughter or grandchild.

I guess inspiring girls around the world doesn’t count? (And I can only imagine that the thought of Ride now inspiring gay children strikes Wood with dread.)

Though she performed capably in her public position as a Role Model of the Century, Sally Ride’s example will likely be the exact opposite of what NASA and Gloria Steinem predicted. She will serve as a reminder of at least some of the very good reasons why women don’t want to be astronauts.

Because becoming an astronaut might make them lesbian?

The vast majority of women would sooner love an astronaut than be one. And given that most men are destined to perform inglorious jobs for most of their lives, women will come to see that the dream of conquering space rightly belongs to men.

A lot of men do crap jobs, so therefore only men should be astronauts? I can’t even pretend to understand the logic here.

Here’s Ride’s web site, and her official obituary.

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Molly Moon
Molly Moon
12 years ago
Ami Angelwings
12 years ago

Somehow I suspect this is the closest to socializing NWO gets and it’s kinda sad : If Manboobz ever went defunct and ppl moved on, I suspect he’d have a breakdown and be missing us really badly 🙁

Naira
Naira
12 years ago

[blockquote]I would guess that uterus-owning astronauts would take birth control full time while in space, if not to prevent a space conception then to avoid having to deal with a period in zero gravity.

(It wouldn’t be like the end of the world, I’m pretty sure tampons would work just the same, but it seems inconvenient.)[/blockquote]

Well, I think another problem would be regarding where the menstrual fluid would flow. Space toilets have to have some moderate suction, since waste doesn’t flow the right direction very well in zero gravity. (Modern Marvels on the History Channel is friggin’ awesome)

Falconer
12 years ago

@Amnesia: Pinkie Pie and Space Core mash up disturbingly well.

Owly probably thinks women in space would need to dress like Lt. Uhura (or possibly this Lt. Uhura (Uhura and Nichols are awesome, but cee-rist! could we be any more sexist?)).

Naira
Naira
12 years ago

argh…blockquote fail

ozymandias42
12 years ago

Nichols is one of my feminist heroes. She literally did inspire people to go into space– Mae Jamison, the first black female astronaut, was inspired by her.

[/middle school black history project]

Cliff Pervocracy
12 years ago

The Straight Dope has a great column on menstruation in space!

http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2827/how-do-female-astronauts-menstruate-in-space

(Great until that “women are crazy on their periods… but men are crazy all the time, ho ho!” ending paragraph. Cripes. But the other details are interesting.)

Apparently menstruating in space actually isn’t terribly problematic:

There’s no evidence retrograde menstruation occurs in space, and even if it did, it probably wouldn’t cause endometriosis: reverse flow seems to trigger this condition only in those who experience it chronically. Returning women astronauts who’ve menstruated in space report that everything worked the way it usually does.

Shaenon
12 years ago

I wanted to be an astronaut as a kid. Then the Challenger disaster happened in second grade and I thought maybe I’d rather just write science fiction.

whataboutthemoonz
12 years ago

I don’t want to be an astronaut because I’m deathly afraid of being trapped in space, but all manboobzers that are not The First Joe or NWOslave or Steele or Ruby are invited to my cardboard spaceship party 🙂

Shaenon
12 years ago

Evil Mirror Universe Uhura is seriously ripped. I love that episode.

kiki
kiki
12 years ago

(The worst was Crash, with its uplifting message of “racism consists of one person from each race doing exactly one good thing and one bad thing. like if a guy rapes a black woman, but then he rescues her from a fire, we’re even-stevens, right?”)

(Except the two Asian characters, who are both comically inept people-traffickers. Take that, racism!)

captainbathrobe
12 years ago

Hi Ami!

Falconer
12 years ago

Evil Mirror Universe Uhura is seriously ripped. I love that episode.

Except in that photo, that’s Good Prime Universe Uhura. EMU Uhura shows up in GPU Uhura’s outfit, so unfortunately we can’t see how ripped she is 🙁

The Challenger disaster happened on my dad’s 36th birthday. It kind of dampened the whole day. Seemed like he had bad luck on his birthday, but that’s probably just confirmation bias.

The Columbia disaster was another sad day. I don’t seem to remember turning on lights that day (although I’m sure I must have done).

Naira
Naira
12 years ago

Thanks Cliff.

The more you know!

kirbywarp
kirbywarp
12 years ago

I knew there’d be a study back by pixels on a screen stating women weren’t just as good as men, but even better.

“… Height, not strength or gender, is the most negative factor in a pilot’s ability to tolerate G stress. …”

*sigh*

eline
eline
12 years ago

Yawn. These women who tell me I’ll never fulfill my potential as a woman and have a happy, full and satisfying life because, whilst fertile, I’m physically incapable of going through pregnancy without my insides slowly twisting and tearing apart, eventually making me die a horribly painful and bloody death, are *so* tiresome.

Same with the women who tell me I shouldn’t have abortion if I happened to be raped and get pregnant. Or, gods forbid, just get pregnant regardless of the cause.

kiki
kiki
12 years ago

It’s been a long time, but wasn’t there a measurable period of seconds that the Earth/team/scientists could not account for — at the end, one is complaining that the Jodie Foster character thinks she was ‘gone for a long time when it was only “small number of seconds,” but then somebody (a woman? a wife? very long time) says something about but where was the ship for those X seconds.

My recollection is that someone – I think the Angela Bassett character – says that the tape impossibly recorded a long period of static, something like six hours, during the few seconds that the pod was falling. It’s a stupidly unnecessary scene that completely ruins the did-it-really-happen mystery – shame, because I like that movie, cheesy as it is.

chocomintlipwax
12 years ago

I totally did two sessions of space camp. And the first year I did get a scholarship from the AAUW. Which isn’t quite so affirmative-actiony because I still had to apply and get accepted and pass a physical and all that jazz. But being a girl did mean I got some money.

Anyway, I was 12 so I wasn’t interested in boys. And I had no idea who Sally Ride was either, although I had probably heard her name. I just kinda wanted to be an astronaut. And lemme tell ya, being spun around at 4Gs was no problemo even for me, and I’m Miss Major Motion Sickness. (I can’t read in cars.) I was the pilot on one of the missions, which was AWESOME.

Btw, they also have a program for adults, which was implemented some time after I attended. Seems the program has changed a fair bit in general. Hopefully the moldy bread at the dining hall has also changed.

http://www.cosmospherecamps.org/camps.php?id=16

Falconer
12 years ago

Okay … my kitty is chasing her tail in the middle of the floor, and then she’ll sit down and yowl, or at least give voice.

Should I give her money, or what?

thebewilderness
thebewilderness
12 years ago

Criminy! Those are some very very sour grapes.

Ride Sally Ride!

Argenti Aertheri
Argenti Aertheri
12 years ago

Is NWO arguing that women don’t tend to be shorter than men?

NWO, I know you really hate statistics, and all aspects thereof, but the concept of “on average” is something grade school children can understand. You might want to pay particular attention to this part of what pillowinhell said — “Height, not strength or gender…”

Tulgey Logger
Tulgey Logger
12 years ago

I think “reading” is a bit much to expect of Owly, sadly.

cloudiah
12 years ago

Falconer, for female kitties, tuna is money.

speedlines
speedlines
12 years ago

Owly’s unique use of “ladette” remains hilarious to this Brit.

Yeah, he was probably reading a Daily Mail article and latched onto it without understanding anything, as usual.

Ithiliana
12 years ago

Trufact: I keep reading “Ladette” as “Layette” and getting confused.

Not that being confused is a new response to NWO!

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