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#31
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Reminds me of Hillary's comment from the early White House times that the only way she could get in the newspaper was to change her hair style. Please. I was about to eat breakfast... Sorry I apparently hit your anti-Clinton reflex. The point is, no matter the level of accomplishment, women are judged largely by their appearance. |
#32
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![]() "Dave Butler" wrote in message news:1108566704.572762@sj-nntpcache-5... Jay Honeck wrote: Reminds me of Hillary's comment from the early White House times that the only way she could get in the newspaper was to change her hair style. Please. I was about to eat breakfast... Sorry I apparently hit your anti-Clinton reflex. The point is, no matter the level of accomplishment, women are judged largely by their appearance. You've got to be kidding! That's not true at all in the professional world. It's just true for the Hollywood set. I can think of many women, tops in their fields of science, medicine, electronics, aerospace..you name it, who I can guarantee did not reach their pinnacles with their looks. I know one woman in particular, a friend of mine; a Navy Commander flying F18's who would be right at home on the cover of Playboy however. If I suggested to her what you have said here, I'm sure she would laugh like hell! Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/CFI Retired for private email; make necessary changes between ( ) dhenriques(at)(delete all this)earthlink(dot)net |
#33
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![]() W P Dixon wrote: But of course my Dad says I like to trade wives in when they hit 25. ![]() Friend of mine is an electrician. His wife just turned 40. He joked about trading her in on two 20 year olds. She told him "Honey, you ain't wired for 220." George Patterson He who would distinguish what is true from what is false must have an adequate understanding of truth and falsehood. |
#34
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
"Dave Butler" wrote in message Sorry I apparently hit your anti-Clinton reflex. The point is, no matter the level of accomplishment, women are judged largely by their appearance. You've got to be kidding! That's not true at all in the professional world. It's just true for the Hollywood set. I can think of many women, tops in their fields of science, medicine, electronics, aerospace..you name it, who I can guarantee did not reach their pinnacles with their looks. I know one woman in particular, a friend of mine; a Navy Commander flying F18's who would be right at home on the cover of Playboy however. If I suggested to her what you have said here, I'm sure she would laugh like hell! Nope. Not kidding. Do you suppose a discussion about, say, Sean D. Tucker would have evoked a comment about hair color? |
#35
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Dave Butler wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote: "Dave Butler" wrote in message Sorry I apparently hit your anti-Clinton reflex. The point is, no matter the level of accomplishment, women are judged largely by their appearance. You've got to be kidding! That's not true at all in the professional world. It's just true for the Hollywood set. I can think of many women, tops in their fields of science, medicine, electronics, aerospace..you name it, who I can guarantee did not reach their pinnacles with their looks. I know one woman in particular, a friend of mine; a Navy Commander flying F18's who would be right at home on the cover of Playboy however. If I suggested to her what you have said here, I'm sure she would laugh like hell! Nope. Not kidding. Do you suppose a discussion about, say, Sean D. Tucker would have evoked a comment about hair color? Not in a discussion primarily among men. But to use a comment about hair color to support a claim that "women are judged largely by their appearance" is quite a leap. Look at the substantive comments about Ms. Wagstaff in this thread. Comments by guys pretending that they are in a high school locker room are pretty clearly said in a light vein (at least that is how I read them) not as a judgment of Wagstaff. (P.S., I liked the brown hair better, too, but that is in no way a judgment about her as a pilot or as a person!) -- Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently. |
#36
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Hee Hee,
That's funny! A good sense of humor is a requirement. Goodness knows I like to laugh and cut up. Patrick "George Patterson" wrote in message ... W P Dixon wrote: But of course my Dad says I like to trade wives in when they hit 25. ![]() Friend of mine is an electrician. His wife just turned 40. He joked about trading her in on two 20 year olds. She told him "Honey, you ain't wired for 220." George Patterson He who would distinguish what is true from what is false must have an adequate understanding of truth and falsehood. |
#37
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Dave Butler wrote:
Yea, but I still liked her dark hair 1,000% more than her blond hair. I wonder how many others feel the same. Reminds me of Hillary's comment from the early White House times that the only way she could get in the newspaper was to change her hair style. Your quite correct, the mainstream media gave infinitely better coverage to Hillary's hair style than her conviction of violation of federal open meeting laws, ducking records subpoenas, insider trading, swapping pardons for votes in NY, etc... Nevertheless, Ms. Wagstaff's dark hair was, IMHO, a much better compliment to her fantastic flying ability. |
#38
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![]() "Dave Butler" wrote in message news:1108570946.960251@sj-nntpcache-5... Dudley Henriques wrote: "Dave Butler" wrote in message Sorry I apparently hit your anti-Clinton reflex. The point is, no matter the level of accomplishment, women are judged largely by their appearance. You've got to be kidding! That's not true at all in the professional world. It's just true for the Hollywood set. I can think of many women, tops in their fields of science, medicine, electronics, aerospace..you name it, who I can guarantee did not reach their pinnacles with their looks. I know one woman in particular, a friend of mine; a Navy Commander flying F18's who would be right at home on the cover of Playboy however. If I suggested to her what you have said here, I'm sure she would laugh like hell! Nope. Not kidding. Do you suppose a discussion about, say, Sean D. Tucker would have evoked a comment about hair color? Thank you. You have made my point perfectly. The people commenting on, or even discussing Ms. Wagstaff's hair color, although nice enough people, are in no way even remotely qualified to enhance her career, or even to judge the quality of her expertise. Those of us who CAN make these judgments, including Sean Tucker and myself, could care less what color her hair is. I can assure you that if you approached Sean Tucker and asked about Patty Wagstaff, her hair color would be the last thing mentioned. My point is that people who are concerned with things like looks and hair color are not the people who make and break careers in the professional world. That is not to say that a woman with Patty Wagstaff's professional talents would not use a little "good looks" to appeal to that other market. In fact, that is exactly what she does do..........she already has the total respect of her professional peers. All Patty is doing is AFTER achieving this respect through skill and talent, using all her available tools to market herself to the people you are talking about........the ones that make up her market base......her CUSTOMERS.......not her peers!! :-)) HUGE difference!!!! Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/CFI Retired for private email; make necessary changes between ( ) dhenriques(at)(delete all this)earthlink(dot)net |
#39
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Tempest in a teapot...
This is no dichotomy in a woman being the president of IBM AND giving the best blow job in town. Eye candy doesn't hurt, but how many HP stockholders even knew what Carly Fiorina looked like. She lost her job because she didn't perform, even though she is still quite beautiful. "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ink.net... "Dave Butler" wrote in message news:1108566704.572762@sj-nntpcache-5... Jay Honeck wrote: Reminds me of Hillary's comment from the early White House times that the only way she could get in the newspaper was to change her hair style. Please. I was about to eat breakfast... Sorry I apparently hit your anti-Clinton reflex. The point is, no matter the level of accomplishment, women are judged largely by their appearance. You've got to be kidding! That's not true at all in the professional world. It's just true for the Hollywood set. I can think of many women, tops in their fields of science, medicine, electronics, aerospace..you name it, who I can guarantee did not reach their pinnacles with their looks. I know one woman in particular, a friend of mine; a Navy Commander flying F18's who would be right at home on the cover of Playboy however. If I suggested to her what you have said here, I'm sure she would laugh like hell! Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/CFI Retired for private email; make necessary changes between ( ) dhenriques(at)(delete all this)earthlink(dot)net |
#40
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
"Dave Butler" wrote in message Nope. Not kidding. Do you suppose a discussion about, say, Sean D. Tucker would have evoked a comment about hair color? Thank you. You have made my point perfectly. The people commenting on, or even discussing Ms. Wagstaff's hair color, although nice enough people, are in no way even remotely qualified to enhance her career, or even to judge the quality of her expertise. Those of us who CAN make these judgments, including Sean Tucker and myself, could care less what color her hair is. I can assure you that if you approached Sean Tucker and asked about Patty Wagstaff, her hair color would be the last thing mentioned. My point is that people who are concerned with things like looks and hair color are not the people who make and break careers in the professional world. That is not to say that a woman with Patty Wagstaff's professional talents would not use a little "good looks" to appeal to that other market. In fact, that is exactly what she does do..........she already has the total respect of her professional peers. All Patty is doing is AFTER achieving this respect through skill and talent, using all her available tools to market herself to the people you are talking about........the ones that make up her market base......her CUSTOMERS.......not her peers!! :-)) HUGE difference!!!! Dudley, I agree substantially with your comments, except for "...people who are concerned with things like looks and hair color are not the people who make and break careers in the professional world." I don't think "people who make and break..." are substantially different from the general population. I'm pleased to learn of your personal indifference to such matters. |
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