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DRIVING WHILE BLACK

Posted by jj on Apr 13, 2021 in Intro
DRIVING WHILE BLACK
DRIVING WHILE BLACK

Two nights ago, my black friend, Doc Chris, was stopped by the police around Washington, D.C. Yeah, you know where this is going. Chris can share the details if he likes but suffice it to say that he feared for his life in a way that I never have. I want to say something different.

When I hear my fellow white people deny that there is a "white privilege"... when white people say "if you've done nothing wrong, you don't have anything to worry about"... when white people say "if you're respectful to the police, you'll be ok"... When white people say those things, and more, they denying the daily lived experience of every black person in America. It takes a cold heart, a lot of gall, and a whole lot of ignorance to say that you know better than the people who are being terrified by the police, and then blame them for the experience.

Who is Doc Chris? He's a Marine Corps veteran. He's earned a Ph.D. He's a college professor. Do those facts make you feel better, more outraged at the experience? If so, you should examine those feelings because you're tangled in the roots of your own racism. He has every drop of virtue that even the most racist white people should grudgingly admire but, in the end, Chris is black, and no amount military service, education, hard work, and position can save him on a dark street from the terror of an encounter with a police office who believes that every Person of Color is bomb about to explode.

This has to stop. It just has to stop.

This is a white people problem. Better said, this is a problem caused by white people. How do I know? Because I have never heard a fellow white person punctuate a story of a routine traffic stop with "thank God I lived". Never. Chris is a better man than I and yet I know my experience in his place would have been entirely different. Period. I'd have been irked at the sloppiness of the Motor Vehicle Department. I'd have been peeved at the delay and the inconvenience. And I would have driven off without once worrying about if I was going to die. Hell, I might have even gone full "Karen" and written a strongly worded letter to someone's manager over the kerfuffle. But there wouldn't have been a shaky bedside prayer to thank the Lord for living that night.

You and you and you. What are you going to do about this? How are you make this change come that is LONG overdue?

This has to stop.

Jonathan Cornwell  (c) 2021

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A POSITIVE IN THE PANDEMIC

Posted by jj on Apr 12, 2021 in Intro
A POSITIVE IN THE PANDEMIC
A POSITIVE IN THE PANDEMIC

Recently I attended a virtual discussion about women and disabilities.  One of the speakers made a statement to the effect that there had been a positive for people with disabilities because of the pandemic.  Paraphrasing what she said:  Because of the expansion of jobs working from home and the increase in virtual educational, cultural and political activism opportunities, people with disabilities could engage in ways they might otherwise have been unable to in the past.

This statement made me begin to think about my own circumstances that might also be considered as a positive.  Perhaps it might also apply to some of you.

This could be time for you, like the young woman I mentioned above, to take advantage of many of those same opportunities.  Use whatever extra time you have to explore interests for which you previously thought you did not have time.  Educate and entertain yourself.

I suggest you might become involved in causes that would help women.  The list of those causes is long: (1) passage of the ERA; (2) threats in dozens of states to suppress the right to vote; (3) reproductive rights being denied in state after state; (4) racial injustice still rampant in all parts of our country;  (5) poverty at an all-time high;  (6) the need to elect more women and people of color to every office from local government to your state house to the Congress.  You can participate many ways right from the comfort of your home.

 Search our Resource Library for organizations and websites to get you started.  Then search the web for more.  There is no end to the resources and opportunities that exist.

Share your knowledge, opinions and experiences on this site.

While many of us are still spending most of our time at home….MAKE IT A POSITIVE IN THE PANDEMIC.

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Failing to collect data about women is no trivial offence.........

Posted by jj on Apr 09, 2021 in Intro
Failing to collect data about women is no trivial offence.........
Failing to collect data about women is no trivial offence.........

Women get freezing cold in trains and in big city offices because the air conditioning is set for men’s sensitivity to the cold. They spend the whole theatre interval (when visits to the theatre were still possible) in the queue because there are too few toilets. What may appear to be more of a nuisance – a lack of public toilets for women – is a life-threatening problem in many countries in the world. In some federal states in India, women have no access to toilets and fritter away valuable time looking for a safe place. If they don’t find it, they are often sexually harassed or even killed.

City authorities don’t record these special needs, and they are therefore not taken into account. But the problem is broader. In a large number of areas, data is not collected by gender. That’s true for example in medical research, which is mostly geared towards men for convenience’s sake. It’s also true in traffic planning, giving preference to cars that are overwhelmingly used by men, although the majority of women globally travel by foot or by bicycle. In winter, it’s first the streets that are cleared although most accidents take place on pavements.

In her book Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men, the British author and feminist Caroline Criado-Perez has collected such facts and data from all areas of life, cultures and parts of the earth on just 500 pages. Criado-Perez shows the huge gaps in data to the detriment of women in the workplace, in the design of basic commodities, in medicine and in public life. The ubiquitous discrimination of women is underscored with sobering figures. And they prove what we have only presumed up until now: the world is not only partly but almost exclusively geared to men’s needs. She calls it ‘one-size-fits men’.

When data bias becomes life-threatening

The fact that the data gaps are so grave is also because we live in the digital age. Data is the new gold. With data, people can earn a lot of money and some base far-reaching decisions on it every day. That’s why it makes a huge difference whether data is taken from men or from women for an algorithm and with which data artificial intelligence is fed.

Criado-Perez comes up with the example of job-related assessment tests: Men always got the job if applications were only evaluated by artificial intelligence because both the questions and the answers referred to male views of life. Another example: when the New York Philharmonic Orchestra introduced an anonymous musical test, the number of female musicians rose from 0 to 45 per cent. The same phenomenon can be observed in the evaluation process for scientific essays: If neither authors nor evaluators are known, then more essays come in from female academics and receive a higher mark.

If there’s a will, there's a rather simple way: it doesn’t cost more money to collect data from women and about women to include them in the decision-making.

In the health sector too, women are mostly overlooked. For example, they are often give the wrong treatment when they have a heart attack because they often show ‘untypical’, i.e. non-male symptoms. Women are 17 per cent more likely to die in a car accident than men. Why? Because it’s almost exclusively male dolls that are used in crash tests. Agricultural equipment and machines are only designed for men. Men are usually taller, have bigger hands and more strength. Women, who use equipment or machines that are not suited for them on a daily basis, have health problems and are more likely to have accidents. Men are the measurement for all things. Or why, for an evening meal, are the costs for the food and the hotel allowed as expenses but the travel and babysitting costs are not? Criado-Perez has collected a huge number of similar examples.

A few successes

The good news is that this can be changed. If there’s a will, there's a rather simple way: it doesn’t cost more money to collect data from women and about women to include them in the decision-making. It doesn’t cost more money to take female instead of male test subjects for research. In many areas it would make economic sense to take women more into account. If infrastructure and research are geared more towards women, this does not only lead to women being treated equally but also leads to cost savings. As cost savings are highly valued in our capitalist world, this transition becomes more likely.

But for this to happen, many voices need to come together and demand the ‘gender data gap’ to be closed. Perhaps that includes those men who have read the entertainingly written book and have been persuaded that their view of the world is not the only right one.

The author has even had a few (rather symbolic) successes: Thanks to her perseverance, an image of Jane Austen can now be found on the British 10 pound note. Alongside the image of the Queen, she is the only woman on a British note. It’s also down to Criado-Perez that the statue of a female lawyer stands on Parliament Square in London next to many hundreds of male statues.

Anja Papenfuss
Berlin

Anja Papenfuss is Global Editor in the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung's Communications Department. Previously she was head of FES's Press Department and before that worked as a policy officer in its political analysis unit. She edited our German-language sister magazine, Internationale Politik und Gesellschaft. She studied political science in Bonn and Berlin.

 

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AN AVERAGE OF 3-4 WOMEN DIE EVERY DAY

Posted by jj on Apr 06, 2021 in Intro
AN AVERAGE OF 3-4 WOMEN DIE EVERY DAY
AN AVERAGE OF 3-4 WOMEN DIE EVERY DAY

That’s how many women are killed by a current or former intimate partner and that is only  one of a long list of statistics regarding the killing, sexual assault, stalking and harassing of women in this country.  Are you aware that 1 in 3 women have experienced rape, physical violence, and/or stalking by an intimate partner in their lifetime?  Did you know that 8.5 million girls and 1.5 million boys are abused before the age of 18?

April is National Assault Prevention and Awareness Month and a good time to gain a better understanding of how pervasive these kinds of violence are and how you can help do something about it.  Millions of individuals are affected by these life-threatening crimes every year.  Start by checking out the website of The National Network To End Domestic Violence, an organization that can provide a wealth of information.  What you will learn there will help you better understand the importance of passage of the Violence Against Women Act.

The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA ) was passed in 1994 with bipartisan support.  It has been re-authorized several times since then  to improve it but in February, 2019, after months of failed negotiations, it expired.  Republicans have been unwilling to buck objections of the National Rifle Association (NRA).

On March 17, 2021, the House passed H.R. 1620 with 172 Republicans, some of them women, voting “NO” on the re-authorization of VAWA.  Only 29 Republicans voted “YES” with the Democrats.  The Republicans key reason for objecting to the bill is they agree with the National Rifle Association’s opposition to a provision that would close what is referred to as the “boyfriend loophole”.

Another law passed in 1996 prohibits current or former spouses who have been convicted of domestic violence from legally purchasing a firearm.  The new VAWA would extend that prohibition to “boyfriends” who have been convicted of stalking and/or assaulting their girlfriend or who have had a restraining order issued against them for actions against their girlfriend.  FBI data indicates a boyfriend is as likely to kill their intimate partner as a husband.

Most Republicans in the House obviously love their guns and the NRA more than they care about human lives.  Let’s see if Republican Senators feel differently and have the courage to show it.

Now is the time to help them rise to the occasion.  Call and/or write them of your support for the passage of VAWA as passed by the House.  Need contact information?  Go to senate.gov.  Click on “ find your Senators”  on upper left side.  Click on your state from the dropdown menu.

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PROTECT VOTING RIGHTS NOW!

Posted by admin on Mar 23, 2021 in Intro, Elections
PROTECT VOTING RIGHTS NOW!
PROTECT VOTING RIGHTS NOW!

PROTECT VOTING RIGHTS NOW!

Recent posts on this site regarding Stacey Abrams and the work she and her organization did in Georgia in the Presidential election and the Special Senate Elections in January were met with a groundswell of praise and support. In response to some of the remarks I promised to work on compiling a list of organizations around the country that are involved in voting rights issues and/or voter registration drives.

The list, which by no means contains all possible organizations, is at the end of this post.  But first, you should be aware of activity on this issue in the Congress.  Some of this information may seem redundant but I cannot express in strong enough terms the gravity of the voter suppression efforts we are up against.  If you care about the survival of our democracy, you MUST become involved in every way you can.  Do your homework.  Find an organization that feels right for you and JOIN IN THE FIGHT TO PROTECT VOTING RIGHTS!

Below is the statement of 21 State Attorney Generals in support of HR1 and HR4.   These are bills currently in Congress and, if passed, will supersede laws currently being considered and/or passed by Republican-controlled legislatures in 43 states.  The House passed HR1 and it is now ready for the Senate to take it up.  They both need to be passed NOW!

Statement from the 21 State Attorney Generals:

“HR 1 would shatter the hundreds of proposed barriers to racially equitable voter participation that some factions of legislators are introducing in state houses across the country. Without it, ensuring future elections are fully fair and free will continue to be an uphill climb.  HR 1 won’t put an end to all voter repression, it is a critical first step. The next one rests in HR 4, the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act — a badly needed reinforcement of the Voting Rights Act. We also tip our hats to President Biden for his executive order this weekend instructing federal agencies to take steps to better support voter registration and other election-related advances.”

“Between those federal actions, good state bills that seek to enhance the freedom to vote, and the bipartisan state and local leaders who worked so tirelessly to run the most secure election in history this past go around, we can make our democracy stronger than ever.”

Written by Brian Frosh, attorney general for Maryland; Karl Racine, attorney general for the District of Columbia; and Norman Eisen, Voter Protection Program Chair. 

 The list below comes from fairfightaction.com

Hello Democracy Warrior!

Below are some organizations that you can connect with as they take on voter suppression in their states. Click below for volunteer opportunities! This is neither an exhaustive list of states in which there is work to be done nor organizations that are doing this work, but a place to start!

Arizona

  • Arizona Advocacy Network
  • Arizona Wins 

Florida 

  • Florida Rights Restoration Coalition 

Michigan

  • Voters Not Politicians 

New Hampshire

  • New Hampshire Coalition for Voting Rights

North Carolina

  • Democracy NC 

Texas

  • Texas Civil Rights Project
  • Texas Organizing Project  

Virginia

  • Virginia Democratic Party
  • New Virginia Majority 

Wisconsin  

  • Democratic Party of Wisconsin

Some additional sources:

  Vote Forward 

  Native People Action

  North Dakota Native Vote

  Down Home North Carolina

  Action St. Louis Power Project

  West Virginia Citizen Action Group

  Living United Change for Arizona (LUCHA)

  Georgia Stand Up

  Detroit Action

  One Arizona

  We The People

If you want to educate yourself further regarding saving our democracy, then go to www.brennancenter.org  It is a great source for all “justice” issues.

Remember this…however and with whatever organization you affiliate to get women & people of color registered and to the polls, you will be helping in the battle for social justice.

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