Toot

I don't know how prevalent these views are in the democratic party. I just know that both parties have an antisemitism problem, and, at least from where I'm sitting, the democrats are marginally better at dealing with theirs while the Republicans are doing absolutely nothing to deal with theirs and won't for the foreseeable future. The rest is cost-benefit analysis, and the Republicans will cost me more while benefiting me a whole lot less.

Women Soldiers of the Civil War
Spring 1993, Vol. 25, No. 1 By DeAnne Blanton © 1993 by DeAnne Blanton Disguised as a man (left), Frances Clayton served many months in Missouri artillery and cavalry units. (By courtesy of the Trustees of the Boston Public Library) It is an accepted convention that the Civil War was a man's fight. Images of women during that conflict center on self-sacrificing nurses, romantic spies, or brave ladies maintaining the home front in the absence of their men.