Posted By P.J. Aroon Share

Hillary Clinton, Aug. 5, 2009 | SIMON MAINA/AFP/Getty Images 

If you had been Secretary Clinton, how would you have responded Monday when a Congolese university student at a town-hall meeting asked what husband Bill thought about an issue?

Yesterday, I suggested speaking diplomatically and possibly using grace and humor. (This is not to be confused with acting demure, passive, and ladylike.) If I had been her, I would have calmly but assertively asked, "I'm curious to know: Why are you so interested in my husband's opinion when I'm the one who's secretary of state and my husband is no longer in government?"

Such a question would have: 1) clarified any mistranslation and 2) revealed the sexism in the student's question. It could have led to a larger, more constructive discussion about the need to listen to women's voices in a country where females are being raped with impunity.

Generally speaking, when someone asks an offensive question, one tactic that often works well is to simply ask the person why he/she asked the question. It puts the questioner in the position of having to explain the motive behind asking such an offensive question in the first place.

I give Clinton full credit for boldly laying the smack down when needed. As feminist Laurel Thatcher Ulrich wrote, "Well-behaved women seldom make history." But snapping at a college student seldom helps you as the United States' top diplomat.

Photo: SIMON MAINA/AFP/Getty Images

EXPLORE:AFRICA, HILLARY, WOMEN
 

TIKVA

11:43 PM ET

August 12, 2009

I for one think that the way

I for one think that the way she reacted was EXACTLY the way she should have and I was really proud to see her show a strong reaction to what was (the way it was posed to her) an inherently misogynistic question.
And that is nothing that can or should be treated with grace or humor, in my opinion. It's not a joke and I don't care if the one asking the question was a college student or a politician, for that matter.
It was being disrespectful to her as Secretary of State, to her as a woman and to her as a person and I was glad to see her taking a stand and making her position clear by showing force and power.

 

MODERATEWINGER

8:53 PM ET

August 14, 2009

Frankly

I think this is much ado about nothing. Hillary Clinton speaks for the Obama administration on foreign policy, not Bill Clinton. She could have handled it better, but to me, this is another example of Clinton bashing.

Enough already.

 

Madam Secretary is an obsessive blog about all things Hillary Clinton. From her policies to her pantsuits, Madam Secretary delivers up-to-the-minute news, analysis, and gossip about America's top diplomat.