What Was Eliot Thinking? Part 2

Even Nora Ephron couldn’t make it funny. The comments on my Huffington Post version of the Heartfeldt post “What was Eliot Thinking?” were more thoughtful than the smart-ass or angry replies I usually get. They divide into three categories: “legalize prostitution”, “yes men’s brains are in their pants, so what were you thinking, Gloria?”, and “despite the fact that men’s brains are in their pants, some of them can still resist infidelity.” A few touch on the illegality and hypocrisy aspects of the case.

There’s been lots of chatter but not nearly the amount of joking that, say, Sen. Wide-Stance Craig got after his toe-tapping incident. PunditMom said simply and clearly what I absolutely think must happen: resign.

We are scandal-weary, inured to the shock. Perhaps the height of Spitzer’s stunning rise to power and depth of his fall have whistled by us so fast we see them as a blur. Is that how Dr. Laura got a gig on the Today show to flack her misogynist theory that the wife is to blame for not feeding the husband’s needs. (I won’t dignify her with a link.)?

I just keep thinking about the beautiful, kind, and smart wife Silda and their three daughters. I first met them socially as a family over a decade ago, before he ran for attorney general. And then I think of how he and other arrogant politicians like him take all their supporters down with them: all the contributors to his campaign, his political party, the voters who voted for him.

As much as I don’t care about what other people do with their sex lives, I care a lot about fostering the burgeoning interest in politics that young people are exhibiting these days. If Spitzer doesn’t resign and quickly and cleanly, many will retreat back into the shell of cynicism.

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For that reason if no other, it is essential that Spitzer do the honorable thing now as the first step in his, and our, redemption.

2 Comments

  1. Punditmom on March 13, 2008 at 10:48 pm

    I just can’t event imagine what his daughters are going through. Any father of daughters deserves a special seat in that “hot place” for doing what he did. As for his career as a protector of ethics — don’t get me started.

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