Misogyny in media -- why you've never hated Frank Turco
You remember
in 1989 when the sentencing came down in the Leona Helmsley tax fraud case.
Shocked at the wrongdoing, greed and arrogance in the running of her hotel
empire, you cheered when you heard prison time was given. And to this day you
hate… Frank Turco and Joseph Licari.
They were
the two other executives of Helmsley Hotels and related companies who -- before
Helmsley’s own trial – were sentenced to federal prison for tax and mail fraud
and conspiracy, but in fact, you don’t resent them because you’ve never heard
the names Frank Turco or Joseph Licari.
Leona
Helmsley’s level of exposure to the public consciousness couldn’t be more
different: Newsweek magazine’s cover said of the billionaire hotel executive:
“Rhymes With Rich.”
Even though
she was one of three people sent to prison in the matter, her image alone from
that episode is fused into the American consciousness and permanent lore as the
embodiment of selfishness.
And Turco,
Licari and Harry Helmsley (Leona’s husband and the hotel corporation founder)
never had to pass by newsstands all day where they’d see themselves described
as, say, rhyming with “plastered.”
Harry
Helmsley was indicted along with his wife, but he was found incompetent to
stand trial due to cognitive decline.
And remember
how everyone demonized Leona Helmsley’s alleged statement, denied by her but
recounted under oath by a one-time personal maid: “We
don't pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes."
Blame
Ronald Reagan, Milton Freedman, the Ways and Means Committee and a whole
capital full of corporate lobbyists for that – not the messenger who spoke
those highly accurate words.
No
question, Leona Helmsley was an unabashedly greedy person in business and
arrogant at home. It was said in testimony that she once fired an employee
because he entered her bedroom to repair a phone chime, and that Helmsley, just
after her own son’s death at age 40, sued his widow to make her pay to
transport his coffin from Florida to New York.
And
spending $3 million for her own birthday party in Morocco right when millions
were in danger of starvation from a drought on that continent? Nope, that was Malcolm
Forbes who did that in the ‘80s.
Yet
Forbes’ image avoids any universal demonization over that self-centered excess,
despite his admitting at a press conference that regarding the $3 million he
spent, “some of it is a business expense.” If Helmsley had thrown so costly a
party and comfortably acknowledged deducting part of it, everyone would know
and would scowl over it.
And
if she had said that not paying taxes in times of huge deficits “makes
me smart,” average Americans would have rolled their eyes in disgust, but
Donald Trump said that at a 2016 debate when accused of not paying taxes, and
he was shortly elected president.
And
while corporate media such as Newsweek, TV networks and the New York Times
waved a baton to coordinate all our outrage at Helmsley’s “Only the Little
People Pay Taxes” declaration, the fact that her statement reflected reality was barely
dealt with by any of them.
The
intense focus on Leona Helmsley’s awful personal traits revealed in her trial
was an old tactic – give the mass public a villain so they think about that
individual instead of the policies which enabled their evil deeds. Prompting
the people to flail at a persona is a safety valve to relieve the pressure to
actually change an unjust system.
And
when three of the four people indicted the Helmsley Hotels case were men, but
only the woman has her name used as a synonym for heartlessness and greed, the usefulness of sexism to the power structure in maintaining that safety valve is
clear.
Massive
tax cuts for corporations and the rich sailed through under Reagan and George
W. Bush, with lots of Democrats voting for them and media never analyzing how
little people’s sales, occupational and income taxes and road and bridge tolls
go up because of lowering corporate rates. Oh, but how awful the “Queen of
Mean” Leona is.
Recalling
the public sector of that same decade, it is Nancy Reagan who is initially
condemned for a lack of compassion for people who were stricken with AIDS, and
she is the one scoffed at for believing in astrology.
But she
didn’t implement the deliberately slow response to the AIDS crisis – her
elected husband did. And President Ronald Reagan, not just Nancy, heeded the
stars and planets in making many decisions about precise timing of events and
ceremonies, but also possibly about the most important policy matter of all.
The first
revelations of astrology’s influence in the Reagan administration were by an
aggrieved former chief of staff Donald Regan after he was forced to resign
because of Iran-Contra. And contrary to the general perception, Regan did not
accuse Nancy Reagan specifically of using astrology; it was not the
Donald Regan-Nancy Reagan feud of the historical memory.
Don Regan’s 1988
book For the Record said: “Virtually every major move and decision the
Reagans made during my time as White House Chief of Staff was cleared in
advance with a woman in San Francisco who drew up horoscopes to make certain
that the planets were in a favorable alignment for the enterprise.”
Notice he
said, “the Reagans,” not the First Lady. The real story is a U.S. President’s
reliance on astrology, yet when people bring up that issue, it’s almost always
hinging on Nancy Reagan.
Journalist
Allen McDuffee on Timeline dot com quotes San
Francisco astrologer Joan Quigley in her memoirs as saying: “I was
responsible for timing all press conferences, most speeches, the State of the
Union addresses, the takeoffs and landings of Air Force One. I picked the time
of Ronald Reagan’s debate with Carter and the two debates with Walter Mondale;
all extended trips abroad as well as the shorter trips and one-day excursions.”
McDuffee
said Quigley even boasted of having a role in persuading the staunchly
anti-Soviet Ronald Reagan to change his stance and negotiate with USSR president Mikhail Gorbachev over arms reductions.
Quigley’s
statements, like Donald Regan’s, never focus on Nancy Reagan. Yet today’s right
wing spin artists need a sanitized image of Ronald Reagan to line up their
constituencies in political battles. So, just as with shifting the blame for a
regressive tax code to a Leona Helmsley who did not create it, on the matter of
presidential astrology a woman will do nicely as the repository of public
scorn.
The left can
fall for this. I’ve sometimes heard LGBT activists condemn Nancy’s leadership in stymying the
national effort in the ‘80s to stop AIDS.
I imagine I
as well have focused disproportionately on Nancy Reagan, instead of the Reagan Administration
in discussing that issue. The tendency to go along unconsciously with the false
genderizing of an outrage is a subtle but powerful effect of that patriarchy
machine we need to – rhymes with rich – off.
Brian Arbenz lives in Louisville, Ky. USA.
Same as it ever was...
ReplyDeleteSo much of the national feeling against Leona Helmsley resulted from the prosecution's long parade of witnesses, almost of whom accused her of nothing illegal, just petty and arrogant. Had it been Harry Helmsley on trial instead of her, would we have heard every ex-employee of his settling scores by testifying about non-crimes? Or, if we did, would the public have stuck it all onto him the way they did onto her? Would the prosecution have focused on his crimes, not his character?
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