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OUTRAGED! OUTRAGED! OUTRAGED!

Posted by jj on Nov 25, 2021 in Home Page, My Voice
OUTRAGED! OUTRAGED! OUTRAGED!
OUTRAGED!  OUTRAGED!  OUTRAGED!

Another rich, white boy.

Recently a 20-year-old man in Lewistion, NY, was sentenced to eight years’ probation.  Christopher Belter had pleaded guilty to two counts of second degree sex abuse, third degree attempted abuse and third degree rape, all involving multiple 15- and 16-year-old girls in his home.

Because Belter was 17 at the time the assaults occurred, he was initially sentenced to a two-year interim probation with the understanding, if he successfully completed probation, he would be granted Youthful Offender status.  Prior to the recent sentencing hearing Niagara County Judge Mathew Murphy ruled that Belter would be sentenced as an adult and denied Youthful Offender status.  Judge Murphy said of Belter ”we now know from his documented failure to follow the rules imposed by the court about abstinence from pornography that this defendant does not hesitate to ignore the rules when they compete with his own carnal appetites.” 

Despite Belter’s failure to comply with the restrictions of his 2-year probation, Judge Murphy explained, “It seems to me that a sentence that involves incarceration or partial incarceration isn’t appropriate, so I am going to sentence you to probation.”  This even after the judge had said “the Defendant still poses an ‘above average risk’ to reoffend after two years of counseling.”

The judge did issue a lengthy list of probation rules for Belter and did issue a strong warning about following the rules.  In addition, Belter will have to register as a sex offender.   He returns for a Sex Offender Registration Act hearing on December 2.  There it will be decided if he is a level one, two or  three sex offender.

Steve Cohen, attorney for one of the victims, made the following statement:   “Justice was not done today.  There were ‘zero consequences’ for violating his previous probation.  He is privileged.  He comes from money.  He is white.  He was sentenced as an adult, appropriately – for an adult to get away with these crimes is unjust.”

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ONCE MORE WITH FEELING: the ERA

Posted by jj on Nov 22, 2021 in Home Page, ERA and CEDAW
ONCE MORE WITH FEELING: the ERA
ONCE MORE WITH FEELING:  the ERA

Once More, with Feeling: The ERA

by Robin Morgan Nov 15, 2021

In 1923, on the 75th anniversary of the 1848 Women’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, Alice Paul introduced the first version of the Equal Rights Amendment: “Men and women shall have equal rights throughout the United States and every place subject to its jurisdiction.”

The National Women’s Party and professional women like Amelia Earhart, the great pilot, supported it. But other reformers, particularly in the labor movement, who had worked hard for protective labor laws for women, were afraid the ERA would wipe out their progress. (This could have been solved by mobilizing for the extension of protective labor laws to men – like not lifting items over a certain weight or doing especially hazardous labor — but it became a huge sticking point for those protectionists who exploited class divisions within the women’s movement.)

By the early 1940s, both the Democratic and Republican parties had added support of the Amendment as a plank in their political platforms, although opposition was building: social conservatives, who considered equal rights for women a threat to their existing power structure, joined with labor and with leftists fighting for protectionist workplace laws to hinder the amendment. Eleanor Roosevelt agreed with them, and the ERA stalled.

Nevertheless, in 1943, after two World Wars that had seen women pouring into the labor force, the Amendment was reintroduced, this time reworded to reflect language in the 15th and 19th Amendments: “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.” That’s the whole of it, even today – 24 words

Still, the left and the right remained fairly united in opposition. By the 1960s, young women active in the Civil Rights Movement and the anti-Vietnam War movement (I was one) began to examine their/our own lives politically and shake the dust of the male left off our boots. We organized as citizens, and politicians started to react to the power of women’s voices in new ways. Mainstream groups joined the call for the ERA–this time including organized labor.

Whew, you exhale. Yes! It was passed by the Senate and the House on March 22nd, 1972, and the proposed 27th Amendment to the Constitution was sent to the states to be ratified! But wait. Congress placed a seven-year deadline on the ratification process. Still, the ERA hit the ground running and got 22 of the necessary 38 state ratifications in the very first year.

Yet as opposition coalesced, the pace slowed. All through the 1970s, ERA opponents like Phyllis Schlafly, right-wing leader of the Eagle Forum’s Stop ERA group, played on fears that had generated opposition back in women’s suffrage days. She and her followers claimed that women would be sent into combat, that contraception use and abortion rights would be required, that same-sex marriages would be upheld, that unisex bathrooms would be mandated, and that the ERA would destroy the family.

State’s rights advocates added that the Amendment was a federal plot, and corporations — particularly the insurance industry — strongly opposed the measure, which they believed might cost them money. Not surprisingly, the ERA was also vociferously opposed by most evangelical and/or fundamentalist religious groups.

Nevertheless, The National Organization for Women (NOW) and ERA America, a coalition of almost 80 mainstream organizations, mobilized skillfully and that same year, Indiana became the 35th state to ratify the amendment. Whew again!

Oops. As the 1970s drew to a close, Illinois changed its rules to require a three-fifths majority to ratify an amendment, thereby ensuring that their previous simple majority votes in favor of the ERA “didn’t count.” Other states proposed or passed rescission bills, despite legal precedent that states lack the power to retract a ratification. All the while, the original 1979 deadline was approaching and, although some groups, like the League of Women Voters, wanted to retain 11th hour pressure as a political strategy, most ERA advocates appealed to Congress for an indefinite extension of the time limit, and NOW coordinated a successful march of 100,000 supporters in Washington DC. Congress granted an extension until June 30th, 1982.

Is that a tentative “whew” I hear? Nope.

The political tide would turn much more conservative, and in 1980 (the year Ronald Reagan was elected president), the Republican Party removed their support for the ERA from its platform. Distinguished Republican feminists walked out of the convention in protest when the party took that plank out of the platform, and Betty Ford denounced the action.

Meanwhile, Reagan never named Phyllis Schlafly to a promised cabinet position, after all.

So, given machinations by the states plus the sharp right political turn, and despite increases in massive pro-ERA lobbying, petitioning, walkathons, hunger strikes, fundraisers, White House pickets, and civil disobedience, on June 30th, 1982, the ERA fell three states short of the necessary 38 for full ratification. It was a significant defeat.

But you can’t keep a good woman down. Two weeks later, the Equal Rights Amendment was reintroduced in Congress, and it’s been reintroduced before every session of Congress since then. In 2017, Nevada became the 36th state to ratify, followed by Illinois and then Virginia made history to become the 38th ratifying state.

Now, attention is focused on removing the deadline. There are also after-the-fact ongoing efforts in several states — North Carolina, Tennessee, Florida — to ratify. Now, gee, everyone claims they want to ratify because after all who could be against equality? Well, the opposition could!

Because the deal is not yet done.

We ourselves were partly to blame in the past: we didn’t fully grasp how state legislatures work, and the importance of redistricting. Wow, were we naïve–the public, not only feminists. Also, we failed to impress sufficiently on Americans the concrete changes that the ERA would bring. Even today, some people say, Don’t women already have equality? Why is an ERA necessary? I’m indebted to Jessica Neuwirth for her excellent book Equal Means Equal: Why the Time For An Equal Rights Amendment Is Now for the clarity and concision of the following examples:

In the absence of an ERA, targeted federal legislation has been used to try to close the gaps, so we women have squeaked in, doing things piecemeal, relying on the Commerce Clause, the Equal Pay act of 1963, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title IX of the 1972 Education Amendment, the 1978 Pregnancy Discrimination Act, and the Violence Against Women Act of 1994. While this has helped, these federal laws are neither comprehensive nor fully inclusive (one has been partially struck down by the Supreme Court for lack of a constitutional foundation). Most critically, none of these laws has the force of a constitutional amendment, which means they do not cover everyone and they can be rolled back at any time by a simple congressional vote. Poof! There goes every form of misogynistic attitude and act against women let loose on us–terrifying.

Moreover, the United States is one of only seven countries in the world (along with Iran, Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, and two small Pacific Island nations, Palau and Tonga) that have not ratified the United Nations Convention On The Elimination Of All Forms Of Discrimination Against Women, otherwise known as CEDAW. It’s the international Bill of Rights for women, and it has been signed and ratified by 187 countries, virtually every nation in the world except the U.S.

President Jimmy Carter did sign it in 1980 but it must be ratified by a two thirds vote of the Senate to enter into force, yet apparently the United States can’t (or won’t) ratify it since the ERA has not yet passed.

What will the ERA really do? It will enshrine in the Constitution the value judgment that sex discrimination is wrong, require the federal government and each state to review and revise all laws and official practices to eliminate discrimination based on sex, and ensure that governments do not enact future laws that discriminate on the basis of sex. It will be the basis for recognition of the principle that the homemaker’s role in marriage has economic value and that marriage is a full partnership; it will ensure that non-monetary contributions to a marriage, such as household work and childcare, must be considered when a couple’s household goods are divided as a result of divorce; it will ensure that married women can engage in business freely and dispose of separate or community property on the same basis as married men, and it will give the same rights to a woman as to a man in marital law and allow a married woman to maintain a separate domicile for voting purposes, for passports, for car registration, etc. It will ensure equality of opportunity in public schools, state colleges, and universities, employment training programs of federal, state, or local governments, and in governmental recreation programs.

It will ensure equal opportunity, privileges, and benefits in all aspects of government employment. It will ensure that families of women workers receive the same benefits as families of male workers under the Social Security law, government pension plans, and workers’ compensation laws.

What will the ERA not do? Well, fortunately or unfortunately, it will not destroy the family. Neither will it mandate contraceptive use, or insist on abortions for women who don’t want to have them.

Public opinion charged way ahead of Phyllis Schlafly, because women are already in combat, performing with valor. Public opinion also left Phyllis at the starting gate in approving same-sex marriage. Nor will it require coed bathrooms, although when flying 35,000 feet in the air, people willingly use unisex bathrooms, anyway.

And frankly, I would wager that if you ask the average American woman if she would enjoy being discriminated against while pregnant or in case she might become pregnant, if she liked being battered by a violent partner, if she was content to sacrifice equal education, never even to aspire to equal pay, and would guffaw at the notion of equal sports access, she would get damned cranky. Even a great many American men might share that reaction.

As for being informed that the United States ranked with Iran, Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, Palau, and Tonga, sharing the humiliated status of not ratifying an international Bill of Rights for the majority of its citizens, again I’d wager that every “red blooded American” would fume with outrage.

I know. We’re tired. The last thing we need is a new cause. But you see, this is an old cause, unfinished. I know that we’re exhausted from COVID and lock-down and climate change crises, and years of Trump and the dreadful aftertaste he leaves in our mouths that still have to swallow some of his Big Lie Republican Party poison. We just want to curl up, squeeze our eyes shut, maybe suck on our thumbs, and listen to a nice fairy tale.

Well, your sunbeam sister here is telling you that the fairy tale will come when all women in this country live free, empowered, and protected by our Constitution. This is one fairy tale we can make come true.

So pick up or order a copy of Jessica Neuwirth’s excellent, thorough, and easily accessible book, and brandish it during Thanksgiving dinner arguments with certain members of that family that has not yet been destroyed. Then drop an email or call your senator, to weigh in as one of what I hope will be many voices saying Now!

Look, if we don’t do it this time, you and I both know we’ll just have to do it all over again, which will really be a drag. Hell is repetition without movement. This is a chance to strike a great blow for democracy in general and for women specifically.

So do it for Alice Paul and Susan B. Anthony and the great Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Do it for all those hunger strikers and civilly disobedient girls and women who acted on their outrage. Do it for daughters and granddaughters–and sons and grandsons, too. But most of all, do it for yourselves.

Hell, yes! Put yourself in The Constitution of the Republic of the United States of America.

The post Once More, with Feeling:

The ERA appeared first on Robin Morgan | Author, Activist, Feminist | NYC.

 

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HELP! CENSORSHIP

Posted by jj on Nov 13, 2021 in Home Page, My Voice
HELP! CENSORSHIP
HELP!  CENSORSHIP

PLEASE! PLEASE!

READ THIS & SHARE

On November 11th (Veterans Day) I attempted to post a tribute to our veterans.  Partway through my effort, Facebook blocked me on the grounds I was sharing with too many groups.   Now they will not let me share at all.

I am a member of all the groups I share with and have been anywhere from several months to almost two years each.  During this whole time, I have never received a single complaint from any of the groups’ administrators.  I have not and will not engage in posting material that violates rules of decency.

For now I am unable to share posts with your group and I do not know how long this situation will continue. To receive what I post, you may do one or more of the following.

  • Go to womensvoicesmedia.org and subscribe to our newsletter.
  • Check back regularly to Facebook.com/Womens-Voices-Media/ and read the posts there.
  • Follow me on Facebook.com/Womens-Voices-Media/ to receive notices of posts.
  • Follow me on twitter @MediaWomans

AND  PLEASE:  SHARE, SHARE ,SHARE  freely and everywhere.

Thank you

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The Fight Isn’t Over

Posted by jj on Nov 01, 2021 in Home Page, Elections
The Fight Isn’t Over
The Fight Isn’t Over

Here’s how you can help protect voting rights and democracy.

PUBLISHED: January 20, 2022 by the Brennan Center For Justice

The Senate last night voted no on changing its rules to allow the Freedom to Vote: John Lewis Act to proceed to a simple majority vote. Had the rule change passed, this critical voting rights legislation would have prevailed. President Biden would have signed it immediately.

The refusal to move forward on this vital piece of legislation was wrong. The threats to our democracy are very real — and growing. These present-day threats harken back to a time when our electoral systems denied Black, Latino, Asian, and Native Americans the right to participate fully in our democracy. Senators should have done their duty, bypassed Senate rules, and passed the Freedom to Vote: John Lewis Act to ensure free, fair, secure elections, and to end vote suppression and electoral sabotage.

But the fight isn’t over. We must continue to demand federal legislation to protect voting rights. And we must fight for our democracy in other ways as well. This setback is a reminder that we must stay vigilant to maintain our rights and that we all have a role to play in preserving our democracy. Here are some ways that you can help to protect voting rights and the fairness of our elections in the days, months, and years ahead.

Advocate for voting rights

  • Continue to demand passage of the Freedom to Vote: John Lewis Act

    • Call or write your senator
    • Call or write President Joe Biden
    • Participate in a rally, march, or other public action
  • Advocate at the state and local level against voter suppression, election sabotage, and redistricting abuse as well as for more resources for running elections

    • Call or write your state governor and your state representatives
    • Attend public redistricting hearings and provide comments (Some tips for effective comments are here)
    • Attend local election board meetings and provide comments
    • Use your social media channels (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram) to make your voice heard, and write op-eds or letters to the editor of your local newspaper

Participate in administering elections

  • Volunteer to serve as a poll worker
  • Apply or run to serve as an election administrator or election worker
  • Support election officials and other local officials who are doing their jobs honestly and coming under attack
  • Volunteer to serve as an election observer — at the polls, during vote counting, and during post-election audits

Mobilize the vote

  • Vote — in every local, state, and federal election in your community
  • Help register voters in your community, school, church, or workplace
  • Help mobilize voters to participate in elections
  • If you are an educator, a parent, or are part of a school setting, set up a civic education program or day at the school to educate students about the election process
  • If you are an employer, give employees paid time off to vote and to serve as poll workers and ensure customers are aware of elections. (More on what businesses can to do protect the election here)

Engage in political and issue campaigns

  • Run for office
  • Volunteer to work on political and issue campaigns
  • Attend local city council or state legislative meetings
  • Write to your state and federal representatives on issues you care about

Protect the vote

  • Volunteer for a non-partisan Election Protection operation, helping voters navigate the election process and resolving problems
  • Volunteer to provide physical or language assistance to voters who need help
  • If you see something suspicious, say something: stand up for voters whose rights are being attacked through the proper authorities

Get involved in your community

  • Volunteer to help people in need, including at soup kitchens, domestic violence shelters, churches, etc.
  • Donate to organizations and programs that help people in need
  • Help start such programs in your community

Welcome new citizens and community members

  • Participate in a new citizenship ceremony
  • Volunteer to register new citizens to vote

Support the truth

  • Combat disinformation — and do not spread it. (Some tips on how to spot and respond to election disinformation are here)
  • Subscribe to the local newspaper in your community

Editor's Note:

An earlier post entitled "Be Your Own Robo-Caller" gives you contact information and a guide to setting up your phone for quick and easy contact of your federal, state, and local elected officials.

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A VICIOUS ATTACK ON GIRLS & WOMEN

Posted by jj on Oct 31, 2021 in Intro, Violence
A VICIOUS ATTACK ON GIRLS & WOMEN
A VICIOUS ATTACK ON GIRLS & WOMEN

Female Genital Mutilation or Cutting (FGM/C)

From a U.S. Government fact sheet.

FGM/C refers to cutting and other procedures that injure the female genital organs for non-medical reasons.  It maybe called “female circumcision” in certain parts of the world.  The practice has no health benefits and can lead to a range of physical and mental health problems.

Immediate effects may include blood loss, severe pain, and sometimes death. Long-term health problems can include urinary infections, fistula, infertility, painful menstruation or sexual intercourse, and a potential increase in the risk of HIV/AIDS infection.  In addition, women who have had FGM/C are significantly more likely to experience difficulties during childbirth and their babies are more likely to die as a result of the practice.  Finally, the practice often leaves girls and women feeling scared, psychologically scarred, embarrassed, and distressed.

 

A Public Health Report on Women and Girls at Risk for Genital Mutilation in the U.S.

Objectives. In 1996, the U.S. Congress passed legislation making female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) illegal in the United States. CDC published the first estimates of the number of women and girls at risk for FGM/C in 1997. Since 2012, various constituencies have again raised concerns about the practice in the United States. We updated an earlier estimate of the number of women and girls in the United States who were at risk for FGM/C or its consequences.

 Methods. We estimated the number of women and girls who were at risk for undergoing FGM/C or its consequences in 2012 by applying country-specific prevalence of FGM/C to the estimated number of women and girls living in the United States who were born in that country or who lived with a parent born in that country.

 Results. Approximately 513,000 women and girls in the United States were at risk for FGM/C or its consequences in 2012, which was more than three times higher than the earlier estimate, based on 1990 data. The increase in the number of women and girls younger than 18 years of age at risk for FGM/C was more than four times that of previous estimates.

 Conclusion. The estimated increase was wholly a result of rapid growth in the number of immigrants from FGM/C-practicing countries living in the United States and not from increases in FGM/C prevalence in those countries. Scientifically valid information regarding whether women or their daughters have actually undergone FGM/C and related information that can contribute to efforts to prevent the practice in the United States and provide needed health services to women who have undergone FGM/C are needed.

The entire report can be read here:

https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/reports/fgmutilation.pdf

FGM is recognized internationally as a violation of the human rights of girls and women. It reflects deep-rooted inequality between the sexes, and constitutes an extreme form of discrimination against women. It is nearly always carried out on minors and is a violation of the rights of children. The practice also violates a person's rights to health, security and physical integrity, the right to be free from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, and the right to life when the procedure results in death.

Yet FGM/C occurs on almost every continent.  The United States is no exception.  One estimate is that as many as half a million girls and women have been victims of this form of violence or are at risk of being victims.  Most victims were born in countries where FMG/C is rooted in cultural beliefs or who live with a parent born in one of these countries.

The burden of preventing FGM/C falls largely on law enforcement but this presents significant challenges.  Affected women and girls are difficult to identify and may not come in contact with law enforcement.  Women who had the procedure when they were very young may not even recognize they are victims.  (This procedure may be done on females as early as infancy.)  Fearing condemnation and harassment from their families and communities, many girls and women will not seek help and/or deny it if asked.

This form of violence against women and girls is such a complicated issue, it is going to take the co-operation of many agencies beginning with education and understanding.  We all have to see and understand the problem to deal with it successfully.

 

 

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