Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2010-06-14 23:56
Article here. Excerpt:
'The Boston Globe’s Sunday lead editorial Child-custody cases demand discretion, not new laws (6/13/10) focuses on Fathers & Families’ shared parenting bill HB 1400. The editorial arose out of contacts between Fathers & Families’ Board Chair Ned Holstein, MD, Massachusetts shared parenting activist Dr. Peter Hill, and the Globe. The Globe had previously endorsed shared parenting in principle in its 2008 editorial A fair role for fathers (Boston Globe, 2/23/08) after meeting with Dr. Holstein.
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Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2010-06-14 23:53
From Abusegate Bob:
Monday, June 14, 2010
Recently Abusegate announced the names of 20 Senators and Representatives we are targeting for electoral defeat on November 2. One of those persons is Ben Lujan, Democratic congressman of New Mexico, who is a co-sponsor of the family-destructive International Violence Against Women Act.
So when Lujan found out his name was on our list, he issued a press release in which Lujan’s campaign manager called Abusegate a “fringe” organization that represents “domestic violence deniers” — see below.
Rep. Lujan may believe there are good reasons to support the International Violence Against Act. But engaging in political name-calling does little to burnish his image as a lawmaker who is working to help New Mexico families, as he claims on his website.
Rep. Lujan should apologize for his demagoguery — call his Washington office at 202-225-6190. Or shoot him an email at https://forms.house.gov/lujan/webforms/issue_subscribe.htm
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Submitted by Anonymous on Mon, 2010-06-14 14:15
Story here. Excerpt:
'It used to be that the definition of hutzpah was a man who had murdered his parents pleading for mercy from the court because he was an orphan.
We have for our delectation an update on this definition out of Sacramento, California, in a story about a woman – the wife of a police detective, to add spice to the narrative — who, disgruntled over the loss of custody of her children to the husband (and going by the stats on this subject, she must be a piece of work to begin with to have lost custody in today’s mother-friendly courts) hires a motorcycle gang hit man to off her husband.
Or she thinks she did. Members of the hit man’s gang tape damning conversations with her and alert the police, who arrest her and eventually convict her for solicitation to murder. The story doesn’t say why, but I’m thinking the gang probably has enough problems with the police, and don’t need the aggravation of a furious vendetta from their proposed victim’s colleagues.
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Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 2010-06-13 23:39
Story here. Excerpt:
'A 12-year-old Calgary boy is back on Canadian soil after being shuffled through a series of foster homes in the U.S. for nearly two years.
The boy, who cannot be named now that he has returned to Canada, has been in foster care in Oregon since he was picked up by police for biking without a helmet while on a summer vacation with his stepfather in 2008.
U.S. officials didn't recognize the boy's stepfather as his legal guardian, so the boy was sent to a foster home.
After a lengthy legal battle, a U.S. judge ruled in May the boy would be allowed to return to Canada.
He arrived at Calgary airport on Friday afternoon, where he was reunited with his mother.'
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Submitted by redwoodwriter on Sun, 2010-06-13 20:37
Article here. Excerpt:
'THE LATEST Sarah Palin controversy has to do with feminism. In a recent article in the Washington Post, feminist author and blogger Jessica Valenti blasted the former vice presidential candidate for “adopting the feminist label.’’ Valenti believes that any talk of a conservative version of feminism is a cynical right-wing ploy to fool women into supporting reactionary antiwoman policies. But while Palin may be far from the best spokeswoman for conservative feminism, the idea itself is essential to feminism’s health.
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Submitted by Broadsword on Sun, 2010-06-13 18:53
Article here. Excerpt:
"Police bodyguards protecting the Royals and the Prime Minister are being armed with 'baby' guns in a bid to recruit more women officers to the role.
...
In a report to the Metropolitan Police Authority, John Bunn, a senior detective in the Yard’s counter-terrorism command described 'considerable improvements' in the work of SO1, the specialist protection unit.
He wrote: 'A diversity forum and work strands following best Metropolitan police service practice have been established, for example changing the type of firearm used to accommodate smaller hands, changes in recruit[ment] advertising, female-only insight days and mentoring under-represented groups expressing an interest in SO1.'
...
Patrick Mercer, former chairman of the Commons sub-committee on counterterrorism, told the Sunday Times: 'I hope the judgment has been made on effectiveness and not on some contorted view of equality.'
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Submitted by Matt on Sun, 2010-06-13 17:31
The following link is the first official Call for Papers for the First Annual Conference on Male Studies to be held in October, 2010 at Wagner College on Staten Island, New York:
http://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/node/37177
Wagner College will host the first annual Conference on Male Studies, on Friday and Saturday, October 1-2, 2010. Six themes representing several disciplines will be addressed by panels and individual presenters:
▪ The deep biology of the experience of being male (genetics, biology, psychoneuroendocrinology, paleoanthropology);
▪ Literacy and education of boys and college males (pedagogy, sociology);
▪ Socioeconomic factors leading to males' over-involvement in the criminal justice system, underemployment and limited opportunities as fathers, resulting from changes in child custody law (economics, forensics, law, public policy);
▪ Misandric representations of boys and mature males in the media and advertising (media studies including cinema, television and internet, and advertising);
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Submitted by Matt on Sun, 2010-06-13 17:29
Article here. Excerpt:
'It is a scientific fact that children do ENORMOUSLY better in joint custody arrangements. The only reason this is resisted by the existing for-profit divorce industry is there are easily $50 billion in annual legal fees in custody battles and also the states are paid billions more annually in matching child support funds under The Social Security Act Title 4d. This has the perverse incentive of making it profitable to force either parent out of a child's life.
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Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 2010-06-13 16:51
Submitted by Matt on Sat, 2010-06-12 17:09
Story here.
'In an ongoing effort to track the dissemination of information about Abusegate, we periodically do a Google search on the word “abusegate.”
For the first time, “abusegate” has exceeded the 100,000 milestone. As of today, “abusegate” has 102,000 hits on Google.
Keep spreading the word, Abusegate, Investigate! One of these days, Congress will take the hint.'
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Submitted by anthony on Sat, 2010-06-12 09:37
Article here. Excerpt:
'When Hillary Clinton ran for Senate in 2000, her Republican rival, Rick Lazio, walked over to Clinton during a debate waving a pledge he demanded she sign; the subsequent outrage over what was seen as an invasion of Clinton's personal space both solidified Clinton's support among women and underlined that gender remained very much an issue in politics.
"...you can't make a point forcefully if you're a man and the person you are making a point with is a woman," Lazio said at the time in response to the anger directed towards him. He added: ''I just think that that's sexist."
Yet in the 2010 races, male politicians had no problems aggressively challenging their female opponents, and the female candidates were more likely to highlight their business experience than their gender.
...
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Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 2010-06-12 08:46
Article here. Excerpt:
'Contrary to popular belief, men are more affected by a rocky relationship than their female counterparts, according to new research from Wake Forest University.
Research shows that women have a harder time coping with a breakup, but the guys are the ones who feel more stress and strain when the relationship hits a rough patch, researchers found. On the upside, men also get more of a psychological and emotional boost when the relationship is healthy.
"Common wisdom says that women are more hurt by problems in a relationship," says Robin Simon, lead researcher on the study and a sociologist at Wake Forest, "but we found that the benefits of support [in a relationship] and the disadvantages of strain are exaggerated for the men."
"Men are more sensitive than we often think they are," she says.'
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Submitted by anthony on Fri, 2010-06-11 19:35
Article here. Excerpt:
'With the World Cup approaching, an organization that advocates Title IX reform released a report lamenting the lack of growth in men's soccer at top athletic programs.
Only 59 percent of Division I programs offer men's soccer, according to the College Sports Council's study. That's a far cry from the 93 percent that offer women's soccer and the CSC says the disparity is because of Title IX and the way schools try to comply with it.
That conclusion was met with a stern rebuttal from both the NCAA and the Women's Sports Foundation, with the latter group saying the law tries to create equal opportunities for male and female athletes but does not force schools to forsake certain sports or offer others.
The CSC's report, released Thursday, points out that there were 197 men's soccer teams in Division I in 2008-09, the same number as in 1995-96. Over that same period, the number of women's teams increased from 189 to 310.
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Submitted by badgerb on Fri, 2010-06-11 01:31
The rise in domestic violence on Super Bowl Sunday was proved a hoax. Not to be outdone, a female professor in England has warned women are at risk during the World Cup. See article here. Excerpt:
'ScienceDaily (June 10, 2010) — An expert at Royal Holloway, University of London is urging victims of domestic violence to have a plan in place should their partners turn violent during the World Cup, and to avoid the temptation of turning to drink themselves.
The World Cup can be a time of fear and worry for victims of domestic abuse as heightened emotions fuelled by alcohol come into play and instances of domestic violence attacks increase. Figures from the Home Office report that during the 2006 Football World Cup there was a 25% average increase in domestic violence on the five England match days in the tournament.
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Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 2010-06-10 22:09
Story here. Excerpt:
'The Alberta government is spending $2.4 million on programs to fight domestic violence in the province, the province's justice minister said Thursday.
Minister of Justice and Attorney General Alison Redford made the announcement at a conference in Calgary — a city that saw nine domestic homicides last year, well above the national average.
"Last spring a young woman was murdered in the home that she shared with her children and her common-law husband," Redford said.
"To know that women have died and that children are impacted is a tragedy. And it's not a tragedy that we can let happen. We need to make sure that there is a consistent message out there that if kids or parents need help — even if it's someone who is abusing — that they are able to reach out and get that help."'
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