Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2016-12-19 15:41
Article here. If these were girls, you can bet Obama and the UN would be all over it. Excerpt:
'Shirin is among 13 families AFP traced and interviewed across three Afghan provinces who said their children were taken for the pervasive practice of "bacha bazi", or paedophilic exploitation, in Western-backed security forces.
Their testimonies shine a rare spotlight on the anguished, solitary struggles to free sons, nephews and cousins from a tradition of culturally-sanctioned enslavement and rape.
Shirin recalled how his 13-year-old brother-in-law screamed and writhed as he was taken from his home earlier this year by a police commander in southern Helmand.
"When I begged for his release, his men pointed their guns and said: 'Do you want your family to die? Forget your boy'," Shirin told AFP in Lashkar Gah.
"Our boys are openly abducted for bacha bazi. Where should we go for help? The Taliban?"'
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Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2016-12-19 14:11
As the entertainment world marks Zsa Zsa Gabor's passing, they completely fail to call out her misandry. She speaks for herself here. Society may think it's cute, but I don't. Imagine if a man proudly said similar such things. Excerpt:
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2016-12-19 11:15
Article here. Excerpt:
'If you want to see how the federal bureaucracy can mess things up, and create huge new areas of overburdening regulation, just look at what it’s done with Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972.
Title IX simply reads: "No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” That’s all.
But from this small, simple statement — there shall be no discrimination on the basis of sex — has been created a regulatory Tower of Babel governing sports teams, student discipline and even, and most dubiously, sexual consent.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2016-12-19 11:10
Article here. Excerpt:
'One of China’s most prominent feminists has a message for the US president-elect: “Hey Trump, feminists are watching you.”
Zheng Churan, who has been supported by Hillary Clinton for her advocacy, wrote a letter to Trump warming him of the perils of chauvinism as he prepares to take office.
Trump famously boasted about using his fame to have sex with women and grope them without prior consent, saying: “When you’re a star they let you do it.”
In 2015 Zheng was one of five feminist activists detained by police for more than a month after the group planned a peaceful protest against sexual harassment.
Zheng, who is also known as Datu or Big Rabbit, wrote to the president-elect: “Even across the Pacific, in the faraway land of China, there are constantly reports of you and your government’s involvement in sexual discrimination.
...
“We wish you to watch out, the feminists worldwide are speaking, and we are watching you.”
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2016-12-19 11:02
Article here. Excerpt:
'Margot Wallstrom, Sweden’s top diplomat, has sought to advance what she calls a feminist foreign policy. What does that mean?
She says it is a way to use the usual tools of diplomacy to address three questions: Do women have equal rights? Are women at the decision-making table? And, are resources equitably distributed to women?
“A feminist foreign policy,” she said, “is an analysis of the world.”'
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Submitted by Matt on Sun, 2016-12-18 17:40
Article here. Excerpt:
'A popular, nationwide program that encourages police and others to treat rape victims with more sensitivity is under fire from the Arizona Governor's Office of Youth, Faith and Family.
In a recent letter to elected prosecutors around the state, Youth, Faith and Family director Debbie Moak admonishes Arizona law-enforcement authorities to rethink their support of Start by Believing, a nonprofit initiative aimed at removing obstacles to the reporting of sexual violence. Statistics show that many women decline to report sexual attacks, sometimes out of fear that investigators won't believe them.
Launched in 2011, Start by Believing is an offshoot of the Washington-based nonprofit End Violence Against Women International.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sun, 2016-12-18 02:01
Article here. Excerpt:
'First, modern feminism is illogical because, as Pinker points out, it is based on the vanilla assumption that, but for lifelong gender socialization and pernicious patriarchy, men and women are on the whole identical. An insurmountable body of evidence by now conclusively demonstrates that the vanilla assumption is false; men and women are inherently, fundamentally, and irreconcilably different. Any political movement based on such a spectacularly incorrect assumption about human nature – that men and women are and should be identical – is doomed to failure.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2016-12-17 04:13
Article here. Excerpt:
'Conservative MP Philip Davies told the BBC that men should not "be excluded from having their views" heard.
He was elected to the committee in a ballot of party colleagues.
But Green Party MP Caroline Lucas said there should be a "proper hearing" before the MP for Shipley, West Yorkshire, can take his place.
Asked on BBC Two's Daily Politics about his nomination, Mr Davies said: "The committee's there whether I like it or not, so if I can bring some common sense to the committee that's surely a good thing.
"Just in the same way that UKIP used to take their seats in the EU Parliament - not because they were fans of the EU Parliament or everything that it represented, but because they hoped to hold it to account."
He added: "I'd prefer if it was just called the equalities committee. I don't see why it needs to be called the women and equalities committee. You can still look at women's issues on a committee that's just called equalities.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2016-12-17 04:09
Article here. Excerpt:
'A male student from Williams College in Massachusetts accused his ex-girlfriend of sexual assault. A month later, she made a counterclaim against him. Guess whose accusation was taken seriously.
John Doe, as he is identified in his lawsuit against the university, had been dating Susan Smith (not her real name) for two years between fall 2013 and winter 2015. In spring 2015, Smith graduated and took a job with the college, where she worked until June 30, 2016. Doe was still a student at the university when Smith became an employee, and they continued to date.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2016-12-17 04:07
Article here. Excerpt:
'Former Baylor football recruit Jeremy Faulk, who was kicked off the team at the height of the school's sexual assault scandal before the 2016 season ever started, remains uncertain about his future, even though a Title IX investigation involving him at Baylor has been suspended, and apparently will never see resolution.
The defensive tackle has just been named the Junior College Defensive Player of the Year after winning a national championship at Garden City Community College in Garden City, Kan., but his brief stay at Baylor may have made him untouchable as far as major universities are concerned.
Faulk re-enrolled at Garden City, from which Baylor recruited him, after he was dismissed from the team and lost his scholarship, at least temporarily, after a report of a sexual assault that was never proved and never prosecuted.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Sat, 2016-12-17 04:01
Article here. Excerpt:
'A college football team finally has recognized its power and leverage over campus administrators but for a queasy-making cause: solidarity over an unprosecuted allegation of multiple sexual assaults. The Minnesota Gophers are demanding that 10 accused “brothers” who have been suspended by the university for misconduct be reinstated or they will sit out the Holiday Bowl on Dec. 27. There is something jarring about this, some missing sensibility.
What’s missing is any recognition that campus officials have the right to hold students to a higher standard than simply being non-felons.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Fri, 2016-12-16 08:15
Article here. Excerpt:
'Minnesota seniors Drew Wolitarsky and Mitch Leidner spoke to the media, announcing the Gophers would “cease all football activities.” The boycott stems from 10 players being suspended following a university investigation into a sexual assault report.
University president Eric W. Kaler and athletic director, who were both called out by the players, released a statement after the boycott was announced.
Claeys wasn’t the only coach to voice his support for the players. Linebackers coach Mike Sherels did as well.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Fri, 2016-12-16 07:32
Article here. Excerpt:
'Last year, Arizona State University’s campus police force was the first in the state to support the “Start by Believing” campaign, in which law enforcement pledges to uncritically accept any allegation made by a rape accuser to facilitate more reports.
Republican Gov. Doug Ducey’s administration doesn’t want others to follow ASU’s lead, however.
The Phoenix New Times reports that Youth, Faith and Family Director Debbie Moak asked prosecutors to stay clear of the nationwide nonprofit Start by Believing campaign in a letter last month.
What’s wrong with the program? It could ruin their rape investigations even if they run them by the book, says Moak, relaying the findings of a workgroup that studied the program:
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Submitted by Mastodon on Fri, 2016-12-16 06:38
Article here. Excerpt:
'The entire Minnesota football team says it is boycotting all football activities until it gets satisfactory answers from the university about the suspension of 10 players this week.
The school suspended the players after an internal investigation into a sexual assault case. Police declined to charge any of the players, but the school suspended them based on internal regulations involving sexual assault allegations.
...
Wide receiver Drew Wolitarsky, with his team members standing behind him, made the announcement at the Gibson-Nagurski Football complex, CBS Minneapolis reports.
“Effective immediately, we will boycott all football activities,” Wolitarsky said. “The boycott will remain in effect until due process is followed, and the suspensions for all 10 players … are lifted.”
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Submitted by Mastodon on Fri, 2016-12-16 06:34
Article here. Excerpt:
'The U.S Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights found last year that MSU failed victims by taking too long to investigate reports of sexual misconduct, a position echoed by a growing number of women who say they were assaulted on campus.
The men in these three cases argued that the process doesn’t serve the accused well, either.
Each of these students alleged MSU was too eager to cast them out and too lax in its investigation of the claims against them, that witnesses were not placed under oath, attorneys’ participation in disciplinary hearings was severely curtailed and even MSU’s own investigators failed, in some instances, to follow internal policies.
"With all due respect to Michigan State, the reality here is they haven't caught up to the sanction they are imposing," George Brookover, the East Lansing attorney who represented all three students, told Ingham County Judge Clinton Canady III on Jan. 6.'
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