Arrgh.

This. And this.

–Ann Bartow

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The Third Circuit has thrown out a $550,000 indecency fine against CBS for Janet Jackson’s “wardrobe malfunction” at the 2004 Super Bowl.

Per this AP story:

… The three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the Federal Communications Commission “acted arbitrarily and capriciously” in issuing the fine for the fleeting image of nudity.

Ninety million people were watching the Super Bowl when singer Justin Timberlake reached for Jackson’s chest.

The court found that the FCC fine for the “broadcast of a nine-sixteenths of one second glimpse of a bare female breast” deviated from its nearly 30-year practice of fining broadcast indecency only when it was extremely “pervasive.”

The opinion is here. Nice to see some common sense on this issue.

–Ann Bartow

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Female Olympians, Raise Your Backsides

Speaking of Olympians, today USA Gymnastics announced the members of the 2008 U.S. Women’s Olympic Gymnastics Team. Coverage here. I find the accompanying team photo (at top, above) quite annoying. Why are the athletes in the front row bending at the knees and lifting up their backsides? Did the photographer ask them to do that? Did they choose to strike that pose?

Would a photographer ever ask a group of male athletes to pose like that? Would male athletes ever pose like that? I doubt it.

Members of men’s team (above), while (or perhaps because) photographed with the victors’ bouquets, mostly adopt the “my-penis-is-too-big-to-close-my-legs” stance.

-Bridget Crawford

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True and Amazing Travel Story: Olympics Edition

I flew back from Stockholm yesterday and was upgraded to Business Class, which was a nice surprise. After I got settled in my aisle seat, a women asked me to change seats so that she could sit with her (adult) daughter. I agreed a little grumpily, since this meant I had to pull my luggage out of the overhead bin and travel toward the front of the plane, upstream against a torrent of boarding passengers. But I did it, and mercifully got another aisle seat in trade, and even better, my new seat mate was a nice and friendly young man who was returning home from a series of international track meets. He was going to spend a few weeks training, and then in August fly to Beijing to compete in the Olympics, which he had already qualified for. His life story is a very interesting and compelling one, and I enjoyed talking to him a lot. I’m not going to reveal his name here, at least for the time being, but I’ll be cheering for him during the Olympics, no question. Now here is where things get freaky weird, in a very cool way. My seat mate was wearing a tee shirt that said “Power To The People” and bore a graphic depiction of the winners’ platform at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City, when Tommie Smith (US gold medalist in the 200 meter race) and his teammate John Carlos famously raised their gloved fists in the Black Power salute. And sitting to my left, just across the aisle, also returning from a series of international track meets (as it turns out, many of the people on the plane were) where he had been coaching was … Tommie Smith. I kid you not.

The conversation that followed when a friendly and observant flight attendant made the connection and pointed all this out was amazing; one of the coolest things I’ve witnessed in a long time. The two had not met before, but I think they will stay in touch now.

So I’m back, and will blog more when the jet lag passes and eight million errands are complete.

–Ann Bartow

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Hair Matters There

Very clever feminist ad modification via AdBust (here).

-Bridget Crawford

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Women for Parity

A group of feminist activists has launched a new blog, “Women for Parity” at http://www.womenforparity.net.  Bloggers there offer political commentary on women’s issues.  Welcome to the blogosphere, Women for Parity!

-Bridget Crawford

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“Black. Female. Accomplished. Attacked.”

WaPo OpEd about Michelle Obama here.

-Maggie Chon

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San Diego Grand Hyatt Boycott (and Girlcott!)

Since this is the hotel where the AALS annual meeting is being held, I thought the FLP readership would be concerned about this story.   The Grand Hyatt’s owner gave $125K to the marriage ban campaign; now gay activists are calling for a boycott.   An excerpt:

Gay rights supporters and their union allies plan to launch a boycott of the Manchester Grand Hyatt because its owner, Doug Manchester, contributed $125,000 to Proposition 8, an amendment to ban same-sex marriage on the November ballot.

Organizers of the campaign, which is expected to be announced at a news conference today, say they believe it is the first time that gay rights supporters have boycotted a business whose owner seeks to ban same-sex marriage.

Leaders will urge the public to avoid the downtown hotel because they say that support for Proposition 8 amounts to unfair treatment of gays and lesbians.

“Manchester’s contribution to this anti-marriage initiative is discrimination plain and simple,”said Brigette Browning, president of Unite Here Local 30, which represents 4,500 hotel and restaurant workers.

The Manchester Grand Hyatt is not unionized. …Gay rights supporters and their union allies plan to launch a boycott of the Manchester Grand Hyatt because its owner, Doug Manchester, contributed $125,000 to Proposition 8, an amendment to ban same-sex marriage on the November ballot.
Organizers of the campaign, which is expected to be announced at a news conference today, say they believe it is the first time that gay rights supporters have boycotted a business whose owner seeks to ban same-sex marriage.

Leaders will urge the public to avoid the downtown hotel because they say that support for Proposition 8 amounts to unfair treatment of gays and lesbians.

“Manchester’s contribution to this anti-marriage initiative is discrimination plain and simple,”said Brigette Browning, president of Unite Here Local 30, which represents 4,500 hotel and restaurant workers.

The Manchester Grand Hyatt is not unionized.

(The good news in this story, I think, is the alliance between the gay activists and the unions.   Hooray for unions.)  

-Erin Buzuvis

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H&R Block and Taxing Civil Unions

To follow-up on an earlier post, the Los Angeles Times is reporting here that H&R Block has agreed to reimburse civil union couples who began filling out their tax returns online only to be told that the company’s software did not support civil union returns.   These couples ended up having to pay extra ($155 in one reported case) to complete their returns.   The company has agreed to provide couples either a $100 coupon toward having their tax returns prepared or a free copy of its tax preparation software.

-Anthony C. Infanti

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DOMA and the Census

Last Friday, Gary Gates of UCLA’s Williams Institute had an interesting op-ed piece in the Los Angeles Times. In the piece, he makes an argument for why the Census Bureau should not alter the responses of married same-sex couples to the 2010 census by reporting them as “unmarried” partners. The Census Bureau, of course, argues that the federal “defense of marriage” act (DOMA) confines marriage to the union of a man and a woman for all federal purposes, including the census. Gates makes the sensible argument that data on the number of married same-sex couples is something that policymakers and researchers could all benefit from and that the collection of data should not be driven by ideology. Unfortunately, I doubt that this argument will have any traction under the current administration (and might be too much of a lightning rod even for the next to take up so early on in its tenure).

-Anthony C. Infanti

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Centennial Events at New England School of Law

This year the New England School of Law celebrates its centennial.   It was founded in 1908 as a women’s law school.   The school’s website (here) lists   some of the great events planned to mark the occasion, including lectures by Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, Justicie Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Professor Martha Fineman (Emory), Professor Virginia Drachman (History, Tufts) and a panel discussion featuring four female chief justices of state supreme courts: Margaret Marshall (Massachusetts), Christine Durham (Utah), Ruth McGregor (Arizona) and   Leah Ward Sears (Georgia).   What a great way to celebrate!

-Bridget Crawford

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Nervous Nellie Was Not a Woman

Today I found myself using the descriptor “Nervous Nellie” in an attempt to self-deprecate when reminding a colleague to do something (as in, “I’m probably being a Nervous Nellie, but I just wanted to check whether you had done …”).  That got me thinking.  Who was Nervous Nellie, and why did it have to be a woman who was nervous?  So I consulted one of my favorite procrastination devices, the Oxford English Dictionary.  Here’s what the OED had to say:

Nervous Nellie  n.  [popularized by use in U.S. politics, esp. as applied to Frank B. Kellogg (1856-1937), U.S. politician.]  slang  (chiefly  U.S.) an overly timid, cautious, or fearful person; one who fusses unnecessarily.

Nervous Nellie aka Frank Kellogg (above left) was not a woman, as I feared.  Whew!  I breathed a sigh of relief.  But wait, is that misogyny lurking?  The original Nervous Nellie was a man, called by a woman’s name to put him down because he exhibited “womanly” traits such as timidity, caution and fear.   So to call a man a “Nervous Nellie” is to deride him as unmasculine, non-conforming to gender expectations.  To call a woman (or to call myself) a “Nervous Nellie” is to deride her for conforming too closely to gender expectations of the weak female.  I used a sexist remark to describe myself?!  Not part of my self-development plan at all.

Off I went looking for further information on Frank B. Kellogg.  I found  this  in the Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress:  he was a United States Senator from Minnesota, Calvin Coolidge’s Secretary of State, an Associate Judge of the Permanent Court for International Justice and the winner of the 1929 Nobel Peace Prize.  Seems like being a “Nervous Nellie” wasn’t such a bad thing after all.  Maybe I should embrace my inner Nervous Nellie.

-Bridget Crawford

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Serving Up Gender Stereotypes With Those Fries

On a trip to the suburbs, I experienced the McDonald’s drive-thru [sic].  Admittedly it was not my finest parenting hour.  And I almost became unhinged when asked by the cashier,  “Do you want a ‘girl’ toy or a ‘boy’ toy with that Happy Meal?”  Far from being some sort of Madonna Ciccone-like cosmic question, it was a practical one: does your kid want the Transformers action figure or the “Littlest Pet Shop” figurine?  

I spared the cashier my inner monologue about gender stereotypes.  Why, I asked myself, is the Transformer the “boy” toy and the Littlest Pet Shop figure is the “girl” toy?  More interestingly, how hard would it be to de-gender the Happy Meal?  Surely if McDonald’s can implement a corporate policy requiring its drive-thru cashiers say, “Hello.  Welcome to McDonald’s.  May I take your order?” then it should not be too difficult to require cashiers to ask, “Would you like a Transformer or a Littlest Pet Shop toy with that Happy Meal?”  

-Bridget Crawford

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Feminist Law Professor Nan Hunter Launches Blog

Nan Hunter (Georgetown Law) has started a brand new blog, Hunter of Justice. It will offer a generally legal take on sexuality and gender issues. Here’s an excerpt of one of her first entries:

The politics of counting, or, Numbers never lie … except when they do

Press reports have been building all week about the Census Bureau’s announcement that it will not count same-sex couples legally married in California or Massachusetts (or in other countries) as”married.”The San Jose Mercury News broke the story, which was picked up by the Washington Post, and the AP story ran in the Times and who knows where else. Now People for the American Way has started a petition campaign calling on the Bureau to change its policy. It’s fascinating to me what legs this story has — the issue isn’t new (see below), but it’s newly visible because it’s being driven as a spin-off of the California drama.

Officials justify the decision as required by the Defense of Marriage Act (DoMA), which limits recognition of”marriage”to different-sex couples for purposes of all federal laws and agency actions. See the Bureau’s analysis, originally posted regarding the 2000 census: http://www.census.gov/population/www/cen2000/samesex.html

Congratulations, Nan!

-Caitlin Borgmann

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16th Carnival of the Feminists

Here, at Gorgon Poisons.

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Jeannie Suk on “Is Privacy a Woman?”

Jeannie Suk (Harvard Law School) has posted Is Privacy a Woman? on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

This essay is about the representation of privacy. Focusing on several of the Supreme Court’s Fourth Amendment cases regarding the police and the home, I explore judicial articulations of the meaning of private space. Several striking figures of women appear in the Justices’ opinions in Kyllo v. United States, and Georgia v. Randolph, for example, and represent different conceptions of privacy that are in dialogue and conflict. To theorize privacy in the home is to imagine a woman, and the way she is imagined is bound up with the idea of the home and stakes of privacy articulated. From the lady of the house in the bath, to the lady at home receiving callers, to the battered woman, distinctive figures of women reveal peculiar fault lines in the modern meaning of privacy in an era of judicial commitment to gender equality. Even long after the gradual demise of the particular marital privacy associated with the common law of coverture, the idea of protecting women from men remains central and appears today in new and different guises that evince both change and continuity in the legal meaning of the home.

Caitlin Borgmann

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Snip, Snip, Snip and a Couple of Lah-Dee-Dahs

 The August 2008 issue of Details magazine reports on a new “trend” in young men receiving vasectomies.  In  “The Birth-Control Extremists” Richard Morgan writes:

[L]ately, vasectomies are becoming the province of young, single men who claim to be tired of worrying about their partners’ vigilance with the Pill. So rather than use condoms:less than ideal in terms of pleasure and, compared with vasectomies, which have an estimated 1 in 2,000 failure rate, only so-so on the contraception front:they’re opting for a permanent fix. * * *  

Each one costs $2,500 and takes around seven minutes. Before the procedure, patients go through a rigorous consultation, most of which consists of warnings. Warning: You’ll have an ice pack on your balls for 24 hours. Warning: You also must wear a “scrotal supporter” for 48 hours. Warning: Your first postoperative ejaculations might be bloody. Warning: There may be heavy bruising and/or swelling. Warning: You will not be sterile right afterward; it takes 6 to 12 weeks or 15 to 20 ejaculations to clear out old sperm. Warning: According to [NY physician  Marc]  Goldstein, you should consider your new infertility  permanent.

And while the prospect of all that might be enough to deter some guys who are considering a precautionary vasectomy:even those susceptible to sneak-pregnancy hysteria:that could be about to change. According to Vincent Ciaccio, a spokesman for a social club for the child-free called No Kidding who got his vasectomy when he was 23, there are rumblings of experiments in China with a simple surgical procedure in which tubes are added to and removed from the vas deferens, which would allow for fully reversible infertility. If that happens, any perceived inequality between the genders when it comes to who’s in charge of birth control could be eliminated. Get ready for equal-opportunity irresponsibility.

The full article is available here.  

Men taking responsibility for birth control is a salutary move, but  Details author Morgan fails to mention that  condoms are  not just contraceptive devices (duh).  They are also a means to reduce or eliminate the risk that one will give (or get) a sexually-transmitted disease.  In the AZT era, are young men not concerned about HIV infection?  Genital warts, anyone?  And  will vasectomies be just another “excuse” for men to avoid condom use?  (“Don’t worry, baby, I got snipped.”)  

I must admit that I did find funny Morgan’s  description of men who are “susceptible to sneak-pregnancy hysteria,” in light of the historic diagnosis of hysteria as a uterine condition.

Thanks to Terrance DeRosa for bringing the Details article to my attention.

-Bridget Crawford

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Been traveling, will be back to blogging in a few days.

–Ann Bartow

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What Makes a Feminist Law Firm?

An article in  today’s  New York Lawyer, entitled  Forming A “Feminist Law Practice,”  describes an unusual Canadian law firm:  

While more women may be starting their own firms, Galldin Liew of Ottawa has taken the unique step of calling itself a “feminist law practice.”  *  * *

Karin Galldin, 31, and Jamie Liew, 30, who graduated from the University of Ottawa Faculty of Law in 2005, said none of their past employers embodied the kind of environment they wanted from a law firm.

“We feel very strongly that we’d like to be an all-service shop as much as we can be for women in the community so they are not getting bounced around from lawyer to lawyer,” Galldin said. “We’d like to be able to get them a full and complete opportunity and appropriate representation instead of saying we only do X and Y. So holistic service is very important to us.”

Both lawyers said they made a commitment to give back to the community, so they serve on boards of local organizations and conduct free workshops, such as “What the Eff Am I Signing? Clever Girls’ Guide to Copyright Contract Law.” * * *

In order to be true to their feminist philosophy, Liew said she does not defend men in criminal cases, the exception being smaller infractions that do not involve violence.

The firm’s feminist policy is included in its retainer so all clients understand the philosophy, Galldin said. There is no shortage of criminal defense firms in Ottawa willing to represent men in cases involving violence, but Galldin said her firm avoids such cases in order to avoid any conflicts. For example, the firm wants to avoid a situation of defending men in criminal cases in the event one of the firm’s female clients turns out to be on the opposite side of the case.

“Because we want to use law as a tool for women, we have decided that, in particular areas of our practice, so as to never be in conflict, we won’t represent men,” Galldin said.

The article quotes this blog’s own Ann Bartow, saying,  “I haven’t seen too many that identify as feminists, but definitely there is a trend of women starting their own firms and trying to carve out a niche and trying to leverage gender as something that helps them stand out a little bit.”  

The full article is available here  (free registration required – sorry).  Thanks to Feminist Law Prof Marie Newman for pointing out the article.  It raises so many questions.  

What makes a law firm “feminist,” as opposed to a firm where feminists work?  Is there enough demand for “feminist” private-sector lawyers so that a “feminist” firms can survive?  There are more  all-women firms now than there were in 1980, for example, when  Levine, Kuriloff and Polan  became the first all-female law firm in New Haven, Connecticut, but they are not exactly common.   It makes me wonder about the long-term viability of a feminist law firm as a business model.  But I’m crossing my feminist fingers anyway, and wishing long, happy, successful and fulfilling legal careers for Ms. Galldin and Ms. Liew.  

-Bridget Crawford

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Nail . . . Meet Hammer

Tom Toles on the New Yorker for the Washington Post.

-Kathleen A. Bergin

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HHS: Contraception Is Abortion

The George Bush not-dead-yet-Presidency lives on! And it’s trying to redefine abortion for all federal grant recipients to include contraception. Read about the story here from RH Reality Check and commentary here from feministing.

– David S. Cohen

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John McCain, Gay Adoption, and Penguins

Strange mix here, but I thought John McCain’s recent insistence that, despite being a parent of an adopted child, he doesn’t “believe in gay adoption” is a nice segway into this story about how homosexuality has been observed to appear naturally in over 1500 species.   McCain presumably wouldn’t approve of Roy and Silo:

Two penguins native to Antarctica met one spring day in 1998 in a tank at the Central Park Zoo in midtown Manhattan. They perched atop stones and took turns diving in and out of the clear water below. They entwined necks, called to each other and mated. They then built a nest together to prepare for an egg. But no egg was forthcoming: Roy and Silo were both male.

Robert Gramzay, a keeper at the zoo, watched the chinstrap penguin pair roll a rock into their nest and sit on it, according to newspaper reports. Gramzay found an egg from another pair of penguins that was having difficulty hatching it and slipped it into Roy and Silo’s nest. Roy and Silo took turns warming the egg with their blubbery underbellies until, after 34 days, a female chick pecked her way into the world. Roy and Silo kept the gray, fuzzy chick warm and regurgitated food into her tiny black beak.

– David S. Cohen

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Get Yer Tokens Here

I went yesterday to Major League Baseball’s All-Star Fanfest here in New York City at the Javits Center.     There were several”attractions”like virtual batting cages (if you didn’t mind waiting on line for over an hour) and the opportunity to record your own play-by-play narration of some of MLB’s greatest games.   Just as I was leaving, I happened to catch one of the”featured”events — an appearance by four former players from the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (popularized in the 1992 film”A League of Their Own“starring Geena Davis, Rosie O’Donnell and Madonna and directed by Penny Marshall).  

Yes, MLB acknowledged the history of (white) women in pro baseball.   There also was a small historical exhibit with memorabilia from the (male) Negro League.   But both the appearances by the AAGPBL players and the small historical exhibit seemed so…canned and uninsightful.     The interviewer’s”big”question to the former AAGPBL players was,”Which of you was Madonna [portraying]?”    I would have been very interested in hearing more about the players’ perspective on the continued exclusion of women from so many levels of professional sports.  But “Fanfest” must be code for “let’s pretend,” judging by the number of grown men dressed in baseball caps, baseball shirts and carrying their gloves around the Javits Center.

-Bridget Crawford  

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Tapeworms As Diet Aid?

Ugh. Via.

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From The Department of: “Anonymous” Was Usually A Woman

This NYT article reports controversy over the authorship of the Serenity Prayer. Below is an excerpt:

… For more than 70 years, the composer of the prayer was thought to be the Protestant theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, one of modern Christianity’s towering figures. Niebuhr, who died in 1971, said he was quite sure he had written it, and his wife, Ursula, also a prominent theologian, dated its composition to the early 1940s.

His daughter Elisabeth Sifton, a book editor and publisher, wrote a book about the prayer in 2003 in which she described her father first using it in 1943 in an”ordinary Sunday service”at a church in the bucolic Massachusetts town of Heath, where the Niebuhr family spent summers.

Now, a law librarian at Yale, using new databases of archival documents, has found newspaper clippings and a book from as far back as 1936 that quote close versions of the prayer. The quotations are from civic leaders all over the United States : a Y.W.C.A. leader in Syracuse, a public school counselor in Oklahoma City : and are always, interestingly, by women.

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The Slippery Slope

Feminist Law Prof Meredith Miller has launched a new general interest law-related podcast called The Slippery Slope. This is a super-cool project, and I’m not just saying that because she asked me to be a guest! Check it out!

Tracy McGaugh

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Women For John McCain

I’m 85% sure this is satire, and 15% afraid it is not.

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The University Of South Carolina Has A New President.

Announcement here. It was clear to me when the two other finalists were women that Pastides was going to get the job. As far as I can tell, the women finalists were perfectly well qualified, but there wasn’t a chance in hell any woman was getting the job. Sorry for huge dose of bitter cynicism.

–Ann Bartow

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South Carolina counterproductively drops out of campaign to attract gay tourists

The State reports:

South Carolina’s top tourism agency has canceled an overseas advertising campaign targeting gay tourists.

The campaign, tied to gay pride week celebrations in London, included ads that proclaimed”South Carolina is so gay.”A handful of other U.S. destinations joined the campaign, including Atlanta, Boston and New Orleans.

After learning last week the state had agreed to spend tax money on the campaign : and spurred by a post on The Palmetto Scoop blog : the Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism said Thursday it would not pay the tour operator.

Parks, Recreation and Tourism director Chad Prosser said an agency advertising manager signed off on the contract, proposed by the agency’s London advertising contractor.

The agency will not pay the roughly $4,942 fee to take part in the campaign.

Employees”exercised extremely poor judgment in approving participation in the program,”Prosser said. PRT, he said, will require more review of future overseas advertising, as it does with domestic advertising.

The campaign touts Amro Worldwide, a London-based company specializing in gay travel. The campaign was meant to reclaim the phrase”so gay,”which has been used as a slur, Amro CEO Andrew Roberts said in a press release June 27.

Efforts to reach Amro Worldwide were unsuccessful.

That press release also included a statement from a”South Carolina tourism”spokesperson noting”we think people may be surprised to see our destination reaching out to the gay market.”

Prosser said the employee, who works for an overseas contractor, was not authorized to speak on behalf of the agency. The agency is reviewing how, if at all, to discipline the employees who signed off on the program.

Some lawmakers were shocked to learn about the campaign, with state Sen. David Thomas, R-Greenville, calling for an audit.

Joel Sawyer, spokesman for Gov. Mark Sanford, said using tax money to support a social or political agenda is inappropriate.

“Our state tourism dollars should be talking about the beaches and attractions of South Carolina,”Sawyer said.

The campaign, which ends Saturday, planted posters all over a single London subway station. Prosser said the agency has asked the S.C. posters be removed.

Once again South Carolina’s homophobes in power have inflicted damage on the economy of this state. In addition to driving away not only gay tourists, but also straight tourists who don’t want to vacation in a climate of bigotry, high tech investors will be alienated by this. And so will a lot of other desirable people – see generally.

–Ann Bartow

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Public Works officials in Atlanta are replacing “Men Working” signs with signs that say “Workers Ahead.”

Story here. Props to Cynthia Good for making this happen.

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There Are Three Finalists for the Presidency of the University of South Carolina. Two Are Women. This About Guarantees the Job Will Go To the Man.

Information about the three finalists is here. See also. I’ll be happy enough to eat my words if I’m wrong. We’ll see tomorrow.

–Ann Bartow

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My Local Piggly-Wiggly Is Now Carrying Sushi

Is that a sign of progress, or of an impending Apocalypse?

–Ann Bartow

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Ohio Paid Sick Leave Initiative Ignores LGBT Families

I never thought I’d see the day when I would question an effort to secure paid sick leave. But I recently learned that the campaign for paid sick leave in Ohio has proposed an initiative that will allow workers to care for sick loved ones only if they are a parent, spouse, or child. Ohio–like most states–bans same-sex marriage, so this leaves out all same-sex couples, let alone other unmarried couples and those who care for loved ones outside the narrow categories in this initiative.

Before you think I have some utopian vision of what a paid sick leave policy can be, consider this: Federal government employees can use their sick leave to care for those with whom they have a “close association” that is the “equivalent of a family relationship.” And Senator Kennedy’s proposed Healthy Families Act contains identical language. A bill pending in Illinois doesn’t go that far, but it covers anyone who has been a member of the employee’s household for at least six months. There are lots of ways to write a law that covers family members, including but not limited to same-sex partners, without running afoul of Ohio’s constitutional amendment.

For more of my analysis of this, please read my blog entry today.

–Nancy Polikoff

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Why Zuska Needs To Keep Blogging

Over at Thus Spake Zuska, Zuska decided to cull from her comments all the reasons she has been told she should not blog. Below are a few of them:

You’re ugly.
You’re old and ugly.
You need to get laid.
You’re old and ugly and you’ll never get laid.

I’m a woman, and I’ve never experienced any discrimination, so you must be wrong.
I’m a man, and I don’t know anyone who’s experienced discrimination, so you must be wrong.
I’m a woman, and I never experienced any discrimination, and besides once a female scientist was MEAN to me!
It’s just hostility in general, not sexism.
There’s no disparity in treatment; everyone is equally under-encouraged.
Science is rough. Women need to learn how to take it.
Scientists aren’t the worst offenders.
No need to worry, eventually sexism will just disappear
Alas, sexism is evolutionarily predetermined.
Boys and girls are just different. You can’t fight biology.

Every day Zuska endures this kind of abuse and continues to post, speaking truth to assholes, she makes life easier and better for the rest of us.

–Ann Bartow

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Physics For Girls

Absinthe has a disheartening observation about a high school physics text here.

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Tasteless Product Mocking

Snack Foods That Sound Like Sex Acts

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Is putting pictures of razor blades on the insides of bathing suits a productive way to “raise awareness” about FGM?

I’d have to go with no.

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Human Trafficking: An ABC News Report On Child Selling In Haiti

Quite sad and disturbing. NB: If you want to help trafficking victims, support passage of H.R. 3387. See also.

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California group proposes George W. Bush Sewage Plant

I’ve generally been critical of naming public facilities after living politicians, but this is one I can endorse:

A California group submitted a proposal Monday to rename a sewage treatment plant after President Bush, calling the initiative a fitting tribute to the outgoing chief executive and the “mess” he’ll leave behind. The Presidential Memorial Commission of San Francisco wants to switch the name of the Oceanside Water Pollution Control Plant to the George W. Bush Sewage Plant. …

More here.

–Ann Bartow

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Church of England Endorses Women as Bishops

Via the New York Times:

The governing body of the Anglican Church in Britain voted on Monday to approve the appointment of women as bishops, a step that appeared to risk a schism in the church in its historic homeland as the Anglican church worldwide faces one of the most serious threats to its unity in its history, over the ordination of gay clergy members.

After a debate late into the night in the city of York, the General Synod of the Church of England, an assembly that holds ultimate authority on church doctrine in Britain, voted by comfortable margins within each of the synod’s three houses : bishops, clergy and laity : to approve the consecration of women as bishops in the face of bitter opposition from traditionalists.

Women in the Episcopal Church in the US are allowed to become bishops. Why do some object so vigorously to women bishops? This seems to stem from a sort of Anglican Church version of originalism:

Opponents of female bishops argue that Jesus, in choosing men for his 12 disciples, intended that men alone should have the responsibility of ministering to his followers.

Caitlin Borgmann

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Most Creepy Hair Care Products Advert I’ve Seen In A While

This.

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CFP – Conflict and Transitional Justice: Feminist Approaches

Conflict and Transitional Justice: Feminist Approaches, September 19-20, 2008 Emory University School of Law. Sponsored by: The Feminism and Legal Theory Project.

Truth Commissions and other forms of transitional justice have become ubiquitous as a mechanism for societies emerging from long years of conflict to move into a post-conflict era. From South Africa to Liberia, from Greensville South Carolina, USA, to Northern Ireland, we see both formal and informal processes of transitional justice at work. However, rarely is the process critiqued through a feminist lens. Do these”traditional”forms of reconciliation help or hinder women’s position in societies from repression or conflict? This workshop asks how a focus on women’s security and women’s ideas about peace, justice and security might further the conversation about transitional justice, conflict and post-conflict societies.

More information here.

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On Bullying in the Academic Workplace

Check out Historiann’s posts here and here.

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A “Pelvic Spa”

This was in the “Fashion & Style” section of last Thursday’s New York Times: A Spa for Those Women Concerned About ‘Pelvic Fitness’, by Natasha Singer:

THESE are the generations of cosmetic medicine:

First came the”medical spa,”or medi spa, offering dermatology services in a retail setting. The medi spa begat the dental spa, bringing tooth bleaching to storefronts nationwide. The dental spa begat the podiatry spa.

And now comes the first medi spa in Manhattan wholly dedicated to strengthening and grooming a woman’s genital area. Phit : short for pelvic health integrated techniques : is to open this month on East 58th Street….

With the ubiquity of pornography, the pelvis had already become a marketable area for modification, ranging from the Brazilian bikini wax to genital surgery referred to as vaginal”rejuvenation.”Doctors have even coined a term for such genital”beautification”: cosmetogynecology or cosmogynecology.

The advent of the pelvic spa, however, takes body fixation to a new level, furthering the idea that there is no female body part that cannot be tightened, plumped, trimmed or pruned.

Caitlin Borgmann

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“Very Young Girls”

A documentary:

Very Young Girls is a documentary film that chronicles the journey of young women through the underground world of sexual exploitation in New York City.

A 14-year-old girl is lured from her home, beaten, raped, held captive, and sold for sex in New York City. The police find her — and arrest her.

A man who has sex with an underage girl should be prosecuted as a criminal rapist. But there is a loophole: if the child accepts money in exchange for sex, the rapist is now a “john” and rarely is subjected to greater punishment than a fine. For the very same act, the girl is often prosecuted as a prostitute and sent into detention. The average age of entry into prostitution today in the Untied States is 13 years old.

The United States government likes to say it leads the world in combating sexual trafficking, and grades other countries on their compliance. If a woman has been brought from the Ukraine to Manhattan and coerced to have sex for money, the US government provides her services under the 2002 Sex Trafficking legislation. She is a victim. But if she is a African-American girl brought to Manhattan from the Bronx, she’s a criminal and she’s going to jail.

Our double standard arises partly from myths about prostitution, promoted in the movies, song, and reality TV – girls are empowered sex workers, strung-out crack whores, greedy “hos,” or hookers with hearts of gold. Very Young Girls shows clearly, that with the average age of entry into prostitution in the United States at thirteen, that sexual exploitation is simply a commercial form of child sexual abuse, the effect of which can continue into adulthood and beyond.

The film follows the girls in real time, using verité and intimate interviews with the girls both when they are still working and when in recovery, The film also uses footage shot by pimps themselves that illustrate exactly how it all starts. Very Young Girls tells the story of girls who spend their teenage years being recruited and brainwashed by predatory pimps, bought and sold on the street, sent to jail, and then recovering from the trauma of sexual exploitation.

Trailer at the link above, and here. Might a federal approach, consistent across states, that treats young, coerced prostitutes as victims rather than criminals be a good idea? Glad you asked. See also. See also.

–Ann Bartow

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“10 Fatal Online Dating Errors That Men Make”

Below are excerpts from the Top 10 email turnoffs for women in bold, with a bit of editorialization:

1. Don’t ask her how much she weighs. Apparently some people don’t like getting this question from strangers. Go figure.

2. Don’t email her seven times asking her why she hasn’t responded to your first email. She might be busy weighing herself to respond to your previous query, and the additional six e-mails could be a distraction from this.

4. Don’t send her a nasty email if she hasn’t responded to you after several emails. While it may get her attention, it is unlikely to make her want to date you.

5. Don’t ask her if she wants to have sex with you on the second email exchange, and don’t send her dirty pictures of you. I actually think asking about sex is less rude than asking her how much she weighs, but it might seem a little abrupt. Some women might welcome the directness and the dirty pictures, if dirty signifies “nude.” If dirty means unwashed, or engaging in sexual activities with “my ex, that bitch,” this may very well be a turn off to many.

9. Do not email-stalk her. Always trenchant dating advice, I’d say.

–Ann Bartow

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Criminalizing Same-Sex Marriage

The  Milwaukee Journal Sentinel  had an interesting story (here) last week with a warning for Wisconsin same-sex couples who are contemplating going to California to marry: Wisconsin makes it a crime for its residents to go across state lines and enter into a marriage that is prohibited or void under Wisconsin law:a category that includes same-sex marriages. This crime is punishable by a fine of not more than $10,000, imprisonment of not more than 9 months, or both. (For those interested in reading the statute, it is Wis. Stat. sec. 765.30. The Wisconsin ban on same-sex marriage can be found in Wis. Const. art. XIII, sec. 13.) The story reports that other states have criminal penalties, too; however, the marriage project director for Lambda Legal indicates in the story that Wisconsin’s is the stiffest.

So, Wisconsin not only refuses to recognize its residents’ out-of-state same-sex marriages, but it also adds insult to injury by reserving the right to put Wisconsin same-sex couples in jail for attempting to marry. The existence of this law has apparently discouraged some Wisconsin same-sex couples that had planned California weddings from following through; however, when told about the ban, one individual replied,”I’d rather be prosecuted than persecuted.”

-Anthony C. Infanti

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Continuing the Air Travel Theme: Hang On To Those Laptops On Your Way To Conferences!

PC World reports:

Some of the largest and medium-sized U.S. airports report close to 637,000 laptops lost each year, according to the Ponemon Institute survey released Monday. Laptops are most commonly lost at security checkpoints, according to the survey.

Close to 10,278 laptops are reported lost every week at 36 of the largest U.S. airports, and 65 percent of those laptops are not reclaimed, the survey said. Around 2,000 laptops are recorded lost at the medium-sized airports, and 69 percent are not reclaimed.

It should be noted that the referenced study was commissioned by Dell, which is marketing a new laptop tracking service to assist with recovery of stolen laptops.

–Ann Bartow

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Via.

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Via.

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