Student
'Girlcott' Protests Abercrombie T-Shirts.
[United States]
With a few words on
their T-shirts, Abercrombie & Fitch lets young women send a message: "Who needs a
brain when you have these?" A group of female high school students have a
message for A&F: Stop degrading us.
The Allegheny County
(Pa.) Girls have
started a boycott--or girlcott, as they're calling it--of the retailer. "We're
telling [girls] to think about the fact that they're being degraded," Emma
Blackman-Mathis, the 16-year-old co-chair of the group, told RedEye on Tuesday.
"We're all going to come together in this one effort to fight this message that
we're getting from pop culture." |
Abercrombie's Racy
T-Shirts Causing Ruckus. [United
States] State Senator
Steve Rauschenberger
[R-Illinois] says he plans to introduce a resolution in the state Senate this week,
calling on trendy retailer Abercrombie and Fitch to stop selling a line of racy t-shirts.
The Republican, who is a GOP candidate for governor, says the $24.50 t-shirts are
"offensive" and "degrading." He says if the Senate resolution
doesn't stop Abercrombie from selling its shirts - he'll lead a boycott of the stores. |
Obama Rails Against Boycott of
"Pro-Lesbian" Doll Maker. [United
States] Attempts to boycott a
doll maker over its backing of a "pro-lesbian" girls group that also supports
abortion rights are "silly" and an "overreaction,"
U.S. senator Barack
Obama (D-Illinois) said Monday. At issue is Girls Inc.'s involvement with American
Girl, a manufacturer of popular dolls and children's books. Earlier this month the
antigay American Family Association announced it was boycotting American Girl unless the
manufacturer stopped contributing to Girls Inc. Girls Inc. serves about 800,000
girls a year, many of them black or Hispanic and most from low-income families. |
Supreme Court Nominee Says He
Struggled With Abortion Dissent. [United
States] Judge Samuel Alito Jr.,
President George W. Bush's choice for the Supreme Court, told Senator Richard Durbin
(D-Illinois) that he had wrestled intensely with a 1991 opinion favoring an abortion
restriction that has become a flash point in the debate over his confirmation. The
majority opinion in the case struck down a law requiring a married woman to notify her
husband before having an abortion. Alito, in dissent, would have upheld that
provision. "He said he had spent more time worrying and working over that
decision than over any other decision he made when he was a judge," Durbin said. |
Nominee's Abortion Rulings
Shaped by Concept of Marriage. [United
States] One distinct theme emerges from
an examination of 15 cases decided by Judge Samuel Alito Jr. involving abortion: His
thinking is shaped by a traditional concept of marriage. His most famous abortion
opinion, in 1991, would have upheld a Pennsylvania law
that required women seeking
abortions to notify their husbands. "Pennsylvania
has a legitimate interest in
furthering the husband's interest in the fate of the fetus," Alito wrote. The
U.S. Supreme Court rejected his position the next year. In a series of less noticed
cases concerning asylum requests based on claims of forced abortions abroad, Alito ruled
that marital status could be the determining factor. Last year, he ruled that the
husbands of women forced to undergo abortions in China
had themselves suffered persecution
serious enough to warrant granting the men asylum in the
United States. |
Bush Nominates First
Female Philippines Ambassador. [United
States] President Bush has nominated
Kristie Kenney as ambassador to the Philippines,
according to a posting on the US
embassy's website. A career diplomat, Kenney would become the first female
ambassador to the Philippines if the
US Senate approves her nomination, replacing Francis
Ricciardone, who left in May. Kenney was most recently ambassador to
Ecuador and
previously served as senior advisor to the State Department's Assistant Secretary for
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement. According to the website, Kenney, from
the state of Virginia, has also
served as economic counselor in Geneva, economic officer
in Argentina and consular officer
in Jamaica. |
Clinton: Hillary Would Be
Better President. [United
States] Former President Clinton said in an interview
Friday that he believes his wife would do a better job than he did in the nation's highest
office. Sen. Hillary Clinton has not said whether she plans to run.
Nonetheless, her husband told Israel's
Channel Two television that her experience as first
lady would help make her a strong president. "In some ways she would be
(better) because of what we did together," he said from New
York. "First,
she has the Senate experience I didn't have. Second, she would have had the eight
years in the White House. I think she wouldn't make as many mistakes because, you
know, we're older and more mature, and she is far more experienced now in all the relevant
ways than I was when I took office," he added. "So I think in a way she
has the best of both worlds." Polls indicate that if Hillary runs for
president, she would be the favorite for the Democratic nomination. |
Best Woman
for Job is ... a Man? [United States] David Allen tried to refuse the job
as chairman of the University of Washington's Women Studies Department and agrees with
critics of his appointment: The job should have gone to a woman. "People
have very good reasons for having strong feelings about my having this job," Allen
said. Allen's past experience leading another department, his connection to the
Women Studies Department as a teacher, and admiration for his work among the students and
faculty all made him the search committee's first choice within a small pool of qualified
candidates, said David Hodge, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. The problem,
it seems, is that the department doesn't have enough women qualified for the job, which
rotates among full professors every five years. |
ABC
Goes All-Female At The White House? [United
States] ABC will likely announce in
the coming days, perhaps as early as this week, that it is becoming the second network to
field an all-female White House team. With new Nightline anchor Terry Moran about to
give up his seat in the front row of the Brady Press Briefing Room, the network is looking
to National Security Correspondent Martha Raddatz, an accomplished veteran of the Pentagon
and State Department beats for ABC. She's best known recently for snapping the now
infamous shot of President Bush playing the guitar in the aftermath of the Hurricane
Katrina. Three sources confirmed on Friday that although contract details are still
being worked out, she is likely to join the network's two other women in the booth during
the week: Jessica Yellin with "Good Morning America" and Ann Compton for radio. |
Ladies
in Red. [United
States] The all-woman society, which has about
25 chapters in Cache
Valley alone, celebrated beauty, vitality and the color red on Thursday, at a hatters
fashion show focused on a womans best friend accessories. The dining
room of Logan
House Assisted Living bustled with more than 90 red hats and a few sparkling purple
boas. As the painted ladies polished the runway showing off their handmade hats and
newly acquired unity pinkie rings, awards were given out for the most decorated
hatter. Queen Mother of the Hyrum Red Hat Chicks, Kristine Johnson, giggled and
laughed as she showed off her many accessories, eventually winning recognition as one of
the best-accessorized hatters of the event. She said the society is a great
opportunity to meet women who are interested in living life. She said its a blast to
be with the women at events that range from brunch downtown to sleepovers. Its
getting out, being with women of your own age and forgetting about getting older. |
Catering
Partners Bloom. [United
States] Cincinnati Concession and Catering needed
employees. First Step Home needed jobs for its clients -- low-income women
struggling to break the cycle of substance addiction and abuse. After meeting with
First Step, Cincinnati Concession President Tom Beal agreed to hire some of the
women. After nearly a year of partnering successfully, Schoenling suggested taking
the collaboration further by creating a joint venture between the private, family-owned
catering company and the nonprofit residential treatment program. In August, the two
did just that by forming Blooming Roses LLC, a company that offers catering, institutional
food services, gifts and promotional products. Cincinnati Concession and Catering
funded all the startup costs, and Blooming Roses will split its profits evenly between
Beal's firm and First Step Home, which has an annual budget of $2 million and 35 full- and
part-time employees. "Programs like Blooming Roses tend to give the nonprofit
that little bit of independence and self-confidence to be extremely effective," she
said. "And I think it does the same thing for the clients." |
Where Power Flows Like
Nail Polish. [United
States] Enough with the basketball games and the cigar
bars. That's what female partners at a Boston
law firm were thinking when they
planned a networking event exclusively for women. So it was that on a recent
Thursday at the G Spa on Newbury Street, in an upscale area of central Boston, attorneys
and biotechnology executives enjoyed an evening of complimentary manicures, pedicures,
massages and facials, in addition to free wine, hors d'oeuvres and dessert. For many
of the women there, the goal, besides socializing, was to engage in some deal-making.
Women lawyers say that many aspects of legal practice in private firms pose
particular challenges, including a compensation system that rewards the ability to bring
in new clients - and the fact that traditional networking events, where client
relationships are made, often cater to men. |
Women
in Technology Announces the 2005 Best Employers in Georgia Awards Winners. [United
States] Women In Technology (WIT), the leading association committed to the development of
Georgia's businesswomen in the technology industry and
a society
of the Technology
Association of Georgia (TAG), today announced its winners for the 4th Annual WIT's Best
Employers in Georgia Awards, presented in special partnership with the TAG HR Society and
sponsored by Platinum sponsor, Microsoft. The 2005 WIT's Best Employers in Georgia
Award winners are: Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. and McKesson Provider Technologies.
"Microsoft, as this year's Platinum sponsor, congratulates these winners who
have done an outstanding job of developing and implementing programs for the growth and
visibility of talented female professionals, said Microsoft Greater Southeast District
General Manager Kirsten Kliphouse. "We hope that other companies will be
inspired by these examples to innovate within their own organizations."
Previous winners of the WIT's Best Employers in Georgia Awards include The Weather
Channel, MATRIX Resources and Earthlink. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. has won
for two consecutive years. |
Court Passes on Transsexual
Discrimination. [United States]
The Supreme Court refused Monday to consider
shielding employers from discrimination lawsuits by transsexuals, dodging a workplace
rights fight. The court's refusal to intervene leaves in place a victory for
Cincinnati Officer Philecia Barnes, who was born Phillip Barnes. A federal appeals
court upheld a jury's finding that Barnes was a victim of discrimination, under a federal
civil rights law. Barnes, a 24-year veteran of the
Cincinnati police force, dressed
as a man at work but a woman during off-hours in 1999 when the officer was demoted.
Richard Ganulin, one of the city attorneys, told justices that employers should be
protected from discrimination lawsuits based on "transsexual and homosexual
characteristics." At issue was the scope of the 1964 Civil Rights Acts, which
protects people from sex or race discrimination. Sexual orientation is not covered
in the law, but justices were asked to deal with a related issue: sex stereotyping of
transsexual workers. The case would have been a follow-up to a 1989 Supreme Court
decision which made it more difficult for employers to win lawsuits accusing them of
sexual stereotyping and other bias. That case involved a woman who argued she was
denied promotion because her supervisors thought she did not act feminine enough.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor sided with the woman and wrote a separate opinion that
gave guidelines for lower courts to follow. Victims, she wrote, must show that
"an illegitimate criterion (such as sexual stereotyping) was a substantial
factor" in the employer's personnel decision. |
Homolexicology: Is a
Lesbian a Gay? [United
States] Apparently, in writing about people who are
homosexual, the word gay no longer covers both men and women. It seems to me that
the usage is now the specifically inclusive gay men and lesbians whether the distinction
is useful or not. "Historically, gay represented both homosexual men and women
and technically still does," says Chris Crain, editor of the gay weeklies The
Washington Blade and The New York Blade, "but a number of gay women felt that gay was
too male-associated and pressed to have lesbians separately identified so they weren't
lost in the gay-male image." |
Utah Cases Challenge Whether Anti-Polygamy
Laws are Constitutional. [United States]
Several prosecutions and lawsuits against
polygamists, now pending in Utah, are notable for the
constitutional defenses that have
been -- or could be -- raised. Polygamy is the practice (usually religious) of
having multiple spouses (usually wives). There are two possible lines of
constitutional attack on anti-polygamy statutes. One derives from the First
Amendment's religion clauses. The other derives from Due Process "right to
privacy" concepts -- and in particular, from the Supreme Court's recent
holding in Lawrence
v. Texas that adults have a privacy right
that extends to private, consensual sex acts. In the end, neither of these lines of attack will -- or should -- be
successful. Still, it is worth taking a close look at each to examine the extent to
which the Constitution allows states to shape -- or forbids them from shaping -- the
definition of marriage, and regulating who can marry whom. History shows that polygamous marriage -- at least as it has been practiced
in the United States
by multiple religious sects -- raises a significant danger that
underage girls will be married to much older men. In other words, it has fostered
and condoned statutory rape. There is also disturbing evidence that underage girls
are being trafficked across state and international lines for purposes of polygamy, a
practice that violates the federal Mann Act. (Shamefully, however, the federal
government has failed to enforce the Mann Act in this context. As with the thousands
of clergy abuse victims, the federal government has ignored polygamy's victims, which
leads one to wonder what a religious group would have to do to a child to prod the federal
government into action.) History shows that polygamy raises a danger of incest as
well. Polygamous husbands have married their own daughters or nieces. |
Utah Judge
With 3 Wives Fights for Job. [United
States] A judge will ask the state Supreme
Court on Wednesday to let him stay on the bench after a commission that oversees judges
ordered him dismissed because he has three wives. The commission issued an order
seeking Steed's removal from the bench in February, after a 14-month investigation
determined Steed was a polygamist and as such had violated
Utah's bigamy law. The
complaint against Steed was filed with the commission in November 2003 by Tapestry Against
Polygamy, an advocacy group founded by ex-polygamous women who organized to help others
leave the handful of secretive religious colonies that adhere to the practice.
Plural marriage was an original tenet of the mainline Mormon church, but the faith
abandoned the practice as a condition of statehood in 1890. About 30,000 polygamists, who
split from the main church into various fundamentalist sects more than 100 years ago, are
believed to be living in Utah.
Steed legally married his first wife in 1965,
according to court documents. The second and third wives were married -- or
"sealed" as the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
refers to it -- to him in religious ceremonies in 1975 and 1985. The three women are
biological sisters and no one in the family was expecting that the second and third
marriages would be civilly recognized. |
Nostalgic Salute to Women of
WWII. [United States] Brenda
Schleunes sees them as an unrecognized part of the
Greatest Generation, these women who served during World War II. But Schleunes aims
to change that with her new play, "Star-Spangled Girls," debuting Tuesday night
at UNCG's Elliott
University Center
auditorium. Meanwhile, Schleunes, founder of the
Touring Theatre Ensemble of North Carolina, used UNCG's Women's Veterans Historical
Collection at Jackson Library as her source material. "These women were very
much an unacknowledged part of the women's movement," Schleunes says. Some
women enlisted because of patriotism. Some sought adventure. One woman was so
annoyed at being suspected of husband-hunting that she purposefully joined the Women's
Army Corps because they had the ugliest uniforms. African American women often found
themselves facing the same segregation and racism as their male counterparts. They
even ate in mess halls with barriers hung down the middle of the rooms to separate them
from the white women. Army nurses are haunted by memories of what they saw in the
field or in hospitals. One helped liberate Mauthausen , the Nazi concentration camp
in Austria. Others felt cheated when they were sent to areas no longer seeing
action, knowing their skills were needed elsewhere. |
Grannies on Patrol.
[United States] The
"Granny Brigade," Carmen Mercer and Connie Foust, sits
silently in the pitch-black desert night at their Minuteman observation post just a few
yards from the dirt road and four-strand barbed-wire fence that separates the United
States and Mexico.
With the temperature dropping into the low 40s and the wind
whipping across the high desert, they wrap their legs in warm blankets. As sector
bosses for more than two dozen Minuteman Civil Defense Corps volunteers on the night shift
along what is known as the Naco line, the women, who have a combined eight grandchildren,
scan the area with a night-vision scope. Mrs. Mercer who is divorced, met and
married a U.S.
serviceman stationed in her native Germany
in 1979, later coming with him
to the United States and becoming
a U.S. citizen.
She said the U.S. government's
inability to keep massive numbers of illegal aliens out of the country is unfair to those
legal immigrants who spend years trying to become U.S.
citizens.
The grandmothers,
dubbed the "Granny Brigade" by their colleagues, led the Minuteman's October
effort in southern Arizona --
targeting the more than 6,000 illegal aliens who cross into Arizona
everyday through a 260-mile corridor known as the Tucson
sector, only about a third of
whom are caught. |
Women
Are Scarce in Rebuilt Big Easy. [United
States] Nearly three months after
Hurricane Katrina barreled into New Orleans,
life has flowed back into the streets of this
city - but in certain areas, it is a life noticeably bereft of women. City officials
guess that New Orleans now has
a population of 150,000 during the day and 75,000 at
night,
after the commuters have left. Sally Forman, Mayor C. Ray Nagin's press secretary,
said there had been no official census and no breakdown by gender, but "there's this
strange feeling that it's all men in town." The male-to-female ratio is most
obvious in the French Quarter, where workers come to blow off steam in the evenings, but
it crosses into other areas. Professional men, their wives and children settled
elsewhere until the end of the school semester, gather in threes and fours at local
restaurants. On Friday afternoons, they leave the city by bus or car or airplane,
staying outside the city just long enough to get a taste of family life. |
Womens
Prison Space Crunch. [United
States] The states only prison for women is
more than 2 times over capacity, records from the state Department of Correction show, and
officials blame county jail systems that lack cell blocks for women. Though its
capacity was expanded in 1991 to hold 384 inmates, MCI Framingham today houses more than
600, according to DOC records. The day-to-day population fluctuates, officials said,
so exact figures are difficult to come by. But not all of those doing time in
Framingham
are doing hard time. Of the 614 inmates listed in a recent count by the DOC, 149, or
nearly 24 percent of the total, were inmates awaiting trial. Whats more,
officials and prison watchdogs added, many of the 451 women convicted and serving time
in Framingham
were charged with relatively minor, nonviolent offenses, which would usually result in
sentences to a county facility like a local house of correction. Only a few counties
have separate facilities for women, so more than 80 percent of women who wind up behind
bars in the Bay State do
their time in Framingham. |
Sexy Attire Works
Against Businesswomen. [United
States] Attractive people may sometimes have a
leg up in climbing corporate ladders. But sexy presentation on its own can work
against women who are already well up the ladder. In a new study, men and women
where shown videos of a businesswoman discussing her backgrounds and hobbies. In
different tests, she played the part of either a receptionist or a manager. And in
one round she wore flat shoes, slacks, and a turtleneck, all considered typical
professional attire. In the other, she donned high-heels, a tight skirt, and a
low-cut blouse. The test subjects rated the businesswoman on competence and guessed
at her college GPA and the quality of her Alma Mater. The sexy outfit didn't affect
their assessment of the receptionist. But the sexy manager was viewed as less
competent. "A female manager whose appearance emphasized her sexiness elicited
less positive emotions, more negative emotions, and perceptions of less competence on a
subjective rating scale and less intelligence on an objective scale," the researchers
write in the December issue of Psychology of Women Quarterly. "Although various
media directed toward women ...encourage women to emphasize their sex appeal, our results
suggest that women in high status occupations may have to resist this siren call to obtain
the respect of their co-workers." |
Where are the Women on TV?
[United States]
On US news networks, women only represent 14% of guests on
influential Sunday morning talk shows. This is one of the findings of a new report
by the White House Project. The study also found that more than half of the talk
shows did not even include one single woman. Since 2001, the number of women in talk
shows has gone up only slightly, from 11% to now 14. Why does it matter? It
should be a concern because people draw conclusions about real life from what they see on
television. When they see no women in positions of power, they assume that women are
not credible in these positions. If no women speak on TV about national security or
arms control, the assumption is that women are not qualified to speak on theses issues and
there are no female experts in these fields. The lack of women on influential
political shows also matters because of what media call agenda setting.
It means that whatever is discussed on these shows is designated as important, and
the people doing the talking are recognized as influential. A lack of female voices
allows the agenda to be set to exclude them and their issues. |
Television
for Women or Oppress Us 101? [United States] Having been a student here at SFA
for a couple of years now, I have managed to accumulate quite a few roommates. One
roommate in particular (who lasted only a week) had her TV permanently set to the Lifetime
Channel. As for me, I could never find much interest in the network. Aside
from the reruns of "Golden Girls" and "Designing Women," the channel
is just plain depressing. The low- budget movies continuously circulate and usually
pertain to an unwed pregnant teenager, an abusive alcoholic mother/father or a cheating
spouse. The Lifetime Channel refers to itself as, "Television for Women."
T his does not seem highly possible if the station is constantly projecting women as
frail, fragile creatures who are victims to oppressive men in the movies they screen.
Anyone who can pick up a newspaper can realize that horrible crimes occur on a
regular basis in the world, but must we have a scripted movie of each of these events
taking place? It is understandable that some light would want to be shed on some of these
issues, but it seems that is the only focus of the station. When dealing with issues
such as abuse, eating disorders or whatever, it would be more beneficial to the program's
viewers if information was provided as to why it is important to seek help, or where to
find support. Through the repeated representation of women being victimized the only
accomplishment the station is succeeding in is a negative mindset. Is that really
what the station wants the women who tune in to walk away with? Rather than
constantly instilling the idea that women are victims, it would be more advantageous to
the public if the station were to focus on a more positive message. |
Fed-up Actress Leads Fight
Against Media Obsession With 'Skinny' Stars.
[United States] You can never be
too rich or too thin, the old adage goes, but the celebrity magazines disagree, devoting
acres of critical coverage to skinny models and actresses. It is an obsession that
now threatens to land them in hot water. The Hollywood actress Kate Hudson, daughter
of Goldie Hawn, is taking legal action against five publications for publishing pictures
of her accompanied by articles suggesting that she was suffering from an eating disorder,
which she denies. Ms Hudson will argue in court that "the images in question
gave a seriously false and misleading impression as to her true physical condition, in
that she was portrayed as being dangerously thin with an eating disorder, which is
contrary to the true position of her weight and diet being of a healthy nature, both at
the time of the images being taken and at present". An analysis of how the
photographs came to be taken, sold and published will form part of the case.
Schillings will argue that the main image in question was stretched, making Ms Hudson
appear thinner than she really is, although there is no suggestion that the photograph was
altered deliberately. Janice Turner, former editor of Real magazine, believes
celebrity titles are targeting skinny women because it is no longer acceptable to
criticize someone for being overweight. She said: "They used to say so and so
was a bit fat. They've realized it's against the spirit of trying to overcome
eating disorders, but they can say someone is thin. Readers love looking at other
women's bodies and comparing their own bodies to celebrities' bodies. |
Who is More
Likely to Enjoy a Good Joke? [United
States] The difference between the sexes
has long been a rich source of humor. Now it turns out, humor is one of the
differences. "The long trip to Mars or Venus is hardly necessary to see that
men and women often perceive the world differently," a research team led by Dr. Allan
L. Reiss of the Stanford University School of Medicine reports in Tuesday's issue of
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. But they were surprised when their
studies of how the male and female brains react to humor showed that women were more
analytical in their response, and felt more pleasure when they decided something really
was funny. Women were subjecting humor to more analysis with the aim of determining
if it was indeed funny, Reiss said in a telephone interview. While there is a lot of
overlap between how men and women process humor, the differences can help account for the
fact that men gravitate more to one-liners and slapstick while women tend to use humor
more in narrative form and stories. In large part, men and women had similar
responses to humor, using parts of the brain responsible for the structure and context of
language and for understanding juxtaposition. In women, however, some areas were
more active than in men. These included the left prefrontal cortex, which the
researchers said suggests a greater emphasis on language and executive processing, and the
nucleus accumbens, or NAcc, which is part of the reward center. |
Hundreds Pay Tribute to Mohegan
Medicine Woman. [United States] Gladys Tantaquidgeon, the matriarch and medicine
woman of the Mohegan Tribe, was praised for her devotion to her heritage as she was
interred Sunday in a traditional Native American ceremony on the Shantok burial ground.
Tantaquidgeon died Tuesday at age 106. The ceremony began at the Tantaquidgeon
Indian Museum, which Tantaquidgeon helped establish in 1931. Mourners walked the
1½-mile route to Shantok, dressed in traditional clothing and singing songs of gathering,
traveling and honor in their native language. Born in 1899, Tantaquidgeon was a 10th
generation descendant of Uncas, the famed Mohegan chief. During her lifetime, she
saw her tribe grow from a few Mohegan families who struggled to keep their tribal heritage
to a federally recognized tribe that owns and operates an enormously successful casino.
Tantaquidgeon, who collected numerous tribal documents, is given much credit for the
Mohegans receiving federal recognition. The information helped document the
continuity of the tribe. |
CEP 6th Womens Conference.
[Canada] The
Communications, Energy and Paperworkers (CEP) Union of Canada held its
6th Womens Conference from 16-18 October 2005 in the
maritime province of New
Brunswick. The conference theme
was Our Time, Our Terms, Women March On.
The conference had workshop sessions on equity, pay equity and women in solidarity
in Canada and abroad.
Caucuses were also held on young workers, regional caucuses,
aboriginal people, people of colou, gay, lesbian, bi-sexual and transgendered workers, and
people with disabilities. The conference was held against the background of the
womens world march and the womens global charter for humanity. The
womens charter is a proposal to build a world where exploitation, oppression,
intolerance and exclusion no longer exist and where integrity, diversity and the rights
and freedoms of all are respected. The core values for this vision of the world are
equality, freedom, solidarity, justice and peace. These, too, were the CEP
conference themes. |
Mexican
Bus Riding. [Mexico]
Living in this beautiful Colonial
Mexican city, I ride the
public buses almost daily. Riding the bus to get around can be a convenient way to
save on transportation costs. Convenient, yes. Comfortable and safe? I
don't think so. I was sitting next to a woman with multiple packages, multiple
kids, and with a look of utter desperation on her face. I mean, who wouldn't be
desperate? She had more bundles to carry than any human should and kids in tow to
boot. I watched her carefully. She seemed the stereotypical Guanajuato Mexican
bus rider. She would give me valuable empirical evidence. She would teach me.
Miles before this woman's bus came roaring up the street, she somehow knew it was
coming. This amazes me. I see this all the time. My wife and I can show
up at the bus stop and wait for an hour for the bus. Mexicans know exactly when the
bus is coming and do not waste their time waiting for it. They just show up when it
shows up. I can only assume this capacity is part of their Mexican genes. This
woman jumped up while gathering her bundles and screaming something to her children.
The kids were already snapping to attention without being told to and were at the
ready. They, too, knew their bus was coming. |
Mexican Court Rules Marital
Rape a Crime. [Mexico] The
Supreme Court of Mexico ruled Wednesday that rape
within marriage is a crime, bringing Mexico's
laws into line with much of the world and
removing one of the many obstacles women here face in reporting rape. The ruling
marks the end of a legal battle waged since 1994, when a majority of the justices agreed
that because the purpose of marriage was procreation, forced sexual relations by a spouse
was not rape but "an undue exercise of conjugal rights." Many women's
advocates agreed that while the ruling was a landmark step, polls on social attitudes have
shown that deep-rooted opinions that women should be subservient still permeate much of
society. They warned that entrenched attitudes still make it very difficult for women to
report rape. A U.N. study found that nine of 10 sexual assaults
go unreported in Mexico
and that 18 percent of victims of sexual assault were not aware that it was a crime. |