Submitted by Mastodon on Thu, 2015-11-19 02:45
Article here. Excerpt:
'The filmmakers of "The Hunting Ground" have been called out for inaccuracies, distortions and false statistics, and for disregarding journalistic integrity in order to push propaganda.
Their response? To call their critics "misogynistic" and accuse them of victim-blaming.
Filmmakers Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering mischaracterized what 19 Harvard Law professors wrote when they criticized the film. The filmmakers claimed that the professor's reference to the Harvard accuser's inebriated state was "classic victim blaming and is exactly the kind of misogynistic, punitive and shaming attitude that helps perpetuate sexual assault on college campuses."'
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Submitted by Matt on Thu, 2015-11-19 01:46
Article here. Well this does her in among the sisterhood. Excerpt:
'And now we get to the single thing that has most distressed me, as a feminist and a lawyer, about the affirmative consent bandwagon. The norm itself sounds great. I myself would never want to have sex with an unconsenting person, and I don’t want you do so either. I also don’t ever want to have sex that I haven’t consented to, and I hope that never happens to you either. But using legal procedure to decide these cases is about far more than just the desirability of the norm. It’s also about the desirability of putting the weight of the state and of punishment behind that norm. We have to want to put the norm into legal proceedings in the real world.
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Submitted by Matt on Thu, 2015-11-19 01:39
Article here. Excerpt:
'A Washington Times headline on Nov. 9 declared, "Pentagon 'gay' rape debacle: Report alleging male-on-male sexual trauma retracted." In an almost unprecedented move, the American Psychological Association (APA) retracted an article it had published a week earlier in its journal, Psychological Services. "Preliminary Data Suggest Rates of Male Sexual Trauma May be Higher than Previously Reported" had claimed that the rate of rape for military males might be 15 times higher than acknowledged. The media trumpeted the presence of another rape crisis.
Why were the data retracted? An APA press release explained, "Although the article went through our standard peer-review process, other scholars have ... raised valid concerns regarding the design and statistical analysis, which compromise the findings." Flawed methodology rendered useless results. This often occurs with rape research, whether it is conducted inside the military, at police stations or on campuses.
The most remarkable aspect of the APA retraction may be that it was mentioned by mainstream media. Most discredited assault studies are invisibly corrected, which allows the original, sensational conclusions to be repeated as fact. For example, the campus survey"Denying Rape but Endorsing Forceful Intercourse" exploded across the airwaves in early 2015. One in three male students would rape, researchers maintained, "if nobody would ever know and there wouldn't be any consequences." Activists cried out for tighter controls on campus.
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2015-11-18 21:43
Story here.
'A trial court has acquitted four men in a gang rape case, saying the woman had falsely implicated them and she seemed to have fabricated the charges against them in consultation with her in-laws.
"From the material on record, the view which points to the innocence and false implication of the accused ... seems to be more reasonable and probable ... I am of the opinion that all the accused are liable to be discharged," additional sessions judge Virender Bhatt said.
Acquitting the men of the charges, the court said there was no such allegations in the police complaint filed by the woman. Earlier, she had also not named the accused, who were her neighbours, the court said.
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2015-11-18 21:31
Story here. Excerpt:
'Four persons, including two women, have been arrested for allegedly extorting around Rs 20 lakh* from a Delhi-based doctor after threatening him to get him implicated in a false rape case, police said today.
The accused were identified as Sweta Panchal, Kuldeep Kaur, Pradeep and Manoj Solanki. It was Panchal who headed the gang, said a senior police official.
According to police, it was Kaur who allegedly targeted the doctor and developed good contacts with him.
On the evening of October 19, she sent a woman patient to the doctor's residence at Pitampura for medical consultancy. The patient, identified as Rukhsar, requested the doctor to escort her to a nearby bus stand as she felt a little unsafe there.
The doctor agreed and when they reached the bus stand, Panchal and her husband Pradeep allegedly forced the doctor inside their car and thrashed him, they said, adding that they also threatened him that they would frame rape charges against him.'
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Submitted by Matt on Wed, 2015-11-18 21:24
Story here. The headline should read 'purported rapist' because there was no trial; he was simply murdered. And it sounds to me like she didn't want to tell her idiot new hubby the truth, i.e., that she simply wasn't a virgin. Instead she had to lie and say she was raped, leading to the idiot murdering someone. Excerpt:
'Two Indonesian newlyweds have been arrested on accusations they plotted to kill a man the woman said had raped her a week before her marriage, and police said Tuesday the couple ate the victim’s genitals after the man was killed.
Lampung police spokeswoman Lt. Col. Sulistyaningsih said Rudi Effendi and his wife Nuriah were being held for further investigation after their arrests Sunday at their house in Tulang Bawang district in Sumatra’s Lampung province.
Sulistyaningsih, who uses one name, said police found the victim’s body in a burnt minivan Oct. 4. She said the monthlong investigation led to the conclusion that the couple had planned to kill the victim, who was a driver for a travel agency.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-11-18 16:19
Article here. Excerpt:
'Alimony, otherwise known as spousal support or maintenance, is an ongoing payment by the higher-earning spouse to the lower-earning one. It has changed and shifted over the 40 years since the Supreme Court ruled that it had to be applied equally to both genders.
Yet it is still heavily weighted toward men paying women. Only 3 percent of around 400,000 alimony recipients are male, according to the 2010 census, up a half a percent since 2000. Recipients claimed $9.2 million in payments in 2013 on their tax returns.
...
Now that women are paying alimony more often, they are getting involved in advocating for change.
"It’s unfair for men to pay it, and unfair for women to pay it. But women are much more outraged by it," said Ken Neumann, a founder of the Academy of Professional Family Mediators.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-11-18 16:17
Story here. Excerpt:
'A forty-year-old man died after he was allegedly pushed off a running train by a woman constable of the Railway Protection Force (RPF) for boarding a women-only train, triggering a massive protests and rail blockade by fellow commuters.
The victim, identified as Dipak Sharma, a resident of Dwarik Jungle Road in Bhadrakali, was travelling in a local train for “women only”, said Railway police officers. As news of the death spread, angry commuters beat up the constable and blocked trains in protest. They also targeted two other trains and pelted stones, smashing window panes and damaging coaches.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-11-18 16:15
Story here. Excerpt:
'Experts say the differences between university sexual assault hearings and criminal trials are intentional. Forcing a student to testify in the same room as his or her attacker can be traumatic. It can also have a chilling effect on victims, who may be hesitant to report rape if they have to confront their attackers face-to-face.
"Whenever you are talking about something as sensitive and intimate as sexual violence, it behooves schools to be sensitive to their students, to make sure that the process is fair and comfortable and they are not putting victims in a position of feeling blamed and shamed and having to confront directly," said Neena Chaudhry, senior counsel at the National Women's Law Center.
Given that risk, said John Foubert, a professor in the school of educational studies at Oklahoma State University, many college administrators feel it’s unnecessary to match the protections given to a criminal defendant.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-11-18 16:03
Story here. Excerpt:
'In Karen Keller’s kindergarten classroom, boys can’t play with Legos.
They can have their pick of Tinkertoys and marble tracks, but the colorful bricks are “girls only.”
“I always tell the boys, ‘You’re going to have a turn’ — and I’m like, ‘Yeah, when hell freezes over’ in my head,” she said. “I tell them, ‘You’ll have a turn’ because I don’t want them to feel bad.”
Although her approach might anger some parents, Keller is sticking to her guns: It’s all part of a plan to get girls building during “free choice,” the 40 minutes of unstructured play time embedded at the end of every school day.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-11-18 15:55
Article here. Excerpt:
'If women are dominant in certain academic disciplines, don’t call attention to it.
The University of York learned that gender equality is a one-way street, when it said in a press release last week that it would mark International Men’s Day this Thursday. (It’s cached on the Internet Archive.)
...
He went on to claim that “female candidates have a higher chance of being appointed than men” in academic staff appointments, as well as in professional support services and academic support staff, “with some departments [in the latter] employing no men at all in these roles”:
...
That provoked about 200 students, staff and alumni to sign on to anopen letter to the school excoriating it for pointing out the hardships of men:'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-11-18 15:53
Article here. Excerpt:
'York University statement:
Earlier today the University issued this statement.
"We have withdrawn the original statement about International Men's Day, and do not propose to mark this event formally. In gender equality, our main focus has been, and will continue to be, on the inequalities faced by women, such as under-representation in the professoriate. At the same time, we will not neglect other aspects of equality, and will take a balanced approach to all nine protected characteristics as defined in the 2010 Equality Act. Our overriding goal is to strive to treat every member of the University community with dignity and respect."'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-11-18 15:52
Article here. Excerpt:
'A row has broken out at York University after plans to mark International Men’s Day on Thursday were cancelled following an outcry from staff and students.
The university had signed up to the event, which aims to highlight issues affecting men and boys, including the high male suicide rate, men’s shorter life expectancy and “the struggles that boys can face in getting an education”.
It has since been cancelled at York after students, staff and alumni signed an open letter to the university objecting to the event. However, a number of students are campaigning to reinstate the day, and accuse the university of sending out a message that “men’s rights are not important”.
A petition has been launched, which states: “It is important that we recognise men’s day just as much as women’s day. True feminists should be fighting for gender equality for both men and women. To cancel men’s day is simply hypocritical. Equality is not just for women and should concern both genders.”'
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Submitted by Minuteman on Wed, 2015-11-18 01:51
Link here. Excerpt:
'Thirty leaders from foundations across the U.S. gathered at The White House Friday for a daylong forum on “Advancing Equity for Women and Girls of Color.” The forum focused on issues that plague women and girls of color and highlighted the launch of “Prosperity Together,” a $100 million, 5-year funding initiative aimed at improving economic conditions for low-income women, specifically women and girls of color.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-11-17 21:18
Article here. Excerpt:
'The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights has opened three investigations this year into Texas universities — Texas A&M University, the University of Houston and Trinity University — over how they handled allegations of sexual violence on their campuses, documents obtained by The Texas Tribune show.
Such federal inquiries have generally been spurred by accusations that universities didn’t do enough to punish students accused of rape or harassment.
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