Wednesday, November 14, 2007

One Anti-Bush Sign and Dixie Chicks Brouhaha Revisited in Bridge World


Why is this controversial? According to the New York Times, one little hastily scrawled anti-Bush sign has created a global uproar. But check out the response from France. Goddess love them, the French didn't give us Simone de Beauvoir for no reason.

Anti-Bush Sign Has Bridge World in an Uproar:


In the genteel world of bridge, disputes are usually handled quietly and rarely involve issues of national policy. But in a fight reminiscent of the brouhaha over an anti-Bush statement by Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks in 2003, a team of women who represented the United States at the world bridge championships in Shanghai last month is facing sanctions, including a yearlong ban from competition, for a spur-of-the-moment protest.

At issue is a crudely lettered sign, scribbled on the back of a menu, that was held up at an awards dinner and read, “We did not vote for Bush.”

By e-mail, angry bridge players have accused the women of “treason” and “sedition.” . . . The controversy has gone global, with the French team offering support for its American counterparts.

“By trying to address these issues in a nonviolent, nonthreatening and lighthearted manner,” the French team wrote in by e-mail to the federation’s board and others, “you were doing only what women of the world have always tried to do when opposing the folly of men who have lost their perspective of reality.”