Archive for January, 2006

Sex-for-visas in the UK

Posted by Nick Kiddle | January 4th, 2006

According to the Sun newspaper, British immigration officials have been granting visas to foreign nationals in exchange for sex. (Now updated with a link to the Sun’s original story - many thanks TheInkSlinger.)

I find it ironic that a newspaper which proudly advertises its daily topless photograph was the one to break a story about what is effectively a form of prostitution. My cynical guess is that the Sun was less concerned with the exploitation than with the anti-immigration potential of the story.

Link Farm and Open Thread #4

Posted by Ampersand | January 3rd, 2006

Here are some links I’ve read lately. As usual, please feel free to write about whatever you’d like in the comments, including links to your own stuff if you want.

UPDATE: Lauren at Femniste just posted her own “link farm,” although she calls it a “corral.” Anyway, we overlap a bit, but she has lots of excellent links I missed, so check it out.

Excellent Source of Information on the Sudan Crisis
This blog collects Eric Reeves’ articles about the ongoing genocide in Sudan. I don’t think there’s any more essential issue in the world right now. (And yet, I’ve barely ever written about it. I guess I don’t feel I have much to say, beyond impotent expressions of horror). Via The Reality-Based Community.

Chivalry Isn’t Dead, But It Should Be
Tekanji makes the case against chivalry. My second-favorite blog post I’ve read this week.

Women’s Rights Laws and African Customs Clash
This New York Times article describes the conflict between activists pushing for laws favoring women’s rights, and the desire of tribal leaders to preserve misogynistic traditions such as publicly checking teenage girls genitalia to certify virginity.

Year In Review (bad-news, cartoon version)

Year In Review (gains for women’s rights around the world version)

Year In Review: Top Ten News Stories About Women In 2005

The Oriental Vagina?
The best post I’ve read on any blog this week (yes, it was posted two weeks ago, but I only just now read it). Jenn at Reappropriate, an asian american feminist, discusses auditioning for a production of The Vagina Monologues and being cast in a part solely for her race.

Shakespeare’s Sister on The Boy Crisis in Education
Contrary to what I argued in recent posts, a USA Today article says that now it’s middle-class white boys who are having the most dramatic fall-off in college attendance. I plan to research the data more in the new year. Shakespeare’s Sister blames it on the rising tide of anti-intellectualism among right-wing Americans, and also on the fact that white men with high school degrees earn almost as much as white women with college degrees. (Edited to correct factual error.)

Super-Excellent Post About Family, Expectations and Education

Last Saturday, Johnson defied the naysayers and graduated from the University of Michigan with a master’s degree in social work. Next month, she begins a job working with the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan.

But her successes are still bittersweet.

“People say I should be proud because of what I’ve accomplished as a teenaged mom,” Johnson said last week. “It’s so hard to live with everyone else’s low expectations.”

Scott Lemieux: Why I Am A Feminist

DJW: Why I, Too, Am A Feminist

Humans as Spiritual Beings
The Uncredible Hallq argues that rather than focusing on ghosts and gods, we should pay attention to the only spiritual being we know for certain exists: Humans.

Lousy Human Being, Good Moviemaker, So Why Not See The Movie?
Well, the particular star being discussed here - Mel Gibson - has been in a lot of movies that suck, so he’s not a great example (I usually wind up having this argument about Woody Allen). But I have to agree with Ed: I’m bewildered by people, on the right or the left, who refuse to see movies, read books, etc., made by lousy human beings or even just by people whose politics they disagree with.

Miles Davis Retroactively Quits Smoking

Interview With Lost Star Naveen Andrews
A pretty interesting interview with the very pretty Lost star, touching on issues of racism in Hollywood and an upcoming role as an abusive husband. Curtsy: Reappropriate.

Right-Wing Christians Seek To Defund Queer Student Center & Women’s Resource Center (curtsy: Dru).

Hellbound Alleee on Angels

My feeling about the angels-as-pets beliefs is somewhat the same as my feelings about Christmas and Santa Claus: the creatures are simply not christian, but come from somewhere much deeper in the past.

British Woman Marries Dolphin
Someone alert Stanley Kurtz!

Science Must Destroy Religion
So Sam Harris argues. As a couple of his readers point out, while it’s true that religion has often done a lousy job at elevating humanity, there’s not much reason to think that Science will do any better.

Better a “Slut Feminist” Than A Jerk
Jessica at Feministing takes down an anti-feminist, anti-sex editorial by Monique Stuart, a cookie-cutter moralistic right-winger. Note the bit in Monique’s article where she seemingly regrets that censoring student newspapers isn’t politically viable. Damn those anti-censorship fanatics!

Book Review: Taking Up Space
A review of Taking Up Space, the new book by fat activist, sociologist and blogger Patty Thomas, aka Fattypatties.

Patty Thomas on “The Victim Mentality”

I hate hearing something like “victim mentality” because it cuts off all productive discussion. It is a discursive stopper. There is no way to answer this criticism. If I protest and say, “no I’m a real victim” then I look like I’m engaging in such a blame game….

Do Girl Monkeys Prefer Girl Toys?
Cathy Young sharply critiques the “boys like trucks, girls like dolls!” monkey study that’s gotten way too much press lately. (A nice companion to Echidne’s excellent posts on the much-hyped “gender and internet use” study).

Fathers Rights Divorce Manual On How To Screw “The Bitch” Over
As Trish Wilson points out, as legal advice this website by the “Married Mens Militia” is ridiculous. But as a written record of woman-hating bitterness, it’s top-notch.

Birth Coaching Doesn’t Lead To Significantly Better Outcomes

A Collection Of Pro-War, Right-Wing Attacks on Murtha

Baby blogging: Andrea meets her tribe

Posted by Nick Kiddle | January 2nd, 2006

At approximately quarter to one on the 23rd of November, the midwife in the delivery room helped get Andrea’s baby blogging career off to a great start by taking a picture of her as she met from the outside someone she’d got to know intimately from the inside over the previous nine months.

Image hosted by <a href=Photobucket.com“/>

Later that day, she began putting faces to voices as I introduced her to the rest of the extended family.

Read the rest of this entry »

New York To Shut Down Jail For Gays And Trangenders

Posted by Ampersand | January 2nd, 2006

New York’s Rikers Island has long had a separate unit for gay and transgender prisoners, intended to protect those prisoners from abuses from the rest of the prison population. According to The New York Times, the unit is now scheduled to be shut down. Instead, gay and transgender prisoners who feel endangered can apply to be put in solitary confinement 23 hours a day.

Though originally intended to promote safety, gay housing became a dangerous wing at Rikers because it mixed weaker inmates seeking protection with violence-prone inmates seeking to prey on them, Mr. Horn said. Some inmates who were not gay, he added, would request to be placed in the unit as a way to avoid their enemies in the general population, or to take advantage of a group they perceived as weak.[...]

The elimination of special housing for gay and transgender inmates has outraged some critics, who say that Mr. Horn’s new policy essentially punishes pretrial detainees, who have not been convicted of any crime, for their sexual orientation. It also forces these inmates, their advocates say, to choose between the possibility of being abused in the general population or being locked up alone for 23 hours a day.

“This is not a change for the benefit of the prisoners, this is a change for the benefit of the administration,” said Carrie Davis, a social worker at the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center in New York, whose clients include former Rikers inmates. “What they’re saying is, people who by virtue of immutable physical characteristics are going to be put in 23-hour lockdown,” she added. “Does that sound fair?”

I have to admit, I’m suspicious of the claim that the only reason to eliminate the special unit is concern for the safety of gay and trans prisoners; it hardly seems likely that they’d be safer in the general population. Furthermore, since applying to live in the unit was voluntary, why were any trans or gay prisoners applying to live there if they would have been safer in the general population?

Ampersand’s 10 Favorite Posts By Ampersand for 2005

Posted by Ampersand | January 1st, 2006

There were posts on “Alas” other than those I wrote, but for obvious reasons I’m not going to sit here rating those. :-) There were also better posts of mine that essentially consisted of nothing but quotes of what other, smarter folks have written, but I haven’t included those here. So here, in more-or-less chronological order, are the ten posts - or series of posts, in some cases - that I’m proudest of from 2005.

Number One:
Probably nothing put more eyeballs on “Alas” in 2005 than the Terri Schiavo controversy, and in particular this image (which was posted here and here):

Terri Schiavo CT scan

But the two best posts I wrote about Terri Schiavo didn’t include that image:

Lies About Terri Schiavo’s Case In The National Review.

The National Review’s most-cited article on the Schiavo case was, frankly, utter garbage. At the time, I apologized to the National Review author, Robert Johansen, for implying that he had shown a shocking indifference to truth, based partly on his implying in email to me that he possessed evidence to support his claims. Nine months later, it’s worth noting that despite multiple email requests from me, Johansen has totally failed to back up any of his disputed claims, or to publish a retraction. I no longer believe that he has any evidence to support the disputed claims in his article.

17 Medical Affidavits About Terri Schiavo. I’m proud of this post because I think it did what blogs, at their best, do: It took a hollow, puffed-up “experts say so!” claim that was intending to decieve through intimidation, and deflated it. Most of the experts weren’t that expert - and the ones who were genuinely expert, mostly didn’t say anything one way or the other.

Number Two:
The three-part series on “gender feminism and equity feminism”: Part one, part two, part three. I think this is a useful series for any feminist who wants to link to something explaining why the “gender vs equity feminism” formulation pushed by conservatives is nonsense.

Number Three:
Every Birth a Wanted Birth: Oh, Really?
This is one of a series of posts arguing that pro-choice policies are at least as compatable with a low abortion rate as pro-life policies - and probably a good deal more compatable. When I first starting making this argument, years ago, I felt like a voice in the wilderness. Happily, this argument, or variations on it, seemed to get a lot more popular among pro-choicers in 2005.

Number Four:
Majicthise on that “maybe fat isn’t so awful” JAMA study

And

Cathy Young’s Reasoning is (Insert Generic Fat Reference Here)

Two posts defending the new federal government findings that fat isn’t so deadly, after all. There’s a bit in the response to Cathy Young that I need to rewrite, but on the whole I think these posts both made good arguments and did a good job of boiling down a lot of research in blog-friendly English.

Number Five:
Myth: The Wage Gap Is Caused By Men’s Higher Pay for Dangerous Jobs

John Stossel on the Wage Gap

I’ve been meaning to write a rebuttal to the claim that men get paid more because they work more dangerious jobs for years, but finally got around to in in 2005, spurred by the new life Warren Farrell’s new book has given this old claim. I’m planning to write at least one or two more rebuttals to Farrell in 2006, but I’m waiting for secondhand copies of his book to become cheap enough.

Number Six:
It wasn’t a post on “Alas,” but I’m on the whole quite happy with my two-part interview on Christian Conservative, here and here.

Number Seven:
This Is How We’ve Freed The Women Of Iraq
And this post is probably as close as I ever come to being incoherant with rage. The injury we’ve done to the women of Iraq - not just in the last two years, but in the last decade - can probably never be made up for.

Number Eight:
For Many Poor Black Girls, Teen Pregnancy Is a Rational Choice
Another one I’ve been intending to write for years.

Number Nine:
Gay marriage isn’t a radical step; it’s just the next step
If I posted less about Same Sex Marriage in 2005, partly it was feeling exhausted with the issue after the 2004 election, and partly it’s simply the feeling that it’s all been said and said again. An exception is this post, which I think is unusually perceptive for me.

Number Ten:
The “Boy Crisis” in Education, part one and part two.
Expect more on this topic in 2006.

That’s it! On the whole I feel it’s a decent body of blog posts. “Alas” frankly isn’t as good now as it used to be - I no longer have the energy or interest to post as much or with as much variety as I once did - but it’s still a pretty decent blog.

I owe big “thank you”s to Kim (Basement Variety!) and Nick, both currently kept away from “Alas” posting by their new, lovely squirming bundles of hunger and need, for their “Alas” posting in 2005. And another thank you to Pseudo-Adrianne, whose blog I hope everyone has bookmarked and blogrolled.

Finally, many thanks to everyone who has cared enough about “Alas” to post, to send me email, to make a contribution to cover costs, or just to read. Y’all rock.

Postscript: I forgot about “Seven Posts About Abortion, Prenatal Testing and Down Syndrome” - it definitely would have made the list had I remembered it.