Frances Laughton was a beautiful woman. She had been a beautiful, adorable child, a stunning runway-ready adolescent, and a promising starlet in college. She had been fawned over, admired, chased, and desired for as long as she could remember. Such was her remarkable beauty that no one ever bothered to look past it and and inquire about her intelligence, moral code, perceptiveness, or creativity. She loved the attention as a little girl, but as she got older it rankled. She was nothing more than a gussied up doll, and that had to change.
For a while she flirted with a femme fatale persona. Her beauty, her sexual allure, and her feminine irresistibility had men wrapped around her little finger, and with that mystical power she knew she could really go places, do things, be somebody. Beauty greased the wheels of power.
Yet she was always bothered by the fact that if getting ahead in the world was nothing more than trading on genetics - she had done nothing to get or deserve her good fortune - then success was worthless as far as social justice, honor, or moral rectitude were concerned. For true personal integrity and to be a model for right action, the irrelevancies of God-given gifts must be dismissed and removed.
At Brown she had tried to become part of Students For Democratic Action, an influential campus group that took its inspiration from SDS, a radical student organization of the Sixties, strong enough to engineer the takeover of Columbia University, energize the civil rights movement, and influence the outcome of the war in Vietnam. SDS members were outspoken and never shy about the use of violent measures to promote progressive causes.
Brown's SDA was a far cry from its militant forbears, but it still cause enough of a ruckus to force the administration to at least consider a quota of twenty-five percent gay, lesbian, and transgender faculty and to double the admission rate for minority students.
Consider they did, but not much came of the hoopla. Brown, not among the elite of the Ivy League but still an influential junior partner, had enough wealthy alumni to reject any such politically-driven, idealistic, and ultimately nonsensical moves which would further erode the academic integrity of the university and tarnish the reputation of its founder.
Outcomes never matter to idealists who are in it for the ride, the identity, and the self-awareness; so campus activism was just as meaningful as if it actually produced results; and Frances tried to join in. She not only thought that it would be a way for her to challenge those who underestimated her while promoting an important political agenda.
Yet, such a wish was clearly impossible. She was treated as someone special rather than an integral part of a group. No woman on campus came anywhere near her stunning beauty. She was truly one of a kind, a unique combination of classical physical perfection and a nubile, languorous sexual allure. She was tall, naturally graceful, with an inbred, untutored elegance. As such she was treated as the goddess that she was.
Everyone knew that they were in the presence of a generational beauty - or even more, since her symmetry, litheness, and female presence hearkened back to ancient Greece and Rome. She was Venus, Aphrodite, Helen every Roman copy, and the most beautiful women painted by Leonardo and Botticelli.
No one was interested in her inner self, and why should they be? They were in the presence of a miracle; and so it was that Frances, from the beginning a deeply serious, committed, and intelligent woman took the first step of redemption. She would changer her appearance and become indistinguishable from the women of The Movement as unappealing as they were.
Progressivism in its embrace of serious things, rejects anything that smacks of the false, the superficial, the nonessential. The use of cosmetics is tantamount to treason, both a disregard for the existential nature of the progressive cause and giving in to the predatory, misogynist male. The more a woman can resemble her Paleolithic forbears and become a natural woman linked to nature and the environmental forces around her, the better.
One woman, Frances thought, did look like the throwback so often limned as the progressive model - prognathous jaw, prominent forehead, narrow-set eyes - and indeed she was the leader of the campus activists, chosen to lead demonstrations, to speak at forums, and to be the image of university progressivism.
'Brutal', Frances thought; but the woman had what Frances wanted - belonging to a group that mattered and being taken for the responsible, dedicated, committed woman that she was. And so it was that she began her transformation from magnificently beautiful starlet to fiercely ugly partisan. She would not - could not - go so far as to regress ten million years, but she would at least alter her looks enough to conform to those of the group.
The transformation of course had to be gradual. It couldn't be a sudden as a nose job, going away for the summer with a beak and coming back cute and pert. No, the change would have to be progressive - tweaking and coloring of her hair, tattoos, studs, and rings, a dismal look, bad posture, and a sobering, snarly attitude. By the time she was finished, her classmates would have forgotten how she first came on campus, would anoint her as one of theirs, and her future of mission, identity, and political integrity would begin.
As much as she felt at home now that her 'inner self' had been exposed, seen, and appreciated, she felt out of place and irritable. These ugly women and skanky, brutally sexless men and the environment they enabled were miserable. She preferred the company of the best and the brightest, the most beautiful, charming, and desirable. She loved being a starlet, a prima ballerina, a goddess.
She graduated with honors, said goodbye to her classmates and fellows activists, and headed to Washington to take up a position and Scientists for Social Responsibility, a nonprofit which focused on the environment and climate change, but dabbled in black causes and lesbianism as well.
It was more of the same - the tedium of good causes, serious and fractiously ugly people, and the depressing, burrowing environment of gloom. Why progressives had to be ugly, think ugly, and worry ugly was beyond her; but she had cast her lot among them for personal reasons, flying her inner flag, and she was not ready to take it down.
As chance and circumstance would have it, she happened to be walking on Pennsylvania Avenue past the White House and saw one attractive, young blonde woman and stage-handsome men after another walk up the drive to the West Wing. They had nothing like the stunning beauty of her former incarnation but at least were a welcome change from the dour, misshapen lot she worked with.
Not quite an epiphany but an eye-opener. Conservatives take things on face value and easily fit them into a clearly defined, neatly organized policy matrix. There is no need to probe and parse when it comes to small government, a muscular foreign policy and traditional social values. One can be beautiful and still be taken seriously. No dredging up of muck, no hand-wringing, no tears and flapdoodle necessary.
Although it took a while to make the elision from stunningly beautiful woman to sloppy, bangingly unattractive progressive, it took only a morning to put back the pieces. She emerged on Tuesday looking like what God had intended her to be. She flashed a smile at Scientists for Social Responsibility, said her goodbyes, and contacted her Republican Congressman in the hopes of moving quickly across the aisle into more congenial territory.
The Congressman like all men was bowled over by her beauty, charm and sexual allure. Anything she wanted was hers, and so she took it, and back in her element was adored, admired, and desired.
Her inner self? Well, that wasn't much to write home about in the first place, so it mattered even less here, whatever it was. She moved about as though she were born for the job, used her native skills and remarkable genetic gift to her advantage and that of the Party, and could never have been happier.
Superficial? False promise? Ignorant idolatry? Nonsense. Beauty is as beauty does, beauty rules, and she was enjoying every minute.






