Historical Racist and Sexist Augusta National Admits Condoleezza Rice

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source: USA Today

Augusta National admits two women, including Condoleezza Rice

After more than three quarters of a century, women will be included on the membership rolls of Augusta National Golf Club, one of the most exclusive clubs in the world and the host of the Masters.

Augusta National Chairman Billy Payne announced Monday that former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and business executive Darla Moore will be the first female members of the club.


The news was first reported by the Associated Press.
"This is a joyous occasion as we enthusiastically welcome Secretary Condoleezza Rice and Darla Moore as members of Augusta National Golf Club," Payne said in a statement. "We are fortunate to consider many qualified candidates for membership at Augusta National. Consideration with regard to any candidate is deliberate, held in strict confidence and always takes place over an extended period of time. The process for Condoleezza and Darla was no different.

"These accomplished women share our passion for the game of golf and both are well known and respected by our membership. It will be a proud moment when we present Condoleezza and Darla their Green Jackets when the Club opens this fall.

"This is a significant and positive time in our Club's history and, on behalf of our membership, I wanted to take this opportunity to welcome them and all of our new members into the Augusta National family."

Rice, 57, was the national security adviser under former President George W. Bush and became secretary of state in his second term. The first black woman to be a Stanford provost in 1993, she now is a professor of political economy at Stanford's Graduate School of Business.

"I am delighted and honored to be a member of Augusta National Golf Club," she said. "I have visited Augusta National on several occasions and look forward to playing golf, renewing friendships and forming new ones through this very special opportunity.

"I have long admired the important role Augusta National has played in the traditions and history of golf. I also have immense respect for the Masters Tournament and its commitment to grow the game of golf, particularly with youth, here in the United States and throughout the world."

Moore, 58, is vice president of Rainwater, Inc., a private investment company, and founder and chair of the Palmetto Institute, a nonprofit think tank aimed at bolstering per capita income in South Carolina. She also is the founder and chair of The Charleston Parks Conservancy, a foundation focused on enhancing the parks and public spaces of Charleston, S.C.

The business school at the University of South Carolina is named in honor of Moore.

"Augusta National has always captured my imagination, and is one of the most magically beautiful places anywhere in the world, as everyone gets to see during the Masters each April," Moore said. "I am fortunate to have many friends who are members at Augusta National, so to be asked to join them as a member represents a very happy and important occasion in my life.

"Above all, Augusta National and the Masters Tournaments have always stood for excellence, and that is what is so important to me."

Augusta National, which opened in December 1932 and did not have a black member until 1990, is believed to have about 300 members. While the club until now had no female members, women were allowed to play the golf course as guests, including on the Sunday before the Masters week began in April.

"The PGA TOUR commends Augusta National Golf Club on the news that it has invited Condolezza Rice and Darla Moore to become its first women members," PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem said in a statement. "At a time when women represent one of the fastest growing segments in both playing and following the game of golf, this sends a positive and inclusive message for our sport."

Monday's announcement marked a significant departure for Augusta National, which had always declined comment about membership issues. Most recently in April, when Payne was questioned at length about the lack of female members in his annual news conference the day before the Masters.

The most recent debate was sparked because one of the Masters' sponsors, IBM, had recently promoted Virginia "Ginni" Rometty as its first female CEO, and Augusta National traditionally had offered memberships to the CEO of IBM.

Payne deflected the questions with the statement, "Once again, that deals with a membership issue, and I'm not going to answer it."

Monday's announcement also comes 10 years after activist Martha Burk of the National Council of Women's Organizations sent a letter to Hootie Johnson, Payne's predecessor as chairman, about admission of female members.

Johnson responded that Augusta would not be forced to change its policies "at the point of a bayonet."

Johnson pulled television advertising for the broadcast to spare Masters sponsors unwanted attention.
 
It looks like Condoleeza Rice got another official coon card.

Indeed!
Condi likes crusty old white men


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Condi is such a good slave.
Damn, she really “knows her place”.
She is extremely skilled at being subservient to old white men .
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Bedgate: Rice On Floor, Straw In Bed</font>

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Condi Rice & Jack Straw
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http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/43606/Condi-Hop-into-my-bed.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2006/apr/03/usa.iraq
http://www.aljazeera.com/archive/2006/04/200849154455457832.html


Tuesday, April 04, 2006

LONDON: US SECRETARY of State Condoleezza Rice gave up her BED on a trip to Iraq so Jack Straw could get some sleep.

The Foreign Secretary got his head down on a fold-out bunk while Condi — dubbed the world’s most powerful woman and tipped as a future President — had to make do with the floor.

Stewardesses on the special Boeing 757, Air Force Two had to step around her as she tried to sleep.

Meanwhile, Mr Straw had retired to Dr Rice’s specially-equipped cabin. It has a bed, desk and meeting area.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: “We are more interested in foreign policy than which bed he slept in.”

The pair were heading to Iraq for a surprise visit as part of a tour by Dr Rice — which also included a trip to Mr Straw’s Blackburn constituency.

They took Dr Rice’s plane from Liverpool to Kuwait before switching to a US military aircraft for the final leg to Baghdad.

Mr Straw was expecting a gruelling visit and needed the extra sleep.

The two are very close and decided rather than visit Iraq separately in the next few weeks, to go on a joint lightning two-day trip.

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Condi Rice's Membership at Augusta National Is Nothing to Celebrate


by Dave Zirin

August 20, 2012


http://www.thenation.com/blog/169475/condi-rices-membership-augusta-national-nothing-celebrate

<br>In a week where the phrase &ldquo;legitimate rape&rdquo; became part of the American political discourse, it&rsquo;s understandable that anyone who believes in women&rsquo;s liberation would be scavenging for some good news. Like a parched soul in the desert, many believe that a trickle of water, if not an oasis, has appeared. After eighty years of antediluvian sexism, the Augusta National Golf Club, site of the Masters, has finally decided to admit women into its ranks. All hail the trailblazers: President George W. Bush&rsquo;s national security adviser and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and South Carolina billionaire banking executive Darla Moore.
<br>As Christine Brennan of <em>USA Today</em> wrote, &ldquo;Today, one of the last bastions of male supremacy is no more. Today, Augusta National has made a crucial statement to every girl and woman who has thought about picking up a golf club. The message is simple: You are welcome.&rdquo;
<br>Her joy is certainly understandable. This is a club where as recently as 2002, after a series of protests, then–club President Hootie Johnson said that Augusta National would admit women on their own schedule and not &ldquo;at the point of a bayonet.&rdquo; The woman who led those protests, Martha Burk, received dozens of death threats. Today she was on ESPN radio saying simply that &ldquo;the women&rsquo;s movements, the U.S. women&rsquo;s groups and individual women who have been pushing for change for 50 years, yeah, we won.&rdquo;
<br>PGA tour President Tim Finchem, who was frightened to raise a whisper of criticism against Augusta National, today tried to get some of the glow, saying, &ldquo;At a time when women represent one of the fastest growing segments in both playing and following the game of golf, this sends a positive and inclusive message for our sport.&rdquo;
<br>And yet, please forgive me if I don&rsquo;t join the chorus of cheers. Rice and Moore are not twenty-first-century Jackie Robinsons, and their acceptance into this bastion of exclusion has nothing to do with women&rsquo;s liberation and is utterly disconnected from the reality of daily life for millions of American women.
<br>Condi Rice as a symbol of female power? Only if by power, we mean the power to put thousands of Iraqi women in graves all in the name of a war based on lies that she actively promoted.
<br>Then there are the birth defects suffered by the children of women in Iraq. In 2009, the <em>Guardian</em> reported that doctors in Fallujah were were &ldquo;dealing with up to 15 times as many chronic deformities in infants, compared to a year ago, and a spike in early life cancers that may be linked to toxic materials left over from the fighting.&rdquo;
<br>A hospital spokesman, Nadim al-Hadidi, told the Inter Press Service, &ldquo;In 2004 the Americans tested all kinds of chemicals and explosive devices on us: thermobaric weapons, white phosphorous, depleted uranium…. we have all been laboratory mice for them.&rdquo;
<br>There were also, under Rice&rsquo;s watch, 19,000 reported sexual assaults of women combat troops in the the US Armed Forces every single year. As <em>the Guardian </em>reported, &ldquo;A female solider in Iraq is more likely to be attacked by a fellow soldier than killed by military fire.&rdquo;
<br>In an eerie echo of the Representative Akin controversy, these women, if impregnated during their assault, could not get an abortion on a US military base. Rice, who claims to be pro-choice, <em>never</em> raised a voice on behalf of these women.
<br>In a sane world, Rice would be awaiting trial at the Hague. Instead, she gets to play golf at a club that, incidentally, didn&rsquo;t allow African-Americans until 1990.
<br>As for Darla Moore, she is a banking billionaire who lives on a South Carolina plantation that&rsquo;s been in her family for seven generations. She is a longtime friend of the Bush family as well as of the aforementioned Hootie Johnson. Ten years ago, when asked about becoming the club&rsquo;s first female member, she said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m as progressive as they come. But some things ought not to be messed with.&rdquo;
<br>I&rsquo;m sure it&rsquo;s tempting to look at today as an advance for women in sports. But it&rsquo;s very difficult to think that today&rsquo;s national celebration of a multi-billionaire and a war criminal has anything to do with women&rsquo;s liberation. If anything, this should only be a story because it&rsquo;s so unbelievable that the membership of the Augusta National Golf Club still opposed the presence of women in 2012. The only way this club could be any kind of symbol of progress and justice is if the people of Augusta, Georgia, a whopping 32 percent of whom live below the US poverty line, took to the eighteenth green and occupied the Masters. Let&rsquo;s see whose side Condi Rice and Darla Moore would be on then.


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