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

Over-booked moms opt out of volunteering

Here’s a thought: When your school system runs in some substantial part on the free labor of parents (and let’s be real, it’s almost entirely the free labor of mothers), you have a big problem. (As an aside, does anyone else hate the term “frazzled moms”?).

It’s not the school system’s fault, of course — they’re sorely under-funded and need bodies in the room to help. But the bodies in the room are almost always women’s bodies. And dads don’t seem to feel the kind of guilt that women do for expending enormous amounts of unpaid time and labor. Volunteer work is really wonderful, but unfortunately in the school scenario, it patches up big gaps that need to be filled by other sources. It keeps the ship from sinking, but it also means no one is sounding the emergency alarm. And that all comes at the expense of women who often already have full or part-time jobs and who are sacrificing their personal time to do largely thankless free work that someone should really be getting paid for. It also comes at the expense of the women who truly don’t have time to do free labor in their kids’ schools, and then feel like bad parents.

None of which means that parents shouldn’t volunteer, or that volunteerism is bad (quite the opposite). But the pressure to volunteer — created by a tightly-squeezed school system — is shouldered almost entirely by women, and covers up bigger problems.

News Flash, Pay Attention: HIV Is About Sex

This is a guest post by Clarisse Thorn, who blogs at Pro-Sex Outreach, Open-Minded Feminism.

Today is World AIDS Day. I don’t think about HIV as much as I did a few months ago, when I was still in Africa and my job was to help with the epidemic. But today, I’m thinking about it, and I have something very simple to say:

HIV is about sex.

One of the big lessons I learned about HIV in Africa is that many, many people will do amazing mental and rhetorical backflips to avoid talking about how HIV is actually spread. It’s astonishing. You’d think that when talking about HIV, you’d have to talk about sex; you’d be wrong.

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