3sg jef fery

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

marți, 8 martie 2011

Women's History Month: Repeating and re-enacting battles we'd hoped WERE history

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
The Women's Museum, Fair Park, Dallas, Texas &...Image via Wikipedia
The Women's Museum, Fair Park, Dallas, Texas
"Milestones in Women's History" exhibit
(I originally had this scheduled for a different day, but it works out well that I bumped it, as it's appearing on the 100th International Women's Day.)


March is Women’s History Month - a time to reflect on where we’ve been and consider where we go next. As the saying goes, those who forget history are doomed to repeat it...or may be forced by circumstances to re-fight battles they’d hoped were already resolved.

It’s been characterized as a “war on women” led by conservative forces, and just since the beginning of 2011, here are some of the shots that have been fired (edited from the original source to make some of the language less partisan, so as not to cloud the issues with that):
1) Proposed legislation would not only reduce women's access to abortion care, it’s actually trying to redefine rape. After a major backlash, representatives promised to back off, but it’s still out there.

2) A state legislator in Georgia wants to change the legal term for victims of rape, stalking, and domestic violence to "accuser." But victims of other less gendered crimes, like burglary, would remain "victims."

3) In South Dakota, legislators proposed a bill that could make it legal to murder a doctor who provides abortion care.

4) Proposed legislation would cut nearly a billion dollars of food and other aid to low-income pregnant women, mothers, babies, and kids.

5) In Congress, a bill would let hospitals allow a woman to die rather than perform an abortion necessary to save her life.

6) In Maryland, all county money for a low-income kids' preschool program was ended. Why? No need, they said. Women should really be home with the kids, not out working.

7) And at the federal level, some in Congress want to cut that same program, Head Start, by $1 billion. That means over 200,000 kids could lose their spots in preschool.

8) Two-thirds of the elderly poor are women, and conservatives are taking aim at them too. A spending bill would cut funding for employment services, meals, and housing for senior citizens.

9) Congress just voted for - and passed - an amendment to cut all federal funding from Planned Parenthood health centers, one of the most trusted providers of basic health care and family planning in our country.

10) And if that wasn't enough, some in Congress are pushing to eliminate all funds for the only federal family planning program. (For humans. But Republican Dan Burton has a bill to provide contraception for wild horses.)
I’m not saying I like them, but I do understand some of the financial proposals. Government deficits are so out of control they’re almost incomprehensible, and there are only two ways to attack them: raising revenues (that is, tax increases) and cutting expenses. It takes both. Neither is popular. But some of the cost-cutting measures that have been proposed recently do seem particularly targeted against women, and motivated at least partially by social as well as fiscal conservatism.

One definition of “conservative” is “keeping things as they are” - that is, preservation of the status quo. By that definition, there are some actions on the list above that look like the polar opposite of “conservative" to me; they’re about radical change that would dismantle existing systems and reverse decades of social momentum - progress which, for the record, has often benefited both sexes.

Forty years after Roe v. Wade, much of the argument still comes back to the issue of abortion in one way or another. Continued limitations on availability of and access to abortion services effectively render the fact that they are still legal irrelevant - and won’t stop the practice anyway. Women who needed to terminate pregnancies before abortion was legal found ways to do it, regardless of the physical risks; if forced away from medically-safe, regulated services, they’ll take those risks again if they have to. Providers of those services are already risking their own lives in some places, and now they’re looking at a proposal that the loss of those lives could be brushed off with a “(s)he needed killin’” defense. And on the other side, women who do carry their pregnancies to term and bear children that they’re not in a position to support without help are seeing doors to that assistance closed. It makes me wonder if some people believe life is only worth protecting and providing for before it actually arrives in the world.

This is way beyond social conservatism, as I recently discussed with a couple of friends on Facebook:
Me: “I just don't get all this. It's a clear reminder that feminism's battles aren't over, but why do we have to keep going back and re-fighting the same ones?”

W: “I agree - we shouldn't have to keep re-fighting the battles. But, unfortunately, there is a sector of our population who want to keep women "in their place." They don't want women to work outside the home, they want to strip them of any power they might have. It is mind-numbing.”

M: “This has me so upset. As one of my friends said, we're becoming a developing country. It's horrible.”

Me: “Re: the developing-country comment - this country is not a fundamentalist theocracy, and yet it seems there are people in power here who'd like to run it as if it were.”
In a February 2011 post on BlogHer.com, Gloria Feldt addressed the matter of “re-fighting old battles” and talked tactics:
“Clearly we need to heed history’s lessons. We've been here and done this so many times...You might feel outnumbered (though you are actually in the majority), or that you don’t have the money or mainstream media access to be effective. So you must use what you've got, and believe me when I tell you that the resources you need are always there if you can see them and have the courage to use them. You have ‘power tools:’
“1. The power of your convictions. Let others know what you think. I found in my experience on the advocacy frontlines that the fastest way to grow your courage muscles is to use them to stand up for what you believe.
“2. The power of your voice. Blog it, baby. When you blog on the topic, be sure to re-post on social media, but to multiply your power, send it to your members of Congress, state legislators, and your local media. Turn it into a letter-to-the-editor or use parts of it to comment on other blogs. Make your voice big. Do something and say something whenever you see something.
“3. The power of your story. We all have stories. We need to share them, for they are a great source of power.
“4. The power of the collective. Join with your blogging, tweeting, facebooking, tumblring sisters and like-minded brothers to create a citizen uprising of Egyptian magnitude.”
I surf the third wave. I’m old enough to be aware of what second-wave feminists worked for in challenging social and legal barriers - socially-prescribed domestic roles, sex-segregated jobs, unfavorable property laws (although I wasn’t aware of the term “second-wave feminist” till years later) - and young enough to share in some of their gains without actually having been part of that wave. But their record after twenty years was mixed, and it’s remained clear to me that feminism still has plenty of challenges to tackle. That’s one reason that re-fighting the old battles is so frustrating to me - but if we don’t want to see history reversed and repeated, re-enacting some of that history may be necessary.

This new “war on women” has firmed up my resolve to repeat a small part of my own history: I will re-read Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid's Tale this year! I didn't view this classic dystopian feminist thriller as science/speculative fiction 20+ years ago, back in the days of the Moral Majority - and I still don't. I always felt that what made it scary was that I could imagine it happening. It’s still (regrettably) timely, and the oppression Atwood depicts still feels all too plausible. And if I read about it, I’ll blog about it; this is my place to document my own history, share my stories, and mark my own tiny place in the larger narrative of women’s history.
Enhanced by Zemanta
Trimiteți prin e-mail Postați pe blog!Trimiteți pe XDistribuiți pe Facebook
Posted in 'riting, mostly true stories, news traffic and weather, thinking out loud | No comments
Postare mai nouă Postare mai veche Pagina de pornire

0 comentarii:

Trimiteți un comentariu

Abonați-vă la: Postare comentarii (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Book Talk: *The Lonely Polygamist*, by Brady Udall
    The Lonely Polygamist: A Novel Brady Udall W. W. Norton & Company (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 0393062627 / 9780393062625) Fiction, 608 pages...
  • Sunday Salon: The end (of the year) is coming!
    I finished and reviewed my 50th and 51st books of 2010 last week, although the reviews have yet to post here ( LibraryThing is all caught up...
  • BBAW 2010: Forgotten Treasures - Books Remembered and Recommended
      BBAW 2010:  A Treasure Chest of Infinite Books and Infinite Blogs Thursday—Forgotten Treasure Sure we’ve all read about Freedom and Mock...
  • BlogHer'10: What's the "publishing ecosystem" evolving into?
    I'll warn you now - my BlogHer'10 experiences will, once again, be the subject of several posts. There are a couple of sessions I...
  • Book Talk: *Mockingjay*, by Suzanne Collins (w/a few spoilers)
      Mockingjay (The Final Book of The Hunger Games ) Suzanne Collins Scholastic Press (2010), Hardcover (0439023513 / 9780439023511) Fiction (...
  • Book Talk: *Red Hook Road*, by Ayelet Waldman
    Red Hook Road Ayelet Waldman Doubleday (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 0385517866 / 9780385517867) Fiction, 352 pages Source : ARC (Advance Reader...
  • Sunday Salon: Writers, readers, and NaNoWriMo
      For the second year in a row, I'm publicly saying NO to National Novel Writing Month ( NaNoWriMo ) . I love to read, and I love to wr...
  • BBAW: New Treasures - Book Blog Discoveries
    BBAW has an overall theme this year: "A Treasure Chest of Infinite Books and Infinite Blogs." Monday—First Treasure We invite you...
  • Sunday Salon: Season of the Lists
    Year-end is fast approaching, like it or not, and one sign of that is the arrival of the Lists. Because I’m once again nursing a disloca...
  • Sunday Salon: Thankful for blog-driven reading, and Indie Lit Awards!
      Karen ’s comment on my entry for last week’s Weekend Assignment made me stop and think for a minute: “It's interesting that your hab...

Categories

  • 'riting
  • #DailyBookPic
  • 24-Hour Readathon
  • a bunch of books
  • announcements
  • Armchair BEA
  • Audiobook Challenge
  • audiobooks
  • BBAW
  • BEA11
  • BEA12
  • blog tour
  • Blogging Authors Reading Challenge
  • BlogHer
  • BlogHer Book Club
  • blogs elsewhere
  • book bloggers
  • BookBloggerCon
  • CBSLA Best of LA
  • Comic Con 2011
  • ComicCon 2010
  • contests and giveaways
  • Ebook Reading Challenge
  • Faith 'n' Fiction 2011
  • family
  • Favorites List
  • fiction
  • FnFRT
  • food
  • fotos
  • Friday Foto
  • Friday/Monday Foto
  • guest post
  • holidays
  • Indie Lit Awards
  • LA Moms Blog
  • links
  • memes and blogger games
  • Memorable Memoirs Reading Challenge
  • metabloggery
  • MomsLA
  • Monday Moment
  • mostly true stories
  • NaBloPoMo
  • nerd factor
  • news traffic and weather
  • nonfiction
  • one book at a time
  • pop culture: movies
  • pop culture: music
  • pop culture: TV
  • randomness
  • reading
  • retrospective
  • reviews
  • roundup
  • RYOB Challenge
  • ShelfAwareness
  • SheWrites
  • site stuff
  • So Cal
  • Sunday Salon
  • THE HANDMAID'S TALE Read-Along
  • THE SPARROW Read-Along
  • TheSmartlyLA
  • thinking out loud
  • Thoughts From My Reading
  • travel
  • Tuesday Tangents
  • Vacation 2010
  • Weekend Assignment
  • Weekend Review
  • Weekly Geeks
  • work

Blog Archive

  • ►  2012 (18)
    • ►  ianuarie (18)
  • ▼  2011 (239)
    • ►  decembrie (14)
    • ►  noiembrie (19)
    • ►  octombrie (12)
    • ►  septembrie (18)
    • ►  august (22)
    • ►  iulie (16)
    • ►  iunie (20)
    • ►  mai (21)
    • ►  aprilie (22)
    • ▼  martie (24)
      • Tuesday Tangents: Hey, my birthday really IS today!
      • Monday Moment: Recycle(d) Crayons?
      • Sunday Salon: The Sales Pitch
      • Friday Filler - the Better-Than-Nothing edition
      • Book Talk: *Skipping a Beat*, by Sarah Pekkanen
      • Inquiring minds wanted to know! (A's for your Q's)
      • Weekly Geeks' 10 Things, plus Top 10 Book-Blogging...
      • Work-wise, blogging may not always work out
      • Sunday Salon: I've Got the News!
      • Week-End Review: Friendly Words and Four-part Linkage
      • Book Talk: *The Weird Sisters,* by Eleanor Brown
      • I am four years old today - and it's Day 2 of my B...
      • Tuesday Tangents, BLOGIVERSARY Edition: Help Me Ce...
      • Monday Miscellany: Where did Sunday go?
      • Week-End Review: Friday Fives & a Funny Foto...
      • Growing Pains; or, does a blogging community get s...
      • Book Talk: *This is Where I Leave You*, by Jonatha...
      • Women's History Month: Repeating and re-enacting b...
      • Monday Moment: Celebration!
      • Sunday Salon: E-Book Week, and What Publishers Want
      • Week-end Review: The Friday Fives
      • Dear Amazon: You can't fire me. I quit.
      • Booking it, in thirty minutes or less
      • Book Talk: *Mary Ann in Autumn,* by Armistead Maupin
    • ►  februarie (26)
    • ►  ianuarie (25)
  • ►  2010 (243)
    • ►  decembrie (21)
    • ►  noiembrie (33)
    • ►  octombrie (29)
    • ►  septembrie (25)
    • ►  august (24)
    • ►  iulie (23)
    • ►  iunie (26)
    • ►  mai (22)
    • ►  aprilie (28)
    • ►  martie (12)
Un produs Blogger.

Despre mine

Guy
Vizualizați profilul meu complet