Behind a smoke screen of high-profile female appointees and soothing slogans, George W. Bush is waging war on women.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
It's time for women to make their voices heard. Their silence on the subject of war and peace is deafening.
Overseas, America's fighting men and women have been waging war against those who would attack America and plunge the world into a period of darkness, and their success can easily be seen.
You want to see a war on women? Come with me to Iraq and Afghanistan, folks. I've been there 35 times. I will show you what they do to women.
War has traditionally been a man's work, although we know that often women were the cause of violence.
War is a perversion of sex.
By jove, no wonder women don't love war nor understand it, nor can operate in it as a rule; it takes a man to suffer what other men have invented.
Politics is a potent way to empower women.
Men love war because it allows them to look serious. Because it is the one thing that stops women laughing at them.
In the business of war, the role of women is really to maintain normalcy and ensure that there is cultural continuity.
There is no war on women. Women are doing well. But women are thoughtful. And what we in the Republican Party and across the country, Republican, Independents and Democrat women say is we're more thoughtful than a label. We care about jobs and the economy and healthcare and education. We care about a lot of different things.