I Need to Calm Down

Archive for March, 2008

A kick in the ass

Posted by Vox on 19 March 2008

I haven’t written much lately for a couple of reasons. First, a lot has been going on with my family lately, and while I don’t want to go into it, really, I’ve been doing a lot of therapeutic day trips and lunches instead of my usual activities. Second, I get overwhelmed easily; I forget that this is a blog and not my brain, and that I don’t have to write about everything. There has been a lot I’ve been thinking about and reading about lately, and every time I sit down to write an entry, I just start thinking, “Man, I have, like, 39 entries to write.”

So I’m hitting the reset button (figuratively, not literally).

Two issues that still need some attention:

1. Palestine. Nadia has been writing some fantastic entries on what is going down in Gaza, what Mahmoud Abbas has called ethnic cleansing [Source], much to the chagrin of Israel’s supporters (that is, U.S. officials told him he was overreacting … um, what?). Be sure to check out her interview from International Women’s Day. And she links to a bunch of other really great blogs. Go forth and click!

2. Andrea Smith’s tenure denial. I keep wanting to write about this. I have read a couple of Andrea Smith’s articles, and I am just starting to read “Conquest” as part of SPEAK’s Read-A-Thon, and this woman is absolutely amazing. She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2005, has countless publications, co-founded INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence, and has many other incredible assets to her C.V. You’d think she would be the dream candidate for tenure. The University of Michigan, though, has denied her tenure.

La Chola has been recording this, though. She has stats, she has analysis, and she has information on what you can do.

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

Keith Olbermann is my hero

Posted by Vox on 13 March 2008

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

And it’s a stupid law, anyway.

Posted by Vox on 12 March 2008

You heard me.

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Things that make me angry #579

Posted by Vox on 12 March 2008

This.

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - A bailiff who forgot about a woman locked in a courthouse holding cell and left her there for four days without food, water or access to a bathroom has been suspended for 30 days but will keep his job, officials said Wednesday.

Yeah, you read that right. He’s keeping his job. A slap on the wrist.

When I read that, I thought there had to be some mistake, and that the story would be about lawsuits and protests and so on. But nope, not a word about any outrage over this little wrist slap from anyone except … the Mexican consulate?

Washington County Cpl. Jarrod Hankins acted without “intentional misconduct” when he left Adriana Torres-Flores in the 9 1/2-by-10 1/2-foot cell, Sheriff Tim Helder said.

Hankins “became busy and simply forgot” about the woman last Thursday, leaving her in the cell with only a jacket until Monday morning.

“I realize some people may have expected Hankins to be terminated. However, my philosophy is if an employee makes a mistake while trying their best to perform their duties, I will try to salvage them,” Helder said in a statement.

Torres-Flores, 38, appeared in court last Thursday on charges of selling pirated CDs. While others pleaded guilty she pleaded not guilty, but Circuit Judge William Storey ordered her held because she is an illegal immigrant from Mexico, deputies said. [Full story]

Oh. I see. So it’s okay to leave a human being without food or water for four days, and instead of criminal neglect charges or, you know, getting fired, you get a slap on the wrist because they were born on the other side of an imaginary line and then had the unmitigated gall to cross it, is that the theory?

This is not an episode of “The Brady Bunch.” Drawing an artificial line in the sand does not give you the right to treat people worse that you would treat an animal. It burns me, it really does, that there were protests and articles and panic and outrage and comparisons to genocide and slavery over a slaughterhouse worker using a cattle prod on a cow’s eye, but this story, this one we’ll probably never hear a word about again.

Just because someone has broken the law by crossing a border does not mean that it is okay to deprive them of basic human rights. If Adriana Torres-Flores had been Nancy Worthington, Nice White Lady Born and Raised in Little Rock, that bailiff would be facing charges right now. But immigrants are only people if they have the documents to prove it in today’s America, I guess.

Posted in Human Rights, Immigration Rights, Police Brutality, WTF | 5 Comments »

An open letter to NOW

Posted by Vox on 10 March 2008

I have a lot of trouble taking you seriously. And no, it’s not because I’m sexist — I have my internalized hang-ups that come out, but this isn’t one of those. I mean, I used to support you. You supported the ERA! You wanted legislation to protect women’s rights! (What happened to that?)

But when you started talking about how unfair the media is to Sen. Clinton, I did a bit of a double-take. Not because I don’t think it’s true — the media has been very sexist in this election cycle, no lie — but because you started claiming that the racism wasn’t there.

Never mind that the focus of the media for months has been on how black women vote. Never mind that any time a black woman supports Obama in a news story, it is implied that she did so on skin color, and every time a black woman supports Clinton, it is implied that she’s bravely going against her race to vote on gender. Apparently, according to news media, black women can’t vote on the issues. That’s sexism AND racism.

Or how about Bill O’Reilly’s comments about Michelle Obama and “lynch parties”? That’s straight up racism right there, the “how dare she” make a comment about this country, doesn’t she “know her place” mentality shining right through.

And were you just not paying attention just last year, when there were near-daily stories about whether Obama is black enough or white enough or mixed race enough to lead the United States? Whether white people would vote for a black man, or African Americans would vote for someone with a white mother? Or a few days ago, when yet another news analysis about black voters hit the wire, as if black voters and black voters alone have carried Sen. Obama to this point? That obsession with Obama’s black identity and “cred”? That’s racism.

But that’s not the only reason I’m no longer taking you seriously. Because you are forgetting one woman who is, at this point in time, one of the two most politically powerful women in the United States, with Nancy Pelosi, who was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives. Dr. Condoleezza Rice (and how often her degree is forgotten) is the second woman and the second black person to ever serve as Secretary of State, the highest-ranked position in the cabinet and fifth in the line of succession for the presidency.

So the real reason I did a double take when you started complaining about Sen. Clinton’s treatment by the media, NOW, is because of Dr. Rice. Feminists complain when Sen. Clinton is called Hillary by the media. Where have you been when Dr. Rice is patronizingly called “Condie” by reporters and news anchors?

You’ve complained that the media is unfair to Sen. Clinton, but where were you when “rumors” were implying that Dr. Rice and President Bush had more than a professional relationship, and that this was what got her the job as Secretary of State? Where are you when news pieces cast Dr. Rice as the Bush administration’s “Mammy” figure?

You all complained that Sen. Ted Kennedy “betrayed women” when he endorsed Sen. Obama rather than Sen. Clinton. Where was NOW when Sen. Kennedy led the attacks on Dr. Rice during her nomination to the position? Where were you, saying that she should not be scrutinized because it was time for the first black women Secretary of State?

This isn’t the first time you’ve left a woman of color hanging, either. When Don Imus called the Rutger’s women “nappy-headed hos,” it was only after days of angry letters that you finally deigned to say something. I see nothing on your website supporting Dr. Andrea Smith, who has written quite a bit on women’s rights and sexual violence and who was recently denied tenure by the University of Michigan. Why do you never speak up against American corporations that test birth control and HPV vaccines on women in Asia, Africa, and Latin America? You’re in favor of those options, but you ignore the fact that women around the world suffer to find the right mixture for you to have guilt-free sex and protected cervixes.

I’ve seen you jump bad when Rep. Pelosi is insulted by the media, NOW. I’ve seen you defend other (white) female politicians. And I don’t think it’s wrong for you to defend Sen. Clinton. But when you only pay attention to the rights of women who look like you and ignore blatant sexism toward women of color and exploitation of women around the world by U.S. companies, well … I think you get the picture.

- Vox

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

The genocides we don’t hear about

Posted by Vox on 5 March 2008

Inspired by Nadia.

We are never allowed to use the word “genocide” to describe what has been happening to us for the last 60 years. In the mainstream united states media (this includes teachers and textbooks as forms of media) there is only one genocide, The Holocaust.

Nadia talks about the current genocide against indigenous Palestinians; in comments, Aaminah discusses the death of millions of Native Americans during colonization and “Manifest Destiny.” Both mention other genocides.

Here is a list of the other genocides we don’t learn about, off the top of my head:

Irish Genocide: In the mid-1600s, under the rule of Elizabeth I and the Stuarts of England and then intensified during the Interregnum of Oliver Cromwell, English settlers declared war on Irish Catholics. Many Irish people were killed, and many more were turned off of their land and in many cases forcibly removed to western Ireland; confiscated land was then turned over the English settlers. There are some arguments, too, that the Great Famine in the mid-1800s was artificially created by the British and that during this period, Ireland produced more than enough food to feed its people.

The Black War: This was, if I understand it, the start of Australian genocide against indigenous Australians in the early 1800s. The Aboriginal population of Tasmania was reduced from several thousand to 300. Other Australian policies against indigenous Australians included the Stolen Generation, where thousands of mixed-blood Aboriginal children were kidnapped from their homes and forced to assimilate to white society in a deliberate attempt to destroy Aboriginal culture.

The Filipino-American War: While not officially declared a genocide, the Filipino-American War, from 1899-1913, led to the deaths of 1.4 million Filipinos between 1899 and 1905, 600,000 in Luzon alone, far more than the estimated 150,000 who fought U.S. occupation. Many of those killed were women and children. Most of the U.S. generals sent to the Philippines were retired generals who had led the genocide on the Plains Indian nations in the U.S., and they used many of the same tactics. Because the U.S. sought to destroy Filipino sovereignty and instituted a program of schools and government programs in their new colony meant to assimilate surviving Filipinos to U.S. culture and destroy Filipino culture, it can be classified as genocide.

The Armenian Genocide: This was actually one of the genocides that inspired Hitler (along with the U.S. reservation system and genocide against Native Americans). He is, in fact, quoted as saying that “No one remembers the Armenians.” From 1915 to 1923, the Ottoman empire deported nearly 2,000,000 Armenians and killed about 800,000 of them, indiscriminate of age, gender, and 2,500 years of living in their homeland.

The Holodomor: From 1931-1934, Russian Soviets methodically and purposefully destroyed crops in the Ukraine and Kazakhstan, without providing any food for the people who depended on them. Additionally, Stalin had seeds and farm animals confiscated, removing other sources of food. Six million died of starvation. During this time period, Russia also deported other ethnic minorities, killing many in the process.

Porajmos: While the Holocaust, the Nazi genocide of the Jews, is taught in schools, Jews only account for 6 million of the 11 million murdered by Nazi Germany. A large number of these were Romani people, who were explicitly mentioned in the Final Solution (to be dealt with as with the Jews) and who made up the main body of those experimented on by Dr. Mengele at Auschwitz. Other populations targeted were homosexuals, Catholic clergy who refused to join the Nazis or who provided sanctuary for those targeted, political prisoners and the mentally disabled and mentally ill (the latter in the T-4 Euthanasia program).

Khmer Rouge: In Cambodia during the Viet Nam War, the Khmer Rouge came to power and promptly began torturing and mass killing ethnic minorities, political opponents, and any other group that fell under their leaders’ suspicions, such as Buddhist monks. People were forcibly removed from cities and sent out to the countryside to work on farms, often as slave labor. Over 1.5 million people were killed.

Guatemalan Civil War: Documents from the Guatemalan Civil War show that it was not so much a war as a genocide. Over 80 percent of those killed were Mayans. Rigoberta Menchu wrote about many of the late-night raids and military actions against the Maya in her book “I, Rigoberta Menchu.”

Burundi and Rwanda: There have been several instances of ethnic cleansing between the Hutu and Tutsi people. In the 1970s, the Tutsis killed and drove out thousands of Hutus in Burundi; many escaped to Rwanda. In 1993, the Hutus killed many of the Tutsis. That’s about all I know on this one.

Kosovo: During the 1990s, the Serbian government enacted “ethnic cleansing” of Kosovar Albanians. Many fled or were forced to leave. They were eventually able to return and gain some rights after U.N. and NATO intervention in the area.

Like I said, these are off of the top of my head; I may have some facts wrong and there are certainly cases I missed. Please let me know.

Isn’t it time we started teaching kids about this in school? Before we repeat history again, as we’re doing in Iraq right now? (No, really; read about the Filipino-American War, the Korean War, and the Viet Nam War, and tell me that there aren’t similarities.)

People who have been victims of genocides have the right to not have their history erased and ignored. Ignoring all of these horrible crimes — and I know that’s barely scratching the surface — is criminal, too.

But it’s easier just to teach a white-washed history, isn’t it? “The Civil War ended slavery and everyone was happy! The end! The Nazis killed the Jews but then the U.S. and England made them stop and all the Jews moved to Israel and everyone was happy! The end! What? The Armenians? The Native Americans? Imperialism? Colonialism? No, no, that’s not important. What’s important is that everyone was happy. The end!”

Posted in Imperialism, Violence | 7 Comments »

Sexism and Sen. Clinton

Posted by Vox on 5 March 2008

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Maybe I missed something?

Posted by Vox on 5 March 2008

But why the fuck are almost all of the actors in “21″ (the film adaptation of “Bringing Down the House”) decidedly NOT Asian?

Posted in WTF | No Comments »

Blog redirect: Intercontinental Cry

Posted by Vox on 4 March 2008

I’ve linked IC before, but if you haven’t checked it out, head over there. I think Intercontinental Cry is one of the best blogs out there on indigenous and land rights issues.

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Dear memoirists

Posted by Vox on 4 March 2008

STOP LYING. AND STOP EXPLOITING PEOPLE WITH REAL STORIES.

Thanks!

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »