Meet the Miss USA winner, Rima Fakih

Last night the Miss USA pageant crowned Rima Fakih the winner.  This is interesting for three reasons:  A)  Fakih is an Arab-American; B)  Fakih's performance in the pageant was a bit underwhelming; and C)  Fakih's victory has triggered a big blog controversy

On the underwhelming performance

In a moment that was replayed during the broadcast, Fakih nearly fell while finishing her walk in her gown because of the length of its train. But she made it without a spill and went on to win....

During the interview portion, Fakih was asked whether she thought birth control should be paid for by health insurance, and she said she believed it should because it's costly.

"I believe that birth control is just like every other medication even though it's a controlled substance," Fakih said.

This prompted Michelle Malkin to argue that the politically correct fix was in

Imagine if those words had come out of the mouth of Carrie Prejean or Sarah Palin.

Between the NYTimes, MSNBC, Jon Stewart, and the late night talkers, we wouldn’t hear the end of it....

Fakih’s cheerleaders are too busy tooting the identity politics horn to care what comes out of her mouth.

Daniel Pipes goes further -- he thinks this is part of a disturbing macrotrend in Western society: 

[Fakih's victory] prompts me to recall some prior instances of Muslim women winning beauty contests in Western countries.

Juliette Boubaaya, 19, was Mlle Picardie in 2009.

Nora Ali was America's Junior Miss in 2007.

Hammasa Kohistani, 19, was Miss England in 2006.

Sarah Mendly, 23, was Miss Nottingham in 2005.

They are all attractive, but this surprising frequency of Muslims winning beauty pageants makes me suspect an odd form of affirmative action.

This has prompted some howls of derision from the liberal side of the political blogosphere, which has in turn provoked counter-howls from the right

Clearly, this is the kind of all-consuming, must-respond debate that your humble blogger has no choice but to work through.

In the interest of being useful to college juniors no doubt pondering a good topic for a senior IR thesis, let's propose three topics that could come from this kerfuffle: 

1)  Has political correctness gotten to beauty pageants?  This is Pipes' and Malkin's thesis.  Malkin at least has an empirical toehold in observing that right-wing contestants might be treated differently than left-wing ones.  Fakih is no former Miss South Carolina --  but if the AP story picked up the contrast between her performance and her victory, well, that justifies some further inquiry. 

Pipes' assertion, however, is just horses**t.  He manages to dredge up the names of five Arab/Muslim women in the span of five years to suggest affirmative action.  Let's be ultraconservative and assume that there are a combined 100 pageants a year in the countries of concern to Pipes.  That means that out of 500 possible contest winners, a whopping 1% of them are Arab and/or Muslim in countries far lower than the percentage of Arab/Muslim populations living in these countries.  That's nothing close to resembling affirmative action. 

2)  How do Arab Muslim beauty pageant contestants define their identity?  Liberty Pundit interprets the issue this way:  "She’s in America. She’s doing what beautiful American girls do. She’s acting Western."  Is this assertion true?  I would anticipate that in-depth interviews of the contestants would be required -- as well as a control sample of non-Muslim contestants to ensure a sufficiently divergent set of cases. 

3)  Is what's good for the pageant good for the winner?   Jonathan Turley notes the recent injection of politics into the pageant interviews: 

As with the Prejean controversy, it continues to amaze me that people inject politics (and frankly substance) in this beauty contest. Usually it is an effort to elevate the competition but at times it is an effort to paint the contestants in a darker light.

Actually, if it's intentional, the injection of politics is pretty clever gambit by the pageant owner, Donald Trump.  After all, political controversy catches the attention of people who otherwise would watch beauty pageants as a guilty pleasure but deny it at a Senate confirmation hearing not watch bueaty pageants.   The Miss America beauty pageant, for example, has suffered declining ratings for years.  If politics livens up the buzz factor for these things, the organizers would be fools not to ask third rail questions on issues like immigration. 

Of course, what's good for the pageant might be bad for the winner.  In theory, Miss USA, like other celebrities, should be able to use their star power to promote their own charities and causes.  However, as I noted here, political controversy is guaranteed to tarnish their luster and reduce their ability to appeal across the political spectrum.  Miss USA winner has some charitable alliances -- but political controversies can harm the star power of the winner. 

I look forward to reading the papers that answer these questions. 

 
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IANUS

5:54 AM ET

May 18, 2010

As I was reading the post

As I was reading the post (irrespective whether this is a case of affirmative action or not), I could not help thinking on the ways in which the fact that an Arab-American woman was crowned the winner of Miss America would feed in the Salafi jihadist discourse as one more piece of propaganda for radicalization purposes.

Moreover, in the context of the current European debates on whether to ban the veil/burka or not, too much emphasis on the fact that Fakih is Arab-American & on the affirmative action issue, is likely to end up feeding into the jihadist propaganda in ways no normal person would have initially intended or anticipated: i.e."while in Europe our Muslim brothers and sisters are struggling for their rights and to defend the modesty of our sisters, in America things have gone way too far and they ended up perverting our own sisters." Also, this sort of propaganda is likely to make the more religiously inclined European Muslims fight more against the ban on the veil at the instigation of the fundamentalist or jihadi voices presenting things in a distorted manner ("see where your sister or wife could end up? walking in bikini in public! so, go and do whatever it takes to defend the veil!").

I really hope that there was no affirmative action involved in the pageant, because if it was, it was a very dumb one which is likely to end up being translated in more radicalization propaganda along the lines of one more Western conspiracy against the Muslim world, one more offense brought to Islam and its principles, so on and so forth...

 

SONGSHU

7:48 AM ET

May 18, 2010

having no criteria

on which to judge the pageant except the picture heading the blogger's post, I feel confident there could not have been a thoroughly, unequivocally more beautiful contestant than this woman. good grief

 

KIESELGUHR KID

12:26 PM ET

May 18, 2010

Good grief.

If, given the opportunity to shriek hysterically about the presence of Muslims in her sight, Malkin has an "empirical toehold," it's just coincidence. But Pipes -- Pipes is still more nuts than you imply. I mean, Britain is -- and you'd think Pipes of all people would know this, as he likes to point fearfully at it -- a country with a substantial South Asian population not just in general but in the educated and skilled classes that (presumably) produce beuaty pageant debutantes. In France you have something similar although the Arab population is less culturally elite than the Brit Pakistani one (and, Pipes' intellectual cred takes a big hit every time he blends those two populations). So, well, duh. He has two interesing data points in America and as you point out they aren't real real interesting.

Furthermore, as Americans get browner, which they are for reasons beyond Malkin shrieking about Muslims, standards of beauty will change and, yeah, expect judges to pick more Arabs and Latinas and so on and fewer blond, blue-eyed types than they have in past (though, who knows, the latter may still dominate -- but there'll be fewer of 'em). This will cause the usual suspects at NRO to tremble and tell us we're conciliating Arabs.

Lastly, one worries about "affirmative action," when one does, because it is worrisome to favor unqualified candidates for a position over substantially better qualified ones. It's not obvious to me that the exacting high-complexity tasks facing Miss America demand skills in which the current winner is noticeably deficient. Certainly it seems to me from the provided diagram -- and of course this is the rare case where analysis might benefit from, you know, a PowerPoint presenting the case more rigorously -- that the selectee would fare well if the general public were polled on the standard "I'd certainly do her" metric.

 

BOOKFISHER

3:02 PM ET

May 18, 2010

Pretty girl -

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80 percent of the girls in the American pageants looks like they came from the same inbreed fjord in upper Norway, they give bland answers on bland questions and have all an slightly unnatural build. Of course a brown muslim girl will win occasionally to break the monotonicity.

Btw don´t conservatives always yell "worrisome trend" when more than one break the proverbial glass celling

 

COUNTCHOCULA1011

3:42 PM ET

May 18, 2010

An example of moderate Islam?

The only thing related to this pageant that has been particularly irksome to me is the suggestion by many that, by participating in a beauty pageant in which she completely violates a fundemental aspectof the religion (modesty), she has demonstrated herself to be a "moderate" Muslim. This isn't an example of "moderate" Islam; it's an example of "unIslamic" behaivor. It just goes to show that the only way a Muslim will be celebrated within US society nowadays is if they cast off their religious principles.

I also have to question whether or not she really is a Muslim. She has a picture of Jesus (saw) in her house, she attended Catholic school, and she celebrates Christmas. That doesn't sound like a Muslim to me.

 

IAN

3:45 PM ET

May 18, 2010

Its a no win situation

If she wins, its old-school "affirmative action". If she loses, its racism and discrimination. Its the old question of two people with the same credentials asking for the same job, one's white and the other is a minority, who gets the job? Either way, its racism/discrimination/"affirmative action". You can't win. Someone, somewhere will trump the race/discrimination card to prove that their idea of whatever is happening is actually happening.

I honestly believe that people who raise the race question on things like that are the same one that perpetuate the racism problems simply because they take EVERY little thing and blow it out of proportion. Yes, racism exists, and hell ya, its a bad thing and should be stamped out, but seriously, people, take action on the real cases, not every little thing that just normally happens. Just beacuse the minority didn't get said job/position/whatever doesn't automatically make it discriminatory.

And finally, she is smoking gorgeous, so obviously deserved to win the crown anyway. Its nice to see a non-white winner...

Wait, am I being racist/discriminatory now? Sound the trumpets, call the police, get me to jail, I'm a white supremicist! Except I'm voting for the Arab-American... Wait, I'm discriminating against white women because I'm working too hard to get other races on the stage! I'm too affirmative action, wrecking the pageant in my overzealous effort to promote diversity!

Either way, you're screwed. It just depends on whose yelling at you.

 

JACOB BLUES

4:01 PM ET

May 18, 2010

OK, I can understand this being a topic of note

In either the NY Daily News or the NY Post (and it is). But that's mainly for the 'cheesecake' aspect of the topic (women in bikinis, women in short shorts and bikini's pole dancing.
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Honestly, beyond that aspect, and despite what self-inflated sense of worth "The Donald" has placed on this - event? competition? grown up version of an M-TV Spring Break contest?, what possible connection would it have to foreign policy issues.
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I mean really, either you guys are hurting for eyeballs on the internet scorecard, or the quality of the already dubious content has just sunk another notch. At the rate this is going I wouldn't be surprised to see Steve Walt try to finnagle a way on to the judges panel, just so he can provide a "realist" perspective.
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The reality, thankfully, is that there are many attractive women in the world who have no problems flaunting it. But beyond the 10th grade mentality of us guys who are the target audiance, really, is pushing things regardless of the 'blogging chatter'.

I mean c'mon, would you actually expect Foreign Affairs to do a winter Swimsuit issue? or "Girls of the OECD?

 

KIESELGUHR KID

4:52 PM ET

May 18, 2010

Well, it's not Salma Hayek

Jacob, you're new here, aren't you?

 

BOOKFISHER

5:28 PM ET

May 18, 2010

More foregn relation qustions in pagants

I would actually pay good money to see beauty contestants answer questions from FP bloggers

 

GZZZUS

6:55 PM ET

May 18, 2010

Man, I was thinking the same exact thing

I watching the final five minutes of this 'pageant.' The problem was, I saw a profile view of this broad that won and thought her face was not built for it.

IRREGARDLESS, I kinda thought the fix was in. But, if Miss USA is supposed to reflect what little girls everywhere aspire to be, then by all means, strive to be brunette and exotic.

As for how this plays overseas, its kind of psy-ops type stuff. The masses will see a beautiful arab-american woman as Miss USA, and might somehow be impressed in an odd manner. Leave the 'opinion makers,' to do as they please with it, but at their own peril. I doubt any common person will have much to get worked up for the US thinking an Arab-American is beautiful enough to be crowned Miss USA. However, the 'opinion makers,' might definitely try to take this and run with it at their own peril. You keep tapping that well of 'the US is out to destroy us,' too much and use this beauty contest as an example, people might start to tune these folks out much quicker.

 

Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.

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