close
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20101122084955/http://feministe.us/blog/

It is technically Sunday. Go!

{ 52 comments }

This is a guest post by C. L. Minou. C. L. Minou has written on trans and feminist issues for the Guardian’s Comment Is Free, Change.org, and Tiger Beatdown. She blogs at The Second Awakening.

[TW for transphobia]

I don’t remember when I first heard of the Trans Day of Remembrance. It must have been at least five or six years ago, when I was just beginning to connect the private tortures of my transness to larger societal concerns. I can’t, to be honest, remember very well my reaction to it. Probably something along the lines of “that’s a good idea.”

I mention this not to give you insight into the Banal Morality of C. L. Minou, but because it seems that nowadays some trans folks are turning against TDOR. Not just the various observances of it, but against the entire concept of having a day to remember the murdered trans people of the previous year. “It’s depressing,” say some. “Where is the positive day?” say others. “Why do we only talk about the depressing deaths, when trans people have accomplished so much?”

And some say, “why should I care about a bunch of prostitutes who have no bearing on my life?”

I’m not going to dispute the first two points. Yes, indeed, remembering the deaths of people who died simply because of who they were is depressing–horribly depressing, and it’s horrible that every year there isn’t a shortage of names to add to the list. And of course trans people are doing amazing things: becoming judges, working in government, bravely taking a stand against ongoing discrimination. These are all amazing things and we should celebrate them.

But that still doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t have a day to remember the dead, or exchange that day for one of unfettered celebration.

[click to continue…]

{ 14 comments }

Pete and Alisha Arnold

I vote yes.

The Arnolds are having a baby. Unless the public votes to have the child aborted. Meet the couple behind Birthornot.com, where “you can vote and choose whether we abort or keep our unborn child.”

Pete and Alisha Arnold, both 30, both tech professionals, live in the Minneapolis suburb of Apple Valley and have been married for 10 years. Since September, they’ve blogged about their expected child at birthornot.com, posting health updates about the mother and the fetus (which will be 17 weeks-old tomorrow), and ultrasound pictures and video. But at the top of the blog is a poll hosted by PollDaddy.com. The question: “Should We Give Birth or Have an Abortion?” “Give Birth” has 46 percent of the vote at the moment, with “Have an Abortion” at 54 percent. The poll closes on December 7th.

As Amanda pointed out yesterday, the whole thing is pretty clearly an anti-choice prank — (a) pro-choice people don’t actually think that every pregnant woman should have an abortion, and (b) the whole ideological underpinning of the pro-choice position is the idea that the woman should decide whether or not to carry a pregnancy to term. It shouldn’t be left up to a vote, in Congress or on the internet. As Amanda wrote:

At first blush, I gave it 9-to-1 odds that it’s an anti-choice stunt, just on the fact that the couple running it have the pro-choice view completely backwards. Putting what you do with your body up to a vote is the anti-choice view. Treating women’s bodies like they’re public property is the anti-choice view. True, most anti-choicers think a woman’s rights should be voted on in order to force childbirth, and they’re making this more open-ended, but the underlying sentiment–that women’s bodies are public property, that their choices should be determined by strangers–is what the pro-choice movement rejects.

And look at that, she was right. The dude behind the website is a right-wing anti-choice blogger. The whole purpose of the campaign seems to be to horrify readers at the idea that abortion would be left up to an internet vote. Which, yeah, is kind of horrifying! Just as horrifying, actually, as the fact that people would use what appears to be a real pregnancy to encourage people on the internet to vote on whether to or not to abort as part of some sort of pro-life publicity stunt. The fact that these individuals will actually be raising a child is stomach-turning. Maybe when that kid is old enough, he’ll have the sense to terminate his relationship with such toxic parents.

{ 33 comments }

An Esquire blogger takes issue with Google’s new “Boutiques” shopping site:

Shopping is hard enough as it is. We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: The reason men don’t get quite as excited about buying clothes as our female counterparts comes down to information — we need options, often easy ones, to make the right decisions. And the Internet doesn’t have a lot of easy options, which is why men aren’t currently going quite as crazy hunting for Black Friday deals, nor do many of us even know what that “Cyber Monday” exists.

Which is also why we got excited to wake up this morning to an e-mail from Google, the Internet’s kingmaker of simplicity in the information overload, about… fashion. Boutiques.com, we were told, “uses computer vision and machine learning technology to visually analyze your taste and match it to items you would like.” Sounds nerdy, but totally brilliant, which is basically why The Times’ Cathy Horyn gave Google’s new e-commerce site the rave review we read on the train this morning.

And then we logged in. Google’s machine learning asks for Your Boutique Preferences, followed by not one but a dozen pictures of…. wait, this is only for women? Now, we understand, ladies love to shop online, and for our half of the species, well, it’s kind of a pain in the ass right now. But as Michael Williams over at A Continuous Lean lamented the other day, guys want to shop online, and there’s a missed opportunity in having fantastically curated clothing sites that are more or less “deliberately designed to repel men.”

A Google spokesman told The Style Blog this morning that the company had “no other specifics to share at this time” beyond its blog-post announcement that right now “Boutiques is only available in the U.S. and only for women’s fashion, but we plan to expand in the future.” Well, men might as well start making their voices be heard. There will be other sites — good ones, without repellants — but this Google thing is going to be a big deal, and it’s going to get better. Tell them you want a whizbang, mind-reading fashion site of your own — or at least a tab on there somewhere. In the meantime, Gilt Man has some nice shirts on sale today.

Maybe I’ve been in New York for too long, but most men I know are interested in fashion, and shop extensively online, and care quite a bit about how they look. I realize Google is operating out of t-shirt-and-flip-flop land in Palo Alto, but this is a pretty big misstep (and missed opportunity). I’ve been playing on Boutiques all morning, and dudes, you are missing out. Rise up!

{ 41 comments }

Oh, good.

There are only a handful of priests in the country trained as exorcists, but they say they are overwhelmed with requests from people who fear they are possessed by the Devil.

Now, American bishops are holding a conference on Friday and Saturday to prepare more priests and bishops to respond to the demand. The purpose is not necessarily to revive the practice, the organizers say, but to help Catholic clergy members learn how to distinguish who really needs an exorcism from who really needs a psychiatrist, or perhaps some pastoral care.

So glad that’s covered.

“People are talking about, are we taking two steps back?” Father Vega said. “My first reaction when I heard about the exorcism conference was, this is another of those trappings we’ve pulled out of the past.”

But he said that there could eventually be a rising demand for exorcism because of the influx of Hispanic and African Catholics to the United States. People from those cultures, he said, are more attuned to the experience of the supernatural.

Bishop Paprocki noted that according to Catholic belief, the Devil is a real and constant force who can intervene in people’s lives — though few of them will require an exorcism to handle it.

“The ordinary work of the Devil is temptation,” he said, “and the ordinary response is a good spiritual life, observing the sacraments and praying. The Devil doesn’t normally possess someone who is leading a good spiritual life.”

With the idea that Latino and African Catholics are more attuned to the experiences of the supernatural, and that people who are possessed are leading bad lives, what could possibly go wrong here?

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

Encarnación Romero was an undocumented immigrant working at a poultry plant in Missouri when she was arrested in 2007 during a raid by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She was jailed for two years for federal identity theft, because she used a fake name and Social Security number when applying for her job (those charges, notably, would not stick if they were filed today — the Supreme Court rejected the use of identity theft prosecutions in simple immigration cases like this one). In prison and unable to care for her infant son herself, Romero did what many parents would have done (and what my own parents certainly would have done): She asked her sister to look after the baby, Carlitos, until she could come home. The sister was already overwhelmed with her own three children, and sought help through her church. An acquaintance took Carlitos to the home of the church’s minister, and the minister and his wife contacted another couple who were looking to adopt.

Romero’s parental rights were then terminated, and Carlitos was adopted by Seth and Melinda Moser.

Unsurprisingly, Romero did not have adequate legal representation, and does not speak English. Lawyers for the Mosers, who adopted Carlitos, say that Romero abandoned her child, and “She went by different aliases, and therefore all the correspondence that the court sent her, and that I sent her, even that her attorney sent her, all came back refused.” Romero’s attorneys, though, say that while she did seek employment under an assumed name, she gave ICE officers her real name shortly after being arrested. The fact that she was booked under a false name doesn’t mean that she abandoned her child — it means that there was a clerical error (and possibly that there wasn’t proper translation, and that she didn’t have a lawyer).

The whole thing is horrifying. And of course the public argument is coming down to nice adoptive parents vs. illegal immigrant jailed mother — with “the best interests of the child” used as a tool to advance injustice:

Rick Schnake, the Joplin attorney representing the Mosers, said that removing the child from the family he has known for the past few years would only compound the tragedy. He argued that the best interests of the child are served by keeping him with his adoptive parents.

“This little boy is four years old. He doesn’t speak Spanish, he speaks English,” Schnake said. “I don’t mean to be caustic about it but it’s not the child’s fault she was (in jail).”

Considering that Romero would not be jailed for the exact same act had she been arrested today instead of in 2007, it’s not so clear that it’s totally her fault she was in jail, either. And it’s not her fault that her parental rights were terminated, and that her son was taken away from her. It’s not the child’s fault that he was part of a predatory adoption, but that doesn’t mean that it’s in his best interests to stay with those adoptive parents. Adding to the mess is the fact that the adoptive parents hired the attorney who acted on behalf of the birth mother during the court proceedings to terminate Romero’s parental rights.

A lot of the commentary on this story says it’s a “tragedy for all involved” and that we’re all hoping for “the best outcome for everyone.” Except, well, no. It is a tragedy for all involved, but it’s more of a tragedy for the woman who had her baby taken from her and for the baby who was taken than for the couple who knew that parental rights hadn’t properly been terminated, but apparently thought that their desire for a child trumped another woman’s rights to raise the child she carried, birthed, loved and raised for his first six months of life. I don’t want to impute too many motives on the Mosers, because who knows what the whole story is from their perspective. But I do think it’s fair to expect that adoptive parents will make every reasonable effort to figure out where their baby is coming from, and will act as ethically as possible in a situation which is often fraught with inequality and injustice and coercion. I’m not sure it’s clear that the Mosers did that here. I can understand why, having raised this child for four years, they wouldn’t want to give him up. But unless I’m missing something (and I might be), it seems that they made a whole series of unethical, bad decisions on the front end and now want everyone to look the other way. I don’t have a whole lot of sympathy for that position.

The undercurrent in all of this is the idea that the Mosers are de facto better parents than Romero because Romero is brown and “illegal.” And that’s an idea that plays pretty well in much of the United States. I hope Romero gets her son back, and that this case can be a lesson that predatory adoptions and aggressive anti-immigrant policies only serve to harm women, children and families.

{ 45 comments }

Today (her time!) is the birthday of our very own and very fabulous Chally! Here’s to hoping, Chally, that this next year is as awesome as you are. Please accept this humble offering of the thing I assumed you would enjoy most in the world — David Tennant with a cute little kitty cat:

David Tennant holding a tiny kitten.

Leave your birthday wishes for Chally in the comments!

{ 18 comments }

My Endless New York

by Jill on 11.15.2010 · 1 comment

in General

Not much else to say other than, Tony Judt, you are so sorely missed. I’m not sure there’s a writer alive who so perfectly articulates the spirit of a place or the truths of a particular time. The public intellectual, the insightful and accessible historian, seems to have taken a back seat to the partisan blow-hard. Tony Judt was a giant. And his picture of New York looks a lot like mine; I also chose this place. It’s sadly a less vibrant city without him in it.

{ 1 comment }

A small child receives IV cholera treatment in St. Marc.

PHOTO: A woman hold a small child, who receives IV treatment for cholera in St. Marc. Image provided by Partners in Health, with more available here.

At this point, you’ve likely seen news of the cholera outbreak in Haiti. As of the NY Times’ latest report, there have been over 900 deaths, and experts are worried that this is only the beginning:

The death toll in Haiti’s cholera epidemic has reached more than 900, the government reported Sunday, as aid groups rushed soap and clean water to a disaster-wracked population to fight the disease.

The Ministry of Health reported that as of Friday, there had been 917 deaths and more than 14,600 were hospitalized with cholera-like symptoms. That is up from the 724 deaths and 11,125 hospitalizations reported a few days before.

The disease has been found in 6 of Haiti’s 10 provinces, known as departments, and is most severe where it originated, in Artibonite, which accounts for nearly two-thirds of the deaths.

Several epidemiologists have said the disease has not peaked and will likely worsen and break out in other regions of the country, with United Nations health officials estimating about 270,000 may be sickened in the coming years. Several new cholera treatment centers are springing up in the capital and other areas.

Unfortunately, this slow-burning epidemic is not receiving the same kind of international attention and pledges of aid that the earthquake in Haiti at the beginning of this year. This is ironic if sadly unsurprising, since the cholera outbreak is largely a result of the earthquake and certainly compounded by the severe inadequacy of the earthquake response. As Alanna Shaikh said at the Progressive Realist a couple weeks ago:

Haiti is currently facing its first cholera outbreak in a hundred years. It’s not a surprise, exactly. It was something public health experts have been afraid of since the earthquake. But after nine months, we were starting to hope maybe it wouldn’t happen.

According to the BBC, 196 people have now died, and 2,634 have been hospitalized as the result of the cholera outbreak. It is most likely the result of drinking water from the Artibonite River. A few of the sufferers report drinking only purified water, but they may have gotten the disease from accidentally swallowing bathing water or from food prepared by an infected person.

Cholera is exactly the kind of diseases you worry about after a natural disaster. It comes from drinking water tainted with fecal matter, which is what happens when infrastructure is destroyed and people don’t have access to clean water or functioning toilets. Cholera is especially hard of children, who dehydrate and very quickly from the diarrhea caused by the disease.

Yes, experts predicted the likely outbreak of deadly disease not long after the earthquake, yet infrastructure in preparation for the outbreak was still lacking when it hit. Indeed, as of two months ago, a mere 2% of the earthquake debris has been cleared; I’m unsure if more recent figures are available, but it’s doubtful that two months managed to magically accomplish what nine months did not. With this being the case, it’s less than shocking that there is also a severe lack of working toilets and uncontaminated water.

If you have money to spare, Partners in Health is an on the ground organization in Haiti that takes a community-based approach to providing free health care. They have been responding to the cholera outbreak by treating patients both at special treatment centers and in their communities, distributing soap and water purification supplies, educating communities on prevention, building showers, and working towards long-term water security in Haiti. You can support Partners in Health’s efforts to respond to the cholera outbreak and save lives by donating here.

Many of the links in this post via abby jean, who has stayed on top of news from Haiti consistently.

{ 0 comments }

As interpreted by A Total Dude who would like to emphasize how much of a Total Dude he is. I mean really, Cormac McCarthy is #1? Then Fight Club? The Beach made your Top 10? JAMES FREY? Even putting aside the fact that eight of the ten books on the list were written by white men, half of these books aren’t even that good.

Thanks for the Zadie Smith, I guess.

{ 26 comments }

BERJAYA

Meet Priscilla Shirer. She’s the Phyllis Schlafley of our time, making a successful career out of telling other women to submit to their husbands and the Lord. The author of the piece does a good job at pointing out the various hypocrisies and nuances of Shirer’s position, so I won’t go too far into them here, but suffice it to say Priscilla’s life path and her choices fly directly in the face of what she evangelizes as “natural” for women. Women, according to the peddlers of Biblical Womanhood, are naturally emotional. We’re naturally submissive. We naturally want men to take care of us. We naturally fall back behind a male leader.

Men, by contrast, are naturally unemotional. They’re naturally aggressive. They’re natural leaders. All of which, the article points out, stands in stark contrast to the thousands of men crying and hugging each other as they listen to speeches at Promise Keepers rallies.

The “naturally” submissive women have also been leading areas of the church for centuries. And male church leaders have created all kinds of rules to reign them in and make sure that they don’t get too powerful. Which is funny, isn’t it, to spend centuries telling women from a variety of backgrounds and cultures that what they all seem to be doing is totally unnatural? And when the telling doesn’t work, to go with “God said so” and the stick instead of the carrot? One would think that the “natural” wouldn’t take so much convincing.

That, to me, is what is most interesting about Priscilla Shirer and Phyllis Schlafley and all of the women who have made careers out of telling other women to be submissive, and who have achieved their success by aggressively angling themselves as authorities of a movement which tells women that passivity and submission to male authority are the hallmarks of true and good femininity. They lead a movement that tells women not to be leaders; they succeed in careers outside of the home by telling women that success in a career outside of the home is a man’s job. They embody the fundamental human desire for recognition and for appreciation, and for success in what you work hard at — all while saying that those very things are unnatural in Godly women.

And women respond; women seem to love them.

The “don’t-have-a-career careerists” are hypocrites to be sure, but they’re also incredibly useful insofar as they carve out a space for women to exert some power and authority when they might otherwise feel powerless, all under the cover of acceptable feminine behavior. Religious institutions — and Christian institutions in the United States and Europe are the ones with which I’m most familiar — have long functioned in the same way. Women who might not otherwise have much power in their day-to-day lives can lead a church group; they can teach a Sunday school class; they can become a valuable member of an organization that is bigger than themselves, and that makes them feel like they’re making a positive difference, taking on significant responsibility, and teaching and leading others. Women attend religious services in larger numbers than men, and tend to be more active in their houses of worship; I suspect that one reason behind that is that church (or temple or synagogue or mosque or wherever one worships) can be a source of pride, community and authority for women who may not get that same kind of recognition and power in their homes or in their paid jobs.

But female authority in male-dominated and male-created institutions can go only go so far. Women can teach Sunday School, but they probably shouldn’t teach adult men in Bible study. Women can organize and lead the choir, but they shouldn’t be behind the pulpit. The rules vary from institution to institution — and there are more than a few religious organizations where women can have any role they desire — but in the more traditional and conservative denominations, female leadership is welcome insofar as it helps the institution, but not to the point where women might have any real authority over men, and definitely not past the point where women might think that because they’re capable leaders in their roles serving their house of worship that they’re capable leaders at home or in the secular world.

At the same time, the secular world has changed quickly, and women are not content to be treated like second-class citizens (and, if one looks at the history of a wide variety of religions and religious movements, women have never been content to take a back seat and simply follow men because God said so — Second Wave feminism hardly invented the pushy broad or the capable lady). Religious institutions — even conservative ones — have to adapt to cultural shifts with losing either credibility or their followers, and without damaging a power structure that is quite dear to the men it benefits. It’s a difficult balance to strike. Women like Priscilla Shirer, though, help conservative churches to walk the tightrope. Shirer herself benefits from all of the things that women aren’t supposed to want — authority, power, prestige, financial and social success. Other women can look up to her, and can have their own totally normal, totally human desire for success quietly justified; they can also feel like their own leadership in their churches is Godly and appropriately submissive and feminine. At the same time, Priscilla Shirer draws lines that fall neatly within the interests of male church leadership, but which sound less patriarchal and outdated coming from a woman. Speaking from a place of power as a woman, and telling other women that their own power has limits — that it’s ok to be an individual and help the church, but that you have to be complementary to your husband and let him call the shots at home, because God says women are naturally inclined towards submission — sounds like female wisdom coming from Shirer, whereas it might sound a little more finger-wagging and abusive coming from a man.

It’s not a religious conspiracy, and Shirer isn’t exactly a hapless tool for the church to use to keep women in line. She actually seems like quite a bright and self-aware woman. But she benefits substantially from this arrangement — she gets the successful career and the feelings of accomplishment and the financial windfall, while convincing herself that God is using her as a mouthpiece to inspire others to behave in accordance with His rules. “God wants me to” is an awfully good way to resolve any cognitive dissonance (especially when the men who believe they have a closer ear to God’s mouth seem to agree). And it benefits other women, sort of, at least in the short-term and in very particular communities — they get to lead without feeling guilty about leading. And of course it benefits men — female leadership is appropriately curtailed, but there’s a little taste of power and leadership so the ladies feel important and no one gets uppity or actually challenges the status quo, so men get to keep on running things and reaping the real benefits.

The problem is that human beings — even women! — are rarely satisfied by a small taste of anything. And power, respect and accomplishment? Those things taste good.

{ 40 comments }

Well, clearly everyone at Feministe has had a bit of a ridiculous week this week, but that’s no reason you lot shouldn’t have lots of posts to share yourselves. Post a link and a short description of something you’ve written this week. Make it specific, don’t just link to your whole blog.

Not quite sure how this HTML deal works? Just use this as an example: <a href=”http://BlogPostAddress.com”>BlogPostTitle</a>

{ 45 comments }