Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-07-15 06:33
Article here. Excerpt:
'The phrase “wheels of justice,” of shady proverbial origin, is a popular way both to celebrate and lament the process of law. These wheels do turn, we are told, but they turn slowly. Are there not also wheels of injustice, constructed of a much stronger alloy, and forever counterposed to the forces of equity and morality? Most certainly there are, and they operate in too high a gear for us to bear.
The worst injustice is that which its perpetrators claim is meant to correct another. Nowadays one finds examples of this almost at random. A small British publishing house called “And Other Stories,” for instance, has committed itself to publishing only women writers for the year 2018. The stated reason is to correct the imbalance in women’s representation in the literary world, particularly when it comes to writing prizes. A senior editor at the publisher, Sophie Lewis, took to the pages of The Independent, one of London’s daily papers, to explain her company’s decision.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-07-15 06:28
Article here. Excerpt:
'One of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s flagship economic ambitions for getting more women in the workforce could have the opposite effect of widening the very gender pay she has campaigned so hard to narrow.
...
A key ambition of the Democratic front-runner is to raise the female labor force participation rate after stagnating for close to two decades. To that end, Hillary trumpeted the virtues of paid family leave as well as the reform of sick days.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-07-15 06:24
Article here. Excerpt:
'Today the Prime Minister has set out to ‘end the gender pay gap in a generation’. It would be an ambitious goal, if a wage gap actually existed. According to the latest ONS figures, women between the ages of 22 – 29 earn 1.1 per cent more on average than their male counterparts and women between the ages of 30-39 are also earning more.
And it doesn’t stop there. There’s evidence that when men and women follow the same career path in the UK, women tend to out-earn and out-perform men. There is growing evidence that if you control for similar backgrounds, women actually tend to get more aggressively promoted than men by their employers.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Wed, 2015-07-15 06:21
Article here. Excerpt:
'Whenever a high-profile account of alleged campus sexual assault comes crashing down – such as Rolling Stone's gang-rape accusation – activists predictably fall back on the claim that only 2 percent of rape accusations are false.
This isn't accurate. First, the 2 percent figure refers to false reports made to the police. Making a false police report carries a penalty, which exists to deter people from doing so (although sometimes that penalty isn't enforced, such as with the Duke Lacrosse rape hoaxer). No such penalty exists on college campuses. (Indeed, even the accuser in the Rolling Stone article, though proven to have lied, did not face any punishment from the school.)
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 09:42
Article here. Excerpt:
'Karl Savage is the kind of guy that makes top Democrats nervous.
He lives in a working-class neighborhood, with a cigar-store Indian perched on his front stoop and a carved Harley-Davidson sign on his garage. He's voted in Democratic primaries, he's older, he's white—and he does not care for Hillary Clinton. Not one little bit.
He made this very clear, in fact, to a Clinton campaign volunteer who rang his doorbell recently only to watch the front door close on him just seconds into his pitch. A short while later, his wife, Pamela, offered this explanation before similarly shutting the door: "We're not interested. We don't like her."
So while Republicans fret about their party's outreach to Latinos and other minorities, this one Saturday morning door-knock encapsulates the fear among leading Democrats: Their party no longer speaks to white people, particularly white men, and they could lose the White House because of it.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 05:03
Article here. Excerpt:
'Interest is growing in using transcripts to note dismissal or expulsion after a student has been found responsible for a sexual assault based on a preponderance of evidence.
...
The idea of noting a history of sexual assault on college transcripts is one of many that have been suggested to combat the high incidence of such violence on campuses across the country. Many colleges have been accused of preferencing their sports programs over the safety of female students, turning blind eyes to the behavior of some male athletes. The SEC in June became the first athletic conference to take a united stand against allowing students with such histories to find a home on the courts or in the fields of college athletics. Continued publicity of cases in which alleged victims lie about assaults makes the job of administrators considering blanket policies a tricky one.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 05:02
Article here. Excerpt:
'Administrators at the University of California San Diego failed to properly investigate sexual assault allegations against a male student and increased sanctions against him for appealing their decision, ruled superior court judge Joel Pressman on Friday, July 10.
A female student accused the 20-year-old male, known as John Doe, of inappropriately touching her on the morning of February 1, 2014. The male student denied these allegations and later told an officer who was investigating the accusations that the two had had sex both the night before and after the alleged touching occurred. However, John Doe's statements to investigating officers, as well as other evidence, was not allowed to be presented during the Title IX sexual misconduct hearing.
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 04:50
Article here. Excerpt:
'No one (or group) made an attempt to stop the assailant who was the first to exist the train and into the crowd of families in D.C. for 4th of July celebrations. Oblivious to what harm he may continue to do, the others on the car were just relieved to see him leave.
John Daniel Davidson at The Federalistwrote, “That Spires had a knife—what the police said was a ‘small, black folding knife’ they later recovered from a trash can—is no excuse. Any two adult men in that subway car could have stopped him, no matter how crazy or strong he was, and saved Sutherland’s life.”
...
Prior to reading these and other stories, I would have chalked up the “beta male” stories to liberal fantasies to stomp out masculinity. But these are no longer fantasies. The beta male movement is real. It started with drugging little boys who didn’t want to sit still in class. The outcome is big boys sitting still while a man is stabbed to death. We must save the alpha males before they are extinct.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 04:02
Article here. Excerpt:
'A California judge just issued a win to proponents of due process in campus sexual assault hearings.
Judge Joel M. Pressman deemed a University of California-San Diego campus hearing "unfair," ruling that the hearing panel limited the accused student's right to due process.
The accused student, listed as John Doe, had sued the university after being suspended for sexual assault without due process. John claimed that his right to cross-examine his accuser and adverse witnesses was limited, and Pressman agreed.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 03:42
Article here. Excerpt:
'A father at the centre of Britain’s first known case of paternity fraud involving IVF has called for the introduction of routine DNA testing in divorce after he was tricked into raising another man’s child as his own for six years.
The man, whose identity cannot be published for legal reasons, is also calling for an overhaul of the law after a judge ruled that his ex-wife could not be forced to hand back tens of thousands of pounds in maintenance payments even though they were the result of “fraud”.
He is urging MPs to consider new legislation to recognise paternity deceit as a crime rather than a civil wrong in cases involving premeditation and large amounts of money or serious emotional damage to children or parents.
The man, a lecturer and businessman based in southern England, was cheated by his ex-wife, a successful businesswoman, into believing that the baby she conceived through fertility treatment at a clinic in Spain was his child.'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 00:57
Story here. Excerpt:
'Nobel laureate Tim Hunt, who ignited a debate over sexism in science with his comments about women at a conference last month, will not be reinstated as an honorary professor at University College London (UCL), the university has confirmed.
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In a short statement on 9 July, the university's governing body, UCL Council, wrote that it “unanimously supports the decision taken by UCL’s executive to accept the resignation”. The council said that the extent of media interest was unprecedented and that it recognized the distress caused to Hunt and his wife Mary Collins, an immunologist at UCL. But it also said that “all parties agree that reinstatement would be inappropriate”.
Hunt declined to comment on the UCL statement but wrote in an email to Nature: "I’ll just point out that my ‘contract’ was due to expire early in 2016, and I’d already given my last lecture, so there really didn’t seem much point in reinstatement from my point of view."'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 00:55
Submitted by Mastodon on Tue, 2015-07-14 00:51
Article here. Excerpt:
'A NEW campaign has been launched to teach workers in nightclubs and bars to spot predatory rapists.
Bystander training is being rolled out across the country to encourage staff to intervene if they see women in potential danger of sexual assault.
The training will run in parallel with a hard-hitting anti-rape initiative from Police Scotland targeting the 16-27 age group, who account for a third of victims and perpetrators of the crime.
...
“We have examples of where the predator has moved in, looked for the girl who has had a bit to drink and when she has got up to go to the toilet or the bar, has insinuated himself with her.
“The predator cuts her out of the group and he will be the one who buys her that last drink and he is the one who leaves with her. That is when that woman is at her most vulnerable.”'
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Submitted by Mastodon on Mon, 2015-07-13 00:15
Article here. Excerpt:
'A ruling that found Iowa State University administrators improperly removed a men’s basketball player from the team for alleged sexual misconduct will stand, an appeals court ruled Thursday.
The Iowa Court of Appeals dismissed an appeal filed by the university’s governing board, which argued the discipline against former Cyclone guard Bubu Palo was appropriate for his actions toward a female student in 2012.
The decision leaves in place last year’s ruling by District Judge Steven Oeth, who threw out the university’s sanctions against Palo and questioned the accuser’s credibility. The judge said ISU President Steven Leath had kicked Palo off the team and imposed other disciplinary sanctions despite no clear evidence that the sex was nonconsensual.'
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Submitted by Matt on Mon, 2015-07-13 00:06
Story here. A strong case for mandatory DNA testing post-birth even when no paternity fraud is suspected. Excerpt:
'As Laura walked into the grocery store, catching up with Janeth, she was surprised to spot someone she knew. Behind the butcher counter was a colleague from her job at Strycon, an engineering firm. She gave him a big wave. He hardly acknowledged her. "That’s Jorge!" she told Janeth. "He works in my office." He was a well-liked 24-year-old who worked a few floors up from her, designing pipes for oil transport, so she was surprised to see him waiting on customers in the shop.
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