In defense of the sanctimonious women's studies set || First feminist blog on the internet

Nobody puts the Silver Fox in a corner!

David Geffen beat out Anderson Cooper as the #1 gay in America? Sure, he may have a lot of money, but Anderson has the power of connecting with the people. And those eyes…

Other notables:
-Several bloggers made the list. We’re taking over the world.
-John Aravosis, Andrew Sullivan and Nick Denton beat out Tom Ford (who I can’t stand). Sucka.
-Am I the only person who didn’t realize Jodie Foster was a lesbian?

Final thoughts: It’s great that there are 50 well-known, powerful people who are out. It’s not so great that so many of them (including my own boyfriend) aren’t out enough to pose for the cover of the magazine.

Thanks to Ali for the link.

Leave the morals at the border

The right-wing version of “morality” never fails to boggle the mind — and it’s thoroughly depressing when the highest court in our country continues to capitulate to their blatant violations of international law and basic human rights norms (not to mention their stomping all over the Constitution).

Onward Bush’s soldiers, torture as ye may, but do it in Guantanamo, and not in the USA.

On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court turned down the habeas corpus plea of a Canadian national, captured in Afghanistan when he was 15 years old, because the possible deprivation of his human rights was not conducted on “U.S. soil.” The court, with three judges dissenting, cited a law passed by the Republican-controlled Congress last year that the fate of Guantanamo prisoners will be determined by secret military tribunals outside the purview of U.S. courts.

There are about 380 prisoners at Guantanamo. A grand total of 10 have been charged with a crime.

Guantanamo is obviously problematic for the international standards it sets, and because Bush officials use it as an excuse to forgo basic U.S. law and deny prisoners their Due Process and general Constitutional rights. But Guantanamo is also embarrassing because it demonstrates a profound lack of faith in our own criminal justice system and our intelligence agencies. If the prisoners being held at Guantanamo are as thoroughly guilty and dangerous as the Bush administration asserts, shouldn’t they be tried for their crimes by a jury of American citizens? Shouldn’t they at least be charged with something? What, exactly, is the problem with our justice system that makes the Bush administration refuse to use it in dealing with supposed terrorists?

Despite all the right-wing flag-humping, Guantanamo strikes me as pretty unpatriotic.

The Shat Fix

Several people have mentioned Shatner’s cover of “Common People.”

Here it is:

God, when did Joe Jackson get white hair?

And forget “Rocket Man.” Here’s Shatner doing Harry Chapin:

The first I ever really heard of Harry Chapin was back in the 70s, when I was in grade school and played in the town softball league (my team was Burlap & Silk, sponsored by a local boutique. I kinda wish I’d kept the shirt). Our coaches were high school girls, who had a couple of defining characteristics. One, they never let us slide into home plate, because a girl on their high school team tore the hell out of her knee that way in a very gruesome manner. The second was their Harry Chapin shirts, which said something about playing for the cheap seats.

Harry Chapin died while I was at summer camp. Interestingly, Elvis had died a few years earlier while I was at summer camp. These were the only two times I went to summer camp. Coincidence?

Attention Torontonians

I will be in your fair city April 14-15. I’d love to get insider tips on what to do, where to go, what to eat and all that good stuff. And, perhaps, meet up for drinks.

Chat up your city in comments (because I’m sure that people other than me would like to know). If you’d like to meet up for drinks, coffee or whatever, drop a line at feministe (at) gmail (dot) com.

It’s the Coolest

All I have to say about this is NYU Law students are so cool that we don’t sit around voting ourselves cool on law blogs. Just sayin’.

That shotgun sure makes people nervous

A guy, name of Dick, domain name a common anti-feminist trope, sent an email to the Feministe gmail account asking what was up with the little girl with the shotgun.

Is it supposed to be a penis? he asked.

Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, Dick, I replied.

Dick observed that it didn’t look much like a cigar, and suggested that in that case, the artist lacked talent.

Zero-Sum Games

Mr. Shakes has an excellent post over at the new digs, Shakesville, discussing why feminism benefits everyone — and why the continuing insistence of a lot of men (even progressive ones) on denigrating, attacking or maligning feminism (even as they accept individual feminists) is against their own interest. In particular, Mr. Shakes wonders why it’s so hard to accept that empowering women is not done at the expense of men, and that we’re all in this together. Indeed, when we say that patriarchy hurts men, too, we mean something like this:

One of the greatest bulwarks against men accepting the feminist movement is that they seem to think that women gaining power must necessarily dilute their own exclusive powers and status. But in so holding onto this erroneous notion, they forget that they themselves are powerless in the face of the corporate plutocracy that now weighs down so heavily upon all of us. If they could get their heads around the fact that they too are powerless and insignificant and ignored, they would stop trying to beat up on the kids they perceive to be weaker and instead acknowledge their own weakness, ally themselves with them, and move forward with them in a new movement that would grant greater freedoms for all of us. It shouldn’t be about trying to maintain some illusory advantage over others. It should be about trying to create concrete advantages for all of us.

If men were smart, they wouldn’t fight against feminism. They would embrace it for what it really is: Humanism. (And stop fretting over whether the term “feminism” is exclusory; its principles aren’t.) They would incorporate the principles of all civil rights movements and collaborate with their proponents on the genesis of a vast humanist movement. Instead of feeling threatened by or put upon by these movements, instead of feeling they somehow denigrate straight, white men’s lives or their ability to be who they are, men would apply these ideas in an effort to improve their own lives, along with everyone else’s. What we need to do is confer all the rights and privileges that these men have traditionally enjoyed upon everyone else, and then, once we’ve done that, we can start thinking about what new rights, obligations, responsibilities we can confer on everyone, in order to make our society a more egalitarian and fair place to live.

Men need to get it through their heads that they, too, are under the heel of power structures that have no interest in promoting their welfare. They must understand that the rights and privileges that they have hitherto been enjoying fall far short of the privileges they could enjoy were they to try and achieve them. The internecine warfare that occurs between women and men, people of color and white people, straights and gays, as they all squabble like schoolchildren in an attempt to gain or deny rights, is exactly what those in power want. They promote it, they foment it, they do everything they can to aggravate it, because they know that if we were all ever to get our fucking shit together, and demand that the society we all live in and contribute to should be fair and decent to everyone, then the egregious wealth and power that they enjoy would finally meet its end.

What men need to understand is that their wives, the black guy across the street, the gay guy next door, are not the only ones toiling under the weight of a patriarchal system that doesn’t benefit all men, but instead a select few who hold all the power and all the wealth in their hands, the weight of a society that rewards capital and a slavish work mentality over human dignity and the freedom of individuals to express their own interests and realize their full potential as human beings.

One of the ways that the power structure keeps us divided is to create and reinforce hierarchies within the powerless, so they spend their time fighting each other instead of those in power. One of the ways that’s done is to give some of those at the bottom the illusion that they share the wealth based on some shared characteristic. So, the patriarchy encourages white guys to vote Republican by playing on their fears of the Other — and by holding out the possibility that they, too, can join the club. I remember reading during the last election that a lot of people who had no hope of ever leaving an estate big enough to be taxed nonetheless supported the repeal of the estate tax. Why? Because they might be rich someday.

Another example of this is class anxiety, and the idea that if you get an education, you should be making more money than people who don’t have a degree. This was illustrated nicely by the reactions many people in New York had to the transit strike in late 2005 — there was an awful lot of resentment that transit workers would be making in the high five figures for driving a train. A lot of people on New York One, a local cable news channel, demonstrated in man-on-the-street interviews that their resentment about how much the members of the TWU got in comparison with themselves was directed at the blue-collar transit workers, and not at, say, their own white-collar employers. This is the kind of thing that keeps people from collective action, and keeps the people in power pulling the strings.