Jeepers, Have All The Newly Unemployed Republicans Gone Into Direct Marketing?

This blog is getting clobbered with spam today.   Note to spammers: I don’t need a bigger penis. Thanks anyway. My life is already filled with too many enormous reproductive organ facsimiles as it is.

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So Much Good News: Deval Patrick New Massachusetts Gov!

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The NYT reports:

Democrat Deval Patrick, a former top U.S. civil-rights enforcer, was elected governor of Massachusetts on Tuesday, becoming the second black ever elected to lead a U.S. state. Breaking a 16-year Republican hold on the office in the liberal state, Patrick won 55 percent of the vote to beat Republican Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey by 15 points.

Here’s Patrick’s website. He won with the endorsements of NARAL, NOW, Planned Parenthood and MassEquality PAC! Thanks for the reminder to Shark-Fu.

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Abortion Supreme Court Oral Argument

Lyle Denniston has a summary of the oral argument before the Supreme Court here. It appears that Justice Kennedy, who wrote a virulently anti-abortion dissent in Stenberg v. Carhart, may be more amenable to striking down the law this time. Chief Justice Roberts, who many, including me, thought might be the only hope for a fifth vote striking down the law, was not very telling during the argument.

– David S. Cohen

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“Gonzales v. Planned Parenthood” Before The Supreme Court Today

Good overview with links at Our Bodies, Our Blog. Background and legal documents are available here or here.

In related and very happy news, y’all no doubt already know that that South Dakota voters voted to overturn that state’s abortion ban, and SD’s virulently anti-choice incumbent AG Phil Kline was defeated.

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Madam Speaker

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I have not always been in agreement with Nancy Pelosi‘s views and actions in the past, and I am sure I will have concerns about things she does or does not do in the future, but watching her ascend to the position of Speaker of the House absolutely thrills me beyond all reason. A female Speaker of the House in the U.S. Congress. Maybe anything really is possible for women. Thank you, Nancy Pelosi, for inspiring in me a sense of optimism about the future I thought was gone forever.

The Republicans have already thrown all manner of criticism her way, and obviously that will only increase. Supposedly Liberal Dudes who secretly despise uppity women will be surreptitiously undermining her leadership behind public masks of support, and history suggests the Supposedly Liberal Dudes will be ably assisted in this by female collaborators, some of whom will claim to be feminists. But this is nothing new or unforeseeable. She’s been fighting these battles for a long time, and last night she won big. Congratulations and thank you, Madam Speaker. You give me hope, and you make me very proud.

–Ann Bartow

Update: WaPo video of Pelosi’s address last night is available here (you have to sit through an advertisement to get to it, sorry).

Update 2d: Diane at the Dees Diversion noticed that Chris Matthews spewed a lot of sexist crap about Pelosi during last night’s coverage.

Update 3d: Per Bitch Ph.D.:

Holy crap, Bush really *did* say “In my first act of bipartisan outreach since the election, I shared with her [Pelosi] the names of some Republican interior decorators who can help her pick out the the new drapes for her new offices.”

Update 4th: Did y’all know that Nancy Pelosi has five children? Read to the bottom of her bio which states: “Pelosi and her husband, Paul Pelosi, a native of San Francisco, have five children: Nancy Corinne, Christine, Jacqueline, Paul and Alexandra, and five grandchildren.”

Update 5th: Feminist Law Prof Sharon Sandeen granted me permission to post the contents of an e-mail message she sent:

I saw your blog about Nancy Pelosi today and it brought back a lot of memories. I remember working on her first campaign (to be the Chair of the California Democratic Party, circa late 1970s) and being in awe of a woman who could achieve such a position of leadership while raising five small children. I knew she had five children because they were often at the campaign headquarters working right along everyone else. She had an amazing ability to keep an eye on them while focusing on her candidacy, a skill that has obviously served her well since. She also always impressed me with her poise and professionalism. Too bad that some pundits have characterized her professional dress as a negative. Of course, whether they dress well or poorly, successful women can’t seem to avoid comments about their attire, hair style, jewelry, etc….

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Women We Owe

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Via Sinister Girl.

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Via here.

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Why I Hate Voting In South Carolina

It’s the lines. I’ve lived and voted in six states: New York, Massachusetts, California, Pennsylvania, Ohio and South Carolina. I’ve never experienced long weights anywhere else like I do in SC. In November 2000 it took me four hours to vote. It hasn’t been quite that bad since, but I’ve never managed to vote in less than an hour, even in “off years.” It never took me more than twenty minutes to vote anywhere else. This disparity is partly because other states provide more voting facilities than South Carolina does. For example, California precincts allocate 1 voting machine for every 200 voters. In South Carolina, the law requires only 1 machine for every 250 voters. From the South Carolina Code:

SECTION 7-13-1680. Number of voting machines; type and use; repair; custody. [SC ST SEC 7-13-1680] The governing body of any county or municipality providing voting machines at polling places for use at elections shall provide for each polling place at least one voting machine for each two hundred fifty registered voters or portion thereof or as near thereto as may be practicable. The machines shall be of the type approved as provided for in this title and shall be kept in complete and accurate working order and in proper repair. The machines may be used in such election districts or precincts in the county or municipality as the officials holding the election or conducting the primary may determine. The governing body of the county or municipality owning the machines shall have custody of such machines and other furniture or equipment of the polling places when not in use at an election.

In Ohio in 2004, in precincts that averaged 170 voters per machine, some people had to wait five hours to vote. My precinct had 8 machines for 2,076 voters this morning (1093 women and 983 men), one machine for every 259 and a half voters. The polling places in SC are open from 7 am to 7 pm. If all the registered voters show up, each machine will have to accomodate 21.72 voters per hour, which would be highly unlikely. It took me 90 minutes to vote (most of which I spent in line), during which time at most twelve other people voted. Some politicians blame this situation on the voters, claiming they inadequately prepare ahead of time, and then take too long to vote, reading and re-reading the proposed statewide constitutional amendments that are on the ballot interminably. Well, I’m glad people read the proposed amendments carefully. Who wants to accidentally vote for hate? Who wants to accidentally vote to have poor and middle class taxpayers subsidize the McMansions of the rich? (“Balanced” overviews of all of the proposed constitutional amendments on the SC ballot are available here and here.)

The brand new, HAVA funded electronic voting machines (which lack a paper back-up, naturally) are complicated to use. After I selected all my candidates and weighed in on all the proposed amendments at issue I got to a screen that told me to touch the “vote button” when I was finished making my selections, but I couldn’t find a “vote button” anywhere on the screen. What I actually needed to do, it turned out, was touch the “next button.” After I touched “next” I needed to push an analog vote button that wasn’t even on the touch screen, but on a different part of the voting machine altogether, several inches above it. A poll worker had to point it out to me. I pushed it and can only hope my votes registered correctly.

–Ann Bartow

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One Weird Mobile Billboard

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Stupidly, I thought it was a joke. It wasn’t:

… No Democrat has won the district in more than 30 years, but Paccione is putting up such a challenge that Bush came to town to try and give Musgrave a boost three days before the Election Day.

“She has worked to prevent the institution of marriage from being redefined by activist judges,” Bush said to thousands rallying for the GOP at a cavernous event center. “She understands your values, and that’s another reason to send her back to the United States Congress.”

Outside, Musgrave’s critics drove a truck mounted with a billboard that criticized the Republican position on gay marriage and its plan in the war on terror: “Stop gay marriage now, so Osama doesn’t get away.”

–Ann Bartow

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I’m the one wearing the yellow shirt!

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This is a picture of the March For Women’s Lives that took place on April 25, 2004 in Washington DC. I attended with a wonderful group of feminist law students. I found this photo at a website called “I’m Not Sorry” which describes itself as “a site where women can share their positive experiences with abortion.”

–Ann Bartow

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Abortion in Poland

According to this “Todayonline” article:

… Abortion is only allowed in Poland in cases of rape, incest, danger to the mother’s life or irreversible malformation of the foetus. Breaking the law carries a two-year jail term.

Recently the ultra-Catholic far right in the country’s parliament sought to have a “right to life from the moment of conception” written into the constitution to prevent any liberalization of the abortion law, and possibly to ban the practice outright.

The move by the League of Polish Families, part of the ruling coalition, has won the backing of the powerful Polish Roman Catholic church.

When Poland was a member of the Soviet bloc abortion was freely available, as it was elsewhere in communist countries. But severe limits were placed on it in 1993 legislation after the fall of communism.

Feminist organisations say that a total ban would only strengthen an already flourishing back street abortion industry.

“We calculate at between 80,000 and 200,000 a year the number of illegal abortions in Poland,” Wanda Nowicka, president of the country’s family planning federation, told AFP recently.

The article also notes that Polish feminists have been demonstrating in favor of a return to legalized abortion. Via The F-Word.

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Are “Porn Stars” Human?

Not according to the U.S. Marines. Jenna Jameson apparently does not exude the solemn patriotic dignity that the Marines’ invited speaker “Ultimate Fighting Championship brawler Tito “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy” Ortiz” does, and for some reason the Marines couldn’t even bring themsleves to eat in her presence. See also Sparkle*Matrix. Cringe-inducing “MSM” accounts here and here.

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The Lancet Has Posted Its Series On Sexual And Reproductive Health Online

The series homepage is here. Registration (free) enables online access to the six constituent articles. Here is the summary for the first article, entitled “Sexual and reproductive health: a matter of life and death“:

Despite the call for universal access to reproductive health at the 4th International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo in 1994, sexual and reproductive health was omitted from the Millennium Development Goals and remains neglected. Unsafe sex is the second most important risk factor for disability and death in the world’s poorest communities and the ninth most important in developed countries. Cheap effective interventions are available to prevent unintended pregnancy, provide safe abortions, help women safely through pregnancy and child birth, and prevent and treat sexually transmitted infections. Yet every year, more than 120 million couples have an unmet need for contraception, 80 million women have unintended pregnancies (45 million of which end in abortion), more than half a million women die from complications associated with pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period, and 340 million people acquire new gonorrhoea, syphilis, chlamydia, or trichomonas infections. Sexual and reproductive ill-health mostly affects women and adolescents. Women are disempowered in much of the developing world and adolescents, arguably, are disempowered everywhere. Sexual and reproductive health services are absent or of poor quality and underused in many countries because discussion of issues such as sexual intercourse and sexuality make people feel uncomfortable. The increasing influence of conservative political, religious, and cultural forces around the world threatens to undermine progress made since 1994, and arguably provides the best example of the detrimental intrusion of politics into public health.

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Dr. Crazy Surely Isn’t

Here is an excerpt from one of her posts at Reassigned Time:

… When I decided to become a professor, I was under the naive impression that I’d be entering a world in which gender didn’t determine my identity quite so much as it would in other professions. I thought all of the theorizing about women and all of the lip-service to feminist ideologies meant that by becoming part of this world – the world of the intelligentsia – that I’d be less regulated by sex/gender stuff. I also thought that all of this education would introduce me to people who had broader ideas about sex/gender than the people I knew from my working-class upbringing. To some extent, this has been true. But to another extent, I’ve seen the ways in which women are put in their place in this world to be more insidious (and as such, more diabolical). People may be more politically correct in this world, but they are often just as sexist at rock bottom.

So what does it take to be labeled “a bitch” or to be labeled “crazy”? Having an opinion. Expressing unhappiness. Pursuing ambitions above one’s station. Getting uppity about an issue. Speaking one’s mind. Refusing to take no for an answer. Refusing to make nice or to smoothe things over. Being too dynamic in the classroom (and no, Sexist Student, I don’t think that “taking horse tranquilizers” would make me a better teacher – nor do I think that I’m “too much of a feminist” to be qualified to teach). Not accepting being pigeonholed into the role of “Professor who listens to students’ problems and will cut them some slack,” in the way of Mommy or Big Sister or Best Friend. Saying no. Saying yes.

In other words, you’re going to call me a “bitch” or call me “crazy” no matter how hard I try to play by the rules. So why not just call myself Crazy and be done with it? All of the momentum that would be gained by calling me Crazy is lost if I just say, “oh yes, I’m crazy, didn’t you notice that sooner?” I’m not going to spend my time and energy trying to refuse that label. There are more important things to talk about. …

Read the whole thing here.

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Privacy and Abortion

It’s been fashionable for a long time to decry the reasoning behind Roe v. Wade as insufficiently focused on women’s equality and too much focused on privacy. After all, the Supreme Court justified denying public funding for poor women’s abortions partly based on the fact that abortion is, from Roe, a private matter, so public funding isn’t required.

However, when stories appear like this one about the Attorney General of Kansas probably leaking information about abortion patients to Bill O’Reilly who then broadcast information about the patients’ abortions on his show, we are reminded why grounding abortion rights in privacy is still absolutely essential to women’s rights and women’s health.

–David S. Cohen

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“Great Feminism. Great Times.”

The title of this post is a product of the Advertising Slogan Generator. Here are some more:

It’s Shake ‘n’ Feminism, and I Helped.

Feminism Tested, Mother Approved.

Come See the Softer Side of Feminism.

Gotta Lotta Feminism.

The Feminism Sign Means Happy Motoring.

Wow! I Could Have Had a Feminism!

It’s the Feminism You Can See.

Fast Feminism and Good for You.

All You Need is a Feminism and a Dream.

Guess I’ll quit while feminism is rhetorically ahead!

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Checking Back In…

With PostSecret:

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and with academicsecret:

The power to walk away:

I almost got sucked into a really unnecessary online discussion about some topic that’s close to my heart. Does everyone here know what trolls are? Trolls are people who seem to be engaged with you in a discussion seriously, but in reality are just trying to derail the conversation. They are to be avoided. The only outcome of engaging in a discussion with a troll is rising blood pressure and major frustration. Oh, plus lots of time lost. So stay away from them. …

The Weepy Little Professor:

This semester, I noticed a group of students who basically sit in the back and laugh the whole time. Turns out (perhaps sadly), this is nothing new. But for some reason, it’s bothering me a lot. It feels like they’re lauging at me.

As a result, I’m finding myself growing more and more self conscious, and I’m losing my lecturing mojo. I’m constantly checking my fly, touching my nose, the whole nine. It’s stupid, but it’s bothering me.

The thing that’s so weird about it is the way they laugh. They look at me, but turn their heads, and put their hand up in front of their faces to whisper something to the others. Then they all giggle. While staring at me. With their hands over their mouths. Imagine a 7th grade lunchroom, and you’ve got the idea.

The thing is, they’re not really disrupting the class, just themselves and me. I once made a joke directed toward the entire class to the effect that the lecturing stage was not, in fact, a television, and that I could actually see them chatting. The class laughed. For once, the little group did not. …

But they also didn’t stop. …

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When the Dead Get Dissed Online

From this NYT article:

…If the Internet has increased the ease and anonymity of communication, it has also weakened inhibition and decorum.

“When they’re face to face at a funeral, people don’t have the guts to do something like that and write something offensive,”said Justin Rowan, embalmer for the Freyvogel Sons Funeral Home in Pittsburgh.”On the Internet, people might not even know the guy, but they might feel free to write something.”…

…Pamela Tay said she felt ill when she discovered a discussion on MyDeathSpace about her 18-year-old daughter, Kelli Laine, who was killed by a drunken driver in 2001.

“It was Mother’s Day when I came across it, and that is the hardest day of the year for any mother who has lost their child,”Ms. Tay said. “They were joking about her sexually. They were saying it was my fault for letting Kelli go out that night.”

After she complained about the postings, they were taken down, only to re-emerge later.

“It is so incredible to me that people say these things,”Ms. Tay said.

Anyone who participates regularly in the feminist blogosphere surprised by this? No, I didn’t think so.

–Ann Bartow

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Sex Trafficking in Iraq and Syria

According to this Guardian Unlimited article:

Um Ahmad, as she was known to the girls, had it all planned out. From Baghdad to the border and on to Damascus and a new life, Mona and her three Iraqi friends didn’t need to worry about a thing.

The job in the textiles factory outside the Syrian capital would pay $300 ( £160) a month, travel for the long journey was already arranged, a place for the girls to stay was ready and waiting and – best of all – Um Ahmad would pay Mona’s father one month’s salary in advance.

For the 26-year-old eldest daughter of eight children whose parents faced a daily despair of car bombs and poverty in their Baghdad slum, the offer sounded too good to be true.

It was.

Within a week of arriving in Damascus, Mona – whose name has been changed to protect her identity – had been plied with alcohol by Um Ahmad, required to dance for “friends of the factory owner” and had lost her virginity.

Unable to return to her family due to the perceived shame she had brought upon them, Mona began her new life in Syria as a prostitute working for Um Ahmad, dancing in bars outside Damascus and having sex with clients. …

…Before April 2003 the number of Iraqis in Syria was estimated at 100,000. Last week UNHCR chief spokesman Ron Redmond said that each month some 40,000 Iraqis are now arriving in Syria, a country of only 19 million people.

The UNHCR report found that prostitution among young Iraqi women in Syria, some just 12 years old, “may become a more widespread problem since the economic situation of Iraqi families is increasingly deteriorating”.

“Organised networks dealing with the sex trade were reported,” it said, finding evidence that “girls and women were trafficked by organised networks or family members”. …

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Elizabeth Alice Clement, “Love for Sale: Courting, Treating, and Prostitution in New York City, 1900-1945”

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From the book’s website:

The intense urbanization and industrialization of America’s largest city from the turn of the twentieth century to World War II was accompanied by profound shifts in sexual morality, sexual practices, and gender roles. Comparing prostitution and courtship with a new working-class practice of heterosexual barter called “treating,” Elizabeth Alice Clement examines changes in sexual morality and sexual and economic practices.

Women “treated” when they exchanged sexual favors for dinner and an evening’s entertainment or, more tangibly, for stockings, shoes, and other material goods. These “charity girls” created for themselves a moral space between prostitution and courtship that preserved both sexual barter and respectability. Although treating, as a clearly articulated language and identity, began to disappear after the 1920s and 1930s, Clement argues that it still had significant, lasting effects on modern sexual norms. She demonstrates how treating shaped courtship and dating practices, the prevalence and meaning of premarital sex, and America’s developing commercial sex industry. Even further, her study illuminates the ways in which sexuality and morality interact and contribute to our understanding of the broader social categories of race, gender, and class.

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Bob Herbert Gets It

Read his recent NYT column, “War on Women,” here if you haven’t yet. [Ed: The title of the column is actually “Punished for Being Female.”] The United Nations report he references is available here and here. Related U.N. complied information about women in the U.S. can be accessed via here.

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Disagreement is Fine, But Hatred Isn’t

Amananta at Screaming Into The Void has a post up about the fact that she has been taking a lot of inappropriate abuse from other bloggers. Although she doesn’t say it directly, it sounds like some stress in her personal life has made this a lot more difficult to bear right now. I support her decision to stop blogging if that is what she needs to do, but damn, I hate it when mean bullies win, and I don’t want to lose her unique and eloquent voice in the feminist blogosphere. If you have anything positive to offer Amananta, now would be a good time. Otherwise, please leave her alone.

–Ann Bartow

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Another Links Post

“The Massacre Behind the Curtain” by Amanda Marcotte at Pandagon

“The Color of Violence” by Samhita at Feministing

“Memoirs of the Racially Insensitive” at Rice Daddies

“Nancy Pelosi Has Girl Cooties” by Amanda Marcotte at Pandagon

“Brutality, repression, and murder in Oaxaca,” at Pinko Feminist Hellcat

“Playing Graph Games in the Gender Wars” by Echidne of the Snakes

This Blackberry commercial via Lizardbreath at Unfogged

“No Protection, No Justice, No Investigations: Violence Against Women in Guatamala,” at Sparkle*Matrix

“No on No.6!” at Mad, Melancholic Feminista

“Shameless Medical Librarian Promotion” at Women’s Health News

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Female Virgina Voters are “Queens For A Day”?

According to the NYT: “In Virginia Race, Women Make the Difference” Here is an excerpt:

In the final stretch before Election Day, both candidates have high-profile Virginia women campaigning on their behalf. Mary Matalin, the Republican strategist, is urging women to”talk to your girlfriends”on Mr. Allen’s behalf. Lynda Robb, the wife of former Senator Chuck Robb and a daughter of President Lyndon B. Johnson, is hailing Mr. Webb as”understanding the needs of Virginia’s families.”

The Allen and Webb campaigns have attacked each other throughout the fall over their commitment (or lack thereof) to women’s issues and concerns, and they are ending, to a large extent, with women’s voices. In one Webb commercial being broadcast this week, a woman named April Cain looks into the camera and declares,”I have two boys, one is 9 and one is 12.”

“George Allen hasn’t done anything to help my family,”Ms. Cain adds.

In a new commercial for Mr. Allen, put up by the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the female announcer intones that Mr. Webb’s writings”routinely stereotype women as promiscuous objects.”

“Arrogantly and outrageously,”the voice continues,”Webb refuses to be ashamed of what he’s written.”

The battle for the female vote began in earnest earlier this fall, when the Allen campaign, struggling to regain control of the race after several missteps, took aim at Mr. Webb’s argument 30 years ago against women in combat and the admission of women to the Naval Academy.

For much of the fall, commercials have featured retired military women arguing for : and against : Mr. Webb, who has said that he has changed over the years and that he should be judged by his record of advancing women when he was secretary of the Navy during the Reagan administration.

Last week, when polls showed the race a dead heat, the Allen campaign introduced a new issue seemingly tailored for women: saying Mr. Webb’s novels included sexually explicit scenes and”chauvinistic attitudes.”

They both sound like jerks to me, but of course though I may be deeply personally affected by whatever dumbass legislation the winner decides or declines to support, I don’t get a vote. Can we get to Election Day without the spectacle of one or both of them campaigning in a pink suit? Here’s hoping.

–Ann Bartow

NB for youthful readers: “Queen for A Day” was a reality television program in the late 1950s through the early 1960s. Read more about it here.

Update: The hate e-mail from Webb supporters has really been poring in over this post. If I lived in Virginia I’d surely hold my nose and vote for Webb, but I’d still notice that he hasn’t been much of a friend to women before this campaign. I like our chances better with Democrats than Republicans, but putting the Democrats into power will only help women if we keep the pressure on the white males like Webb we will largely elect.

Udate 2d: See also.

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Call for Proposals: Feminism, Activism and the Academy

The Women’s Studies Committee at The College of Saint Rose invites you to join Activist/Scholar/Publisher Barbara Smith and Authors/Activists Jennifer Baumgardner and Amy Richards for the First Annual Saint Rose Women’s Studies Regional Conference on Saturday, March 24, 2007.

This year, we invite scholarly papers, practical workshops and dialogues by and between feminist and womanist activists, writers and scholars on themes related to Feminism, Activism and the Academy.

All papers and presentations should present frameworks for understanding a variety of issues – theoretical, organizational and strategic – that are facing women in the struggle toward social justice in our diverse communities and our increasingly connected global world.

We are especially interested in models and strategies of feminist organizing both in and out of the academy and in joint efforts between feminist activists, feminist scholars and oppressed urban communities. Contributions which address the problems of and potential for collaboration between scholars, activists and neighbors in effecting positive social transformation are encouraged

Individual Presentations should be no more than 20 minutes in length (about 10 double spaced pages).

Panel Discussion:   Proposals for panels should include an abstract of the panel and how papers go together. Panel participant names, affiliations and paper titles should also be submitted.

Workshops:   Proposals for workshops should include a complete description of the workshop, presenter’s credentials and the sort of space needed.

Student Paper Awards:   There will be two student paper awards:one for the best undergraduate paper and one for the best graduate student paper.   To be considered for one of these awards, students should (1) indicate on the registration form that they are either a graduate or undergraduate student, and (2) submit their completed paper by February 1, 2007, to Dr. Angela D. Ledford, Women’s Studies Coordinator at ledforda@strose.edu

Registration:   Total registration cost (which includes pastries, coffee, tea and lunch) is $30.00 (payable by check to the WST Program at the College of Saint Rose c/o Dr. Angela D. Ledford, WST Coordinator, The College of Saint Rose, 432 Western Avenue, Albany, NY   12203.   Fee can be reduced or waived based on need.
 Proposals of no more than 300 words should be submitted to Dr. Angela D. Ledford, Women’s Studies Coordinator, at ledforda@strose.edu

Or Dr. Angela D. Ledford, Women’s Studies Coordinator, The College of Saint Rose, 432 Western Avenue, Albany, NY   12203.

Proposals postmarked by January 7th are insured full consideration

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“Instant Blog Post: Template”

This G Bitch Spot post is hilarious.

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Why You Might Not Want To Read “Home Team Advantage: The Critical Role of Mothers in Youth Sports,” by Brooke de Lench

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Flea will tell you at One Good Thing: Here is a short excerpt from her detailed and interesting review:

…De Lench believes that girls are being turned off sports, not only because they are perceived as being unfeminine (which is true) but also because girls are”naturally inclined to play in a process-oriented, collective, inclusive, and supportive way emphasizing relationships and responsibilities.”Girls don’t want to win because they’re afraid of”hurting the other girl’s feelings, because losing makes people feel bad.”

She touts the U.S. women’s soccer team as being the best of all possible role models for young girls, and again I agree, but didn’t de Lench watch the documentary about the team where the players reminisced about how much they hated the Norwegian team and how badly they wanted to beat them? Doesn’t she remember Brandy Chastain’s infamous shirt removal at the end of the U.S/China China game at the Rosebowl? Does she think Chastain ripped off her shirt out of grievance for hurting China’s feelings? …

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Ellen Goodman Asks: “Have you noticed how much dress and undress matter? Even to prime ministers? Have you also noticed how many women believe they are making their own choices when they are actually caught in a cultural vise?”

Read her recent column, “Undressing for Halloween,” in which she observes:

Here in America, our Halloween revelers have only the scantiest — and I do mean scantiest — idea of how the market has shaped the options that they regard as their own. Most women are only dimly aware of how we internalize the liposuctioned, breast-implanted, celebrity-shaped images that define the “right” female body. They are even less aware of a culture that defines sexy as something seen rather than felt.

There in London, a young teacher wearing the niqab seems equally unaware that the mask she dons as an act of self-expression aligns her with the mullahs of repression. After all, in today’s Iran the choices may be veil or jail. And in Afghanistan, women are choosing the burka to save their lives. As Deborah Tolman, who wrote “Dilemmas of Desire,” says, the stakes are astonishingly high: “If we can’t cover it, we can kill it. That’s the context.”

Mullahs and marketers are not the same. Nobody is forcing an American woman into the “Sultry Witch” costume. Nobody is forcing a British citizen into a full-face veil. But there is something, well, scary when women claim the “freedom” to fit into such narrow constraints of sexuality.

Via Our Bodies, Our Blog.

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Drop in number of female Supreme Court clerks “could be anomaly”

At least according to this National Law Journal article, which considers the 50% decrease in the number of female clerks this year as opposed to last, and notes :

Discrimination might explain why women do not constitute a larger share of the clerks [7 out of 37 new hires were female], but it is hard to imagine that those justices who used to hire women but did not this year suddenly turned against women. The dramatic change calls for some other explanation.

The authors conclude it was “a random variation in the applicant pool.” They do not address the larger issues related to why at least half of all law students are female but half of the Supreme Court Clerks are not.

Via the Leiter Law School Reports.

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Betrayal By the Supposedly Liberal Dudes of Nicaragua

Read Heart’s post:

“War on Women in Nicaragua: Left and Right Unite in Total Ban on Abortion”

I think we face the same possibility here in the United States. I hope I am wrong. Every time I see Harry Reid and his ilk glorified by the Supposedly Liberal Dudes like Atrios, I fear that I am not.

–Ann Bartow

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Not My Best Friend

Diamonds. See also. See also 2d.

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Carnival of the Feminists #26!

Up at A Blog Without A Bicycle.

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A Nightmare

DNA clears man of 1981 rape conviction. Unbelievably awful for the wrongly imprisoned man, and fairly horrible for the woman who was raped and cut with a knife as well. Her side of the story is not reported in the linked article.

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“An appellate court said Maryland’s rape law is clear — no doesn’t mean no when it follows a yes and intercourse has begun.”

Short news story here, via Sinister Girl. The lenthy court opinion in the case, Maouloud Baby v. State of Maryland, is accessible here. It is not pleasant to read, to put it mildly.

Update: Analysis at Sex Crimes.

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The NYT Has A 2006 Elections Blog

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Full sized version here. Notice anything all the bloggers have in commmon? Via Laura Quilter at Derivative Work.

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There is Something Disconcerting About These Baby Accessories

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“Zaky — It’s Like Leaving a Part of You with Your Baby”

Available here in case you actually want to buy them, maybe for next Halloween?

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Sex Crimes: A blog devoted to the criminal laws regulating and punishing sex offenders

By Corey Rayburn Yung, it is accessible here.

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CFP: Special Technology Issue of “Feminist Teacher”

From the CFP:

Seeking Papers that
… address any topic related to technology
… take an explicitly feminist perspective
… discuss implications for teaching practices

Using a broad definition of technology, we are interested in papers that address feminist concerns in relation to teaching about technology, the uses of technology for teaching, technology policies of schools or other sites of teaching, the intrusion of technology into educational settings, and related topics. Suggested topics include technology assessment from a feminist perspective, communications technology and access to women, representations of women in media and technology, teaching feminist ethics in high tech contexts, including reproductive technologies in biology or health classes, issues raised by genetic testing, using technology in teaching your subject matter, technology in social studies classes, how language of technology positions women, teaching about technology with feminist science fiction, how girls appropriate technology, sexuality and technology, gender issues in high tech gaming, the proliferation of pornography on the web, and many others.

If you have an idea for a paper you’d like to chat about or if you have a paper you would like to submit, please contact

Issue Editor: Suzanne Damarin
Damarin.1@osu.edu
Phone: 614-292-7845
Fax: 614-292-7900
Ohio State University

DEADLINES: One Page Abstract – December 4
Full Manuscript – April 2, 2007

Feminist Teacher is a Quarterly Journal published by the University of Illinois Press. Learn more here.

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Geoffrey Stone on “Gay Marriage in New Jersey”

At the U of Chicago Law School’s Faculty Blog. Here is an excerpt:

We have come a long way. I remember the first time a student wrote on a classroom blackboard “Come to the First Meeting of Gay Law Students Association. Wednesday. 4:00. Seminar Room C.” This was roughly twenty-five years ago. I was stunned to see such a message. Although I had previously had one or two openly gay students, the idea of a Gay Law Students Association was completely novel to me. One of my faculty colleagues was outraged, comparing it to a Heroin-Users Law Students Association. It was, he said, a criminal conspiracy. Three years later, that professor (knowingly) wrote Supreme Court clerkship recommendation letters on behalf of the student who had written that initial announcement.

Within a decade, the Law School had banned any employer who discriminated on the basis of sexual orientation (including the United States military) from using the Law School’s placement facilities (as it had already banned employers who discriminated on the basis of race, religion, and gender) and established the Stonewall Scholarship for students who intended to devote part of their careers to defending the rights of gays and lesbians. By the late 1980s, neither of these steps was seen as particularly controversial.

Cass Sunstein has a related post entitled, “Gay Marriage Timing in New Jersey.”

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Happy Halloween!

halloween_02.jpg From here.
halloween1998.jpg

From here.

pukepump.gif From here.

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From here.

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Linda DeRiviere, “A human capital methodology for estimating the lifelong personal costs of young women leaving the sex trade”

This article appeared in Feminist Economics (July 2006). Here is the abstract:

This article combines case study interviews with the tools of economic cost-benefit analysis to estimate the lifelong effects for individuals in Manitoba, Canada, who began engaging in prostitution as youths. The empirical findings reveal that sex workers retain only a small portion of their earnings from prostitution after feeding drug addictions and third-parties extortions of net residual earnings. The sex-trade worker typically suffers from debilitating addictions and health conditions that are symptomatic of the stress and danger of engaging in this lifestyle. After leaving prostitution, the former sex worker faces major challenges in rejoining the mainstream labor market. The issues engender multiple reasons for policy-makers to direct their attention to counteracting the conditions of vulnerability that bring youth into this lifestyle and, thereby, effectively disrupting the supply of sex workers.

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Planned Parenthood, Cecile Richards, and South Dakota

An essay by Jennifer Baumgardner in The Nation describes the challenges facing Planned Parenthood. Here is a short excerpt:

… And yet, there is a gap between Planned Parenthood’s reach and its grip: its ability to make politicians bend to its will or even inspire the communities it serves. This was obvious when Senator John Kerry recently announced that he believes that both sides–prolife and prochoice–obfuscate and exaggerate for political gain. It is obvious when state legislators all over the map work openly with prolife groups, defying the opinions of medical experts (the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists doesn’t support any of the myriad restrictions on abortion). And it is obvious in South Dakota. The state has two Planned Parenthood clinics–but they have to fly their doctors (and, until recently, their nurses) in from Minneapolis, nearly 200 miles away, because the local community doesn’t necessarily embrace the organization. In February South Dakota’s legislature passed a law banning all abortions unless the life of the pregnant woman is in danger. There is no health exception and no exception for pregnancy due to rape or incest. On March 6 Governor Mike Rounds signed the ban, sparking a campaign to overturn it with an initiative on the ballot this November, as well as a flurry of fundraising, organizing and e-mails from groups like the ACLU, NARAL Pro-Choice America and, of course, Planned Parenthood. …

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Judge Holds That Exposure Law is Gender Specific

According to this Yahoo News article:

A judge dismissed an indecent exposure charge against a woman accused of disrobing in front of a 14-year-old boy, saying the law only applies to men. Superior Court Judge Robert W. Armstrong said earlier in the week that the law only mentions someone who “exposes his person.”

“It’s gender specific,” Armstrong said.

He dismissed a misdemeanor charge against Alexis Luz Garcia, 40, of Corona, who was cited in May after parents of a neighbor boy said she showed him full-frontal nudity as he played basketball.

Prosecutor Alison N. Norton said the decision to throw out the case will be appealed because another section of state law says that “words used in the masculine gender include the feminine and neuter.”

Norton said Garcia had complained that the 14-year-old was making too much noise while playing basketball. She went out on her sundeck.

“He looked up at her, she looked down at him, and she disrobed,” Norton contended.

The boy ran inside and told his parents, who complained to Garcia.

“She threatened to do it every time he played basketball,” and the parents called police, Norton said.

Via Sui Generis, A New York Law Blog.

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Spam O’Lantern

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Yeah, it kind of makes me queasy too. From here.

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Links: Interesting Things To Read

“‘Science’ kits that teach stereotypes” at Adventures in Ethics and Science.

at Blackfeminism.org.

“Reflections On BigLaw” at The Happy Feminist.

“Katherine Arnoldi: Fighting For Teen Moms” at Feministing.

“A Jolly Trapise Through The Whorehouse of Antiquity” at I Blame the Patriarchy.

“Valuing Families: State Legislative Models Brought to you by Progressive States and MomsRising” and “Immigrant Poor Send More Foreign Aid than US Govt” both at NathanNewman.org.

“Fear Thy Neighbor” at Doing Justice.

“Flesh, Cloth and Rape” at Feminish.

“Pestilence Amid Prosperity” at Jurisdynamics.

“Note to NeoCons: Stop Pimping Feminist Arguments” at Mad, Melancholic Feminista.

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Her Rapist

Author Maureen Gibbon has an essay called “My Rapist” in today’s NYT Magazine. The courage she showed by writing this, and by publishing it in such a public venue, is incredible. Though the prose is fairly pared down, her pain radiates powerfully through her words.

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She Wasn’t Human To Them

At Women’s Space/The Margins, Heart has been blogging about acts of violence against women. It can’t be easy for her to write these posts, and they are very difficult to read, but it is important that people pay attention to this issue, and she is to be commended for her efforts. Recently she publicized an incident in which 14 boys were incredibly abusive toward a girl, without appearing to have any awareness that she was actually a fellow human being. The post begins as follows:

Last June a developmentally disabled 17-year-old girl, Julia, met two boys she had chatted with online at a local shopping mall. They led her to a nearby riverbank, where the two boys became up to 14 boys.

The boys raped her (forced her to perform oral sex), beat her, lit her hair on fire several times, poured urine onto her body from a cup, then urinated on her directly. They then threw her coat and some of her clothes into the river.

They filmed the entire attack and made a DVD out of it, which they sold for $5 each. They later made a worse video which was sold for $10 each. They listed their real names as credits in the video. One boy thanked his mother for the use of her videocamera. …

You can read it in its entirety here, and you should.

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Pole Dancing Kit For Girls

Taking the sexualized Halloween costume for young girls to a whole new level, we have this development out of England: a pole-dancing kit being sold as a toy for young girls. After an outcry from parents, the kit was taken out of the toys and games section of Britain’s biggest retailer’s website . . . and moved to the fitness section.

Sometimes it’s hard to write fiction more shocking than reality.

–David S. Cohen

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The Path To Marriage In New Jersey

A few days ago the NJ Supreme Court stopped short of ordering full marriage rights for same-sex couples.   Instead, the court ordered the legislature to institute a system of equal benefits and rights for them, whatever that system may be called. The legislature can choose to join Massachusetts with full marriage or Vermont and Connecticut with civil unions (or some other term that’s the equivalent to marriage in everything but name).

There is one other option for the legislature, though, and this one could be the best bet to full marriage rights for same-sex couples. The court gave the legislature 180 days to act. Given the long history of the New Jersey legislature ignoring direct orders from the state supreme court (see the New Jersey school funding saga for unfortunate examples), it’s possible that the legislature might do nothing in the next 180 days. After all, that’s not that long for a legislature to act.

But, doing nothing might just be the most realistic path to full marriage. There may be a majority of the legislature in favor of full marriage, and if that’s the case, then by all means, they should go that way. But, presuming there isn’t (and the state’s enacting a watered-down domestic partner bill in 2004 indicates there isn’t support for full marriage), legislators in favor of full marriage for same-sex couples should stall by any means possible.

Here’s why: if nothing happens in 180 days, the litigants will go back to court to enforce the decision. The New Jersey courts (possibly the state supreme court if the litigants go back there to re-open the decision) will have no choice but to enter an order requiring the state to marry the couples. Why? Because they have ordered full equality (just not necessarily in name), and if the legislature fails to act, the only way full equality can be achieved is through marriage . . . because no other parallel institution will exist. The court can’t create it, and neither can the state agency that oversees marriage licenses. Only the legislature can create something other than marriage. So, if nothing exists other than marriage, the court will have to order marriage.

Patience (and delay) just might be the biggest virtue here.

–David S. Cohen

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Court to “Toto” Constant: Pay $19M in damages to women raped and otherwise tortured by death squad under your command

The Center for Justice and Accountability (www.cja.org), on whose founding Board of Directors I served, has just announced a significant victory for justice. The US District Court for the Southern District of New York has ordered Emmanuel”Toto”Constant to pay $19 million in damages to three women who survived rape, other torture, and attempted killing committed by FRAPH, the notorious Haitian death squad that operated under the command of Constant. CJA notes that the judgment “marks the first time where someone has been held accountable for the state-sponsored campaign of rape in Haiti.” Acknowledging rape as torture is also significant as this was an Alien Tort Claims Act case decided post-Sosa (see Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692 (2004)) and a Torture Victim Protection Act case.

Jennie Green of the Center for Constitutional Rights, who was part of the litigation team, stated: “In holding that rape is a form of torture, this decision is an important addition to the body of law prohibiting sexual violence. The courageous women who brought this case have sent a message that torturers cannot live freely in the United States and will be held accountable.”The court order with the findings of fact (which are grim reading indeed), conclusions of law, and award of damages appears here. News stories on the case appear here. A good overview of issues, facts and law appears in the CJA/CCR press release here. A press release on the case is here and background information about the case and about the targeting of women in Haiti in the early 1990s appears here.

–Stephanie Farrior

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Decision in NJ Same-Sex Marriage Case

The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled today that denying same-sex couples the benefits that opposite-couples receive through marriage violates the New Jersey Constitution and that the state legislature should determine the appropriate remedial steps.   The Court reasoned:

Denying committed same-sex couples the financial and social benefits and privileges given to their married heterosexual counterparts bears no substantial relationship to a legitimate governmental purpose. The Court holds that under the equal protection guarantee of Article I, Paragraph 1 of the New Jersey Constitution, committed same-sex couples must be afforded on equal terms the same rights and benefits enjoyed by opposite-sex couples under the civil marriage statutes. The name to be given to the statutory scheme that provides full rights and benefits to same-sex couples, whether marriage or some other term, is a matter left to the democratic process.

The full text of the decision is here.

-Posted by Bridget Crawford

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