Archive for April, 2004

Why isn’t infertility grounds for fault-based divorce?

Posted by Ampersand | April 14th, 2004

Same-sex marriage opponents have said, over and over, that denying equal marriage rights to same-sex couples is justified because same-sex couples cannot naturally concieve children together. Legal marriage is based, according to this argument, on heterosexual fertility.

But here’s a question. According to Stephen Nock - a scholar often cited as an expert by SSM opponents - “the traditional fault-based grounds” for ending marriage in the United States include “felony life-or-death convictions, physical or sexual abuse of a child or of the spouse, adultery, and abandonment.” (See “Marriage Law: Obsolete or Cutting Edge?” in Michigan Journal of Gender & Law, 10 Mich. J. Gender & L. 21, 2003).

If fertility is the core of legal marriage in the US, then why was infertility not a traditional fault-based ground for divorce?

Abuse was - so clearly, treating each other decently, without violence, is a core legal requirement of marriage in the USA.

Adultry was - so clearly, fidelity is a core legal requirement of marriage in the USA.

But ability to bear children was not a traditional ground for fault-based divorce.

How on earth did the legislature and the courts overlook that, since - according to SSM opponants - bearing children is virtually the only legal justification for marriage?

(P.S. Yes, I know I posted this general line of thought before - but I didn’t get an answer then, plus I didn’t have the Stephen Nock reference then, so what the heck.)

“They are forcing their way into our towns, breaking our doors down, saying, `We are sodomites and there is nothing you can do about it.’”

Posted by Ampersand | April 13th, 2004

The title of this post comes from this article from the Chicago Tribune, about homophobia in the South. And yes, the woman who said it was being serious.

From later on in the article:

Josh Runyon, 27, who grew up in Dayton, used to believe he would go to hell because he is gay. Everywhere he went, people reminded him of it–on the street, in the fast-food restaurant where he worked and in the church where he worshiped.

Since he came out at age 14, Runyon, the son of a preacher, has grown used to Christians telling him that his sexual orientation is an abomination and quoting the Bible to make their point. Some offered to pray for him; others threatened to burn a cross on his front lawn if he didn’t renounce his sexuality.

“Christianity stopped making sense to me, so when I turned 18, I left the church. I just didn’t feel welcome,” said Runyon, who later moved to Chattanooga. “People are locked in ideas from 20 years ago. I was taught that homosexuality is a sin and that gay people were going to hell. So I decided to stop going to church and just be gay.”

Rev. Matthew Nevels, a former Southern Baptist minister, said he left the convention after church members shunned his son when he was dying of AIDS. Nevels, of Chattanooga, is president of Parents, Family and Friends of Lesbians and Gays.

Of course, the kind of “Christians” who shunned Nevels’ son don’t represent all Christians; not all Christians are assholes. But those who are assholes sure manage to make all the other Christians look bad, don’t they? It’s really unfair to the decent Christians out there.

Via Mouse Words.

Charges against Melissa Ann Rowland dropped

Posted by Ampersand | April 13th, 2004

From the Salt Lake Tribune:

Acknowledging they have reservations about Melissa Ann Rowland’s mental health, prosecutors agreed to drop a murder charge against the woman for allegedly refusing a Caesarean section that may have saved her unborn twin boy.

Instead, Rowland, 28, pleaded guilty Wednesday to two counts of third-degree felony child endangerment in a deal that could end her three-month stay in jail. The agreement, though, did little to appease women’s rights activists who say prosecutors, by charging Rowland with murder, dehumanized all women.

Teenage girl dies after late-term abortion

Posted by Ampersand | April 13th, 2004

The Detroit News reports on the tragic death of Tamiia Russell, a fifteen-year-old Detroit girl who died due to complications from a second-semester abortion. As the article points out, abortion-related deaths are very rare; unsurprisingly, pro-life groups are attempting to turn Tamiia’s death into a referendum on abortion in general and late-term abortions in particular (Tamiia was 24 weeks pregnant when she died).

This pro-life news source gives more details, but I’m not sure how reliable it is. If it is reliable, however, then WomanCare - the clinic which performed Tamiia’s abortion ? deserves to be shut down, and some of its employees should face real penalties. However, since the article doesn’t attribute many of its allegations, read it with a grain of salt. (Link via The S.I.C.L.E. Cell).

The facility vaginally inserted laminaria, a seaweed used to begin dilation. Russell was sent home, where she confessed to her family that she was pregnant and had begun the abortion procedure.

When her mother and aunt called WomanCare, they said the abortion could not be stopped once the laminaria is inserted.

However, according to eMedicine Journal, though there are some medical risks, “pregnancies have safely been carried to term after laminaria insertion and removal.” In fact, many crisis pregnancy centers offer laminaria removal for women who have changed their minds after beginning an abortion procedure.

Russell’s mother drove her daughter to the abortion facility the next day to finish the abortion, which was performed by Alberto Hodari. Upon her return home, she experienced severe bleeding — “so much so she soaked an entire mattress,” Redden told LifeNews.com.

WomanCare told her family that such bleeding was “normal” following an abortion, and not to take her to the hospital.

Concerned for Russell, the family called paramedics who rushed her to Sinai-Grace Hospital. Russell died on the way to the Hospital.

Her death is a tragedy. But to argue that her death proves that abortion should be banned is ridiculous. All surgical procedures - however safe - occasionally have complications leading to death. There are sometimes irresponsible doctors in every medical field.

Right now, abortion is an extremely safe procedure (although no procedure, including birth, is absolutely safe). That won’t be the case if abortion is outlawed.

On Raising a Sensitive Son

Posted by Ampersand | April 13th, 2004
  • Check out this Salon article about the writer’s son, a gentle boy with no interest in sports (in contrast to his tomboy sister). In some ways - particular in his preference to playing make-believe on his own over sports with the boys - Matt reminds me of myself at his age.
    Liza pays about as much attention to gender expectations as she does to my entreaties to keep her braids out of her dinner plate. When she wrestles with the boys, no one perceives her behavior as a “problem.” So why should Matt have to toughen up? What’s wrong with being scared of violent battles? Our expectations of how boys should behave are as deeply rooted in our psyches as our expectations of wolves. Wolves, and boys, are not supposed to step out of character.

    A friend asked if I’m scared my son will be gay. Right now, the question seems irrelevant. And right now, like any mother, I love my son in all his specialness. Like any mother, I just want him to feel accepted. I don’t want him to change; I want the world to change.

    By the end of the article, it’s clear that Matt (who is seven) is taking small steps towards a socially-acceptable masculinity. But it’s hard to pull that off, and as he gets older the standards he’ll be expected to live up to will become more stringent, and the punishments for failure more brutal. The result, all too frequently, is to teach boys who don’t fit in to hold themselves in contempt. Frankly, if I were a parent of a sensitive, gentle boy, I’d seriously consider home-schooling.

    Matt and boys like him are why sexists who talk about the need for boys to be correctly gender-socialized drive me up a fucking wall. They should all be beaten up, insulted, and isolated every day for five or six years until they can begin to understand the torture they want to condemn wimpy boys to.

    Boys don’t need gender socialization - they need to be rescued from gender socialization.

    Via Ms Musings, who has some good comments.

  • Some more stuff Amp is reading

    Posted by Ampersand | April 13th, 2004

    Just a few links hanging around on my desktop…

    • Take the LGF Quiz: Little Green Footballs or late German Fascists?

    • I have a reason to live! Only three weeks until the new Stephen Sondheim album is released!
    • A New York Times article reports on progress being made in producing remote controls which will be implanted in our brains, so we can control our devices with just our thoughts. Kewl!
    • A good Head Heeb post on Israel’s security fence points out that the wall has been good for both Israelis and Palestinians where it has followed the Green Line. (It’s been good for Palestinians because it’s easier to be kept out of Israel by a wall than it is to be kept out of Israel by an occupying army bent on collective punishment).

      My view has always been that the Wall would be a good idea if it weren’t for Israel’s attempt to use it to grab territory beyond the green line. Israel has, of late, been re-routing the Wall to be closer to the green line. So give some credit to Israel; and credit as well to Israel’s critics, without whom Israel would probably have stuck to their original plan.

      Unfortunately, Israel is still planning to hold onto settlements it should let go, which will only prolong the bloodshed.

    • Speaking of Israel, a Zogby poll shows that ” in direct opposition to Congressional attitudes, a majority of Americans now believe that Congress should hold Israel accountable for maintaining programs of weapons of mass destruction and for its human rights violations in the Palestinian Territories.” How strange - am I actually part of the mainstream on an issue?
    • New to the blogroll: Jewschool.com.
    • The US Catholic Bishops website has court transcripts of the three ongoing partial-birth abortion ban trials. The transcripts are in .pdf format, unfortunately (I find html superior for reading), but still interesting reading. Via After Abortion.
    • Some testimony has been a setback for the pro-life folks; their own witness admitted under cross-examination that “partial-birth” abortion might include D&E abortions as well as D&X abortions. That kind of over-broad definition was one reason the Supreme Court has found past “partial-birth” abortion bans to be unconstitutional.
    • Interesting post by Robert Corr about when in a pregnancy “personhood” can be said to begin. His view is that the same conditions that medicine uses to define death should determine when abortion is acceptable. From a debate Robert links to:
      Until the 20th week … there is no complex cerebral cortex and no major central nervous activity. That is a condition universally regarded as a state of death in adults. An adult human being in such a state cannot really be “killed,” just unplugged. And such an act would not be disrespectful of their individual existence because that existence has already ceased, and only a body remains.

      In the case of a fetus, you’d replace “has already ceased” with “has not yet begun,” but the same general principle applies. I don’t entirely agree with Robert, but it’s very interesting nonetheless. Via Feministe.

    • It’s basically just a very long commercial (or, as the Times calls it, an “advertainment”), but I thought The Adventures of Seinfeld and Superman was a hoot.
    • Why aren’t politicians flocking to cater to the single woman vote? Ms. Musings has a discussion and many links.
    • S.K. Elkins discusses “same-sex marriage and the religion in which I was raised.” Which, in her case, is Reform Judaism. There’s more than I can sum up, and it’s all good, so go read it; but I want to quote this bit in particular:
      So can we please stop framing this as a “religious versus secular” debate now? Please? Because for people who belong to faiths which already recognize same-sex marriage, that whole shtick is not only getting really old, it’s also got to be getting really insulting.

      This is a legal and a constitutional issue. The only way to frame this as a religious issue at all, IMO, would be to frame it as one of religious discrimination.

      And I don’t think that any of us really wants to go that route, do we?

      Actually, I’ve been wondering what would happen if some pro-gay religious organization did sue on those grounds…

    • Gabriel Rosenberg has been defending this syllogism:
      1. Legal parents ought to be married.

      2. Gays are legal parents.
      3. therefore, Gays ought to be married.

      Start here and then use the links at the top of the post to move through Gabriel’s discussion; it’s really excellent, closely-reasoned work. The debating technique - accepting a major premise of the opposition, and showing how that premise actually supports Gabriel’s case - is classic.

    • On the other hand, if you want to test how strong your stomach is, read this anti-same-sex-marriage piece by sci-fi novelist Orson Scott Card. His hatred - not just for gays, but for left-wingers in general - is not well hidden. I particularly like the bit where he brings up the old “gays are trying to recruit your children!” myth.

    On this day in women’s history…

    Posted by bean | April 13th, 2004

    April 13

    1854: (Birthday) Lucy Craft Laney born in Macon, Georgia. Laney, a free black woman, opened what became the Haines Normal and Industrial Institute in Augusta, Georgia, that grew from five students in a basement to a four-acre campus of almost 1,000 students.

    1919: (Birthday) Madalyn Murray O’Hair, atheist lawyer who won an American citizen’s rights to be free FROM religion as well as free to be for the religion of one’s choice in Murry v. Curlett which outlawed prayer in public schools (1963) after her son Bill had objected to being forced to participate in school prayers. The day after the case went to the U.S. Supreme Court, Madolyn was dismissed from her welfare department job as incompetent. Since 1975, she has been the subject of a never-ending urban legend claiming that she is ” is trying to get religious broadcasting banned from American airwaves.” Recent versions of this urban legend claim that her efforts would ban shows like Touched by an Angel from the airwaves.

    1933: (A First) Ruth Bryan Owen is appointed minister to Denmark by President Franklin Roosevelt, becoming the first woman to lead a U.S. diplomatic mission.

    On this day in women’s history…

    Posted by bean | April 11th, 2004

    April 11

    1865: (Birthday) Mary Ovington, cofounder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), born in Brooklyn, New York.

    [Ovington] served as chair of [the NAACP] board from 1919-1932 and became its treasurer. Acting many times as a mediator between factions within the organization, she found herself in later years at odds with W. E. B. Du Bois who favored limited integration while Ovington favored full integration and was active in the fight for school desegregation. She wrote several books on black leaders and several novels.

    1881: Spelman Seminary (later Spelman College) for Black women opens in Atlanta, Georgia.

    1953: Oveta Culp Hobby is sworn in as Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare as the second woman to ever hold a U.S. President’s cabinet post.

    Score a point for the liberal-biased faggot reporter

    Posted by Ampersand | April 10th, 2004

    Oh, this is priceless. From Wonkette:

    We’ve just been blessed with a fascinating series of emails, in which an angry news consumer engages in what might called a Socratic dialogue with a reporter in the news division of a major television network. It took place today, Matt Drudge is involved, and it involves calling people cocksuckers. Enjoy!

    As Kevin Drum says, make sure you read all the way to the end.

    It’s Googlebombing time.

    Posted by Ampersand | April 10th, 2004

    Swiped from Notes from the Tundra:

    An anti-semitic group has googlebombed the word “Jew” so that searches for the word make their own own nasty page Google’s first hit. When you type in “jew” and hit “I’m feeling lucky” on Google, you get to their website. If you link to wikipedia’s page for it, like this ~ Jew ~ then eventually, google’s first hit will end up there.

    Jew, jew, jew, jew, jew, jew, jew

    (If you’re not familiar with it, you can read more about google bombing here.)

    On this day in women’s history…

    Posted by bean | April 9th, 2004

    April 10

    1862: the New York State legislature (while people’s attention was centered on the Civil War) took away a mother’s right of equal guardianship over her children and the control of minor children’s person and property on the husband’s death that had been granted for the first time in history a few years before. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who had campaigned for the reform, succeeded in having it reinstated soon afterwards.

    1882: (Birthday) Frances Perkins, first woman appointed to a cabinet position (Secretary of Labor), born in Boston, Massachussetts.

    Before Frances Perkins would accept the Cabinet appointment as Secretary of Labor, she told President-elect Franklin Delano Roosevelt, “I don’t want to say yes to you unless you know what I’d like to do and are willing to have me go ahead and try.”

    She then read Roosevelt her list. It contained much of what would become the New Deal’s most important social welfare and labor legislation: direct federal aid to the states for unemployment relief, public works, maximum hours, minimum wages, child labor laws, unemployment insurance, social security, and revitalized public employment service. “Are you sure you want these thing done?” She asked. “Because you don’t want me for Secretary of Labor if you don’t.”

    Roosevelt never hesitated. He was convinced that the capable and strong minded woman in his study was the most qualified person for the job. “Yes,” he said. “I’ll back you.” With that, Perkins immediately accepted the post and served as Secretary of Labor the entire 12 years of the Roosevelt Administration. She was the first woman ever to serve as a Cabinet member and she served longer than any other Secretary of Labor.

    1930: (Birthday) Dolores Huerta, Chicana cofounder of the United Farm Workers Union, born in Dawson, New Mexico.

    1960: (A First) Women are ordained as pastors in Sweden’s Evangelical Lutheran Church for the first time in the Church’s history.

    1970: (A First) New York State legislature passes into law unrestricted abortion rights during the first six months of pregnancy.

    Same-Sex Marriage does so effect Het Marriage

    Posted by Ampersand | April 9th, 2004

    A post on Notes From the Tundra suggests that opposite-sex marriages are changed by same-sex marriage, after all. Here’s a sample:

    Speaking as someone who will have been in a state-sanctioned, state-approved, culturally -encouraged heterosexual marriage for ten years this October, I know that the recognition of SSM has an effect on how I feel about my own marriage. Because you see, something happened recently, just over a month ago now, something that has made me rethink my original “WTF?” response to the anti-SSM folks’ arguments.

    What happened just over a month ago now was that Multnomah County, Oregon–the county in which I live–ruled that for the state to refuse to recognize the marriages of same-sex couples was discriminatory and unconstitutional, and therefore ordered the county offices to stop denying marriage licenses to couples on the basis of gender.

    And that did affect my feelings about my own marriage, and in ways far deeper and more profound than I ever would have anticipated. Something about my own marriage changed last month. Something important.

    What changed about my marriage was that for the first time in nearly a decade, I could actually feel pretty okay about it.

    That doesn’t fully cover the author’s thoughts - I definitely recommend reading the whole thing.

    Disclosure: Hey, am I ethically required to mention that the writer I’m linking to is my housemate of nearly 20 years, or is that not necessary?

    About that Daily Kos flap

    Posted by Ampersand | April 9th, 2004

    I don’t have a thing to say about the Daily Kos flap, other than I think Kos has acted with a lot more decency than most of his critics. However, Matt Stoller has lots to say, and what he says is well worth reading.

    There is no history of ethnic strife in Iraq

    Posted by Ampersand | April 9th, 2004

    I generally avoid blogging about Iraq, both because it’s too depressing and because there are other bloggers who do it so much better than I could. But this quote about Paul Wolfowitz’s February 2003 testimony before congress is too stunning not to reproduce.

    In his testimony, Mr. Wolfowitz ticked off several reasons why he believed a much smaller coalition peacekeeping force than General Shinseki envisioned would be sufficient to police and rebuild postwar Iraq. He said there was no history of ethnic strife in Iraq, as there was in Bosnia or Kosovo. He said Iraqi civilians would welcome an American-led liberation force that “stayed as long as necessary but left as soon as possible,” but would oppose a long-term occupation force. And he said that nations that oppose war with Iraq would likely sign up to help rebuild it. “I would expect that even countries like France will have a strong interest in assisting Iraq in reconstruction,” Mr. Wolfowitz said. He added that many Iraqi expatriates would likely return home to help.

    ….Enlisting countries to help to pay for this war and its aftermath would take more time, he said. “I expect we will get a lot of mitigation, but it will be easier after the fact than before the fact,” Mr. Wolfowitz said. Mr. Wolfowitz spent much of the hearing knocking down published estimates of the costs of war and rebuilding, saying the upper range of $95 billion was too high….Moreover, he said such estimates, and speculation that postwar reconstruction costs could climb even higher, ignored the fact that Iraq is a wealthy country, with annual oil exports worth $15 billion to $20 billion. “To assume we’re going to pay for it all is just wrong,” he said.

    Oy, oy, oy, oy.

    Via Political Animal.

    Abuse of people dressed as funny animals department

    Posted by Ampersand | April 9th, 2004

    Alas reader Lucia sends in this Foxnews link:

    Easter Bunny Whipped by Pa. Church Group

    GLASSPORT, Pa. — A church trying to teach about the crucifixion of Jesus performed an Easter show with actors whipping the Easter bunny and breaking eggs, upsetting several parents and young children.

    People who attended Saturday’s performance at Glassport’s memorial stadium quoted performers as saying, “There is no Easter bunny,” and described the show as being a demonstration of how Jesus was crucified.

    And where the Church goes, can commerce be far behind? Check out Burger King’s disturbing new ad site, Subservient Chicken. You can tell it to do anything - dance, read a book, watch tv, make a pillow fort, whatever. Make sure to ask it to “eat me” to get an especially disturbing close-up.

    Defending Rachel Corrie (yet again)

    Posted by Ampersand | April 9th, 2004

    While criticizing Kos’ recent remarks, Mark Kleiman says he’s “prepared to defend” his response to someone calling Rachel Corrie a peace activist:

    “Peace activist” my Aunt Fanny! Rachel Corrie never called for Palestinians to make peace with Israelis. She only wanted the Israelis to stop hitting back. She was an unarmed participant in the armed struggle to kick the Jews out of Israel.

    Her death, like the death of any human being, was a sad thing, but there’s no evidence that the man driving the bulldozer intended it.

    I feel a lot sorrier for the people — Jews and Arabs — who weren’t deliberately getting in the way of earth-moving equipment in support of a terrorist campaign, and who died at the hands of Rachel Corrie’s beloved Palestinian “resistance” for the crime of taking the wrong bus.

    1. Did Rachel Corrie support terrorism?

    I can’t imagine that Mark will be able to defend most of what he wrote without resorting to guilt-by-association. Nothing in Corrie’s writings indicated that her goal was “to kick the Jews out of Israel”; rather, she wrote that she’d welcome “a democratic Israeli-Palestinian state within my lifetime,” which isn’t consistent with the kind of anti-Semitism Mark implies Corrie supported.

    Mark states that Rachel opposed all Israeli self-defense. From Rachel’s writings, it’s clear that she was passionately driven by Israeli actions against ordinary Palestinian civilians; there’s no evidence that she opposed Israelis firing back when fired upon.

    If Israel had been respecting Palestinian human rights all along - by not allowing settlers to steal Palestinian land, by not destroying the orchards and homes of Palestinians who have not been convicted (or in most cases, even accused) of terrorist acts, by not engaging in collective punishment of Palestinians, and by not using the IDF to terrorize many innocent Palestinians - if, in other words, Israel had kept to the green line and attacked only those Palestinians who made armed attacks on Israelis - then it seems unlikely that Rachel would have been protesting Israeli actions.

    Rachel never wrote clearly about terrorism; Mark may consider this evidence that she must have supported terrorism. This is as illogical as assuming that pro-Israel writers who never mention collective punishment must favor collective punishment.

    Rachel died protecting the house of Samir Nassrallah, a Palestinian pharmacist. Despite the fact that the Israelis have presumably investigated him following Corrie’s death (since evidence that Corrie was defending a terrorist would be very helpful to Israel), there is no evidence that Nassrallah is a terrorist or provides support for terrorism; nor is there any evidence of smuggling tunnels under his (no longer existing) house, as some folks have claimed. The most that can be said against him is that he provided a floor for human rights activists like Corrie to sleep on, and that he’s been a critic of Israel. And that he’s Palestinian.

    So in what way was defending Nassrallah’s home “support of a terrorist campaign”? Mark’s statement is only coherent if any Palestinian criticism or resistance to Israel - no matter how peaceful, no matter how unarmed – is defined as a terrorist act. (It’s all part of the resistance, after all). Palestinians have no human rights, and anyone who defends their human rights is defending terrorism.

    Or, I suppose, Mark has some solid evidence showing that Nassrallah is a terrorist or actively supports terrorists (funny how he has evidence the IDF apparently does not). In which case, I trust he’ll share that evidence soon.

    Finally, it’s possible that Mark considers the International Solidarity Movement, of which Rachel was a member, a terrorist organization. However, it’s been eleven months since the IDF raided the ISM office in Beit Sahour, taking all their files and computers. No charges have been filed, nor has any evidence linking the ISM to terrorism been released - which suggests that no such evidence exists.

    2. Was Rachel Corrie’s death justifiable?

    Since the Israeli military has refused to allow an independent investigation of Rachel’s death, it’s impossible to know if she was deliberately murdered. However, I don’t think that’s the relevant issue.

    As I wrote shortly after Rachel’s death, the question is, does the IDF run its bulldozing operations in a way that puts the highest possible priority on not risking civilian lives (not just peace activists, but also Palestinian civilians)? I think it’s pretty clear that they do not. Amnesty International rightly pointed out that Rachel’s death was one of a series of civilians killed by IDF bulldozers. From The Independent (February 6 2003):

    Kamla Sa’id, 65, was found dead in the rubble of her family home after Israeli army sappers dynamited it during a raid on the al-Maghazi refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, Palestinian sources said. Doctors at the nearby Al-Aqsa hospital, where she was taken, said she died of a crushed chest.

    The Israeli army said it was checking the reports of Ms Sa’id’s death, and claimed soldiers had carefully checked the building before demolishing it. Ms Sa’id would not be the first Palestinian to die in this way: there have been previous well documented cases. One of her stepsons, Khaled Sa’id, said: “Israeli troops were acting in a brutal way, they got us all out of the house so fast and in an aggressive manner, they gave no chance for us to see who was out and who was in.” He said Ms Sa’id was partially deaf and could not hear warnings from the soldiers to leave the house.

    The Israeli army demolished the house because it used to be the home of another of Ms Sa’id’s stepsons, Baha Sa’id, who killed two Israelis in an attack on the Jewish settlement of Kfar Darom in September 2000 before being shot dead.

    There have been other occasions when Palestinians were crushed to death when the Israeli army demolished their homes on top of them. One of the best-documented cases was in Nablus in April last year, when eight members of the al-Shu’bi family died because an Israeli soldier bulldozed their house, despite warnings from neighbours that there were people inside.

    In December, just a few miles north of Ms Sa’id’s home, Ashur Salem, a 68-year-old man, was crushed to death when Israeli soldiers blew up his house, according to witnesses. His son said when he found the old man’s body, his head was “like a bar of chocolate, it was only two centimetres thick”.

    But there have also been instances when Palestinian claims that people had been crushed to death in house demolitions turned out not to be true. There was a case in Jenin where Palestinians assumed a missing relative had died, only for him to later turn up alive.

    The Israeli army routinely demolishes the homes of Palestinian militants, even after their deaths, claiming the suffering it inflicts on their families acts as a deterrent. International human rights groups have condemned the practice as collective punishment, which is outlawed under the Geneva Conventions.

    In practice, the relatives of suicide bombers and other dead militants are often provided with new homes by the militant groups, while their neighbours, whose homes are often also damaged or even destroyed in the course of the demolition, are the ones who are left homeless.

    Recently there has been a spate of demolitions of houses and shops in the occupied territories whose Palestinian owners are not connected to any militant groups or attacks on Israelis, on the basis that they were built without the correct permits.

    The IDF’s bulldozing methods have demonstrated a pattern of reckless disregard for civilian life. (And before anyone asks: yes, I think Palestinian terrorists are worse. But I also think the IDF should be held to a higher standard than “better than people who bomb buses.”)

    There is only one responsible way to bulldoze an area when civilians (protestors or otherwise) are present; you park the machine a safe distance away until police or soldiers have detained the civilians, and only when you know that every single civilian is safely out of the area do you proceed. To do otherwise - to plow a bulldozer into an area which may contain civilians - is morally wrong.

    Several people have excused what happened to Rachel Corrie by pointing out that Israeli bulldozers have unusually large blind spots. But that only makes things worse. Larger blind spots make it more likely that a civilian will be killed, and make it even more essential that the area be completely cleared of civilians before bulldozing begins.

    Mark’s implication that the IDF is free of blame if Corrie wasn’t intentionally murdered is, to my mind, grade-school morality. The IDF has the ability and the responsibility to make civilian safety a priority; they have to do more than merely refrain from actively murdering protestors.

    (Note: What I wrote above is recycled from a post written shortly after Corrie’s death.)

    3. Was Rachel Corrie a “peace activist.”

    I think calling Rachel a “peace” activist may be a misnomer, if by peace activist you mean pacifist. She clearly supported the right of Palestinians to engage in armed resistance in the occupied territories, which is not an unreasonable view (as long as it doesn’t extend to supporting killing unarmed civilians or blowing up buses). Nonetheless, Rachel’s actual activities consisted of non-violent protests to protect human rights; since she was there to support human rights, not peace, it’s more accurate to call her a human rights activist.

    (On the other hand, one could argue that there can’t be peace as long as Palestinians lack basic human rights, and so activism for human rights is activism for peace.)

    I don’t agree with everything Rachel wrote; the situation in Palestine is more complex than her writing (or Mark’s) indicates. Still, it’s easy to understand how someone could lose track of nuance living with Palestinians suffering under Israeli collective punishment. In the end, I think that human rights activists who die unarmed, in the protection of the rights of noncombatants, are heroes, and deserve admiration and respect.

    I’ve often enjoyed Mark’s writing, and I’m not going to do anything silly like delink him (like he’d even notice!). Nonetheless, his comments about Corrie - and his implication that because some Palestinians blow up buses, all Palestinian resistance should be considered terrorism - deserve nothing but contempt.

    On this day in women’s history…

    Posted by bean | April 9th, 2004

    April 9

    1923: The U.S. Supreme Court holds in Adkins v. Children’s Hospital of Washington, D.C. that the freedom of contract applies to women as well as men.

    1939: Marian Anderson sings before 75,000 people from the Lincoln Memorial after having been refused the right to sing in the Constitution Hall of the Daughter’s of the American Revolution (DAR). First lady Eleanor Roosevelt resigned the DAR and suggested the Lincoln Memorial site to protest racial bigotry. Relatively recently the DAR has tried to change history by claiming they did not refuse Anderson, the hall was all ready rented.

    On this day in women’s history…

    Posted by bean | April 8th, 2004

    April 8

    1865: (Birthday) Albion Fellows Bacon, housing reformer, born in Evansville, Indiana. Bacon was instrumental in drafting and getting passed a model state law in Indiana which regulated tenement dwellings and allowed the condemning of unsafe or unsanitary dwellings.

    1918: (Birthday) Betty Ford, U.S. First Lady acknowledged as a working partner to U.S. President Gerald, born in Chicago, Illinois. Ford went public with her mastectomy to bring the procedure out of the closet as well as admitting to drug and alcohol addiction.

    Kerrynomics: Republican Economics circa 1999

    Posted by Ampersand | April 7th, 2004

    Once upon a time, I would have called Kerry’s economic proposals “Republican.” That was before Bush was elected and Republican economics slid from noxious to not sane. So his policies are more like “Republican Retro 1999,” at least if this AP article is accurate:

    Kerry said he would not allow the federal budget, other than spending on education and homeland security, to grow beyond the rate of inflation.

    This was once a popular trick among Republicans who wanted to cut social spending but pretend they weren’t. The scam is pretty simple: every year, the total American population grows. So just in order to spend the same amount per person, federal spending programs have to increase not to account for inflation, but also to account for increasing population. Kerry knows this perfectly well; he’s just stealing an old Republican trick to avoid saying “I plan to cut the social services every needy American recieves.”

    As Nathan Newman writes:

    Which means an inflation cap is a net cut in spending per person. So that means:

    • cuts in payments to each disabled person

    • less money per person for roads & subways
    • less money for each child in child care
    • less job training money for each worker

    From his explanation of the proposal, it’s unclear whether he would apply this to Medicaid. If it does, his plan would be an assault on health care for the poor.

    Nathan has a whole bunch more - go check it out. And while you’re there, be sure to read his recent posts on trade agreements, labor rights and CAFTA - here and here.

    Supporting Kerry and supporting same-sex marriage

    Posted by Ampersand | April 7th, 2004

    A Democratic friend of Elizabeth Marquardt has criticized Elizabeth for opposing same-sex marriage. Elizabeth suggests this is hypocritical of the friend, since the friend plans to vote for Kerry in the upcoming election. Kerry, like Elizabeth, opposes same-sex marriage (and he’s willing to amend the Massachusetts constitution to prevent gays from marrying) but supports civil unions.

    There’s a key difference between Elizabeth’s friend and Elizabeth, however. Elizabeth’s friend doesn’t have a full range of positions to choose from; among candidates who have a chance of winning in 2004, it’s the Bush position or the Kerry position, and that’s it. Given a system in which the only real choices are the Bush position and the Kerry position, it’s not hypocritical for someone who favors SSM to support (bleh) Kerry. At least Kerry opposes Bush’s plan to amend the Federal Constitution.

    Elizabeth, however, did not face that sort of constraint when choosing her position on same-sex marriage. She had a free choice of all positions, and chose to take an anti-gay position on this particular issue. (As Elizabeth points out, she’s generally pro-gay on other issues.). Thus, Elizabeth’s choice to oppose gay marriage is not equivalent to the choice her friend made to support Kerry.

    I agree with Elizabeth that Kerry’s position on same-sex marriage is morally incoherant (although it seems odd of Elizabeth to say so, since her position is so similar to Kerry’s). However, when the only choices are Bush and someone whose position on SSM is incoherant, then it’s a reasonable position to vote for incoherancy.

    That said, this is another example of what’s wrong with a two-party system. And Kerry’s opposition to equality - whether it comes from heartfelt opposition to gay marriage or from political pandering - doesn’t really inspire my support. (Don’t worry, Bush-haters, I plan to pull a paper bag over my head and vote for Kerry anyway.)