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Living Liberally Needs an AIG Bonus… Just a Little One. Please help if you can.

A message from Living Liberally co-director Katrina Baker.

Things are bad, but I don’t have to tell you that. AIG execs are making bank while many people have been out of work for months. Meanwhile, politicians and mainstream media outlets seem suddenly shocked that the public has “rage.” For the last six years, local Living Liberally chapters have found ways for people to channel that rage, build power in their communities, and work together for the world they want to see. But, in the current economic climate – we will have a hard time continuing to support them.

While our political fortunes are up, like almost everyone, our financials are tough right now. We can only cut costs so much, and there are some expenses we need to keep paying to keep this organization running (like our web tools). That’s why we need to turn to the friends that know us best — and ask you for your help.

As a reminder, Living Liberally — the national organization that runs Drinking, Eating, Laughing, Reading, Screening, Crafting & Praying Liberally — is an organization I’ve been co-directing for over 4 years. We went from one chapter of Drinking Liberally in 2003 at Rudy’s bar in Hell’s Kitchen to a few chapters in 2004 to now over 300 chapters in all 50 states and several internationally. These chapters are comprised of ordinary people who do extraordinary work in their communities pushing progressive policies, candidates, and community values. They are teachers, sheriffs, postal workers, bloggers, professors, stay-at-home parents, retirees, and mechanics.

With a staff of two people and an extensive volunteer network, Living Liberally has accomplished a lot with relatively little…however, we do require that “little” to maintain our overloaded website and e-mail system, support our chapters, and be a strong partner to the progressive movement.

And that’s why we need you — join us on Saturday, May 30th for the Living Liberally Annual Fundraiser, our spring celebration that draws together our community, honors our allies, and brings in much needed resources to continue our work

You can get your tickets now at: http://livingliberally.org/celebration09. There are $100, $150 and $250 giving levels; and, if you order now, you can two tickets for just $150 (that’s the community organizer early bird special until March 31).

This year our good friend Sam Seder will be the master of ceremonies as we honor the national watchdog Media Matters, the black political blog Jack & Jill Politics, and Manhattan’s own Borough President Scott Stringer. The event will have food and drink, politicos and pals, and a great chance to help us make a difference.

Every ticket has a big impact on our small operation. Please consider purchasing your ticket now — it will go a long way toward helping us with our work ahead and we’ll have a great time on May 30th.

Get your tickets: http://livingliberally.org/celebration09

Also, if you’d like to join the host committee, or know an organization that would want to learn about sponsorship options, please let me know.

Finally, every little bit counts – if you can’t make it to the event please still consider making a contribution or buying a Liberal Card or two.

I know it’s hard for a lot of people to give right now, but if you have a stable job, please continue to support your favorite organizations – we all need your help.

Feministe Feedback: Stats on Cohabitating Before Marriage

A reader writes in:

My boyfriend and I are moving in together and my parents (evangelical Christians) are concerned. In addition to their moral arguments regarding why we shouldn’t live together, they have read statistics that couples who cohabitate before marriage are more likely to divorce.

I’ve heard this research myself, and a little googling proved that the data is often used by Christians to argue for marriage before cohabitation. Problem is, I don’t know where to find any useful analysis of the data that isn’t dogmatic. I would really like to have an honest conversation about the data (I assume one simple reason is that the kinds of people who cohabitate before marriage are also the kinds of people who believe divorce is sometimes necessary/beneficial for couples, but anyway, a newer study does reject the findings about cohabitation and divorce rates), but it would help to have some more useful information. Any suggestions?

Leave tips in the comments. And remember that you can write in to Feministe Feedback by emailing feministe@gmail.com

Posted in Uncategorized

Shameless Self-Promotion Sunday

You know the drill: Post a link to something you’ve written this week and a short description. Be specific; don’t just link to your whole blog.

Regulating New Jersey’s Hair Down There

New Jersey’s reputation for big-haired women may have just been taken to the next level: The state is considering enforcing its ban on Brazilian bikini waxes. As Reason says, when hairless genitalia is banned, only bandits will have hairless genitalia.

The state Board of Cosmetology and Hairstyling is moving toward a ban on genital waxing altogether after two women reported being injured in their quest for a smooth bikini line.

Both women were hospitalized for infections following so-called “Brazilian” bikini waxes; one of the women has filed a lawsuit, according to Jeff Lamm, a spokesman for New Jersey’s Division of Consumer Affairs, which oversees the cosmetology board.

Technically, genital waxing has never been allowed — only the face, neck, abdomen, legs and arms are permitted — but because bare-it-all “Brazilians” weren’t specifically banned, state regulators haven’t enforced the law.

The genital area is not part of the abdomen or legs as some might assume,” Lamm said.

…well there’s your first problem.

Spa owner Linda Orsuto, who owns 800 West Salon & Spa in Cherry Hill, estimates that most of 1,800 bikini waxes performed at her business last year were Brazilian-style.

“It’s huge,” she said, adding that her customers don’t think their bikini lines are anyone’s business but their own. “It’s just not right.”

She said many customers would likely travel across state lines to get it and some might even try to wax themselves.

Back-alley Brazilians and do-it-yourself waxes are no fun for anyone involved.

I’m all for greater health department oversight of salons — some of the practices I’ve seen are pretty disgusting. One of the more common ones is re-using those popsickle stick things on the same client — putting wax on the stick, using the stick to spread the wax on the client’s skin, and then putting the stick back in the wax and re-spreading. It’s not sanitary, since wax isn’t hot enough to kill all the potential germs you just redeposited into the vat. When you’re dealing with the innermost folds and countours of someone’s most private parts, you don’t want unsanitary conditions. Or, to put it more blunty, I don’t want someone else’s buttcrack germs spread all over my crotch. Waxing can also cause burns and ripped-off skin if done improperly. So please, New Jersey and other states, regulate away so that people don’t walk out of their salons with infections and open wounds.

But banning a bare beaver? There are surely problematic aspects to waxing — including the usual feminist and gender issues, which we’ve all spent more than enough time navel-gazing (vulva-gazing?) about — but are Brazilians really so physically and socially problematic that we need to ban them? Maybe I’m just getting old, but the Brazilian craze seems to have died down a bit anyway. The salon I go to now offers a “French” wax, which isn’t as extreme as a Brazilian, because there was a demand for something not quite as bare. Seems to me that, regardless of the pubic hair trend du jour or my own feminist views on waxing,* health departments should be regulating public health and safety, not pube design. Certainly the great state of New Jersey could find something better to do with its bureaucratic spare time. Although if they are going to waste time and resources micromanaging the aesthetics of the local beaver population, I know at least one guy who may be interested in helping out.

Thanks to Tom Foolery for the link.

_______________________________
*Those views, for the curious: I don’t really care.

Live in Illinois? Read on…

The Illinois Campaign for Reproductive Health and Access are urging Illinoisans Illinoisians Illinoisers residents of Illinois to contact their state legislators in support on H.B. 2354, the Reproductive Health & Access Act. It passed out of committee on March 11, but I haven’t heard yet when it’s due for a floor vote.

Nonetheless, now’s the time to move. (I know it’s late afternoon Friday. Monday works too.) The antis are out in full force, so your state legislator needs to hear from you.

Here’s a piece with more on the bill:
http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2009/03/13/roundup-illinois-reproductive-health-act-approved-house-committee

Campaign website: http://www.illinoisreproductivehealth.org/ And action page: http://www.illinoisreproductivehealth.org/action.shtml. They’re asking for calls, and you know I’m all about picking up the phone, but they also offer a free fax tool. There’s also a really nice letter to the editor tool I really like.

More below the jump…

Read More…Read More…

Preach it, Judith Warner

It’s about time someone wrote this:

Now, I’m just as jealous of the yoga-pants-at-9-a.m.-on-Monday-morning crowd as the next frazzled working mom. But, I’m sorry to say, however delicious charting the downfall of the wealthy at-home mom may be, we do have to stop for a little reality check. While the rich, bathed in our attention, are turning necessity into a hand-wringing sociological event, most women in this country are just going about their business, much as they always have.

We — journalists and readers both — simply must, for once, resist the temptation to let what may or may not be happening to the top 5 percent (or 1 percent) of our country’s families set the story line for what women’s lives are becoming in this recession.

Because, the fact is, the story’s not about them.

“This is a classic blue collar recession,” says Heather Boushey, a senior economist at the Center for American Progress. Fully half the jobs that have been lost so far have been in construction and manufacturing. Only 5.1 percent of job losses have been in finance and insurance — the kinds of careers that support the opt-out lifestyle.

The kind of marital tensions that we’re seeing in the downwardly mobile lifestyles of the rich and wretched, the family historian Stephanie Coontz told me this week, aren’t necessarily typical of couples further down the income scale, either. Wealthy families, she said, have tended, with their work-around-the-clock husbands and at-home wives, to have adopted a rather old-fashioned model of marriage, with fixed sex roles. They’ve set the tone, but the rest of the population hasn’t necessarily followed.

Increasing numbers of working class women now — in a downturn where 82 percent of the job losses have been among men – have become their family’s sole wage-earners, it’s true. But their husbands, very often, are holding their own at home just fine. For while the stereotype has long been that working class men won’t do “women’s work,” Coontz said, the truth is that in recent years they’ve had a better track record than the most high-income men in sharing domestic duties. Twenty percent of these men, in fact, actually do more housework and child care now than their wives. “These people have been doing it for some time and they’re much more ideologically committed to doing it,” she said. “I think your worst offenders” (dirty coffee mug-wise), “are in that top 5 percent.”

“I’ve been a little irritated by the slams on men,” she added.

It’s not just for the sake of being fair to the hubbies that we’ve got to keep our wits about us these days and avoid falling into the usual clichés about class and gender with which we tend to make sense of men and women’s changing lives. There’s a deeper reason, too: paying attention only to the – real or perceived – “choices” and travails of the top 5 percent hides the experiences of all the rest. And this means that the needs of all the rest never quite rise to the surface of our national debate or emerge at the top of our political priorities.

This happened very obviously in the 1990s, when the New Traditionalist story line hid the fact that many mothers at home were actually either poor (and unable to “afford to work” if they had kids, as Coontz puts it), or had had their nonworking “choice” made for them by an inflexible workplace or a high-earning husband’s nearly 24/7 work schedule. Years of public prosperity passed without any real action on creating family-friendly workplaces.

We can’t let that happen again now.

Wealthy families may be downsizing somewhat, but many others are living right on the edge. The former don’t need government support; the latter desperately do. There were hopeful signs emerging in the not-so-distant past that much-needed change might be on the way: a number of states had voted to start to pay for family leave, and momentum was gathering behind paid sick leave, too. But now, states are backing away from those initiatives. A ballot measure that would have brought paid sick leave to Ohio has been withdrawn, the Associated Press has reported, and in New Jersey and Washington state the implementation of new mandates for paid family leave may be delayed because of fiscal concerns.

The Obama administration clearly has made the real-life needs of middle- and working-class families a high priority. But in the current climate, fighting Republican and business community concerns about “raising the cost of work” is going to be a real challenge.

So let’s make sure we remember who’s really suffering. And give their stories their due.

Word. Read it all.

Setting a good example

It makes me really happy that the Obamas are planting a vegetable garden. (It makes me less happy that it’s being billed as Michelle’s project, because gardening is for ladies). Consuming locally-grown food is good for your health, great for the environment, and often less exploitative of other human beings. It’s not possible for all of us to have our own little plot of land to grow food on (or to afford organic locally-grown produce at Whole Foods), but as Michelle Obama points out, we can all make small changes by cooking a little bit more or trying to avoid processed foods or eating more vegetables. For those of us who live in cities, farmers’ markets are good options for affordable, local food. For people in the suburbs or more rural communities with the luxury of extra time, gardening may be an option. I try to buy locally-grown produce at the green market; this spring, I’m going to plant a small herb garden; when I eat meat, which is relatively rare, I make an effort to buy free-range and grass-fed; I’m trying to eat out less and cook more. Those are the small changes I’ve made. What do you all do? Any other suggestions for how we can promote environmentally and ethically responsible food consumption practices?

Come out Thursday and support GEMS

On Thursday March 26th, the Lovelife Event will be fund-raising for GEMS, an organization that focuses on mentoring and empowering girls who have survived sexual exploitation and assault. Their mission statement:

Girls Educational and Mentoring Services’ (GEMS) mission is to empower young women, ages 12-21, who have experienced sexual exploitation and domestic trafficking to exit the commercial sex industry and develop to their full potential. GEMS is committed to ending commercial sexual exploitation and domestic trafficking of children by changing individual lives, transforming public perception, and revolutionizing the systems and policies that impact sexually exploited youth.

It’s a great organization and a worthy cause, and it’s sure to be a fun event. There’s no minimum donation requirement or pricey table-buying — just show up and give what you can to help young women in need. I’ll definitely be there, and I hope some of you can make it. The details:

No Cover
When: Thursday, March 26th 2009 Doors Open at 9pm
Where: Gallery Bar 120 Orchard St NY, NY 10002 (btwn Rivington & Delancy)
Who: You and everyone you know.
Acception Donations for GEMS at the door.

RSVP by emailing abovemeasureent@gmail.com.