Tagged: Women’s Issues

Hillary

“Binders Full of Women” Top Search Term

MSNBC reported that “Binders full of women” was a top Google search term today. Not only that, but the phrase has also gone viral via memes and blogs. From our own blog, to Gawker’s discussion on binders, the Tumblr page and some hilarious images.

And it appears that one conclusion can be clearly made about binders: they are outdated and suck!

The phrase “Binders Full of Women” clearly got to people. It inspired some. It aggravated others. It definitely got the emotions going!

Perhaps the comment captures that awkward, old-fashioned and disconnected Romney so well! No better way to insult all female professionals, right? Let us know what you think in the comments. What did the phrase do to you, and why did you Google it?

About these ads
K

Texas Refuses Govt Funding to Clinics Providing Abortion

 

Reuters just reported that the Obama Administration stated it would shut down a program that provided medical care services to over 100,000 low-income women in Texas, as the state refused funding for clinics that provide abortions. Why are we so set on increasing our population and burdening poor women who are already barely getting by – just because we are  selfish and short-sighted!? We must stop this never-ending war on women.

Image

Stain

We love the name of this piece created by Kyra Morris, and are touched by it.  ”Stain” is painted with red acrylic on canvas, and brings about feelings of both happiness and suffering. There is something about the combination of colors, the woman’s expression, and it name “Stain” that really leaves an emotional mark.

Check out the submitted pieces of art, and discover how to exhibit your work by visiting our page Images Speak.

images

Obama & Gender Equality at State of the Union

To court the female and lgbt vote, Obama made several specific comments about gender equality: 

“You see, an economy built to last is one where we encourage the talent and ingenuity of every person in this country. That means women should earn equal pay for equal work. It means we should support everyone who’s willing to work; and every risk-taker and entrepreneur who aspires to become the next Steve Jobs.”

and,

“Which brings me back to where I began. Those of us who’ve been sent here to serve can learn from the service of our troops. When you put on that uniform, it doesn’t matter if you’re black or white; Asian or Latino; conservative or liberal; rich or poor; gay or straight. When you’re marching into battle, you look out for the person next to you, or the mission fails. When you’re in the thick of the fight, you rise or fall as one unit, serving one Nation, leaving no one behind.”

and,

“I’m confident a farmer can contain a milk spill without a federal agency looking over his shoulder. But I will not back down from making sure an oil company can contain the kind of oil spill we saw in the Gulf two years ago. I will not back down from protecting our kids from mercury pollution, or making sure that our food is safe and our water is clean. I will not go back to the days when health insurance companies had unchecked power to cancel your policy, deny you coverage, or charge women differently from men.”

Read the full speech

squatting childbirth

Benefits of Squatting for Childbirth

Even though most women give birth while on their backs, research overwhelmingly shows that this is the worst position to be in during childbirth.

Advantages of squatting include:

  • Shortened pushing phase (2nd stage of labor)
  • Decreased need for forcep deliveries
  • Reduced need for episiotomy
  • Shortened birth canal depth
  • Decreased labor time due, because we are  working with gravity
  • Pelvic diameter is increased

This is because squatting tilts the pelvis and uterus forward, properly aligning the baby for successful birth. Squatting also increases the frequency and intensity of contractions, while the position also relieves back pressure. These many advantages of squatting during childbirth have long been known and documented via research, yet practitioners continue to promote a supine position for their own convenience. But what about you?

Read more on about.com and wikipedia

13-Year Old Girl on Slut Shaming

This 13 year old is awesome!!

“Slut shaming contributes to rape culture and rape-supportive culture. Rape culture is a culture in which sexual violence against women is commonplace and in which prevalent attitudes tolerate this violence. Slut shaming contributes to this by saying that it is ok to rape sluts. Because by having too much sex or wearing tight and revealing clothing they are somehow asking for it. Rape is caused by rapists, misogyny, and structural violence and institutional tolerance – not by clothing or makeup or how she walks or talks, and not by her drinking or not being careful enough.”

 

Read more on the Huffington Post and Daily Mail

Women are Like Men ~ Just Cheaper

We need to pay attention to the fact that nationally American women earn only 81 cents for every male dollar! And this trend of inequality is consistent across America, with the median income for women being lower than men in all 50 states.

 And a recent research study presented some frustrating numbers on blatant prejudice against female professionals, described by the Washington Post as follows

“The research focused on career paths of high-potential men and women, drawing on thousands of MBA graduates from top schools around the world. Catalyst found that, among those who had moved on from their first post-MBA job, there was no significant difference in the proportion of women and men who asked for increased compensation or a higher position.

Yet the rewards were different.

Women who initiated such conversations and changed jobs post MBA experiencedslower compensation growth than the women who stayed put. For men, on the other hand, it paid off to change jobs and negotiate for higher salaries—they earned more than men who stayed did. And we saw that as both men’s and women’s careers progress, the gender gap in level and pay gets even wider.”

Especially following the recent Wall-Mart scandal regarding unequal pay, it is clear that there is inferior value placed on women compared to men in the workplace. Isn’t it time we demand equal treatment?

Read more at ThinkProgress.com


Newly Released UK 1911 Census: Suffragettes Report Strange Ailments

The newly released UK Census from 1911 relating to illnesses and infirmities has provided us with an interesting look at how people then viewed their health. The responses, which are often amusing, were provided by the head of the household who usually had little medical knowledge. Some of the more strange health issues included “old age”, being “voteless”, “bald” and being “short of cash”.

My favorite part of the report is that Suffragettes often listed being voteless or disenfranchised as an illness. For example, four women reported that their ailments included being “voteless, and therefore classed with idiots and children”.

Read more about the report here.

Young Girl Questions Pink Toys & Gender Socialization

While shopping for toys with her dad, a young girl gets angry about the extreme gender-specific characteristics of the toys around her. She exclaims that, “the companies that make these things trick the girls into buying pink stuff” and then complains, “Why do girls have to buy princesses? Some girls like superheroes!”  Very cute video!

Alert: We Are Treating Women like Sh*t!

Objectification has consequences.

As 2012 is right around the corner, we have to be honest with ourselves regarding the fact that women are still treated like shit in most countries around the world, even here at home. We hear of women not being able to drive in Saudi Arabia, and imprisonment of rape victims in Afghanistan. However, we often assume that our women receive more equal treatment here in the Westernized world. Even though we may be slightly better off than our middle-eastern counterparts, I would also argue that the treatment of women in the US and Europe has gotten worse.

1 in 4 American women experience domestic violence in their lifetime.

We see a wave of right-wing laws controlling women’s reproduction, even calling for IUD users to be considered mass murderers! We also see increased objectification of women in the western world, with continued nudity and massive amounts of photoshopping of skinny stars and models. Apparently an anorexic waif is still not skinny enough. Also, women are still greatly discriminated against in terms of pay and opportunities for advancement.

Photoshop Fail! Avril is missing a piece of arm due to her altered waist.

But the most damaging attack on women is more psychological, pervasive and less apparent: objectification of girls, followed by the normalization and encouragement of sexual violence against these objectified (and thus ‘deserving’) girls. This psychological cycle is quite dangerous. First we prop up young women who are naked and photoshopped, indicating that this is what society values. Next, we encourage men to treat women as sexual toys ready for their pleasure and taking. And finally, we blame the victims for the attacks. Their clothes were too skimpy or they were drunk, rape clearly being the appropriate punishment.

An ad against heavy drinking by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, blaming the victim.

So how do we encourage violence against women? A recent British study looked at British men’s magazines and statements made by convicted rapists, and found that most individuals could not tell them apart. Here is a sample:

There’s a certain way you can tell that a girl wants to have sex . . . The way they dress, they flaunt themselves.

Some girls walk around in short-shorts . . . showing their body off . . . It just starts a man thinking that if he gets something like that, what can he do with it?

Mascara running down the cheeks means they’ve just been crying, and it was probably your fault . . . but you can cheer up the miserable beauty with a bit of the old in and out. 

What burns me up sometimes about girls is dick-teasers. They lead a man on and then shut him off right there.

Filthy talk can be such a turn on for a girl . . . no one wants to be shagged by a mouse . . . A few compliments won’t do any harm either . . . ‘I bet you want it from behind you dirty whore’ . . .

You know girls in general are all right. But some of them are bitches . . . The bitches are the type that . . . need to have it stuffed to them hard and heavy.

You’ll find most girls will be reluctant about going to bed with somebody or crawling in the back seat of a car . . . But you can usually seduce them, and they’ll do it willingly.

Girls ask for it by wearing these mini-skirts and hotpants . . . they’re just displaying their body . . . Whether they realize it or not they’re saying, ‘Hey, I’ve got a beautiful body, and it’s yours if you want it.’

You do not want to be caught red-handed . . . go and smash her on a park bench. That used to be my trick.

Some women are domineering, but I think it’s more or less the man who should put his foot down. The man is supposed to be the man. If he acts the man, the woman won’t be domineering.

I think if a law is passed, there should be a dress code . . . When girls dress in those short skirts and things like that, they’re just asking for it.

Girls love being tied up . . . it gives them the chance to be the helpless victim.

I think girls are like plasticine, if you warm them up you can do anything you want with them.

A never-ending supply of naked and objectified women gracing magazine covers.

To find out which quote is from a convicted rapist or from a man’s mag, read about the study at Jezebel. Unfortunately the encouragement of violence against women also brings up the actual numbers. The CDC found in a 2005 study that 1 in 4 women in the United States are victims of domestic violence at some point in their lives and RAINN reported that there were 248,300 sexual assault victims in 2007. In addition, we are seeing laws being passed to punish and jail women based on their role in the reproductive process. I feel that the objectification of women makes it easier for others to hurt and attack her, and thus also indirectly contributes to violence against women. After all, an object feels no pain and has no emotions, and is never quite equal to a human life.  


Raped Afghan Women Sentenced for “Moral Crimes”

The European Union recently blocked the release of a documentary commissioned by the EU about Afghan women in prison for moral crimes, known as Zina. The film follows two girls, one who was raped and another who ran away from domestic violence/ The documentary highlights the many injustices and human rights violations currently being carried out against women in Afghanistan. And even though the Afghan women had made recent strides in women’s rights, the film points out  that sentencing of women for moral crimes has gone up.

Half of female prisoners in Afghanistan are sentenced for “moral crimes,” which Human Rights Watch estimates to be in the hundreds. These women are imprisoned for anywhere from 2 to 12 years, and sometimes there is a way out: in the case of rape you can choose to marry your rapist.

And when these poor women are set free? They have to worry about being murdered by their family members for bringing shame. One source quotes ”Quite a few of them feel like they’re going to be forced back into the abusive situation that they escaped from and some have said very clearly that they expect their families are likely to kill them, because they’ve brought shame on their families by ending up in prison.”

The reason the release was blocked, an EU official stated, was to protect the safety of the women in the film.

Read more here.

Women with IUDs are Mass Murderers

Recently, Jon Stewart poked fun at Mississippi’s conservative movement to eliminate women’s rights. Stewart joked that considering single-celled blastulas as full people would also mean that women who use IUDs are serial killers.

Jon Stewart says:

“Moving on to Mississippi, a state so red, even the art house movie theaters play Larry the Cable Guy stand-up specials.  Yesterday, Mississippi voters were considering a state constitutional amendment that would have defined embryos as people, from the moment of their fertilization.  Single-celled blastulas, with all the rights of actual corporations! Wow, so apparently voters can oppose abortion, without believing that a woman who uses an IUD is a serial killer.(takes out tape recorder)  Screenplay idea: IUDs turn normal women into mass murderers.”

Watch the VIDEO on TheDailyShow.com

See more at the Daily Kos

Disagreements Among Feminists

Disagreements in scientific or technological fields often push scientists toward discovering new findings. Progress tends to be made through discussions and battles. Then consider feminism: some criticize that there is no coherent message, belief or goal for the feminist movement. But, remember that one single message is much easier to squash than a debate. Then you often have women accusing each other of being anti-feminist (including LG with our page Feminist Fail), though we lack to see the positive side of disagreements.

Disagreements and discussion actually inherently contain more power than a single message and often signify more widespread support. Let us discuss and disagree and fight for our views so that we can all make progress.

Equality in the Workplace

Women collect nearly 60 percent of four-year degrees in the United States, and they make up close to 50% of the workforce.

However, our progress at gaining senior leadership positions is not as impressive.  Last year, women held about 14 percent of senior executive positions at Fortune 500 companies, and worse, that number has barely budged since 2005!! So what is keeping women from taking charge? Ilene Lang, President and Chief Executive of Catalyst (a research firm looking at women in the workplace), finds that it is influenced by “entrenched sexism,” which both men and women are unconsciously influenced by. Women are often taught not to show their aggression like men, and competitiveness is often less valued in young women.

She continues by saying, “I don’t want to blame this on men,” rather “social norms that are so gendered and so stereotyped that even though we think we’ve gone past them, we really haven’t.”

The bar is set much higher for women, and men are able to get away with a lot more. It is like men are judged for their potential, while a woman has to prove herself multiple times. Companies must make a commitment to the advancement of women by promoting and mentoring them, and accurately measuring their progress.

Read more at The New York Times