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

Non-white people make some headway; white people freak out.

White people

The New York Times asks, “Is Anti-White Bias on the Rise?” Which, if I were the headline-writer, I would change to, “Are White People Stupid, Selfish or Both?”

Just kidding you guys, I love white people! I’m a white person! My slogan for white people goes like this: White people. Some of them are so great!

But oh god some white people are so terrible. Like all of the white people who apparently think that anti-white bias is on the rise, and is now more prominent than anti-black bias? (Also there are apparently only two biases — anti-black or anti-white). These are definitely the white people who are like, “It’s not fair that black people can use the n-word and I cannot, and also one time someone called me a honky and that’s just as bad.”

I am sorry, white people who say that, but that is not just as bad. And you are not the victim of “bias” because the n-word is the one thing in your entire life that you are not allowed to say.

As usual, Patricia J. Williams’ reaction to the piece is spot-on:

The finding that white Americans see blacks’ progress as an insult or a diminishment of their status is not entirely surprising. Zero-sum formulations of prejudice tend to emerge in lean economic times, fueling cultural or historical rivalries of all sorts.

I have a hunch that if the study had included questions about whether whites feel threatened by “reverse racism” among Asians, Latinos and immigrants, the results would be much the same. Those perceptions notwithstanding, data show that white Americans remain the most privileged human beings on the planet.

Her whole take is worth a read. Paul Butler, too, reminds white people that we’re doing pretty ok:

But, lest anyone worry, white folks, comparatively speaking, are doing just fine. Blacks are twice as likely to be unemployed. Six African-Americans head Fortune 500 companies. Of those businesses, 480 are run by whites. We have one black president, and almost one million black people in prison.

White people, let’s all take a deep breath. EVERYTHING IS GOING TO BE FINE.

Ending Sexual Violence in Conflict: Prevention and Protection

OK, folks, it’s time to dig in. First plenary at the Nobel Women’s Initiative conference on Ending Sexual Violence in Conflict starts at 11:00AM ET today, and I’ll be liveblogging it right here. Hoping to get some of your questions in live!

Here’s the description of our charge for the AM:

Where are we now and what needs to be done? This panel will review what is being done and what needs to be done to prevent sexual violence in conflict. Reflecting on successes and obstacles, speakers will discuss initiatives/techniques at the international, national and local level to prevent atrocities and protect women.

And here are the featured presenters:

Moderator: Joanna Kerr – Action Aid International, South Africa
Speakers:
Joanne Sandler – UN Women, USA
Charlotte Isaksson – Armed Forces, Sweden
Godelieve Mukasarasi – SEVOTA, Rwanda
Binalakshmi Nepram – Manipur Women Gun Survivor Network, India

And here’s the liveblog!

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Guess who might be losing his job.

So tragic.

(And no, it’s not because the PC Police got him. It’s because he was promoting racist opinions under the guise of scientific research, and compromising the academic credibility of LSE).

Thanks, Xtina, for the update.

links for 5-23-2011

Many thanks for the conGRADulations all! Eh? Ahaha. Anyway, after a weekend of hibernation, I’m glad to be back. Still on student time though, which is why this is being posted at one in the morning.

A queer rights and immigrants rights activist tosses glitter over Newt and Callista Gingrich at one of their book signings in Minneapolis. Maybe Scott “the worst thing to happen to Wisconsin worker’s rights and now queer rights” Walker is next?

Via Racialicious:

But we must not grow weary. We must continue to uplift one another. Use our voices to tell our multifaceted stories. Our mere existence is a testament against an oppressive system that would rather we continue on as the mules of the world Zora noted decades ago. But like Zora, we must not “weep at the world.” We should be “too busy sharpening our oyster knife.”

From The Rising Attacks on Black Women Since the Presence of Michelle Obama

And in that vein, another black woman at the top of her field, Serena Williams, gets victim blamed.

A Saudi Woman takes on her country’s ban on female drivers by getting behind the wheel. This should remind us that activism and bravery are in actions simultaneously ordinary and extraordinary.

Three cis-women detail their experiences after making the choice to undergo tubal ligation. For those who might think “hey, that’s major surgery, which will have a major and lasting effect on a woman’s life and body, isn’t it a little drastic?”- pregnancy and childcare have major and lasting effects on cis-women’s lives and bodies. Aortions have major and lasting effects on cis-women’s lives and bodies. Hormonal birth control has a major and lasting effect on cis-women’s lives and bodies. This is just one choice among a series of choices in a culture whose lack of support and respect for cis-women’s lives and bodies has limited us in the first place.

Finally, a constructive critique of Slutwalk as a strategy in the fight against rape culture. I found this an insightful and intersectional analysis of race, sexuality and gender, one that I’m sure many of us deal with in our own organizing. There is resistance to the reclamation of the word slut from many who fight against sexualized violence, and it is something we must consider, and without immediately jumping to the conclusion that people who dislike the term slut are internalizing heteropatriarchy. We ALL internalize heteropatriarchy. We all have different strategies for working through that. What I like about this piece is its honesty, and what I like about Slutwalk is that it is one strategy, which, like all others, should be considered open to critique and improvement. No movement is perfect. No movement ever will be. But isn’t the whole point of the work we do in effort of that?

Ending Sexual Violence in Conflict: Liveblogging the NWI Conference

Greetings, Feministe-rs! Jaclyn Friedman here.

I’m beyond honored to be attending the Nobel Women’s Initiative’s conference on Ending Sexual Violence in Conflict, at which over 100 women from around the world – activists, academics, security experts, corporate leaders, and Nobel Peace Laureates Jody Williams, Shirin Ebdai and Mairead Maguire – are coming together next week to forge a new security, and a future free of sexual violence in conflict. You can read a great (though definitely trigger-warning-worthy) overview of the issue and the conference’s approach to it here.

I’m also super excited that I’ve been given permission to liveblog and livetweet some of the proceedings, so that y’all can listen in and I can share some of your comments and questions with this incredible group. I’ll be doing the liveblogging right here (as well as at Yes Means Yes), and I’ll be focusing on the three overview panels, which are:

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Congrats Anoushka!

someecards.com - Congratulations on graduating from a school that didn't ask Snooki to be its commencement speaker

Our wonderful intern Anoushka just finished grad school and was awarded a Master’s degree, which is a huge achievement. Nice work, lady! Leave her congrats and love in the comments.

Posted in Uncategorized

Things I Have Never Done That I Would Like To Do Before the World Ends

illustration of god's giant hand

So, the bad news is that we’re all going to die. The good news is that we know when we’re going to die, so we can blow our life savings this week to do all the things we’ve always wanted to do.

Unfortunately, my life savings is somewhere in the low four figures (and my debts hover in the six figures), so, no trips to Antarctica for me. But! There are free and relatively (relative to my impending death) cheap things that I have never done, but which can be done in the next few days before the world ends. My top seven apocalypse-is-nigh to-do list:

1. Heroin.

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Bros Editing Bros

Photo of AC Slater

You know who really doesn’t get enough attention these days? Dudes. And you know what’s really noteworthy and unusual? The fact that dudes (and mostly white dudes, weird) edit most of the major magazines and newspapers in the United States. Glad Women’s Wear Daily is on top of it.

NEW YORK — A few weeks ago, Bon Appétit editor in chief Adam Rapoport and New York Times Magazine editor Hugo Lindgren went out to dinner at Veritas with Times food critic Sam Sifton and Random House editor Andy Ward. It was, in Rapoport’s words, a “very dude dinner.”

Once the waitress came around to take drink orders, Lindgren made the great faux pas of ordering a sparkling wine.

“I was like ‘Dude! What? You want a sparkler?’” said Rapoport.

Sh-t talk began. The other dudes had ordered vodka and bourbons.

Sparkling wine?! Haha. It’s just more interesting from there.

God bless Ann Friedman for giving us the lady version.

Supporting Abortion Rights Throughout the UK

This is a guest post by Hannah. Hannah is a writer and activist in sunny London town. She blogs about gender, disability, and whatever else is sticking in her teeth, over at give the feminist a cigarette.

Being a UK lady-blogger and reading predominantly US blogs, when reading about abortion in the States, you succumb to a feeling of intense relief and – it has to be admitted – insufferable smugness.

“Oh, you wacky Americans, with your testifying foetuses and ‘forcible rape’ clauses! Your Hyde Amendment and your clinic bomb attacks! Thank heavens,” we sigh, “that we live in such an reproductive-rights-loving climate where religion does not dictate what happens in our baby-makers. Sure, it’s not exactly an abortion-on-demand paradise round here, what with two doctors having to agree that continuing your pregnancy will send you mad, bad or sad before they’ll sign you off for the prodedure. Sure, we have oddball MP Nadine Dorries, who’s apparently trying to use her entire political career to reduce the abortion time limit and bring in abstinence-only sex ed, but she’s in a tiny minority, and abortion’s still legal in the UK, so what’s the problem? Everything’s fine, right?”

Well, yes, everything’s dandy – if you’re from mainland Britain. But in many parts of the UK, things are very different. The law is much more restrictive in the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man, where abortion provision is limited or even non-existent. In Northern Ireland, terminating a pregnancy is illegal in almost every circumstance (including where the pregnancy results from rape, or will cause serious illness). Women in Northern Ireland pay the same taxes as I do, the NHS operates in the same way there as it does here – and yet they are not entitled to this key aspect of health care.

Similarly, abortion remains illegal in the Republic of Ireland, except in notoriously fuzzily-defined circumstances: one of the plaintiffs in the recent ABC Case was suffering from a rare form of cancer which would have proved fatal had she continued the pregnancy – yet she was unable to find a single doctor who was willing to sanction an abortion.

They can, of course, nip across the water and have the procedure here. Which is super! If they can come up with the cash for flights, accommodation, and the abortion itself, at a moment’s notice! Which isn’t a big deal, right? I mean, who among us couldn’t lay their hands on anywhere up to £2,000 just like that? It wouldn’t be that traumatic to travel hundreds of miles from home – probably alone, because who could you tell? – to undergo a medical procedure in a strange city where you don’t know anyone. Right?

Which is where I start to plug. Denizens of Feministe, I give you: the Abortion Support Network.

We are a tiny grassroots charity offering grants, accommodation, and support to women who are forced to travel from Ireland and Northern Ireland to access a safe abortion. We’re entirely volunteer-run, our budget is miniscule, and we’ve nearly run out of money once this year already – so if you have a spare pound/dollar/euro rattling around, feel free to throw it our way! Check out the events page for future get-togethers! And there are tons of ways you can help out, wherever you are – just give us a shout.

It never ceases to amaze me how little awareness there is in the UK about Irish/NI abortion law. So please, pass it on – tell your friends, retweet our pearls of wisdom, bring up the subject over Sunday lunch with the in-laws (“Hey there, Right-Wing Uncle Alan! Let’s talk fallopian tubes.”) – every little helps.

Thousands of women make this journey every year – at least 1,123 from NI in 2009, and 4,422 from the Republic. But it’s not the numbers that break my heart. It’s the individual stories. The mother of two who had recently migrated from Eastern Europe, who couldn’t speak English and was already struggling to make ends meet. The woman who couldn’t read, so had to ask a stranger to help her read our website. The woman with mental health problems who was suffering domestic violence.

“I cannot begin to describe how scared and alone and difficult it was for me, I can only imagine most women feel the same. Nobody wants to have to make a decision like this and for most they will never have to. I will forever feel grateful for the help and support I received. Thank you all so much.”

~ 37 year old mother of 3