Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Tribute to Crunchy Chicken

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Deanna Duke, who writes the blog, Crunchy Chicken, is being honored by her friends this month. This amazing woman started Goods 4 Girls and gave all of us who were floundering around, not knowing how to help, a great direction.  Goods 4 Girls collects cloth pads and sends them to school girls in Africa.  It's an amazing and wildly successful organization that GladRags is proud to be working with through our G4G Kit.  Her blog, Crunchy Chicken, is full of great info and inspiration and makes an entertaining read. She is committed to a better world and has the guts to speak her mind.

Deanna is a woman who can really turn thought into action. A Crunchy Tribute tells you how you can take some action too.  Our action for Deanna this month is a donation of four G4G Kits and we are putting the G4G Kit on 10% discount so you can help too!

Thanks Deanna for all your good work!

-Brenda 

add to sk*rt

ManQuarium

Friday, December 21st, 2007

image1.jpgI was recently made aware of this new site, sponsored by Procter and Gamble, to market the Gillette Venus Breeze, a razor for women.  They call the site, the manquarium.  The premise of the site is as follows: you are a girl and you want to find a man.  The manquarium website will help you build the perfect man.  The site asks you to pick a body of a guy in swim trunks (animated of course).  You can scroll through man "types", like the geeky but cute one with glasses, or the person of color with corn rows.  Ok, so now that we have picked our man, we answer some questions about ourselves, like where we want to go on a date or what the best compliment would be.  We put all of this into the site and what we get back is an animation of our man swimming telling us things that the Proctor and Gamble team thinks we want to hear.  Like if you input that you want him to think you are smart, your man will tell you something like your intelligence is hot.

Ok P and G, what are we saying here?  I glean from this website the following…

• women should be looking for a man

• they should pick a man based on how he looks

• clearly we need to shave to find a man 

I mean, that is the bottom line.  This is an ad for a razor.  So we are all heterosexual women who need to snag a man.  

Shame on you procter and gamble.  Shame on you… 

add to sk*rt

FCC Ruling on Media Consolidation

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

I think one of the biggest problems confronting us today is media consolidation.  The implications of having only six or seven corporations who rule the airwaves and media outlets does not bode well for anyone beyond those who own those corporations.  Dissenting voices don't get heard and big business just gets to further its case.  As with most important issues, it's complicated. Here are some links to understand more.

Now with Bill Moyers (always a common sense voice of reason).

Media Channel (they watch the media) and this link takes you to Michael Copps dissenting statement on today's ruling.

 Seattle Times Editorial

add to sk*rt

Bleeding in Africa

Friday, November 30th, 2007

For the past two years, many individuals and organizations have contacted GladRags regarding a largely publicized issue afflicting many communities in sub-Saharan Africa.  For many reasons, young girls are unable to and do not want to attend school during the days they are menstruating.  These days can add up to a 10-20 percent absenteeism rate throughout a school year (http://allafrica.com/stories/200710120286.html).  Clearly, this absenteeism leads to missing a great amount of information being taught and is generally disruptive to a girl's scholastic experience.

The many reasons that girls face this obstacle include lack of sanitized water, restroom facilities, underwear, and, the missing product for which GladRags is contacted, menstrual pads.  Also, the topic of menstruation is often taboo in many of these cultures, which makes it difficult for girls to openly arrive at a community solution to this life condition.  Another important obstacle that many news outlets and western organizations fail to consider when contemplating this issue is an absence of a waste disposal system to deal with the disposable pads that have been proposed as a solution and what the creation of such a system would mean.

So, given these many hurdles to overcome, what is the answer?
(more…)

add to sk*rt

Michael Franti Is My Hero!

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

    Tonight while my husband and I were cooking dinner we got on the subject of a recent opinion piece in our local paper,The Oregonian, in which our local right wing Bush sycophant columnist, David Reinhard,  was discussing whether or not waterboarding was torture. We both got so upset talking about it we had to calm ourselves down with some deep breaths and a beer. Fortunately the music we were playing was Michael Franti's most recent album "Yellfire". Bruce said, thank goodness for Michael Franti and we went back to making potato-leek soup knowing we aren't alone in this world of craziness we now live in.  

If anything ever happens to Bruce (perish the thought), I am going to hunt down Michael Franti and make him my own! If you don't know his music, find it, listen to it. He is a radical voice for truth and accountability and you can dance like crazy too. His song "To the East, to the West" could solve most of the world's problems. I looooovvvve him! 

 -Brenda

add to sk*rt

Shock Doctrine

Monday, October 8th, 2007

The other day I was listening to an interview with Naomi Klein, author of No Logo and, more recently, The Shock Doctrine.  I like her creative and clear perspective on the waves of capitalistic thought that have struck the US.  She goes up against Milton Friedman, a die hard free market enthusiast whom I think took the concept a bit too far in its unmitigated simplicity, and whom Klein echoes as she states her case that the current free market ideology uses the tactic of shock to further its agenda.

So, I'm not much of an economic thinker, but it can be argued that economics effects everything we do in this society, all with which we interact.  Read the Democracy Now! interview for Klein's crash course on Friedman's economic thought and her interpretation of how it has shaped our country here.

Klein also created a video clip that introduces the viewer to her theory.

Trying to keep my wits about me,

Diana 

Information is shock resistance.  Arm yourself.

 

add to sk*rt

No more menstruation?

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

Wyeth Pharmaceuticals (my former employer of years gone by) has recently developed Lybrel, an oral contraceptive.  What makes Lybrel different from other combination estrogen and progesterone oral contraceptives is that Lybrel is taken 365 days a year.  No more of those sugar pills that give your body the necessary break from the outside hormones that it needs to have a monthly period.  Lybrel stops menstruation from occurring at all, which according to many doctors is a perfectly safe option.  According to Dr. Kurt Barnhart, Associate Professor and Director of Clinical Research for the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology at UPENN in regards to Lybrel clinical trials, "It is our hope that based on these findings physicians will begin to more readily initiate dialogue with their female patients about continuous therapy — helping to eliminate the misconception that periods are a medical necessity and to emphasize the safety and viability of menstrual suppression."  Wyeth contends that women experience an increased quality of life due to not menstruating.  You can read an article about lybrel here: article

Wow.  Every day I am floored by the growing disconnect between the average woman and her body.  The natural cycles, which seem to have been working for the female body for thousands of years is all of a sudden deemed unnecessary by the medical elite.  We all know why we menstruate.  In the typical situation, each month the body prepares for the possibility of pregnancy by delivering an egg from the ovary to the uterus.  In preparation for the egg, the uterus builds up a nutrient rich lining.  When the egg is not fertilized, the lining sheds, hence menstruation.  It is a natural cycle, the ebbing and flowing of hormones.  Personally, I become suspect when medicine attempts to eliminate a natural function that serves its place in the balance of our bodies.  If it ain't broke, why fix it?

In addition, I wonder about the motivation behind the new drug.  Bleeding is gross and bad and we should feel bad about it right, so let's just make it not happen?  Are we going to get to a time when all women who are not trying to get pregnant medicate themselves so that they don't menstruate?  Will it become even more of a taboo to be a bleeding person?  I mean, it is already something that people have a hard time talking about and most of us do it.  What happens when most women don't?  Will those that chose to still bleed become ostracized and will menstruation become even more of a shameful activity? 

-Jodi Nan 

add to sk*rt

Mother’s Milk Watered Down by Formula Industry

Tuesday, September 11th, 2007

milkad.jpg

I think breastfeeding is one of the most rewarding, important, and wonderful things that happens between a mother and her child. Here's a dismaying article reported in the Washington Post about how the politically powerful formula industry toned down some intense and provocative ads produced by the Health and Human Services Department to increase historically low breastfeeding rates in the U.S.

While these ads were blunt and used scare tactics like showing an insulin syringe or an asthma inhaler with a nipple, the facts are that breastfed children suffer significantly lower rates of conditions like type 1 diabetes and asthma. But with $8 Billion in worldwide annual sales, those formula makers have some clout and they know how to use it.

-Brenda 

add to sk*rt

Only White Women’s Wisdom?

Friday, July 6th, 2007

A few weeks ago, I was in a new thrift shop in my neighborhood.  I found their book section, which I was surprised to find was stocked with some really fantastic authors and titles.  I was thrilled, because I seemed to have serendipitously stumbled upon the source of my summer reading—I was just finishing up my second year in graduate school and was more than eager to begin thinking about three upcoming months of pleasure reading.  As I surveyed the titles and noticed what I was most interested in, I had a series of thoughts that affected how I chose which ones to put in my basket.

I remembered an idea that my friend, Teresa, had told me about.  She had just finished reading Cunt by Inga Muscio, and she wrote to me, "[Muscio] suggests that everyone go through a year of only consuming art made by women.  Only reading women's writing (magazines and news and books and poetry), only listening to music by women.  If we did it, we could make a significant dent in the male-dominated economy.  We'd also learn how difficult it is, and how rewarding, to seek out women's voices."  I knew that I couldn't do this for an entire year, with required reading for graduate school coming up again in three months, but the idea of having an intentional focus to my summer reading, watching and listening intrigued me.  In the middle of my thrift store search, then, I looked for books by women writers, and was happy to immediately find a book by Margaret Atwood.  I also picked up two by Barbara Kingsolver that I'd read ten years ago, and was eager to meet those characters again.

Then, I realized something else: I was only finding books by white women.  I'm a white woman myself, and had recently come to learn that the majority of the media I take in–from news, movies, television and books–comes from the perspective of white folks.  Even (or, especially) the media and art that I, a self-proclaimed progressive white feminist, usually pay attention to is made by white journalists, directors, painters, writers, musicians, and the like.  So, I immediately revised my challenge: to seek out the voices of women of color, and to learn, as Inga Muscio says, how difficult and rewarding this would be to.

I've realized that I can easily find music, books, magazines, and movies that reflect many of my experiences as a white person, but in mainstream media, women of color would be hard pressed to find those that reflect their own experiences.  Think about it the next time you go to the movies: who are the people portrayed in the movie?  Who is first, second, third billed (often it's white men)?  In your favorite music, who is singing their stories to you?  I don't want to tell you not to listen to your favorite music or not watch the movies you want to see.  Sometimes it's hard enough to find movies directed by white women, for example.  But maybe we can pay attention to what media we're taking in and think about other perspectives we might be missing.

I decided to to this because white folks' art and media have usually come to be understood as the "standard" for what's acceptable and/or profitable in those areas, and I simply want to widen my understanding of what is possible in these areas.  Yet I don't want to be considered a "good" white person for doing this.  Instead, I understand my task as an issue of the reality of my U.S.-American life: I, like many of us, live in communities made up of lots of different kinds of people, and I decided that want to get to know some of the perspectives that I don't readily or easily come in contact with, especially the voices of other women. 

Needless to say, I put down the Kingsolver and Atwood.  I actually walked out of the thrift store empty handed, despite the vast selection of books.  None of the books there seemed to be by women who I could identify as Native American/Indigenous American, Asian American, Latina, African American, or any of the many multitudes of cultures besides European-North American.  

I've had a good time so far in my task.  I've read Sister of My Heart, by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, and am in the middle of The Autobiography of My Mother, by Jamaica Kincaid.  I've watched the film Monsoon Wedding , directed by Mira Nair , and have listened over and over to Bahamadia 's album, Kollage.  I was also really excited to get my latest issue of Bitch Magazine in the mail (which, if perhaps managed mostly by women who would identify as European American, strives to include material by and for women whose perspective gets lost in mainstream media).  

If you have any suggestions of music, books, movies, photographs, magazines, for me and other readers, we'd love to hear them!  Please leave them as a comment, below.

I'll write again with updates.  Stay tuned!
Elizabeth

add to sk*rt

How Important is it to Have a Menstruator in the White House?

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

    I am usually not very political, but I must say that the prospect of having a female President of the United States has got my ears pricked. The only reason why a woman should not be President that I can ever remember anyone giving is that she would be too emotional and unable to make decisions, especially during “that time of the month”—that is to say because she is a menstruator. I have heard this reason more than once, most often in semi-jest, and honestly I haven’t heard it in a while, but I remember these kinds of comments as a young girl. What other reason could men give? Menstruating is what makes us different. Then there is the whole school of thought that women are NOT different. We can do anything men can do. I think there are a masculine and a feminine principle at play here. Generally, women tend to carry more of the feminine principle than men, and men more of the masculine than women, but we all know lots of exceptions to that rule. To tell you the truth, I am more disturbed by women who have made their way into government and business only to act just like men. Clearly, women should not be discounted because of gender and in most ways are not actually different than men. And yet, I think embracing the contrasting way the feminine principle governs a nation and in this case would influence the world is vitally important.
    In my neck of the woods in progressive Vermont, so far the buzz is all about Barack Obama. I’m mildly surprised that everyone is not jumping at the chance just to get a woman (does she even still menstruate?) in the White House. Maybe you all can fill me in on how she’s managed to turn people off. I’m rooting for a female President because I think what the world really needs is the female principle and woman are more likely to carry it than men (especially in politics). But if Hillary Rodham Clinton takes the election and perpetuates the masculine model and Barack Obama becomes President and embraces the feminine, I have to wonder—how important is it to have a full-blooded (pun intended) menstruator in the White House? And I’m sorry, I can’t help it, a menstruator in the “White” House, maybe they are afraid they’ll never get the stains out!

Michelle

add to sk*rt
  •  

    July 2008
    M T W T F S S
    « Jun    
     123456
    78910111213
    14151617181920
    21222324252627
    28293031  
  • Recent Posts

  • Categories

  • Archives