The War on Women

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Million Women Rise: Women’s Voices | The War on Women

Postby Allegro » Tue Dec 11, 2012 12:15 am

Women’s Voices from the Democratic Republic of Congo

Million Women Rise stand in solidarity with the women and children who are currently facing violence due to the invasion by M23 militia. On this page we will be uploading testimonies shared from our sisters in the Democratic Republic of Congo:

    27 November 2012

    Dear Sabrina and dear all,

    Many thanks for all your good work for the Congo. The inhuman condition of the population due to the invasion of M23 in the region, the displacement of civilians without anything, the suffering of innocent women and children just for the control of minerals must stop. After killings and using child soldiers in Ituri, Bosco has become untouchable in Kivu while those who committed the same crime with him are now in the ICC [International Criminal Court]. The international community has to make pressure to arrest him. Kagame and Museveni have to stop their game of supporting this dusty war in the Congo. I will give you tomorrow some testimonies from one hospital from Goma.

    In solidarity
    Mama Kongosi

See Petition UK Members of Parliament:
Violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Needs to End Now!
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Orinda-Lafayette Presbyterian Congo Team | The War on Women

Postby Allegro » Tue Dec 11, 2012 12:51 am

Mentioned in the space above, here’s
more on the Congolese city of Goma.

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Orinda-Lafayette Presbyterians for Congo organize a network
Submitted by Ann Garrison | Sat, 12/01/2012 - 21:34

KPFA Evening News, 12.01.2012

    The Orinda-Lafayette Presbyterian Congo Team has begun organizing a network that they can activate to pressure the U.S. government, as European activists have, to pressure the U.S. government to stop supporting the Rwandan and Ugandan regimes implicated in the Congo conflict and to help advance the cause of peace in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Rena Myers Dahlkamp, the team’s coordinator, encouraged anyone who would like to become a part of their network to contact her at 925-247-0482.

    Image
    ^ The Ugandan and Rwandan backed M23 militia withdrew from the eastern Congolese city of Goma, in response to international pressure, on 12.01.2012, but they have not laid down their arms.

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Re: The War on Women

Postby parel » Wed Dec 12, 2012 10:05 pm

a few impressions from me on the machinations and manipulation of the abolitionists at the recent Reuters/IHT Trust Women conference in London. http://www.trust.org/trustlaw/blogs/the ... keholders/
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Re: The War on Women

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Dec 13, 2012 8:39 am

And Our Vote For the Vilest And/Or Most Clueless Ad Placement Ever Goes to...
by Abby Zimet
Image

....Springdale Dry Cleaners of Cincinnati, Ohio, which put the anti-abortion "Choose Life" slogan on....their wire coat hangers. It seems irony isn't dead after all. Utterly tasteless, or just unfathomably clueless? We report, you decide.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: The War on Women

Postby Project Willow » Thu Dec 27, 2012 11:59 pm

*Trigger warning* !!!!!!


I can't remember if I posted about a similar case here in the US, a 9 year old Native American. I know I made a draft. Disembowelment is one potential result of violent anal rape.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/20/delhi-bus-gang-rape-victim-intestines-shocking-details_n_2340721.html
Delhi Bus Gang Rape Victim Has Intestines Removed As Shocking Details Of Assault Emerge
By Dominique Mosbergen
Posted: 12/20/2012

Shocking details of the physical condition of the 23-year-old survivor of the bus gang rape and assault that took place in India over the weekend emerged on Wednesday, with reports saying the woman is battling for her life in a New Delhi hospital, in critical -- but stable -- condition.

WARNING: This post contains graphic details

As an earlier report on The Huffington Post noted Wednesday, the young woman, reportedly a paramedical student, was brutally raped by up to six men on Sunday. The sexual assault spanned several hours and left the woman close to death. Her friend, described as a "male companion," was also attacked, reportedly beaten with metal rods. Both were assaulted after boarding a private bus and were eventually dumped on the side of a road.

A Hindustan Times report on Thursday has revealed more shocking details about the assault. The paper reports the woman was not only raped and beaten, but was also "violated with a metal rod."

“It appears to be that a rod was inserted into her and it was pulled out with so much force that the act brought out her intestines... That is probably the only thing that explains such severe damage to her intestines,” said a doctor at Safdarjung Hospital where the woman is being treated.

As earlier reports note, the woman has undergone multiple surgeries this week. On Wednesday, portions of her intestine, which had turned gangrenous, were removed. Doctors say only five percent of her intestine had been left inside her when she arrived at the medial facility on Sunday. Dr. B.D. Athani, medical superintendent at the hospital, said the woman will have to be fed through intravenous fluids for the rest of the life.

The Hindustan Times continues:

According to sources, one of the accused persons who were brought to the hospital for a medical examination on Tuesday confessed to having seen a rope-like object -- likely her intestines -- being pulled out of the girl by the other assailants on the bus. The sources said that the girl had bite marks on her body.

Incredibly, the young woman has pulled through the invasive surgeries and, as of Thursday, was said to be "alert and conscious."

"In the morning she was in stable condition. She continues to remain in ICU on life support, her vital parameters like blood pressure, urine output, respiratory rate were within acceptable limits," Athani said, according to PTI.

The doctor went on to praise the young woman and her fighting spirit.

"She is a brave girl," he said. "Withstanding…everything."

While the woman is currently unable to communicate verbally, the Hindustan Times reports a heartbreaking note to her mother reveals the survivor's indomitable spirit. The woman's brother told the newspaper his sister had written the words “Mother, I want to live” on a piece of paper.

The merciless rape case has horrified a nation that has become jaded to such assaults against women. Sexual violence has long been a serious and widespread problem in India, where perpetrators of such crimes often go unpunished. However, after news of the bus gang rape made headlines this week, a string of protests have erupted in the country, with throngs of Indians flooding the streets demanding justice and change. Many have called for the men who committed the crime to be executed.

"We have been screaming ourselves hoarse demanding greater security for women and girls. But the government, the police, and others responsible for public security have ignored the daily violence that women face," Sehba Farooqui, a women's rights activist, said this week, according to the AP.

In Mumbai and elsewhere, groups of supporters have also organized vigils for the 23-year-old survivor. NDTV reports that around 100 people gathered with candles on a Mumbai beach to pray for the woman this week.

"We face eve-teasing every day," said Niharika Khanna, a 19-year-old female student who attended the vigil. "Whether it's when we are going to college or whether we are waiting for a bus at the bus stop. We have to address this issue now. This is happening everywhere. It is horrible. Women have to raise their voice. What we are wearing cannot become a topic of discussion. Women are not safe anywhere, whether it's Delhi or Mumbai."

On Wednesday, three of the six men accused of Sunday's rape and assault were brought before a New Delhi court. Two of the accused confessed to involvement in the crime, while the third man agreed to undergo an identification test. NDTV reports that he has since been identified by the woman's male friend.

Vijay Sharma, a 20-year-old gym instructor and one of the accused, reportedly told the court on Wednesday: "I admit to my crime. Hang me."

A fourth man, Ram Singh, who allegedly led the attack, has been detained, but has yet to appear in court. The status of the two other men who were reportedly involved in the attack remains unconfirmed at this time.

It is believed that the six men, who are thought to be friends, had gone "on a joyride" on the bus on Sunday night.
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Re: The War on Women

Postby blankly » Fri Dec 28, 2012 3:40 am

There are no words.

Can anyone think how we have got to the point where people imagine, then perpetrate this level of violence against the weakest/most defenceless, and enjoy it.
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Re: The War on Women

Postby Project Willow » Fri Dec 28, 2012 7:09 pm

There have always been men like this, and the great majority who participate in the oppressive systems that nurture these violent acts.

The young woman has died.

Another took her own life after police put her through hell for reporting she'd been gang raped.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/indian-rape-victim-has-brain-damage-lung-infection-doctors-struggle-to-save-her-life/2012/12/28/cf4ad07c-50b4-11e2-835b-02f92c0daa43_allComments.html?ctab=all_&
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Re: The War on Women

Postby Allegro » Sat Dec 29, 2012 2:10 pm

Image

Image
Art will be the last bastion when all else fades away.
~ Timothy White (b 1952), American rock music journalist
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Re: The War on Women

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sun Dec 30, 2012 11:39 pm

How very horrible the rape of the young paramedic in training was and how sad to learn of her death. I cannot find the words to more appropriately comment. What a terrible shame. Such sadness her survivors must endure...

Here's another, but not so brutal story from Kenya:

Kenya hospital imprisons new mothers with no money

By JASON STRAZIUSO | Associated Press – Thu, Dec 27, 2012

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The director of the Pumwani Maternity Hospital, located in a hardscrabble neighborhood of downtown Nairobi, freely acknowledges what he's accused of: detaining mothers who can't pay their bills. Lazarus Omondi says it's the only way he can keep his medical center running.

Two mothers who live in a mud-wall and tin-roof slum a short walk from the maternity hospital, which is affiliated with the Nairobi City Council, told The Associated Press that Pumwani wouldn't let them leave after delivering their babies. The bills the mothers couldn't afford were $60 and $160. Guards would beat mothers with sticks who tried to leave without paying, one of the women said.

Now, a New York-based group has filed a lawsuit on the women's behalf in hopes of forcing Pumwani to stop the practice, a practice Omondi is candid about.

"We hold you and squeeze you until we get what we can get. We must be self-sufficient," Omondi said in an interview in his hospital office. "The hospital must get money to pay electricity, to pay water. We must pay our doctors and our workers."

"They stay there until they pay. They must pay," he said of the 350 mothers who give birth each week on average. "If you don't pay the hospital will collapse."

The Center for Reproductive Rights, which filed the suit this month in the High Court of Kenya, says detaining women for not paying is illegal. Pumwani is associated with the Nairobi City Council, one reason it might be able to get away with such practices, and the patients are among Nairobi's poorest with hardly anyone to stand up for them.

Maimouna Awuor was an impoverished mother of four when she was to give birth to her fifth in October 2010. Like many who live in Nairobi's slums, Awuor performs odd jobs in the hopes of earning enough money to feed her kids that day. Awuor, who is named in the lawsuit, says she had saved $12 and hoped to go to a lower-cost clinic but was turned away and sent to Pumwani. After giving birth, she couldn't pay the $60 bill, and was held with what she believes was about 60 other women and their infants.

"We were sleeping three to a bed, sometimes four," she said. "They abuse you, they call you names," she said of the hospital staff.

She said saw some women tried to flee but they were beaten by the guards and turned back. While her husband worked at a faraway refugee camp, Awuor's 9-year-old daughter took care of her siblings. A friend helped feed them, she said, while the children stayed in the family's 50-square-foot shack, where rent is $18 a month. She says she was released after 20 days after Nairobi's mayor paid her bill. Politicians in Kenya in general are expected to give out money and get a budget to do so.

A second mother named in the lawsuit, Margaret Anyoso, says she was locked up in Pumwani for six days in 2010 because she could not pay her $160 bill. Her pregnancy was complicated by a punctured bladder and heavy bleeding.

"I did not see my child until the sixth day after the surgery. The hospital staff were keeping her away from me and it was only when I caused a scene that they brought her to me," said Anyoso, a vegetable seller and a single mother with five children who makes $5 on a good day.

Anyoso said she didn't have clothes for her child so she wrapped her in a blood-stained blouse. She was released after relatives paid the bill.

One woman says she was detained for nine months and was released only after going on a hunger strike. The Center for Reproductive Rights says other hospitals also detain non-paying patients.

Judy Okal, the acting Africa director for the Center for Reproductive Rights, said her group filed the lawsuit so all Kenyan women, regardless of socio-economic status, are able to receive health care without fear of imprisonment. The hospital, the attorney general, the City Council of Nairobi and two government ministries are named in the suit.
___
Associated Press reporter Tom Odula contributed to this report.

Tell me again about all the things now missing from your comfortable life... My 200 foot
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Re: The War on Women

Postby Iamwhomiam » Mon Dec 31, 2012 11:21 am

Remember that good feeling, the feeling we experience learning that another rescue of trafficked woman? Our belief that they were indeed "rescued," and life would begin getting better?

11 women inmates escape destitute home in Bengal

By Indo Asian News Service | IANS India Private Limited – 52 minutes ago

Kolkata, Dec 31 (IANS) At least 11 woman inmates, among them two Bangladeshis, escaped from a destitute home in West Bengal's Hooghly district Monday. A state minister later attributed the fleeing to their "tendency to escape".

"Eleven inmates of a destitute home in Uttarpara escaped through a window early Monday. Two of the women are Bangladeshi nationals," an official at the Uttarpara police station said.

"Most of the escapees are from North 24-Parganas and were trafficked to Mumbai. They were rescued and brought to the home Nov 23," the official added.

West Bengal Minister for Women and Child Development and Social Welfare Sabitri Mitra denied any lapse of security at the home and blamed the inmates' "tendency to escape".

"Inmates of destitute homes have a tendency to escape and in this case they never wanted to live in the home," said Mitra.

"There has been no lack of security. They have been trying to escape ever since they were brought here following a court order. A departmental inquiry has been ordered and police are looking for them," added Mitra.

An official of the destitute home, some 15 km from here, said the women had been trying to escape ever since they were brought to the home.

"We have informed the district administration about the escaped inmates. A complaint has been registered with the police who are investigating the matter. All the escapees are in their late 30s," the official said.

Shelter homes in the district have earlier been in the news for the wrong reasons when the body of a mentally deranged women inmate was found buried inside a home after being raped and killed.
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Sasha Waltz | noBody : The War on Women

Postby Allegro » Sun Jan 06, 2013 4:48 pm

I’ve just watched half this film,
and a warning especially to women is necessary.

The sounds of feet upon the stage, swosh of garments, breezes and faint wind, quieted whistles and percussive instruments, and slight drones of noise accompany your view. The piece was published 2002.


^ noBody | Sasha Waltz

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Re: The War on Women

Postby Project Willow » Thu Jan 24, 2013 10:44 pm

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/24/new-mexico-abortion-bill_n_2541894.html
New Mexico Bill Would Criminalize Abortions After Rape As 'Tampering With Evidence'

A Republican lawmaker in New Mexico introduced a bill on Wednesday that would legally require victims of rape to carry their pregnancies to term in order to use the fetus as evidence for a sexual assault trial.
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Re: The War on Women

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Jan 25, 2013 1:51 pm



Hate Crimes: A Rape Every Minute, a Thousand Corpses Every Year
There' a pattern of violence against women that’s broad and deep and incessantly overlooked.
January 24, 2013 |

Here in the United States, where there is a reported rape every 6.2 minutes, and one in five women will be raped in her lifetime, the rape and gruesome murder of a young woman on a bus in New Delhi on December 16th was treated as an exceptional incident. The story of the alleged rape of an unconscious teenager by members of the Steubenville High School football team was still unfolding, and gang rapes aren’t that unusual here either. Take your pick: some of the 20 men who gang-raped an 11-year-old in Cleveland, Texas, were sentenced in November, while the instigator of the gang rape of a 16-year-old in Richmond, California, was sentenced in October, and four men who gang-raped a 15-year-old near New Orleans were sentenced in April, though the six men who gang-raped a 14-year-old in Chicago last fall are still at large. Not that I actually went out looking for incidents: they’re everywhere in the news, though no one adds them up and indicates that there might actually be a pattern.

There is, however, a pattern of violence against women that’s broad and deep and horrific and incessantly overlooked. Occasionally, a case involving a celebrity or lurid details in a particular case get a lot of attention in the media, but such cases are treated as anomalies, while the abundance of incidental news items about violence against women in this country, in other countries, on every continent including Antarctica, constitute a kind of background wallpaper for the news.

If you’d rather talk about bus rapes than gang rapes, there’s the rape of a developmentally disabled woman on a Los Angeles bus in November and the kidnapping of an autistic 16-year-old on the regional transit train system in Oakland, California -- she was raped repeatedly by her abductor over two days this winter -- and there was a gang rape of multiple women on a bus in Mexico City recently, too. While I was writing this, I read that another female bus-rider was kidnapped in India and gang-raped all night by the bus driver and five of his friends who must have thought what happened in New Delhi was awesome.

We have an abundance of rape and violence against women in this country and on this Earth, though it’s almost never treated as a civil rights or human rights issue, or a crisis, or even a pattern. Violence doesn’t have a race, a class, a religion, or a nationality, but it does have a gender.

Here I want to say one thing: though virtually all the perpetrators of such crimes are men, that doesn’t mean all men are violent. Most are not. In addition, men obviously also suffer violence, largely at the hands of other men, and every violent death, every assault is terrible. But the subject here is the pandemic of violence by men against women, both intimate violence and stranger violence.

What We Don’t Talk About When We Don’t Talk About Gender

There’s so much of it. We could talk about the assault and rape of a 73-year-old in Manhattan’s Central Park last September, or the recent rape of a four-year-old and an 83-year-old in Louisiana, or the New York City policeman who was arrested in October for what appeared to be serious plans to kidnap, rape, cook, and eat a woman, any woman, because the hate wasn’t personal (though maybe it was for the San Diego man who actually killed and cooked his wife in November and the man from New Orleans who killed, dismembered, and cooked his girlfriend in 2005).

Those are all exceptional crimes, but we could also talk about quotidian assaults, because though a rape is reported only every 6.2 minutes in this country, the estimated total is perhaps five times as high. Which means that there may be very nearly a rape a minute in the U.S. It all adds up to tens of millions of rape victims.

We could talk about high-school- and college-athlete rapes, or campus rapes, to which university authorities have been appallingly uninterested in responding in many cases, including that high school in Steubenville, Notre Dame University, Amherst College, and many others. We could talk about the escalating pandemic of rape, sexual assault, and sexual harassment in the U.S. military, where Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta estimated that there were 19,000 sexual assaults on fellow soldiers in 2010 alone and that the great majority of assailants got away with it, though four-star general Jeffrey Sinclair was indicted in September for “a slew of sex crimes against women.”

Never mind workplace violence, let’s go home. So many men murder their partners and former partners that we have well over 1,000 homicides of that kind a year -- meaning that every three years the death toll tops 9/11’s casualties, though no one declares a war on this particular terror. (Another way to put it: the more than 11,766 corpses from domestic-violence homicides since 9/11 exceed the number of deaths of victims on that day and all American soldiers killed in the “war on terror.”) If we talked about crimes like these and why they are so common, we’d have to talk about what kinds of profound change this society, or this nation, or nearly every nation needs. If we talked about it, we’d be talking about masculinity, or male roles, or maybe patriarchy, and we don’t talk much about that.

Instead, we hear that American men commit murder-suicides -- at the rate of about 12 a week -- because the economy is bad, though they also do it when the economy is good; or that those men in India murdered the bus-rider because the poor resent the rich, while other rapes in India are explained by how the rich exploit the poor; and then there are those ever-popular explanations: mental problems and intoxicants -- and for jocks, head injuries. The latest spin is that lead exposure was responsible for a lot of our violence, except that both genders are exposed and one commits most of the violence. The pandemic of violence always gets explained as anything but gender, anything but what would seem to be the broadest explanatory pattern of all.

Someone wrote a piece about how white men seem to be the ones who commit mass murders in the U.S. and the (mostly hostile) commenters only seemed to notice the white part. It’s rare that anyone says what this medical study does, even if in the driest way possible: “Being male has been identified as a risk factor for violent criminal behavior in several studies, as have exposure to tobacco smoke before birth, having antisocial parents, and belonging to a poor family.”

Still, the pattern is plain as day. We could talk about this as a global problem, looking at the epidemic of assault, harassment, and rape of women in Cairo’s Tahrir Square that has taken away the freedom they celebrated during the Arab Spring -- and led some men there to form defense teams to help counter it -- or the persecution of women in public and private in India from “Eve-teasing” tobride-burning, or “honor killings” in South Asia and the Middle East, or the way that South Africa has become a global rape capital, with an estimated600,000 rapes last year, or how rape has been used as a tactic and “weapon” of war in Mali, Sudan, and the Congo, as it was in the former Yugoslavia, or the pervasiveness of rape and harassment in Mexico and the femicide in Juarez, or the denial of basic rights for women in Saudi Arabia and the myriad sexual assaults on immigrant domestic workers there, or the way that the Dominique Strauss-Kahn case in the United States revealed what impunity he and others had in France, and it’s only for lack of space I’m leaving out Britain and Canada and Italy (with its ex-prime minister known for his orgies with the underaged), Argentina and Australia and so many other countries.

Who Has the Right to Kill You?

But maybe you’re tired of statistics, so let’s just talk about a single incident that happened in my city a couple of weeks ago, one of many local incidents in which men assaulted women that made the local papers this month:

“A woman was stabbed after she rebuffed a man's sexual advances while she walked in San Francisco's Tenderloin neighborhood late Monday night, a police spokesman said today. The 33-year-old victim was walking down the street when a stranger approached her and propositioned her, police spokesman Officer Albie Esparza said. When she rejected him, the man became very upset and slashed the victim in the face and stabbed her in the arm, Esparza said.”

The man, in other words, framed the situation as one in which his chosen victim had no rights and liberties, while he had the right to control and punish her. This should remind us that violence is first of all authoritarian. It begins with this premise: I have the right to control you.

Murder is the extreme version of that authoritarianism, where the murderer asserts he has the right to decide whether you live or die, the ultimate means of controlling someone. This may be true even if you are “obedient,” because the desire to control comes out of a rage that obedience can’t assuage. Whatever fears, whatever sense of vulnerability may underlie such behavior, it also comes out of entitlement, the entitlement to inflict suffering and even death on other people. It breeds misery in the perpetrator and the victims.

As for that incident in my city, similar things happen all the time. Many versions of it happened to me when I was younger, sometimes involving death threats and often involving torrents of obscenities: a man approaches a woman with both desire and the furious expectation that the desire will likely be rebuffed. The fury and desire come in a package, all twisted together into something that always threatens to turn eros into thanatos, love into death, sometimes literally.

It’s a system of control. It’s why so many intimate-partner murders are of women who dared to break up with those partners. As a result, it imprisons a lot of women, and though you could say that the attacker on January 7th, or a brutal would-be-rapist near my own neighborhood on January 5th, or another rapist here on January 12th, or the San Franciscan who on January 6th set his girlfriend on fire for refusing to do his laundry, or the guy who was just sentenced to 370 years for some particularly violent rapes in San Francisco in late 2011, were marginal characters, rich, famous, and privileged guys do it, too.

The Japanese vice-consul in San Francisco was charged with 12 felony counts of spousal abuse and assault with a deadly weapon last September, the same month that, in the same town, the ex-girlfriend of Mason Mayer (brother of Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer) testified in court: "He ripped out my earrings, tore my eyelashes off, while spitting in my face and telling me how unlovable I am… I was on the ground in the fetal position, and when I tried to move, he squeezed both knees tighter into my sides to restrain me and slapped me." According to the newspaper, she also testified that “Mayer slammed her head onto the floor repeatedly and pulled out clumps of her hair, telling her that the only way she was leaving the apartment alive was if he drove her to theGolden Gate Bridge ‘where you can jump off or I will push you off.’" Mason Mayer got probation.

This summer, an estranged husband violated his wife’s restraining order against him, shooting her -- and six other women -- at her spa job in suburban Milwaukee, but since there were only four corpses the crime was largely overlooked in the media in a year with so many more spectacular mass murders in this country (and we still haven’t really talked about the fact that, of 62 mass shootings in the U.S. in three decades, only one was by a woman, because when you say lone gunman, everyone talks about loners and guns but not about men -- and by the way, nearly two thirds of all women killed by guns are killed by their partner or ex-partner).

What’s love got to do with it, asked Tina Turner, whose ex-husband Ike once said, “Yeah I hit her, but I didn't hit her more than the average guy beats his wife.” A woman is beaten every nine seconds in this country. Just to be clear: not nine minutes, but nine seconds. It’s the number-one cause of injury to American women; of the two million injured annually, more than half a millionof those injuries require medical attention while about 145,000 require overnight hospitalizations, according to the Center for Disease Control, and you don’t want to know about the dentistry needed afterwards. Spouses are also the leading cause of death for pregnant women in the U.S.

“Women worldwide ages 15 through 44 are more likely to die or be maimed because of male violence than because of cancer, malaria, war and traffic accidents combined,” writes Nicholas D. Kristof, one of the few prominent figures to address the issue regularly.

The Chasm Between Our Worlds

Rape and other acts of violence, up to and including murder, as well as threats of violence, constitute the barrage some men lay down as they attempt to control some women, and fear of that violence limits most women in ways they’ve gotten so used to they hardly notice -- and we hardly address. There are exceptions: last summer someone wrote to me to describe a college class in which the students were asked what they do to stay safe from rape. The young women described the intricate ways they stayed alert, limited their access to the world, took precautions, and essentially thought about rape all the time (while the young men in the class, he added, gaped in astonishment). The chasm between their worlds had briefly and suddenly become visible.

Mostly, however, we don’t talk about it -- though a graphic has been circulating on the Internet called Ten Top Tips to End Rape, the kind of thing young women get often enough, but this one had a subversive twist. It offered advice like this: “Carry a whistle! If you are worried you might assault someone ‘by accident’ you can hand it to the person you are with, so they can call for help.” While funny, the piece points out something terrible: the usual guidelines in such situations put the full burden of prevention on potential victims, treating the violence as a given. You explain to me why colleges spend more time telling women how to survive predators than telling the other half of their students not to be predators.

Threats of sexual assault now seem to take place online regularly. In late 2011, British columnist Laurie Penny wrote, “An opinion, it seems, is the short skirt of the Internet. Having one and flaunting it is somehow asking an amorphous mass of almost-entirely male keyboard-bashers to tell you how they'd like to rape, kill, and urinate on you. This week, after a particularly ugly slew of threats, I decided to make just a few of those messages public on Twitter, and the response I received was overwhelming. Many could not believe the hate I received, and many more began to share their own stories of harassment, intimidation, and abuse.”

Women in the online gaming community have been harassed, threatened, and driven out. Anita Sarkeesian, a feminist media critic who documented such incidents, received support for her work, but also, in the words of a journalist, “another wave of really aggressive, you know, violent personal threats, her accounts attempted to be hacked. And one man in Ontario took the step of making an online video game where you could punch Anita's image on the screen. And if you punched it multiple times, bruises and cuts would appear on her image.” The difference between these online gamers and the Taliban men who, last October, tried to murder 14-year-old Malala Yousafzai for speaking out about the right of Pakistani women to education is one of degree. Both are trying to silence and punish women for claiming voice, power, and the right to participate. Welcome to Manistan.

The Party for the Protection of the Rights of Rapists

It’s not just public, or private, or online either. It’s also embedded in our political system, and our legal system, which before feminists fought for us didn’t recognize most domestic violence, or sexual harassment and stalking, or date rape, or acquaintance rape, or marital rape, and in cases of rape still often tries the victim rather than the rapist, as though only perfect maidens could be assaulted -- or believed.

As we learned in the 2012 election campaign, it’s also embedded in the minds and mouths of our politicians. Remember that spate of crazy pro-rape thingsRepublican men said last summer and fall, starting with Todd Akin's notorious claim that a woman has ways of preventing pregnancy in cases of rape, a statement he made in order to deny women control over their own bodies. After that, of course, Senate candidate Richard Mourdock claimed that rape pregnancies were “a gift from God,” and just this month, another Republican politician piped up to defend Akin’s comment.

Happily the five publicly pro-rape Republicans in the 2012 campaign all losttheir election bids. (Stephen Colbert tried to warn them that women had gotten the vote in 1920.) But it’s not just a matter of the garbage they say (and the price they now pay). Earlier this month, congressional Republicans refused to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act, because they objected to the protection it gave immigrants, transgendered women, and Native American women. (Speaking of epidemics, one of three Native American women will be raped, and on the reservations 88% of those rapes are by non-Native men who know tribal governments can’t prosecute them.)

And they’re out to gut reproductive rights -- birth control as well as abortion, as they’ve pretty effectively done in many states over the last dozen years. What’s meant by “reproductive rights,” of course, is the right of women to control their own bodies. Didn’t I mention earlier that violence against women is a control issue?

And though rapes are often investigated lackadaisically -- there is a backlog of about 400,000 untested rape kits in this country-- rapists who impregnate their victims have parental rights in 31 states. Oh, and former vice-presidential candidate and current congressman Paul Ryan (R-Manistan) is reintroducing a bill that would give states the right to ban abortions and might even conceivably allow a rapist to sue his victim for having one.

All the Things That Aren’t to Blame

Of course, women are capable of all sorts of major unpleasantness, and there are violent crimes by women, but the so-called war of the sexes is extraordinarily lopsided when it comes to actual violence. Unlike the last (male) head of the International Monetary Fund, the current (female) head is not going to assault an employee at a luxury hotel; top-ranking female officers in the U.S. military, unlike their male counterparts, are not accused of any sexual assaults; and young female athletes, unlike those male football players in Steubenville, aren’t likely to urinate on unconscious boys, let alone violate them and boast about it in YouTube videos and Twitter feeds.

No female bus riders in India have ganged up to sexually assault a man so badly he dies of his injuries, nor are marauding packs of women terrorizing men in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, and there’s just no maternal equivalent to the11% of rapes that are by fathers or stepfathers. Of the people in prison in the U.S., 93.5% are not women, and though quite a lot of them should not be there in the first place, maybe some of them should because of violence, until we think of a better way to deal with it, and them.

No major female pop star has blown the head off a young man she took home with her, as did Phil Spector. (He is now part of that 93.5% for the shotgun slaying of Lana Clarkson, apparently for refusing his advances.) No female action-movie star has been charged with domestic violence, because Angelina Jolie just isn’t doing what Mel Gibson and Steve McQueen did, and there aren’t any celebrated female movie directors who gave a 13-year-old drugs before sexually assaulting that child, while she kept saying “no,” as did Roman Polanski.

In Memory of Jyoti Singh Pandey

What’s the matter with manhood? There’s something about how masculinity is imagined, about what’s praised and encouraged, about the way violence is passed on to boys that needs to be addressed. There are lovely and wonderful men out there, and one of the things that’s encouraging in this round of the war against women is how many men I’ve seen who get it, who think it’s their issue too, who stand up for us and with us in everyday life, online and in the marches from New Delhi to San Francisco this winter.

Increasingly men are becoming good allies -- and there always have been some. Kindness and gentleness never had a gender, and neither did empathy. Domestic violence statistics are down significantly from earlier decades (even though they’re still shockingly high), and a lot of men are at work crafting new ideas and ideals about masculinity and power.

Gay men have been good allies of mine for almost four decades. (Apparently same-sex marriage horrifies conservatives because it’s marriage between equals with no inevitable roles.) Women’s liberation has often been portrayed as a movement intent on encroaching upon or taking power and privilege away from men, as though in some dismal zero-sum game, only one gender at a time could be free and powerful. But we are free together or slaves together.

There are other things I’d rather write about, but this affects everything else. The lives of half of humanity are still dogged by, drained by, and sometimes ended by this pervasive variety of violence. Think of how much more time and energy we would have to focus on other things that matter if we weren’t so busy surviving. Look at it this way: one of the best journalists I know is afraid to walk home at night in our neighborhood. Should she stop working late? How many women have had to stop doing their work, or been stopped from doing it, for similar reasons?

One of the most exciting new political movements on Earth is the Native Canadian indigenous rights movement, with feminist and environmental overtones, called Idle No More. On December 27th, shortly after the movement took off, a Native woman was kidnapped, raped, beaten, and left for dead in Thunder Bay, Ontario, by men whose remarks framed the crime as retaliation against Idle No More. Afterward, she walked four hours through the bitter cold and survived to tell her tale. Her assailants, who have threatened to do it again, are still at large.

The New Delhi rape and murder of Jyoti Singh Pandey, the 23-year-old who was studying physiotherapy so that she could better herself while helping others, and the assault on her male companion (who survived) seem to have triggered the reaction that we have needed for 100, or 1,000, or 5,000 years. May she be to women -- and men -- worldwide what Emmett Till, murdered by white supremacists in 1955, was to African-Americans and the then-nascent U.S. civil rights movement.

We have far more than 87,000 rapes in this country every year, but each of them is invariably portrayed as an isolated incident. We have dots so close they’re splatters melting into a stain, but hardly anyone connects them, or names that stain. In India they did. They said that this is a civil rights issue, it’s a human rights issue, it’s everyone’s problem, it’s not isolated, and it’s never going to be acceptable again. It has to change. It’s your job to change it, and mine, and ours.

Rebecca Solnit has written a version of this essay three times so far, once in the 1980s for the punk magazine Maximum Rock’n’Roll, once as the chapter on women and walking in her 2000 book Wanderlust: A History of Walking, and here. She would love the topic to become out of date and irrelevant and never to have write it again.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Postby Perelandra » Wed Mar 13, 2013 2:14 pm

Via Mother Jones.
Inside Mississippi's Last Abortion Clinic
Mississippi used to have 14 abortion clinics. Now there is one. If you visit it, here are some of the people you might meet.
Text by Kate Sheppard. Photos by Matt Eich.
Tue Jan. 22, 2013 3:01 AM PST

Jackson Women's Health Organization holds the dubious distinction of being Mississippi's only remaining abortion clinic. In 1981, there were 14, but thanks in part to increasingly repressive legislation, the others have closed.

Last April, Republican Gov. Phil Bryant signed a new law requiring any doctor performing abortions in the state to have permission to admit patients at a local hospital. That's a problem for Jackson Women's Health, since neither of its two doctors—both of whom fly into Mississippi to provide abortions—has admitting privileges. Bryant called the law "the first step in a movement, I believe, to do what we campaigned on...to try to end abortion in Mississippi."

Abortions in Mississippi are now only legal in clinics until 16 weeks of pregnancy—many other states permit the procedure up to 24 weeks. The state requires abortion clinics to abide by many of the same building codes as hospitals, even though other medical offices don't have to follow these rules. Doctors must perform a sonogram and offer the patient an opportunity to see the image and listen to the fetal heartbeat. All women must attend counseling with a doctor and then wait at least 24 hours before undergoing the procedure. Minors must have the consent of both of their parents. A few other states have passed some of these restrictions, but Mississippi has them all.

Mississippi already has one of the lowest abortion rates in the United States, with just 5 percent of women electing to end their pregnancies—compared to 19 percent nationally. It is one of just three states—along with North and South Dakota—that have only one clinic and zero providers who live in-state.

The Center for Reproductive Rights has challenged the new law, and the state department of health has given the clinic until January to comply. If it fails, Michelle Movahed, an attorney at the center, worries that the closure could set off a domino effect, with more and more legislatures using red tape to close clinics—in effect nullifying Roe v. Wade one state at a time. "Mississippi is the dream for what anti-abortion groups are trying to have happen."

DR. WILLIE PARKER, Physician

Parker, 50, lives in Washington, DC, and flies to Jackson once a month. "Growing up in the South, I had a traditional religious upbringing," he says. "There were certainly lots of unwed pregnancies, but it was just sort of implied that if a woman became pregnant it was her obligation to continue the pregnancy."

But when he began practicing as an ob-gyn, Parker says, "I was faced with seeing women all the time who had unplanned pregnancies. So that started a 12-year path of wrestling with the morality of providing abortion care. [In the end,] I felt obligated ethically, morally, and spiritually. So I did."

In 2011, a colleague asked Parker if he'd be willing to travel to a clinic in Mississippi that had no local providers. "I had reservations. All I heard about it growing up was Mississippi Burning. But the majority of the women who were going to be affected by the closure of the clinic are black women. If I can't make those women a priority as a black person and as someone from that region of the country, then who else will? Given that nobody in Mississippi will, because they've been harassed or they've left the state, this is what we're left with."

KEBA, Patient

"I'm not so much for abortion," says Keba, 30, who asked that we use only her first name. "I feel like if you could go with another measure, go another route. It's something that I will probably think about and allow to haunt me for years to come."

"Really just the timing is not a good thing. I have two 11-year-olds, nine months apart. I have a seven-month-old. You see the difference [between] two kids and three. My older two are having to go without. It's unfair to them. That's the reason I can't have another baby right now."

"I've been sick. I just got back to working after having the latest baby. I can't financially afford to just sit back and be caught up with this sickness for the next nine months, be out of work for six more weeks, doctors' appointments. I just can't afford not to come in. This is just the best decision for my household right now."

SHANNON BREWER-ANDERSON, Clinic Director

"I have six kids," says Brewer-Anderson. "I've been through not having any money, don't know how I'm going to pay the light bill, daddy's not there, don't know how I'm going to get another bag of Pampers. So I understand what these women are going through. I was one of those young, dumb girls. That's what I always tell people. I didn't know anything about abortion. We never spoke about abortion. I didn't know abortion clinics even existed here."

"Some people will come from two, three hours away. They don't even have a car. Somebody brought them. They paid someone to bring them here two different times. That shows you how desperate a woman would be to get this taken care of. She rode the Greyhound bus from wherever she came from, got a taxi here, then had to call a taxi to take her back."

"When you work here, it's not just like a job. The fact that this is the only clinic here in town, it's like you're part of something that is pretty big."

But she worries. Not long ago, state inspectors showed up for a surprise visit. "There is nothing that makes me more nervous than dealing with the department of health. The protesters can stand out there all day and do whatever they want to do and scream. There is nothing that can close it down except the department of health."

ROY McMILLAN, Protester

Roy McMillan holds the plastic babies he tosses into car windows. "I was found in a shoebox," says McMillan. "Abandoned at birth, naked, in the middle of the night in Alexandria, Louisiana." A young couple adopted him.

McMillan, 69, is known at the clinic as the guy who throws the plastic babies into your car window. He's clad in bright yellow rain pants not because of the weather, but because the owner of the house behind him turns the sprinkler on him each morning.

"I call myself a peacemaker. What did Jesus say in the Beatitudes? He said, 'Blessed are the peacemakers.' Who are we trying to make peace between? A mother and a child. The No. 1 instinct is that between a mother and child. If you don't believe me, go to the zoo."

Four years ago, McMillan, who says he has been arrested 69 times at abortion clinics, threatened one of the clinic's doctors. Since then, a court order has kept him 50 feet away from the clinic door. "I said, 'Your days are numbered, just like mine,'" McMillan says. "They said it was a threat. I said that was a religious liberty, a point of view I had." Still, some clinic staffers are worried about harassment from protesters; one of the clinic's doctors dons an alien mask each time he comes in.

"We're telling government this has got to end and we're willing to suffer to change it," McMillan says. "We're not going to shoot anybody."

BETTY THOMPSON, Counselor

Counselor Betty Thompson (center) meets with staff members. "I was intended to be here," says Thompson, a 15-year veteran of the clinic known to all as Miss Betty. "I had a baby when I was 16. I could certainly relate to what was happening here."

"Most women who come in here, they have made up their mind," she says. "Those that are ambivalent, you can recognize them when they walk in the door."

"I don't think [women] understand the gravity of all the things that are thrown in their way. They're so absorbed with their own personal crisis, they don't care what the rule is. 'You tell me what I need to do so I can do it.' It doesn't dawn on them that they have the right to be here. They feel like they're sneaking. You don't have to feel that way. And I tell them that."
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Re: The War on Women

Postby Pele'sDaughter » Wed Mar 13, 2013 4:46 pm

http://todaynews.today.com/_news/2013/0 ... dict?lite=

The victim in an Air Force sexual assault case that has provoked a firestorm in Congress says she was “absolutely stunned” when she learned that a top general had erased the conviction of her alleged assailant and that the decision will undermine the Pentagon’s efforts to encourage women to report such attacks.


Lt. Gen. Craig Franklin didn't even attend the court martial. :evil:
Don't believe anything they say.
And at the same time,
Don't believe that they say anything without a reason.
---Immanuel Kant
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