Has Our Lady Speed Racer Given Us a New Paradigm?
She Brings Us Hope
By Brant McLaughlin, published Apr 21, 2008
Published Content: 794 Total Views: 226,073 Favorited By: 28 CPs
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The beautiful female Indy race car driver from Roscoe, Illinois finally took home her first victory trophy on April 19th, 2008, crossing the finish line first in the Japan 300 on the 1.5-mile Twin Ring Motegi track, the first gal ever to win an IndyCar Series race. The race watchers from the small town where Danica Patrick received her first speeding ticket, going 65 in a 45 mph zone in her black Mustang Cobra, roared their appreciation for their new hometown heroine.
Patrick's strategy in this tough race was to conserve fuel better than the earlier race leaders, and that was the strategy that paid her off by yielding to her her first victory, as she beat pole-sitter Helio Castroneves by nearly six seconds.
Patrick has been racing Indy cars since 2005 when she was 23 years old and, until this weekend, has had to answer relentless questions about her level of racing skill.
Patrick has many fans, and some of those fans don't necessarily care how well she does when she gets behind the wheel on a race track. She has posed seductively in men's magazines and in a skimpy bikini for Sports Illustrated, although she has never posed in the nude (yet?). She is a certifiable natural beauty.
Feminists despise Danica Patrick. She uses her looks for financial gain and is unashamed of being male eye candy. She unabashedly competes fiercely in a male sport but never puts down men for unfairly trying to psyche her out in a male-dominated field (I hope that you, dear reader, catch the reference to the antics of The Hillary in politics when she first was getting rocked by what is typical harsh attacking in her chosen-and male-dominated-field.), never condemns her beloved sport for conspiring to keep talented gals like herself out of its prestigious inner circle or keeping her from using her skills make the big money.
And in the wake of her first victory-a victory that would have given the lie to the aforementioned condemnations had she ever been foolish or shallow enough to make them-she did nothing to endear herself to the feminists.

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