fickle: (I will be heard credit wickedchild_md)
Link of the Day: Get Your War On.

Originally, the subject line read 'Get Your War On Comics' and then I realized that it looked like I was trying to declare war on comics and thought better of that. XD The link is to a set of comics all about the American War in Iraq, Operation Enduring Freedom (or whatever the hell they're calling it this week) and Bush's general idiocy.

My favorite strip? Plan B.

You've got to love black humor.

Feminist.

Oct. 17th, 2006 02:10 am
fickle: (sorry our president credit clearobscurit)
Link of the Day: Feminist (Yes, you are).

Sars takes on the issue of people saying "I'm not a feminist but [insert belief here]", and exactly how stupid a statement that is. I'm actually a major fan of her blog, which tackles both actual cultural issues and just talks about her own life. It's generally well-written, funny and easy to empathize with. My favorite of her columns would actually have to be slut which I loved enough to already post about, otherwise it would have definitely been today's link.

Apart from that, I was supposed to go watch films on immigration from 6-8PM today for my Women's Study.

Guess what happened?

The first film was delayed by US Customs who said that it contains obscene or immoral material. The plot of the film? It's a documentary made by a guy who spent a year living alongside illegal immigrants in order to record their lives. What an obscene idea; it's really immoral of him.

At any rate, we watched a replacement film called "Well-Founded Fear" about the asylumn-seeking process, which was double the length of "Living With Illegals", meaning I was stuck there from 6-9. I liked the film though but its length made me rather fidgety and of the 'just let them in, already!' mindset. America's a big country. It's not like it's China. I am strongly against tightening immigration laws and I detest the fact that the new limitations on asylum seeking make it harder for people to apply, or to appeal the decision if they're denied the right to stay in the US.
fickle: (I will be heard credit wickedchild_md)
So, I'd say that a fair share of you have already seen the following meme, right?

We would like to know who really believes in gay rights on livejournal. There is no bribe of a miracle or anything like that. If you truly believe in gay rights, then repost this and title the post as "Gay Rights". If you don't believe in gay rights, then just ignore this. Thanks.


How many of you read that and went 'BWUAH'? Because seriously, what's the point of that meme? Who is this unnamed we? The FBI? The HRC? Aliens monitoring us from space somewhere?

Also, secondly, who believes in gay rights? Gay Rights isn't a religion. It's not the Tooth Fairy, it's not Santa Claus.

So why make a meme that basically says, "If you believe in fairies, clap your hands!"?

Honestly, it's like that really stupid statistic that says 98% of teens have tried pot and to repost that in your journal if you're part of the two percent that haven't. For one thing, just thinking about that one for a little would make it pretty clear that's not true and a little basic research would disprove it.

And yet I keep seeing that in people's signatures.

ARGH. Way to give teens an undeserved bad name, everyone.

I wasn't sure if I was just being too critical about the Gay Rights meme, then thankfully [livejournal.com profile] ceresi also posted about it, as well as linking to other people that had pointed out the flaws in the Gay Rights meme like the self-righteousness, the us versus them mentality, and the coerciveness.

Personally, I believe in human rights, regardless of gender, ethnicity, sexuality or anything else used to divide humans into groups. I believe in taking useful action, and I believe that just posting a meme won't change anything.

I also believe that this is currently the most worrying topic in the political hot zone.

I mean, the right to obtain evidence through torture? Not showing them the evidence against them? No limits on how long people can be held? That's more important to me than some mythical person who's supposedly going through all of el-jay and seeing who's reposting a paragraph and who isn't.

And if you really want to support a cause specific to one group, try supporting the Equal Rights Amendment. Trust me, sending off an e-mail to Congress or your Senators is a lot more productive than just reposting something in your livejournal -- for one thing, people with actual power are more likely to see the former, since I rather doubt that most political figures go around surfing el-jay on their breaks.

Edit: You want to do something real for Gay Rights? Here. A nice little collection of links to work with. Enjoy.
fickle: (fuck off and die)
Read them.

Trust me, I couldn't phrase it anywhere near as well as they have.

But just to convince you to click, here are some choice excerpts:

In Scotland, it [rape] can only be committed by males upon females, which appears to mean by persons biologically male at birth upon persons born biologically female.

Translation: If you're a guy, tough luck. You can't accuse anyone of raping you, because it couldn't have happened.

But where the accused has no involvement at all in producing the victim’s state of insensibility and where he happens upon her by chance and has sexual intercourse with her when she is totally unaware of his presence and intentions, then it cannot be established that she demonstrated unwillingness. Therefore, it cannot be shown that any force was used to overcome unwillingness which never existed in fact; therefore, there is no rape.

Translation: If you find an unconscious girl and fuck her, it's not rape.

What have come to be known graphically as “oral sex” and “anal sex” do
not qualify as rape and digital penetration is not sufficient to constitute rape.


Translation: Rape = penis into vagina with lots of violence or threats thereof. Nothing else counts. And that is why guys can't get raped -- they don't have vaginas! Wow. Groundbreaking theory there.

Just read it. I'm hissing, snarling and wanting to shake the fucking idiots who came up with those definitions, so I think this is about as much commentary as I can dish out.

Edit:

Lysander [PWNED, care of Fickle] says:
And then there's the added bonus of the fact that rapists were allowed to cross-examine their victims in court and use any and every bit of info they had on prior sexual history until the law finally was passed to stop that after a girl committed suicide after being cross-examined by her rapist for five days straight during which he wore the same outfit he was wearing when he assaulted her and made her hold up the panties she was wearing at the time for the court. Repeatedly. I hate them all and want them to die.
fickle: (poland credit samiamagirl)
How many of you pay attention to the news about countries outside of the one that you live in?

Most of my flist is from America; people say Americans are self-absorbed and rarely listen to anything except American news.

True or not? Historically, America had an isolationist attitude during WWI but that was nearly a century ago. We should have moved on by then.

I know I pay attention to news about Europe, because I grew up there, Asia because that's where my genetic stock is from and where most of my family is, Australia because I lived there too once upon a time, and America because that's where I go to uni/live/was born. Dual nationality for Sri Lanka and America, permanent residency for Austria and Australia -- I've got personal reasons to cover most of the globe, though nothing for Africa or the Middle East.

Not that it matters.

I don't see how anyone can be ignorant of the genocide in Dafur or each successive crisis in the Middle East. It's news. Our world, our events. It might be happening on the other side of the world for now, but if chaos theory says one butterfly's wings flapping can create a storm, then one death (Archduke Franz-Ferdinand) is all it takes to kick off a World War.

Boys kissing. Just as a reward for reading through that.

So do me a favor and answer the following poll honestly? Answers are screened so that nobody will know what you've voted.

[Poll #785691]

Hey, look!

Mar. 3rd, 2006 02:55 am
fickle: (pro-choice mai)
It is possible to be worse than Bush!

How?

Easy. Ban abortion and only make one exception: If the mother's life is at stake.

And South Dakota did it!

Even Bush wants three exceptions - incest, rape and the mother's life being in danger.

Of course, now what everyone needs to worry about is that law being used to challenge Roe vs. Wade.

Oh, well, that and the fact that the Patriot Act got renewed. That's worrying too, don't you think? Our Senate passed it.

It's at times like that I question why I want to study in America, let alone live in it.

Joke. XD

Jan. 27th, 2006 10:16 am
fickle: (Default)
How many Bush administration officials does it take to change a light
bulb?


1. One to deny that a light bulb needs to be changed;

2. One to attack the patriotism of anyone who says the light bulb needs
to be changed;

3. One to blame Clinton for burning out the light bulb;

4. One to arrange the invasion of a country rumored to have a secret stockpile of light bulbs;

5. One to give a billion dollar no-bid contract to Halliburton for the new light bulb;

6. One to arrange a photograph of Bush, dressed as a janitor, standing on a step ladder under the banner: Light Bulb Change Accomplished;

7. One administration insider to resign and write a book documenting in detail how Bush was literally in the dark;

8. One to viciously smear #7;

9. One surrogate to campaign on TV and at rallies on how George Bush has had a strong light-bulb-changing policy all along;

10. And finally one to confuse Americans about the difference between screwing a light bulb and screwing the country.
fickle: (sorry our president credit clearobscurit)
Demand Alito not be confirmed.

Don't let him make the laws. He doesn't deserve to have that kind of power, based on his past decisions.

Support the McCain amendment.

Directed at stopping torture, it's especially relevant right now thanks to the 'extraordinary rendition' case of Khaled El-Masri, a German citizen who was kidnapped during a vacation and transported, or “rendered,” to Afghanistan where he was drugged, beaten and held in secret for five months.
fickle: (damsel in distress)
I was going to make this an edit to my last post, but it stands on its own.

How to prevent rape.

Yes, I'm sick of those e-mails that tell me to carry umbrellas, watch what I wear, don't let myself be caught alone in a room with a guy - I'm sick of being told I should never let my guard down. I'm sick of being told that when rape happens, it's just a girl exaggerating or trying to cause trouble. I'm sick of having rape trivialized, to the point that the next person who tells me it's just a bit of unwanted sex is going to have to deal with me verbally laying into them until my fingers are too tired to type/my mouth is too dry to speak. What I'd like to do is gut them, to castrate them, then tell them over their screams that it's only a little wound, not to make such a fuss. Pain is in the mind of the perceiver.

If nothing else, that's what Take Back the Night rallies tell people - it's okay to grieve. It's okay to be hurt. There are going to be days when you can't drag yourself out of bed, periods of time when everything hurts. Smells can trigger flashbacks, sounds too. It's okay. It's normal. It's not what you want, it stops you from acting the way you feel you should, but it's what happens anyway. I'm not fostering a culture of self-pity here, but nor do I think that denying your own pain is productive. To slice away the part of you that was wounded in an attempt to be wholly clean and incomplete - no. Because then you lose, not just to someone else, but you lose part of yourself, and it's not a game because it's your soul and your mind and your heart, and if you let someone damage you to the extent that you have no choice but to cripple yourself just so that you can survive, then they're hurting you twice over, once for the inital incident and once for the self-sundering. And they'll never stop hurting you, because you'll always remember.

And I know I said 'when you let' right after protesting the use of the phrase 'she was raped', but the thing is, getting raped is not the victim's choice. How a person deals with that is their choice. Sleeping around, swearing off sex, hiding away, hating yourself- they're all different ways of reacting, some more destructive than others, some less. The latest rally had about 50 girls all jammed into a small room, and I know that wasn't everyone. I know there were people too scared to come to a private, Safe Space meeting. A full third of all females have to deal with sexual assault at some point in their lives; it's jumped up from one quarter. How long before it hits 50%, and then 100% so that it turns into a standard experience for women, as normal as having blatantly sexual propositions tossed your way by complete strangers when you're just walking down a street and trying to get home?

Go ahead. Say that I'm borrowing trouble. Say that feminism isn't needed any longer, that we're practically equal anyway and that rape isn't really all that much of a problem. Please do. I'd love an excuse to hit someone with my copy of I Never Called It Rape. Because it's getting worse. Not better. Worse. With all our supposed moves forwards, the fact still remains that the incidence of rape has gone up, not down.

And home's not safe either. A quarter of all families will have a child molested by a family member at some point; one million American women endure domestic violence each year. (And those statistics are on the conservative side). Not to mention that again, most rapes are committed by people that the victim knows - and yes, marital rape does count and it is possible to be raped by a boyfriend/crush/ex. Still counts.

If you say no, if you don't want it, it's rape.

That simple.

It doesn't matter who you've slept with before, it doesn't matter what you were doing when you said stop. It doesn't matter what you were wearing, what you drank, or how badly s/he wants you. If you don't want it, then it's your body and ultimately, your choice. When someone rapes you, they take that choice away from you. They don't make up your mind for you; a person's default is not 'yes'. They simply remove your chance to say 'no' by refusing to acknowledge it.

What it all comes down, basically, is that real men accept the responsibility to not harm another person, and it needs to stop going unpunished. I'm not an idealist, no matter how you stretch the word. I'm well aware of the fact that most victims aren't believed, and that even when it does go to court, it's hard to win a case, standing in front of a jury that'll judge you on how you act, dress and speak, operating from the assumption that you must have done something to provoke an attack.

I know that police prefer the victim to be battered black and blue, half-dead from physical violence, rather than deal with the tricky grey areas of physical intimidation and how if a girl knows her attacker is stronger than her, and that fighting back will just result in her getting raped and beat up both, she's more likely to give in without fighting. In my school, when we had a quick seminar about self-defense, we were told to fight as much as we could but not if we thought it would endanger our lives or if we couldn't win. One of the girls summed it up as "lie back and try to not think about it"; the girl I liked best fiercely said she'd carry a knife on her and "kill the fucker". In retrospect, those lessons were only for girls. None for guys.

If I'd been the girl then that I am now, I might have questioned that, asked why we get trained to defend ourselves but why they don't get told to not make it necessary for us to know such things. Back then, though, rape was barely even a blip on my register. It was only as we grew up that my friends started to coming to me, telling me that a friend of their father's raped them, that their boyfriend raped them, that it wasn't true they'd had sex [name deleted] because he'd forced her and she couldn't say otherwise because nobody would believe her...

Rape is underreported.

Rape is a weapon.

Rape ruins lives.

And 'no' means 'no'. Always. Always.

Oh, yay.

Nov. 21st, 2005 09:37 pm
fickle: (damsel in distress)
Latest rape statistics, courtesy of Amnesty International.

Here's a breakdown of the stats. Pay especial attention to the one that states that getting drunk makes it your fault for getting raped.

Devrushka decides to send an e-mail to her male friends for raising awareness about how rape really is a crime and not just a bit of fun that got out of hand. And how it makes no sense to blame the victim.

After all, you refer to rape in the passive tense. You don't say "someone raped her", you say "she was raped".

Women unite, take back the night. And remember that 88% of all rapes are committed by someone you know, not a stranger in an alleyway.

To end this entry on a stronger, more empowering note, check out Sars talking about a war against women. Like Xeney said, "when a woman walks the street at night, she's carrying her most valuable asset with her, the one that everyone wants to steal, like a guy leaving the house with one leg in a cast and a VCR tucked under his arm."

Know why I love Sars so much? She's angry, and not afraid to say so. She understands what it's like to feel helpless, and frustrated, to have it all swirl in your stomach and block your throat, not letting you even scream because it hurts that much to know you can hate so much without having any way to bury your pain. She doesn't care if she comes off as unsympathetic; she doesn't care if she comes off as hostile. She just wants to get her point across, like below:

"Please understand that I have felt that fury, a fury made even more powerful by my own powerlessness, a fury that I have to eat, a fury that won't make anything better for me unless I use it to defend myself, which I might not do successfully, which just feeds the fury until it tickles the back of my throat. Good girls do not daydream about planting a size-nine go-go boot in a man's solar plexus, but good girls get raped and beaten up all the time. So do bad girls. It just isn't fair."
fickle: (all your base credit unknown genius)
Elitism, or why certain people aren't wanted at the RP barbeque and why we don't give a damn if that means we need to lace our sauce with arsenic to keep them away.

Best part of her rant?

to everyone else: stop being so nice. Stop it. Seriously. BE a little more elitist. It's NOT TOO MUCH to expect your players to not only punctuate and use pretty words, but to be considerate of other players, or even, you know, funny, or awesome. Expect more. Look for more. You yourself will not become a better RPer surrounded by morons. You learn more and have more fun when you're surrounded by good, intelligent, witty RPers. I consider myself very lucky to have the group of RP-friends that I have now.

Read it, and rethink your own use of the word "elitist".

And on a more serious note, Kime talks about the JROTC, and is interested in hearing other people's opinions. Don't know what that is? Click the link. I haven't commented there yet, but that's because I'm trying to multitask at the moment since Savior named me his shopping guru.

That entry is currently f-locked. Apologies, everyone, I'll remove the strikes once it's open again. Instead of that, read about a horrific sexual assault case in Toronto. The OP claims that race is a factor, but what's getting to me more is the fact the victim-blaming being flung around, especially considering how long the abuse apparently lasted for.
fickle: (falling for every lie credit deathdestro)
[livejournal.com profile] ceresi had an an interesting post about Bush, torture and the need for Time Turners. Short but good.

And any other Animorphs fans out there? [livejournal.com profile] nyrehtak_nna linked in a recent post to a fascinating letter about the final book that K.A. Applegate wrote. I'll be on the first to admit that I hated the last book.

Why?

Because of the cliffhanger. Because even after the war, they weren't done fighting. Because they got no peace. Because it just seemed so unfair that after everything, they should have to keep suffering. I can deal with character death. I can deal with unhappiness. But not letting them grieve in peace and forcing them out on another fight?

...Blah. And I loathe cliffhangers. Especially the kind she did where there is absolutely no hint as to how it ends.

Apart from that though, the letter is worth reading. She makes good points, she has good reasons and I like her attitude.

I still hate the book's ending but at least I understand what she was trying to achieve.

Slut.

Oct. 30th, 2005 04:55 am
fickle: (Default)
Ah, "slut." A compact little word, forceful even in the way it sounds, starting out with a hissing sibilant and pushing off of the tongue through the L and U, and then that nastily crisp T. "Slut." Say it a few times out loud. Roll it around in your mouth. "Sssslut." "Sss…lllut." Say it again. Notice that it's difficult -- almost impossible, in fact -- to pronounce it neutrally. It's got a sneer built into it, that word. It's not as twangy and unthreatening as "tramp." It's not as easy to yell as "whore." "Whore" is built for screaming rage and dishes flying through the air, with a nice gusty H at the front and a big old roaring R bringing up the rear. Not "slut," though. "Slut" is muttered. "Slut" is whispered. "Whore" comes in like a punch, but "slut" tingles, like a slap. "Slut" hides behind the teeth. "Slut" is for when your back is turned.

"Slut" is for when you don't act like a lady. "Slut" is for when you sit with your legs apart. "Slut" is for when you wear it short, tight, without a bra, cut up high and down low and around the side, because, see, "slut" is also for when you have the nerve to enjoy your body in front of women who hate their own bodies. Don't strut. Don't dance with soul, or lick your lips. Don't look too good; don't think you look too good. Digging your own self is slutty. Making your own good time is slutty. Who do you think you are, anyway? Knees together, slut.

"Slut".

Read it, love it and never use that word again.
fickle: (damsel in distress)
Experts predict hurricane situation will worsen.

In June, Congress and the White House slashed the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' latest request for levee improvements in New Orleans from $105 million to $42.2 million.

Staring at a $200 billion clean-up tab, the original request now looks like a bargain.


Click the link, minions. And if you're living in a coastal area, I suggest considering relocation.

And a new government. Gods, what I wouldn't give for someone competent right about now.
fickle: (damsel in distress)
Schwarzenagger vetoes gay marriage bills.

Oh, and there are still rumors circulating he's running for re-election and possibly later for President because obviously, the last actor we had for President just did such a great job.

Secondly, US image abroad has suffered.

Oh wow. Really? What with the hugest ever mass protests against one person and the fact that 58 percent in the BBC poll see Bush's re-election as a threat to world peace, I would have never guessed that America's actually unpopular now.

This isn't high school. It is not a case of being cool to be uncool. This is a case of a global community, of peer judgment and not of a bully stomping onto the playing field, stomping on the glasses of the geeks and insisting it's because they wreck grade curve so really, bullying them is okay!

Come on people. I lived in Europe. I remember how proud I felt to be able to tell people that I'm American. I remember daydreaming about living in America once I started college.

I don't even know when it was that I started realizing being American was a shameful thing; but I do know it had nothing to do with extra-marital blowjobs and quite a bit to do with someone's idea of diplomacy being to forget the soft words and rely on the big stick.
fickle: (without stain credit wickedchild_md)
Now, most of you reading my journal know that I'm all for free press. Hell, I blog. That in itself is a form of expression that could be curtailed theoretically.

You probably also know that I'm against the Bush administration's decision to allow the flag-draped coffins of soldiers to be photographed, mostly because it seems ridiculous that those people would have died for their country and we can't even see that.

You've most likely also heard me talking bluntly about the lack of proper war coverage and how everything is being censored horredously, as opposed to in the past when the graphic images of the war-zones allowed people to see how awful war really is.

However, there is a huge difference between legitimate journalism and trading pictures of mutilated Iraqi corpses for porn.

Click the link if you want to read about how not only have American soldiers been exchanging incredibly horrific photos for amateur porn, in a trade-off that's soiling not only the whole idea of a free press but also the reputation of the American army. Like they aren't already been viewed as Geneva Convention-violators and torturers, we now have to deal with them being so completely disrespectful and jeering to the people they killed as to trade photos of them for porn?

Come on.

This is the army supposed to be 'liberating' Iraq, the strong arm of American 'diplomacy'.

Excuse me if I missed something, but how the hell is blowing someone's brains out, taking a photo, then profiting from the first two actions for the sake of free porn a diplomatic action? I can't see it as anything but barbaric.

Normally, I would be happy that these photos are up. I'd want to know where the American equivalents are though if it was only the Iraqi troops being shown killed, but I'd be glad that at least someone was showing what a gory debacle war is.

Note the normally, because all bets are off when a photo of a man lying in a mess of intestines and brains is being used as currency to get access to chats with underdressed females.

Such a fair trade, right?

So nice to know the family of the dead Iraqi is actually getting something to relieve the pain of having lost him - except they're not, since this is for the soldier's personal profit, and even if it wasn't, who would honestly, truly feel better about the death of the loved one knowing that photos of their corpse can get you free porn?

I'd go into a little bit about what this could say about the cultural link between violence and sex, but I'll save that for another day in favor of spotlighting another issue: the American press is ignoring this travesty.

The owner of the site was interviewed by European journals (you know, those people that live on that small, cultured continent and are in still shock that Bush got re-elected?) and is quoted in the article I linked to as saying "I've done interviews with the Italians, the French, Amsterdam. ... They were very critical, saying the US wouldn't pick it up, because it's such a sore spot. ... It raises too many ethical questions. ... I started to laugh, because it's true."

Someone enlighten me here: WHAT ethical questions could this possibly raise?

Soldiers killing people, fine.

That's what they're paid to do.

It sucks, I hate it, and I'm completely against the war in Iraq but ethically, it's accepted as standard behavior for soldiers.

Soldiers killing people and exploiting the dead bodies, (and thereby violating the first law of the Geneva Convention which states officiers need to "ensure that the dead are honorably interred, if possible according to the rites of the religion to which they belonged" so nice going there with making us look like barbarians again), is wrong on a whole different level.

You want people to see what the war is really like?

Stop flaming anyone that posts real, unedited photographs of the results.

Let the media distribute it publicly.

Have it on the newspapers, show it on the TV.

What you don't do is make people go to a porn site, where disgusting captions such as "What Every Iraqi should look like!" accompany the pictures, turning what should be a shaming experience into a poor display of nationalism and inhumanity.

If this made you think, pass it on. I got the link from [livejournal.com profile] nefthoron, and you too can either write about it, or just link people back here. The media won't do it? Fine. We'll just create such a firestorm that they'll have to pick up on it eventually because people need to know what's going on.
fickle: (law knows no law)
Snagged from [livejournal.com profile] inuyatta.

California

Gov. Schwarzenegger's office is accepting calls from anywhere regarding their marriage equality bill. It passed both houses of their legislature, but needs the Governer's approval. It's all automated, so you don't have to talk to anyone.

Follow these directions:
1. Call the Governor: 916-445-2841 (This number is listed at www.governor.ca.gov)
2. Push: 2 (voice your opinion on legislation)
3. Push: 1 (gender-neutral marriage bill - Senate Bill 849)
4. And push: 1 to support marriage equality

PLEASE, IF YOU EVER REPOSTED ANYTHING IN YOUR JOURNAL, REPOST THIS.

PM, think it would be okay if I posted this to [livejournal.com profile] legal_dissent as well and set up a poll to ask if anyone wants to write a letter about it?
fickle: (law knows no law)
On September 14th, the state legislature will convene as a constitutional convention to consider a proposed amendment, known as the Travaglini-Lees amendment, that would eliminate equal rights for same-sex couples in Massachusetts and replace them with separate-and-unequal civil unions. Lawmakers need to hear that the citizens of Massachusetts support equality for all. Please call your legislators today and tell them to reject this amendment!

Sen. Charles Shannon Jr.
Phone: (617) 722-1578

Rep. Patricia Jehlen
Phone: (617) 722-2676

Already two of the “top lieutenants of state Senate President Robert E. Travaglini” have gotten the message, and have said they will vote against their boss's proposed constitutional amendment. Now tell your state representatives and senators to follow suit. Urge them to oppose the Travaglini-Lees amendment that would roll back the civil rights of gay and lesbian Bay Staters!

Sen. Charles Shannon Jr.
Phone: (617) 722-1578

Rep. Patricia Jehlen
Phone: (617) 722-2676

In addition to the onslaught on basic rights that gay men and lesbians are facing in the Capitol, on September 7th, Attorney General Tom Reilly certified for signature collection a proposed ballot initiative to pass an anti-gay constitutional amendment that would strip same-sex couples of not only the right to marry, but any and all legal protections. This even more extreme and mean-spirited amendment is supported by Governor Mitt Romney, and several anti-gay and far right organizations that will be collecting signatures this fall in an effort to get the proposed amendment placed on the ballot in 2008. Because of the Attorney General’s regrettable decision, the fight for equality is guaranteed to be a long one, but it is vital that we stop the Travaglini-Lees amendment now, and keep the momentum on our side as we work toward equal justice.

-I snagged the above from People For the American Way, and am so going to be calling those numbers today, after classes. *ticked off* What the hell? California caves so MA decides, "Right, well, we're not special anymore, we'll just take that back?" Hah.

Yeah right.

We fought to get those rights, and Reilly & Romney are crazy if they think that we're just going to roll right over and let them be taken away without fighting again.
fickle: (sorry our president credit clearobscurit)
A Letter to the Terrorists, from London.

stustustu on how American media distorts the truth of the attacks and really, it's not such a big deal. Link gacked from [livejournal.com profile] ceresi.

Elena on how Bush really is NOT helping.

UN condemns attacks. (Well what did you expect?!)

How to HELP London. Peacefully. Without bombing countries in a misguided, spur-of-the-moment reaction. If you only click one link, let this be it.

Video coverage of the attack. Warning: Will most likely open in Windows Media Player.

Online live feed from BBC radio. Plaintext.

Cached feeds, so you can get all your information at once.

And on that note, I think that I'll conclude for the moment with something completely different:

Crazy Lanka! A satire site themed around Sri Lanka. Since my home-base doesn't get enough airtime where I'm concerned usually but if I'm going to ditch my principles, hey, might as well go all the way!

And if anyone has news from Ryuuji-mun, please leave a comment here.
fickle: (author unknown)
Original article here. Snagged the link from [livejournal.com profile] kimetara. Emphasis added by myself.

Not long ago, the American dream was a global fantasy. Not only Americans saw themselves as a beacon unto nations. So did much of the rest of the world. East Europeans tuned into Radio Free Europe. Chinese students erected a replica of the Statue of Liberty in Tiananmen Square.

You had only to listen to George W. Bush's Inaugural Address (invoking "freedom" and "liberty" 49 times) to appreciate just how deeply Americans still believe in this founding myth. For many in the world, the president's rhetoric confirmed their worst fears of an imperial America relentlessly pursuing its narrow national interests. But the greater danger may be a delusional America—one that believes, despite all evidence to the contrary, that the American Dream lives on, that America remains a model for the world, one whose mission is to spread the word.

The gulf between how Americans view themselves and how the world views them was summed up in a poll last week by the BBC. Fully 71 percent of Americans see the United States as a source of good in the world. More than half view Bush's election as positive for global security. Other studies report that 70 percent have faith in their domestic institutions and nearly 80 percent believe "American ideas and customs" should spread globally.

Foreigners take an entirely different view: 58 percent in the BBC poll see Bush's re-election as a threat to world peace. Among America's traditional allies, the figure is strikingly higher: 77 percent in Germany, 64 percent in Britain and 82 percent in Turkey. Among the 1.3 billion members of the Islamic world, public support for the United States is measured in single digits. Only Poland, the Philippines and India viewed Bush's second Inaugural positively.

Tellingly, the anti-Bushism of the president's first term is giving way to a more general anti-Americanism. A plurality of voters (the average is 70 percent) in each of the 21 countries surveyed by the BBC oppose sending any troops to Iraq, including those in most of the countries that have done so. Only one third, disproportionately in the poorest and most dictatorial countries, would like to see American values spread in their country. Says Doug Miller of GlobeScan, which conducted the BBC report: "President Bush has further isolated America from the world. Unless the administration changes its approach, it will continue to erode America's good name, and hence its ability to effectively influence world affairs." Former Brazilian president Jose Sarney expressed the sentiments of the 78 percent of his countrymen who see America as a threat: "Now that Bush has been re-elected, all I can say is, God bless the rest of the world."

The truth is that Americans are living in a dream world. Not only do others not share America's self-regard, they no longer aspire to emulate the country's social and economic achievements. The loss of faith in the American Dream goes beyond this swaggering administration and its war in Iraq. A President Kerry would have had to confront a similar disaffection, for it grows from the success of something America holds dear: the spread of democracy, free markets and international institutions—globalization, in a word.

Countries today have dozens of political, economic and social models to choose from. Anti-Americanism is especially virulent in Europe and Latin America, where countries have established their own distinctive ways—none made in America. Futurologist Jeremy Rifkin, in his recent book "The European Dream," hails an emerging European Union based on generous social welfare, cultural diversity and respect for international law—a model that's caught on quickly across the former nations of Eastern Europe and the Baltics. In Asia, the rise of autocratic capitalism in China or Singapore is as much a "model" for development as America's scandal-ridden corporate culture. "First we emulate," one Chinese businessman recently told the board of one U.S. multinational, "then we overtake."

Many are tempted to write off the new anti-Americanism as a temporary perturbation, or mere resentment. Blinded by its own myth, America has grown incapable of recognizing its flaws. For there is much about the American Dream to fault. If the rest of the world has lost faith in the American model—political, economic, diplomatic—it's partly for the very good reason that it doesn't work as well anymore.

AMERICAN DEMOCRACY: Once upon a time, the U.S. Constitution was a revolutionary document, full of epochal innovations—free elections, judicial review, checks and balances, federalism and, perhaps most important, a Bill of Rights. In the 19th and 20th centuries, countries around the world copied the document, not least in Latin America. So did Germany and Japan after World War II. Today? When nations write a new constitution, as dozens have in the past two decades, they seldom look to the American model.

When the soviets withdrew from Central Europe, U.S. constitutional experts rushed in. They got a polite hearing, and were sent home. Jiri Pehe, adviser to former president Vaclav Havel, recalls the Czechs' firm decision to adopt a European-style parliamentary system with strict limits on campaigning. "For Europeans, money talks too much in American democracy. It's very prone to certain kinds of corruption, or at least influence from powerful lobbies," he says. "Europeans would not want to follow that route." They also sought to limit the dominance of television, unlike in American campaigns where, Pehe says, "TV debates and photogenic looks govern election victories."

So it is elsewhere. After American planes and bombs freed the country, Kosovo opted for a European constitution. Drafting a post-apartheid constitution, South Africa rejected American-style federalism in favor of a German model, which leaders deemed appropriate for the social-welfare state they hoped to construct. Now fledgling African democracies look to South Africa as their inspiration, says John Stremlau, a former U.S. State Department official who currently heads the international relations department at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg: "We can't rely on the Americans." The new democracies are looking for a constitution written in modern times and reflecting their progressive concerns about racial and social equality, he explains. "To borrow Lincoln's phrase, South Africa is now Africa's 'last great hope'."

Much in American law and society troubles the world these days. Nearly all countries reject the United States' right to bear arms as a quirky and dangerous anachronism. They abhor the death penalty and demand broader privacy protections. Above all, once most foreign systems reach a reasonable level of affluence, they follow the Europeans in treating the provision of adequate social welfare is a basic right. All this, says Bruce Ackerman at Yale University Law School, contributes to the growing sense that American law, once the world standard, has become "provincial." The United States' refusal to apply the Geneva Conventions to certain terrorist suspects, to ratify global human-rights treaties such as the innocuous Convention on the Rights of the Child or to endorse the International Criminal Court (coupled with the abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo) only reinforces the conviction that America's Constitution and legal system are out of step with the rest of the world.

ECONOMIC PROSPERITY: The American Dream has always been chiefly economic—a dynamic ideal of free enterprise, free markets and individual opportunity based on merit and mobility. Certainly the U.S. economy has been extraordinarily productive. Yes, American per capita income remains among the world's highest. Yet these days there's as much economic dynamism in the newly industrializing economies of Asia, Latin America and even eastern Europe. All are growing faster than the United States. At current trends, the Chinese economy will be bigger than America's by 2040. Whether those trends will continue is not so much the question. Better to ask whether the American way is so superior that everyone else should imitate it. And the answer to that, increasingly, is no.

Much has made, for instance, of the differences between the dynamic American model and the purportedly sluggish and overregulated "European model." Ongoing efforts at European labor-market reform and fiscal cuts are ridiculed. Why can't these countries be more like Britain, businessmen ask, without the high tax burden, state regulation and restrictions on management that plague Continental economies? Sooner or later, the CW goes, Europeans will adopt the American model—or perish.

Yet this is a myth. For much of the postwar period Europe and Japan enjoyed higher growth rates than America. Airbus recently overtook Boeing in sales of commercial aircraft, and the EU recently surpassed America as China's top trading partner. This year's ranking of the world's most competitive economies by the World Economic Forum awarded five of the top 10 slots—including No. 1 Finland—to northern European social democracies. "Nordic social democracy remains robust," writes Anthony Giddens, former head of the London School of Economics and a "New Labour" theorist, in a recent issue of the New Statesman, "not because it has resisted reform, but because it embraced it."

This is much of the secret of Britain's economic performance as well. Lorenzo Codogno, co-head of European economics at the Bank of America, believes the British, like Europeans elsewhere, "will try their own way to achieve a proper balance." Certainly they would never put up with the lack of social protections afforded in the American system. Europeans are aware that their systems provide better primary education, more job security and a more generous social net. They are willing to pay higher taxes and submit to regulation in order to bolster their quality of life. Americans work far longer hours than Europeans do, for instance. But they are not necessarily more productive—nor happier, buried as they are in household debt, without the time (or money) available to Europeans for vacation and international travel. George Monbiot, a British public intellectual, speaks for many when he says, "The American model has become an American nightmare rather than an American dream."

Just look at booming bri-tain. Instead of cutting social welfare, Tony Blair's Labour government has expanded it. According to London's Centre for Policy Studies, public spending in Britain represented 43 percent of GDP in 2003, a figure closer to the Eurozone average than to the American share of 35 percent. It's still on the rise—some 10 percent annually over the past three years—at the same time that social welfare is being reformed to deliver services more efficiently. The inspiration, says Giddens, comes not from America, but from social-democratic Sweden, where universal child care, education and health care have been proved to increase social mobility, opportunity and, ultimately, economic productivity. In the United States, inequality once seemed tolerable because America was the land of equal opportunity. But this is no longer so. Two decades ago, a U.S. CEO earned 39 times the average worker; today he pulls in 1,000 times as much. Cross-national studies show that America has recently become a relatively difficult country for poorer people to get ahead. Monbiot summarizes the scientific data: "In Sweden, you are three times more likely to rise out of the economic class into which you were born than you are in the U.S."

Other nations have begun to notice. Even in poorer, pro-American Hungary and Poland, polls show that only a slender minority (less than 25 percent) wants to import the American economic model. A big reason is its increasingly apparent deficiencies. "Americans have the best medical care in the world," Bush declared in his Inaugural Address. Yet the United States is the only developed democracy without a universal guarantee of health care, leaving about 45 million Americans uninsured. Nor do Americans receive higher-quality health care in exchange. Whether it is measured by questioning public-health experts, polling citizen satisfaction or survival rates, the health care offered by other countries increasingly ranks above America's. U.S. infant mortality rates are among the highest for developed democracies. The average Frenchman, like most Europeans, lives nearly four years longer than the average American. Small wonder that the World Health Organization rates the U.S. healthcare system only 37th best in the world, behind Colombia (22nd) and Saudi Arabia (26th), and on a par with Cuba.

The list goes on: ugly racial tensions, sky-high incarceration rates, child-poverty rates higher than any Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development country except Mexico—where Europe, these days, inspires more admiration than the United States. "Their solutions feel more natural to Mexicans because they offer real solutions to real, and seemingly intractable, problems," says Sergio Aguayo, a prominent democracy advocate in Mexico City, referring to European education, health care and social policies. And while undemocratic states like China may, ironically, be among the last places where the United States still presents an attractive political and social alternative to authoritarian government, new models are rising in prominence. Says Julie Zhu, a college student in Beijing: "When I was in high school I thought America was this dreamland, a fabled place." Anything she bought had to be American. Now that's changed, she says: "When people have money, they often choose European products." She might well have been talking about another key indicator. Not long ago, the United States was destination number one for foreign students seeking university educations. Today, growing numbers are going elsewhere—to other parts of Asia, or Europe. You can almost feel the pendulum swinging.

FOREIGN POLICY: U.S. leaders have long believed military power and the American Dream went hand in hand. World War II was fought not just to defeat the Axis powers, but to make the world safe for the United Nations, the precursor to the —World Trade Organization, the European Union and other international institutions that would strengthen weaker countries. NATO and the Marshall Plan were the twin pillars upon which today's Europe were built.

Today, Americans make the same presumption, confusing military might with right. Following European criticisms of the Iraq war, the French became "surrender monkeys." The Germans were opportunistic ingrates. The British (and the Poles) were America's lone allies. Unsurprisingly, many of those listening to Bush's Inaugural pledge last week to stand with those defying tyranny saw the glimmerings of an argument for invading Iran: Washington has thus far shown more of an appetite for spreading ideals with the barrel of a gun than for namby-pamby hearts-and-minds campaigns. A former French minister muses that the United States is the last "Bismarckian power"—the last country to believe that the pinpoint application of military power is the critical instrument of foreign policy.

Contrast that to the European Union—pioneering an approach based on civilian instruments like trade, foreign aid, peacekeeping, international monitoring and international law—or even China, whose economic clout has become its most effective diplomatic weapon. The strongest tool for both is access to huge markets. No single policy has contributed as much to Western peace and security as the admission of 10 new countries—to be followed by a half-dozen more—to the European Union. In country after country, authoritarian nationalists were beaten back by democratic coalitions held together by the promise of joining Europe. And in the past month European leaders have taken a courageous decision to contemplate the membership of Turkey, where the prospect of EU membership is helping to create the most stable democratic system in the Islamic world. When historians look back, they may see this policy as being the truly epochal event of our time, dwarfing in effectiveness the crude power of America.

The United States can take some satisfaction in this. After all, it is in large part the success of the mid-century American Dream—spreading democracy, free markets, social mobility and multilateral cooperation—that has made possible the diversity of models we see today. This was enlightened statecraft of unparalleled generosity. But where does it leave us? Americans still invoke democratic idealism. We heard it in Bush's address, with his apocalyptic proclamation that "the survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands." But fewer and fewer people have the patience to listen.

Headlines in the British press were almost contemptuous: DEFIANT BUSH DOES NOT MENTION THE WAR, HAVE I GOT NUKES FOR YOU and HIS SECOND-TERM MISSION: TO END TYRANNY ON EARTH. Has this administration learned nothing from Iraq, they asked? Can this White House really expect to command support from the rest of the world, with its different strengths and different dreams? The failure of the American Dream has only been highlighted by the country's foreign-policy failures, not caused by them. The true danger is that Americans do not realize this, lost in the reveries of greatness, speechifying about liberty and freedom.

Doesn't that just rock? It made me grin and punch the air and go "YES! Why doesn't anyone in America realize that?!" Seriously, my major problem with living in America isn't culture shock, it's people shock. I mean, I'm in Wellesley. Liberal arts college supposedly posssesing intelligent, cultured people and they still fail to see the extent of the world's dislike for them. They're so arrogant and convinced their system is right that it drives me insane - even a lot of the people that dislike Bush don't blame the system, but just the leader. *sighs* There are a few exceptions of course, but in general, I still end up feeling alienated.

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