HomeYour VoiceHerStoryYour MultimediaResource LibraryAbout WVMCode of ConductRegisterLog in


  • Latest Post
  • Post index
  • Archives
  • Categories
  • Latest comments
  • Contact
  • Post Something
  • 1
  • ...
  • 64
  • 65
  • 66
  • ...
  • 67
  • ...
  • 68
  • 69
  • 70
  • ...
  • 71
  • ...
  • 72
  • 73
  • 74
  • ...
  • 167

A WOMEN’S RIGHTS HISTORY MOMENT

A WOMEN’S RIGHTS HISTORY MOMENT
Posted by jj on Sep 22, 2022 in Women In Education, Womens Rights, News
A  WOMEN’S  RIGHTS  HISTORY  MOMENT

Helen Hulick was called to court as a burglary witness in November, 1938. The 29-year-old kindergarten teacher arrived in her usual attire of a top and slacks. But seeing slacks on a woman so greatly offended Judge Arthur S. Guerin that he would not allow Hulick to testify. Instead, he rescheduled her testimony and ordered her to wear a dress at her next appearance.

She refused. As the Nov. 10, 1938 issue of the L.A. Times reported, she stated: “You tell the judge I will stand on my rights. If he orders me to change into a dress I won’t do it. I like slacks. They’re comfortable.

When she appeared in slacks once more, the judge chastised her for both attire and what he perceived as problems with her demeanor. “The last time you were in this court dressed as you are now and reclining on your neck on the back of your chair, you drew more attention from spectators, prisoners and court attaches than the legal business at hand,” Guerin said. “You were requested to return in garb acceptable to courtroom procedure. Today you come back dressed in pants and openly defying the court (…)

“The court hereby orders and directs you to return tomorrow in accepted dress. If you insist on wearing slacks again you will be prevented from testifying (…)   But be prepared to be punished according to law for contempt of court.”

The Times quoted her response as follows: “Listen, I’ve worn slacks since I was 15. I don’t own a dress except a formal. If he wants me to appear in a formal gown that’s okay with me. I’ll come back in slacks and if he puts me in jail I hope it will help to free women forever of anti-slackism.”

Hulick returned wearing slacks, but this time, she also brought with her Attorney William Katz. Katz was armed with citations supporting her argument that she had the right to appear in the attire of her choice.

Judge Guerin held her in contempt of court nevertheless, sentencing her to five days in jail. There, she was forced to wear a denim prisoners’ dress. She was quickly released on her own recognizance, however, after her attorney declared they would be appealing the sentence.

As Hulick’s story garnered attention, hundreds of supporters sent letters of protest to the courthouse.

Finally, the Appellate Division overturned Judge Guerin’s contempt citation.

By taking this stand, Helen launched a national discussion that helped to free women of “anti-slackism.”

 

Rebecca Hains, Author

Rebecca Hains is a media and communication professor, author, and speaker whose work takes an intersectional approach to understanding children, media, and marketing. She has authored and edited five books, including Growing Up With Girl Power, The Princess Problem, and Cultural Studies of LEGO, and she is often quoted in the media. Follow this page to read posts that reflect her interests, with feminist and pop culture humor in the mix!

 

Leave a comment

I Served in Congress Longer Than Anyone. Here’s How to Fix It.

I Served in Congress Longer Than Anyone. Here’s How to Fix It.
Posted by jj on Sep 21, 2022 in News, Equal Representation, Elections
I Served in Congress Longer Than Anyone. Here’s How to Fix It.

"Abolish the Senate and publicly fund elections."  By John D. Dingell         In my six decades in public service, I’ve seen many changes in our nation and its institutions. Yet the most profound change I’ve witnessed is also the saddest. It is the complete collapse in respect for virtually every institution of government and an unprecedented cynicism about the nobility of public service itself.

These are not just the grumblings of an angry old man lamenting the loss of “the good old days.” In December 1958, almost exactly three years after I entered the House of Representatives, the first American National Election Study, initiated by the University of Michigan, found that 73 percent of Americans trusted the federal government “to do the right thing almost always or most of the time.” As of December 2017, the same study, now conducted by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center, found that this number had plummeted to just 18 percent.

There are many reasons for this dramatic decline: the Vietnam War, Watergate, Ronald Reagan’s folksy but popular message that government was not here to help, the Iraq War, and worst of all by far, the Trumpist mind-set. These jackasses who see “deep state” conspiracies in every part of government are a minority of a minority, yet they are now the weakest link in the chain of more than three centuries of our American republic. Ben Franklin was right. The Founders gave us a precious but fragile gift. If we do not protect it with constant vigilance, we will most certainly lose it.

As an armchair activist, I now have the luxury of saying what I believe should happen, not what I think can get voted out of committee. I’m still a pragmatist; I know that profound societal change happens incrementally, over a long period of time. The civil-rights fights of the 1950s and ’60s, of which I am proud to have been a part, are a great example of overcoming setbacks and institutional racism. But 155 years after the Emancipation Proclamation and less than two years after our first African American president left office, racism still remains a part of our national life.

Just for a moment, however, let’s imagine the American system we might have if the better angels of our nature were to prevail.

Here, then, are some specific suggestions—and they are only just that, suggestions—for a framework that might help restore confidence and trust in our precious system of government:

An electoral system based on full participation. At age 18, you are automatically registered to vote. No photo ID, no residency tests, no impediments of any kind. Advances in technology can make this happen effortlessly. Yes, voting should be restricted only to American citizens. Strict protections against foreign meddling are also necessary.

The elimination of money in campaigns. Period. Elections, like military service—each is an example of duty, honor, and service to country—should be publicly funded. Can you imagine if we needed to rely on wealthy donors to fund the military? I know there are those who genuinely believe in privatizing everything. They are called profiteers.

Public service should not be a commodity, and elected officials should not have to rent themselves out to the highest bidder in order to get into (or stay in) office. If you want to restore trust in government, remove the price tag. I am fully aware that the Supreme Court has declared that “money is speech.” That’s nonsense. The day my wallet starts talking to me, I might reconsider that view. Until then, I believe that the pernicious influence of money on our elections must be removed.

The end of minority rule in our legislative and executive branches. The Great Compromise, as it was called when it was adopted by the Constitution’s Framers, required that all states, big and small, have two senators. The idea that Rhode Island needed two U.S. senators to protect itself from being bullied by Massachusetts emerged under a system that governed only 4 million Americans.

Today, in a nation of more than 325 million and 37 additional states, not only is that structure antiquated, it’s downright dangerous. California has almost 40 million people, while the 20 smallest states have a combined population totaling less than that. Yet because of an 18th-century political deal, those 20 states have 40 senators, while California has just two. These sparsely populated, usually conservative states can block legislation supported by a majority of the American people. That’s just plain crazy.

The math is even starker when you look at places like Wyoming and Vermont, each of which has fewer people in the entire state (575,000 and 625,000, respectively) than does the Twelfth Congressional District of Michigan, which I last represented and whose more than 700,000 residents are now in the hands of my wife, Debbie. She fights her heart out for them every single day. Yet her efforts are often stymied simply because it is understood that even should a good bill make it through the hyper-partisan House, it will die a quiet death in the Senate because of the disproportionate influence of small states.

With my own eyes, I’ve watched in horror and increasing anger as that imbalance in power has become the primary cause of our national legislative paralysis. In primaries, the vocal rump of a minority of obnoxious asses can hold the entire country hostage to extremist views. This insanity has sent true public servants fleeing for the exits. The Electoral College has the same structural flaw. Along with 337 of my colleagues, I voted in 1969 to amend the Constitution to abolish it. Twice in the past 18 years, we’ve seen the loser of the popular vote become president through the Electoral College formula, which gives that same disproportionate weight to small states, each of which gets two automatic votes for its two senators.

My friend Norm Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, sees a demographic shift coming that will effectively transform us into two countries. He tells me that “in 2050, 70 percent of Americans will be living in just 15 states. That 70 percent will then have 30 senators, and the remaining 30 percent of the people, mainly those living in the smallest and poorest states, will have 70 senators.”

How do we fix this? Practically speaking, it will be very difficult, given the specific constitutional protection granted these small states to veto any threat to their outsize influence.

There is a solution, however, that could gain immediate popular support: Abolish the Senate. At a minimum, combine the two chambers into one, and the problem will be solved. It will take a national movement, starting at the grassroots level, and will require massive organizing, strategic voting, and strong leadership over the course of a generation. But it has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it? “Abolish the Senate.” I’m having blue caps printed up with that slogan right now. They will be made in America.

The protection of an independent press. This is where the Founding Fathers got it exactly right. Jefferson said, “Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”

Trump has said of reporters, “I would never kill them, but I do hate them. And some of them are such lying, disgusting people.”

My father started out life as a cub reporter for the Detroit Free Press. He always believed that journalism was a tremendously honorable profession. We cannot restore respect to our institutions of government until we put an end to the systematic attacks on journalism that have become prevalent. The playbook is simple: Lie. Repeat the lie. Then attack the journalists who expose those lies as being liars themselves—or, in modern parlance, “promoters of fake news.” The Nazis’ propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, replaced journalism with state-run propaganda and created a political climate based on fear and falsehoods.

The Washington Post won a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of Russian interference in the 2016 election. The Fourth Estate is not a branch of government, but none of the branches of government can be trusted to function honestly without an unfettered free press vigilantly holding it accountable.

Thomas Jefferson had the first word and he should have the last word: “Our liberty depends on the freedom of the press, and that cannot be limited without being lost.”

As a young man, I served in the Army during World War II. My father was a member of Congress. I learned from him and, later, from my own experience that history always repeats itself unless we remember it with clarity and conscience.

Now I am an old man. My age bears with it a responsibility to share what I’ve witnessed so that future generations avoid making the same mistakes. My advice always begins with the truth, which is why would-be despots and demagogues try so hard to discredit it. They hate it like the devil hates holy water.

The conduct and outcome of the 2016 presidential election have put the future of our country in mortal peril. After a lifetime spent in public service, I never believed that day would come. Yet it has. And we now find ourselves on the precipice of a great cliff. Our next step is either into the abyss or toward a higher moral ground. Since before the Civil War, we’ve been told that “Providence watches over fools, drunkards, and the United States.” Yet the  good Lord also granted us free will. The direction we choose to follow is ours alone to make. We ask only that he guide our choice with his wisdom and his grace.

It’s up to you, my dear friends.

John D. Dingell was a member of the United States House of Representatives from December 13, 1955, until January 3, 2015, the longest tenure of any member of Congress in American history.  

This article is an excerpt from “The Dean: The Best Seat in the House”, by the late John Dingell with David Bender.

Leave a comment

THREE PRO-CHOICE CHAMPIONS FOR NEVADA & THE NATION

THREE PRO-CHOICE CHAMPIONS FOR NEVADA & THE NATION
Posted by jj on Sep 19, 2022 in News, Elections
THREE  PRO-CHOICE  CHAMPIONS  FOR  NEVADA  &  THE  NATION

NEVADA  PRO-CHOICE CHAMPION  FOR  THE  U.S.  SENATE:  Born and raised in Las Vegas, Nevada, Senator Catherine Cortez Masto has deep roots in the Silver State. Serving for eight years as her state’s attorney general, she worked to keep Nevada communities safe, strengthening state laws to prevent domestic violence and protecting middle-class families from fraudulent mortgage schemes and predatory lenders. In 2016, Catherine ran a successful campaign to hold outgoing Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid’s seat for the Democrats — and when she was elected, Nevadans made history, voting to make her the first-ever Latina senator. In her first term, she quickly established a reputation as a tireless champion for working families and an effective leader who makes Nevadans’ voices heard. Catherine lives in Las Vegas with her husband Paul, a retired Secret Service agent.

Catherine is deeply committed to expanding economic opportunity for Nevada working families. She believes that all Americans have the right to affordable, quality health care, and she has been a strong advocate in the Senate for strengthening our health care system and for protecting Medicare and Medicaid. A strong advocate for women and children, Catherine is a cosponsor of the Healthy Maternal and Obstetric Medicine (Healthy MOM) Act, which would ensure that mothers and their babies have access to the care they need, both before and after birth. She is a fierce defender of a woman’s right to choose and believes that reproductive health decisions should be made by a woman and her doctor, not politicians in Washington. A cosponsor of the DREAM Act and a fervent supporter of comprehensive immigration reform, Catherine is working to repair our broken immigration system and protect hardworking families. Her position on five Senate committees allows her to continue to advocate for the issues that matter most to Nevadans. She sits on the Committee on Finance; the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs; the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources; the Committee on Rules and Administration; and the Committee on Indian Affairs. When reelected, Catherine will continue to work tirelessly on behalf of the working families she serves.

When she was elected, Catherine became the first woman Nevada elected to the Senate as well as the first Latina senator. In her first term, this trailblazer has made a tremendous positive impact on her state and our country, she has changed the face of power in the Senate. Catherine won a hard-fought race by a narrow margin in 2016, and in 2022, Republicans are sure to do everything in their power to unseat this champion for working families. Support her every step of the way as she faces her first reelection campaign and fights to move our country forward.  SEND CATHERINE BACK TO THE SENATE!

SOURCE:  Emily’s List

“We ignite change by getting Democratic pro-choice women elected to office.”

Leave a comment

THREE PRO-CHOICE CHAMPIONS FOR NEVADA & THE NATION

THREE PRO-CHOICE CHAMPIONS FOR NEVADA & THE NATION
Posted by jj on Sep 18, 2022 in News, Elections
THREE  PRO-CHOICE  CHAMPIONS  FOR  NEVADA  &  THE  NATION

ANOTHER CHAMPION FOR NEVADA IN THE U.S. HOUSE: Susie Lee is a nonprofit leader and education advocate who has dedicated her career to helping her fellow Nevadans lead better, safer, and healthier lives. She is running for reelection to Congress to continue her life’s work of bringing people together to find and implement innovative solutions to the toughest problems facing Nevada’s working families.

Susie grew up the sixth of eight children in a working-class community. Susie got her first newspaper route at the age of eight, and began babysitting and lifeguarding as soon as she was old enough. With the help of Pell Grants, student loans, and scholarships, she paid her way through college; working in the cafeteria, the library, the copy room, and teaching aerobics while also competing on the swim team. Lee  graduated with honors from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburg, earning a master’s degree in public management.  Susie found mentors who gave her the affirmation and encouragement she needed to succeed as a young woman. This experience inspired her work as a nonprofit leader and education advocate, working tirelessly to ensure that Nevada’s most vulnerable children can turn to their school communities for support when they don’t have resources at home.

 After college, she worked in Massachusetts at an environmental and economic consulting firm that specialized in water resource issues. She moved to Las Vegas, Nevada, in 1993, where she then worked as a campaign policy advisor to Las Vegas Mayor Jan Laverty Jones and founded a homeless shelter for parents and children in need. In 2010, she became the president of the board of Communities In Schools of Nevada (CIS), a program that seeks to lower high school dropout rates. Lee has served on several other boards and committees in the Las Vegas area.

 Recognizing that many Nevada families struggle with housing insecurity, food insecurity, and other challenges, she helped launch a site coordinator program to give the most vulnerable students a dedicated advocate ensuring their needs are met inside and outside of school. Susie has proudly called southern Nevada home for over two decades.

Susie is focused on making a tangible positive impact on the lives of southern Nevada’s working families, and she worked tirelessly to help pass the American Rescue Plan. “This relief package is just the kind of big, bold action we need to build back southern Nevada’s economy, which has been absolutely devastated by this pandemic,” Susie has said. “We secured direct payments to working families, along with relief for unemployed workers, schools, small businesses, vaccine distribution, child care and unemployment tax relief, and more. And, at long last, we were able to secure over $4 billion in direct aid for Nevada, something our state desperately needs to provide critical services and prevent layoffs of teachers, law enforcement officers, and first responders. I’m also proud that legislation I supported to prevent surprise tax bills for unemployed Nevadans made it into this final package. This legislation will remove taxes on the first $10,200 of unemployment payments – a measure that will go a long way in providing relief to Nevada families who are struggling to make ends meet. With this relief, we’ll be able to crush this virus, get shots in arms, Nevadans back to work, our kids back in school, and our businesses open and thriving.” Well before the COVID-19 crisis, health care has long been a deeply personal issue for Susie. When she was a freshman in college, her father was laid off from his steel manufacturing job and never had another shot at economic security. Her parents couldn’t afford health insurance because of common preexisting conditions, and when her mother had a heart attack one month before reaching Medicare eligibility, the hospital bill was so large they risked losing their house. Susie understands that access to quality health care is a right, not a privilege, and she will continue to be a powerful advocate for all southern Nevadans.

Susie successfully fought to keep this swing seat blue when Senator Jacky Rosen vacated it in 2018, and she successfully defended it in 2020 in a narrow win that was one of the last to be called in the country. We cannot take anything for granted in this swing district, as Republicans do everything in their power to retake this seat — and the majority in the Senate. With so much of our progress at stake, let’s show Susie our full support and keep this champion for Nevada working families in the House and  the Democrats majority in the U.S. Senate.

SOURCE:  Emily’s List

“We ignite change by getting Democratic pro-choice women elected to office.”

UP NEXT:  A  NEVADA CHAMPION FOR THE  U.S.  SENATE

Leave a comment

THREE PRO-CHOICE CHAMPIONS FOR NEVADA & THE NATION

THREE PRO-CHOICE CHAMPIONS FOR NEVADA & THE NATION
Posted by jj on Sep 18, 2022 in Elections
THREE  PRO-CHOICE  CHAMPIONS  FOR  NEVADA  &  THE  NATION

A  CHAMPION  FOR  NEVADA  IN  THE U.S.  HOUSE:  Congresswoman Dina Titus is running for reelection to continue her outstanding career of public service. Currently in her sixth term in the U.S. House of Representatives, Rep. Titus is the dean of Nevada’s Congressional delegation. As a professor, Dr. Titus taught American and Nevada government classes from 1979 through 2011 at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) where she has professor emeritus status. She is an accomplished non-fiction writer known for her expertise in the history and policies related to nuclear power, weaponry, and waste. Rep. Titus was elected to the Nevada state Senate in 1988, and served as the Democratic Minority Leader from 1993 to 2008. She was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in November 2008. Rep. Titus and her husband UNLV Professor Emeritus Thomas C. Wright, a Latin American historian, have been married for over 35 years and live in Las Vegas.

Rep. Titus is a proud member of the House Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure, Foreign Affairs, and Homeland Security. In 2018, Rep. Titus was elected to become the Chair of a key Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee, where she works to help Nevada’s communities better respond to natural disasters, address the devastating impacts of climate change, and fight for infrastructure projects that will benefit the most vulnerable. After helping the Las Vegas community recover from the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history, Rep. Titus has emerged as one of the leading voices in Congress for substantive action to reduce gun violence. She is a strong advocate for the DREAM Act and comprehensive immigration reform. An expert on matters of nuclear energy and waste, Rep. Titus leads the effort in Congress to oppose the revitalization of Yucca Mountain.

This is a must-win re-election fight.  Rep. Titus gave Nevadans a new voice in Washington when she defeated a Republican incumbent in 2008 — being outspent $3 million to $1.8 million. Redistricting has made her seat significantly more competitive, but we know she has what it takes to win with our help. We cannot take anything for granted in this newly redrawn district, as Republicans do everything in their power to retake this seat and the majority. With so much of our progress at stake, let’s show Rep. Titus our full support and keep this champion for Nevadans in the House and keep the Democrats in control of the House

SOURCE:  Emily’s List

“We ignite change by getting Democratic pro-choice women elected to office.

UP NEXT:  ANOTHER NEVADA CHAMPION FOR THE U.S.  HOUSE

Leave a comment
  • 1
  • ...
  • 64
  • 65
  • 66
  • ...
  • 67
  • ...
  • 68
  • 69
  • 70
  • ...
  • 71
  • ...
  • 72
  • 73
  • 74
  • ...
  • 167

Women's Voices Media

Women's thought, women's opinions, women's facts presented in a feminist point of view. We endorse works that present in an empirical and logical style.

Search

Categories

Women's Voices Media

  • Editor Byline
  • Home Page
  • Intro
  • Newsworthy

Your Voice

  • Background
  • ERA and CEDAW
  • Economic Justice
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Environment
  • Equal Representation
  • Health and Safety
  • Intersectional Issues
  • Intersectional Issues
  • Intro
  • Judicial System
  • My Voice
  • Politics & Elections
  • Reproductive Rights
  • Social Justice
  • Tech
  • Violence

HerStory

  • Background
  • Intersectional Issues
  • Social Justice
  • Women In Education
  • Women In Politics
  • Women In Science, Technology, & Math (STEM)
  • Women In Sports
  • Women In the Arts
  • Women In the Law
  • Women Not Categorized
  • Women in Business
  • Women's Health & Reproductive Rights
  • Womens Rights

Your Multimedia

  • Art
  • Background
  • Events
  • Intersectional Issues
  • Just Interesting
  • News
  • People
  • Welcome

Women's Resource Library

  • Current News
  • Diverse / Uncategorized
  • ERA and CEDAW
    • CEDAW
    • ERA
  • Environment
    • Air / Atmospheric Polution
    • Alternate Power Sources
    • Climate Change
    • Destruction of Forests and Habitats
    • Sustainability
    • Water Resources
      • Fracking
      • Waste Disposal
  • Equal Representation
    • In Business and Corporations
    • In Education (K-20)
    • In Government
    • In Law Enforcement
    • In Sports
    • In the Justice System
    • Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM)
  • Equality and Justice
    • Ableism
    • Ageism
    • Child Care
    • Economic Equality
    • Homelessness
    • LGBTQA Discrimination
    • Poverty and Hunger
    • Racism
    • Sexism
  • Gender Studies
  • General Science
  • Girls & Young Women
  • Health and Safety
    • HIV / AIDS
    • Health Insurance
    • Maternal and Infant Care
    • Medical Research
    • Paid Sick and Parental Leave
    • Pregnancy Accommodations
    • Sex Transmitted Diseases
    • Substance Addiction and Abuse
      • Opioid Crisis
      • Physician Over-prescription
  • Herstory
  • Independant Media
  • Politics
  • Reproductive Rights
    • Abortion Rights
      • Roe v. Wade
    • Contraception
  • The Arts
  • Violence
    • Ableism
    • Child Abuse
    • Date Rape
    • Domestic Violence
    • Elder Abuse
    • Genital Mutilation
    • Gun Safety and Control
    • Harrassment
    • LGBTQA - Abuse and Assault
    • Racism
    • Rape / Assault
    • Sex Trafficking / Sex Slavery
    • Women In Prison
  • World Issues

XML Feeds

  • RSS 2.0: Posts
  • Atom: Posts
What is RSS?

Women's Voices Media
This collection 2026 by Janice Jochum
Copyright 2019 United Activision Media, LLC
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
• Contact • Help • Community CMS

CMS + email marketing
Cookies are required to enable core site functionality.