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Goodbye Molly

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  • Goodbye Molly

    I was soooo sad to hear this today. I posted the article below. We've lost a great columnist.

    AUSTIN, Texas - Best-selling author and columnist Molly Ivins, the sharp-witted liberal who skewered the political establishment and referred to President Bush as “Shrub,” died Wednesday after a long battle with breast cancer. She was 62.

    Ivins died at her home while in hospice care, said David Pasztor, managing editor of the Texas Observer, where Ivins had once been co-editor.

    Ivins made a living poking fun at politicians, whether they were in her home state of Texas or the White House. She revealed in early 2006 that she was being treated for breast cancer for the third time.

    More than 400 newspapers subscribed to her nationally syndicated column, which combined strong liberal views and populist humor. Ivins’ illness did not appear to hurt her ability to deliver biting one-liners.

    “I’m sorry to say (cancer) can kill you, but it doesn’t make you a better person,” she said in an interview with the San Antonio Express-News in September, the same month cancer claimed her friend former Gov. Ann Richards.

    To Ivins, “liberal” wasn’t an insult term. “Even I felt sorry for Richard Nixon when he left; there’s nothing you can do about being born liberal — fish gotta swim and hearts gotta bleed,” she wrote in a column included in her 1998 collection, “You Got to Dance With Them What Brung You.”

    In a column in mid-January, Ivins urged readers to stand up against Bush’s plan to send more troops to Iraq.

    “We are the people who run this country. We are the deciders. And every single day, every single one of us needs to step outside and take some action to help stop this war,” Ivins wrote in the Jan. 11 column. “We need people in the streets, banging pots and pans and demanding, ’Stop it, now!”’

    ‘A Texas original’
    Ivins’ best-selling books included those she co-authored with Lou Dubose about Bush. One was titled “Shrub: The Short but Happy Political Life of George W. Bush” and another was “BUSHWHACKED: Life in George W. Bush’s America.”

    “Molly Ivins was a Texas original,” Bush said in a statement. “I respected her convictions, her passionate belief in the power of words, and her ability to turn a phrase. She fought her illness with that same passion.”

    Dubose, who has been working on a third book with Ivins, said even last week in the hospital, Ivins wanted to talk about the project.

    “She was married to her profession. She lived for the story,” he said.

    Ivins’ jolting satire was directed at people in positions of power.

    “The trouble with blaming powerless people is that although it’s not nearly as scary as blaming the powerful, it does miss the point,” she wrote in a 1997 column. “Poor people do not shut down factories ... Poor people didn’t decide to use ’contract employees’ because they cost less and don’t get any benefits.”

    In an Austin speech last year, former President Clinton described Ivins as someone who was “good when she praised me and who was painfully good when she criticized me.”

    Ivins loved to write about politics and called the Texas Legislature the best free entertainment in Austin.

    “Naturally, when it comes to voting, we in Texas are accustomed to discerning that fine hair’s-breadth worth of difference that makes one hopeless dipstick slightly less awful than the other. But it does raise the question: Why bother?” she wrote in a 2002 column.

    Texas Gov. Rick Perry, whom Ivins had playfully called “Governor Goodhair,” praised Ivins for her wit and insight. “Molly Ivins’ clever and colorful perspectives on people and politics gained her national acclaim and admiration that crossed party lines,” Perry said in a statement.

    Born Mary Tyler Ivins in California, she grew up in Houston. She graduated from Smith College in 1966 and attended Columbia University’s journalism school. She also studied for a year at the Institute of Political Sciences in Paris.

    Her first newspaper job was in the complaint department of the Houston Chronicle. She worked her way up at the Chronicle, then went on to the Minneapolis Tribune, becoming the first woman police reporter in the city.

    Ivins counted as her highest honors the Minneapolis police force’s decision to name its mascot pig after her and her getting banned from the campus of Texas A&M University, according to a biography on the Creators Syndicate Web site.

    ‘Magical in her writing’
    In the late 1960s, according to the syndicate, she was assigned to a beat called “Movements for Social Change” and wrote about “angry blacks, radical students, uppity women and a motley assortment of other misfits and troublemakers.”



    Mussy by birth.....Native by the Grace of God.......



  • #2
    thank you for sharing this,a few thoughts come to my mind one
    well behave women rairly make history /marlyn monro
    two even though i did not know her im proud of her and the alcades shes reciving is well but i think even more she lived her life her truth/ i love the comment that 'you have to dance with those who brung you'.
    im impressed
    Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass..It's about learning to dance in the rain. for me and the wolf

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