Posts Tagged ‘feminism’

A Joke to Delete For?: Religious Humour and Hypocrisy on Facebook

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011

So, Harold Camping, a small-time Christian preacher told us that the end of the world was coming last Saturday, when 200 million Christians would rise up off the ground and go to heaven while the rest of us mooched around murdering each other until Judgment Day in October sometime.

Pretty much everyone who doesn’t listen to his radio shows found the concept pretty damn funny, lots of people held rapture parties, etc. More serious minded Christians pointed out that the New Testament is pretty clear on the fact that you can’t predict the end of the world by adding some numbers together – Jesus himself says “But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only.” (Matt. 24:36). But mostly, we all took the piss. It’s a funny idea.

Come 5pm my time, I posted on a friend’s Facebook Wall, “So, um, you haven’t felt the urge to float upwards at all?” I was expecting some kind of response along the lines, “Oh, Harold Camping is an idiot, something-interesting-about-said-person’s-views-on-eschatology” I was mildly surprised to get the response “fuck off you rude bitch” and then to be promptly deleted as a friend. I was even more surprised to get the response when I asked what he was doing by Facebook message that “you compared me to the lunatic fringes. I am completely fed up with your lack of respect and rudeness. Mocking my faith is completely unnacceptable and reveals you as the hypocrit you are.”

5753599162 4da08a61f5 A Joke to Delete For?: Religious Humour and Hypocrisy on Facebook

Well, look at me, mocking my faith. I'm a hypocrite, natch.

Now, setting aside the comment I could make about someone expressing their frustration with my “rudeness” by telling me to “fuck off you rude bitch” and then calling *me* a hypocrite, I must take issue with these accusations. I am deeply religious, I was well before this person decided to start church shopping, and perhaps my relative confidence in my identity is why I can take criticism of my faith and he can’t. Because take criticism I do, and I have yet to delete anyone for it (except for that one person who started claiming that Hamas had the right to demand the UN teach Holocaust denial in Gazan schools, but that’s less criticism and more anti-semitism).

I’m not a fan of Christianity, I won’t pretend that is not the case. However, the reality is that a lot of people profess Christianity, including some people I love dearly, and if we don’t find a way of politely turning a blind eye to the fact that Christianity itself states it is incompatible with everything else, we end up with crusades and jihads and segregated communities, and I don’t really think that anyone wants that.

But that doesn’t mean pretending that freedom of religion trumps freedom of expression. You have the right to go to church, to take communion, and to really, earnestly, believe that everyone around you is going to hell, and I have the right to call you an idiot and take you to task for corrupting my scriptures. But conversely, I have a right to go to synagogue and believe that God created a world-wide flood several thousand years ago for which there is little to no archaeological evidence and that’s why I can’t work on a Saturday, and you have the right to tell me that I am an idiot and take me to task for that.

Faith is not, and should not be, exempt from scrutiny, humour, criticism, and parody, no more than any other subject which you or I may hold dear, be that politics, family, or relationships. You may call me up on any of my beliefs and, believe me, a lot of people do. To call me a hypocrite for criticising Christianity when I field regular hostile questioning about everything I believe from my wide circle of outspoken atheist friends is simply to misunderstand what that word means.

5753054713 9c6562c488 A Joke to Delete For?: Religious Humour and Hypocrisy on Facebook

Sometimes a good dose of satire is what we all need to gain perspective.

Although I got deleted, a few friends commented on the wallpost saying that he had overreacted somewhat. In response, this person wrote “that is like writing “looking forward to your 72 virgins?” on a muslims wall when there is a terrorist attack. completely unnacceptable.” Indeed, writing such a thing would be completely unacceptable. Making an insensitive and tactless joke following a highly emotive tragedy, however, is not exactly analogous to making a knowing joke following a mildly embarrassing incident by someone else to whom the recipient has a link. An actual analogy to the 72 virgins comment would be writing “I’m planning to start a bakery and I hear you have some ovens going spare?” on my wall on Holocaust Memorial Day, or “What’s the difference between Jesus and a painting? It takes only one nail to hang a painting!” on a Christian’s wall on Good Friday. Those are just lame and offensive.

A much more appropriate comparison would be posting on my wall, “so, how can I serve you, O overlady?” the day after Ovadia Yosef, a respected but ultra-Orthodox/Haredi rabbi, delivered a sermon in which he said that the sole purpose of non-Jews was to serve Jews. I can tell you now that my reaction would not have been “fuck off” but “lol, yeah, bit embarrassing, that guy…”, maybe do a little debunking if I felt like it. Telling someone that they’re a “rude bitch”? Perhaps not. An (atheist) friend who does Physics noted that an analogy for him would be “if someone asked me how the search for those 7 extra dimensions was doing”. You can’t disavow members of your own community, but you can fail to defend them when they do something demonstrably stupid, and dare I say it, you can take a joke aimed at them in good humour. Such has been the reaction of most Christians I have spoken to about Harold Camping, because of course I didn’t single out this person for my “abuse”, as I am sure he would like to believe.

5753654702 d3ca83ce7a A Joke to Delete For?: Religious Humour and Hypocrisy on Facebook

Swearing always makes you seem more Godly. ...right?

I’m pretty sure that this person, whom a few friends have seen since and he seems somewhat embarrassed about this entire episode, wants to believe that he is persecuted for his faith, as he further commented that I deemed his “”Christian views towards forgiveness” (paraphrase) as “anti-woman.”". I was genuinely saddened by that one, because I said no such thing. In a Facebook post I had made on a book extract by a woman who had had her rapist jailed twenty years after he and two of his friends had drugged and raped her at a party, I had actually said that his accusing a woman he had never met of lying about her trauma after rape was sexist. (No, I’m actually not making that up. He wrote “just because someone is a rape victim, it doesn’t mean she is a portal to objective truth, her claims must be subject to the same scrutiny as his … Her attempts to belittle his ‘spiritual awakening’ indicated to me someone who doesn’t comprehend the depths that a person can change.”) I then said that his motivations for accusing her of such a thing derived from his Christian convictions, which were blinding him to the facts actually presented in the article.

There are some very interesting analyses out there to say that Christian attitudes towards forgiveness *are* anti-woman (because some denominations encourage women to stay silent about rape, assault and other abuse in the name of “forgiving” their attacker, who are often fellow Christians – the Amish are especially bad for this). However, that really wasn’t the point, and I have no desire to promote or develop such ideas further – forgiveness is important for any traumatic event committed by or against you, but it’s not an excuse for inaction. If someone cannot recognise that refusing a woman justice after rape because her attacker wrote her an insincere letter saying sorry, then they cannot recognise how they are perpetuating a blame culture in which women are expected to just deal with men’s “uncontrollable” desires and consequent begrudging apologies. And that is really just sad for all of us who have to keep living in the world that culture creates.

I’m really not kidding that not actively batting down excuses for rapists encourages rape, and I think that it is deeply hypocritical to claim that Christianity is the most moral and true religion while advocating policies that I cannot help but see as actively immoral. Allow me to demonstrate this and quote a good article entitled, “Feminism 101: Helpful Hints for Dudes, Part 3

A lot of people accuse feminists of thinking that all men are rapists. That’s not true. But do you know who think all men are rapists?

Rapists do.

They really do. In psychological study, the profiling, the studies, it comes out again and again.

Virtually all rapists genuinely believe that all men rape, and other men just keep it hushed up better. And more, these people who really are rapists are constantly reaffirmed in their belief about the rest of mankind being rapists like them by things like rape jokes, that dismiss and normalize the idea of rape.

If one in twenty guys (or more) is a real and true rapist, and you have any amount of social activity with other guys like yourself, then it is almost a statistical certainty that one time hanging out with friends and their friends, playing Halo with a bunch of guys online, in a WoW guild, in a pick-up game of basketball, at a bar, or elsewhere, you were talking to a rapist. Not your fault. You can’t tell a rapist apart any better than anyone else can. It’s not like they announce themselves.

But, here’s the thing. It’s very likely that in some of these interactions with these guys, at some point or another, someone told a rape joke. You, decent guy that you are, understood that they didn’t mean it, and it was just a joke. And so you laughed.

Or maybe you didn’t laugh. Maybe it just wasn’t a very funny joke. So maybe you just didn’t say anything at all.

And, decent guy who would never condone rape, who would step in and stop rape if he saw it, who understands that rape is awful and wrong and bad, when you laughed? When you were silent?

That rapist who was in the group with you, that rapist thought that you were on his side. That rapist knew that you were a rapist like him. And he felt validated, and he felt he was among his comrades.

You. The rapist’s comrade.

5753654596 b7d9375991 A Joke to Delete For?: Religious Humour and Hypocrisy on Facebook

No-one asks to be raped. No-one is to blame for being raped.

I’m not sorry for making a joke about religion, and I simply don’t have sympathy for people who accuse me of being abusive in abusive messages. I am very grateful that I live in a relatively free society devoid of theocracy, and I’m glad the worst I have to fear is being deleted from Facebook rather than having my head cut off. I think it is a moral imperative for anyone religious who cares about the dignity of the human condition to call sexists sexist when they’re being sexist, regardless of how much it upsets them, because, maybe, one day, they’ll stop. “The most revolutionary thing one can do is always to proclaim loudly what is happening.”

The greatest irony, of course, is that someone who demanded that I forgive an unrepentant rapist apparently couldn’t find it in his heart to forgive me for my “sin”. But I think I can forgive him for that…

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5753054887 468fe11799 A Joke to Delete For?: Religious Humour and Hypocrisy on Facebook

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Reclaim your Night: Feminist Chants for Marches, Protests, and Parties

Sunday, April 10th, 2011

Here is a list of helpful, feministy chants for every occasion you might need to shout down patriarchy. Hannah Paterson, the amazing Welfare Officer of UMSU, compiled these, but she wanted a wider audience. Fly, my pretties, fly! Chant and cheer and win us our rights!

Oh you know. You might find these useful. *shrugs*

Ampelm%C3%A4dchen   Dresden Reclaim your Night: Feminist Chants for Marches, Protests, and Parties

Whatever we wear, wherever we go, YES means YES and NO means NO!

* 2,4,6,8, stop the violence stop the rape

* Tell me what a feminist looks like, This is what a feminist looks like

* RIOT DON’T DIET, GET UP GET OUT AND TRY IT (x2)

* We have the right to not be scared at night!

* Whatever we wear, wherever we go yes means yes and no means no!

* Non, nein, nada, no! Whatever the language, no means no!

* NO means NO – it doesn’t mean maybe! Don’t touch me – I’m not your baby!

* Everwhere we go-o – people always ask us – who we are, and where do we come from – So we tell them – WE’RE ALL FEMINISTS! LOVELY LOVELY FEMINISTS! And if you can’t hear us – we’ll shout a bit louder!

* Women united will never be defeated!

* Hey, Hey, Ho, Ho, Sexual Violence has got to go!

* Feminists unite. Reclaim the night!’

* When bigots attack – We fight back.

* The feminists united, will never be defeated!

* Hey, mister! Get off my sister!

* 2 – 4 – 6 – 8 Stop the violence, stop the rape! 3 – 5 – 7 – 9 The rape conviction rate is a crime!

* You’ve got anger, soul and more! Take to the street and let it roar!

* Say it once, say it again, NO EXCUSE FOR VIOLENT MEN.

* I am not your girl, and I don’t want a date, So get your hands from round my waist and JOG ON, MATE!

* Stand up WOMEN make your choice, side by side reclaiming the night, for together we are strong, making our nights safe.

* 1, 2, 3, 4 We won’t take it anymore! 5, 6, 7, 8 No more violence! No more hate!

* Hey hey! Ho ho! Patriarchy has got to go!

* Not the church! Not the State! Women must control our fate!

* Claim our bodies, Claim our right, Take a stand, take back the night!

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EvilDick Reclaim your Night: Feminist Chants for Marches, Protests, and Parties

I like men and all their squishy bits, but this is really quite funny.

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Want to stop rape? Don’t put rapists in prison.

Monday, February 14th, 2011

An abridged version of this article was printed in The Riveter (Spring 2011), the magazine of the The Riveters, the UMSU Women’s Collective

I recently told someone, as an aside, that we were wasting our time trying to change the 6% of rapes securing a conviction statistic. The person concerned proceeded to obsess over my view on rape conviction rates and completely ignored my argument that the processes actually involved in “conviction” do not stop rapes (and stopping rape, not trying to raise a number, is what we should be doing): directly proving my point.

Much is made of the 6% conviction rate, which is held up as an example of the institutional sexism of our criminal justice system. That sexism undeniably exists; indeed, the Fawcett Society released “Engendering Justice: From Policy to Practice” in 2009, which documented everything from women police being forced to wear male uniforms to the fact that women make up only 12% of senior police officers and 10% of High Court Judges. But of the rape cases that do make it to court, 58% are convicted, which is in line with other crimes.

While campaigning needs to continue to stop the police treating rape as a trivial issue, continuously going on and on about the Crown Prosecution Service not referring more rape cases to court is really just distracting from the real intention behind such efforts (i.e. stopping rape from happening at all). The CPS have to believe that there is a reasonable case for prosecution to be made, which will never be very likely for an entire category of crime which mostly takes place without witnesses or any evidence other than the word of the victim (and a significant number of rapes also take place with people the victim had previously consented to sex with). See “The Pitfalls of Prosecuting Rape” about the difficulties of proving and prosecuting rape. Using “6%” as a flagship statistic for the women’s movement is simply misleading.

MaritalRapeMap Want to stop rape? Dont put rapists in prison.

Want a statistic to get angry about? Marital rape is illegal in only 104 countries.

Why misleading? Stop for a second and consider what a “conviction” is – it’s a little label that the government attaches to people that says “This person is EVIL. Stay away from them. Ignore them. Hate them.” In effect, “conviction” ostracises someone from society completely, perhaps to the satisfaction of those seeking vengeance, but giving the convict no reason to stop committing crime. And sure enough, the reconviction rate within two years of leaving prison is over 60% – so those rapists get out and almost immediately rape someone else (or rob them, or murder them, or whatever). Clearly, we are doing something wrong in the way we deal with crime in this country. And clearly, if we don’t want more people to get raped, we need to change that.

Because prison won’t change anything. Prison locks people away with a large number of people with drug addictions, poor social skills, and mental health problems, leaves them to rot without any meaningful activities, and then spits them out again with the stigma of a criminal record and less of a future than when they started. To suggest that locking away a rapist for however long you think they should be locked away for should be our focus as a movement, instead of asking what on earth they were doing raping someone and dealing with those issues because you think “something must be done”, is not stopping people from being raped; it’s making yourself feel better about the fact that someone was raped in the first place. Sending people to sit in a prison cell for a length of time and then letting them out again, because that’s what “raising the conviction rates” actually means, is going to achieve very little.

Alcatraz Island   prison cells Want to stop rape? Dont put rapists in prison.

Prison cells in Alcatraz

I don’t want anyone, ever, to be raped, or sexually assaulted, or to have any sexual contact that they didn’t consent to. However, people *are* raped, the vast majority of whom are women. Our response to this as a society should be

a) to provide whatever care the survivor needs to recover as best they can. This is a non-starter and completely ignored and underfunded by everyone who isn’t involved in their support. Half of all rape crisis centres have been closed since 1984.

b) to determine why the rape occurred. Was the perpetrator unaware that the victim was not consenting? Are they a psychopath/sadistic/mentally ill? Do they understand the concept of meaningful consent, or do they see all women as mindless sex objects who exist for their own sexual gratification? Were they trying to terrorise someone else completely different but related to the victim? *Why*?

c) to provide remedies to deal with the perpetrator in that specific case. So consent awareness counselling, mental health treatment, childhood therapy, culture change, some way of convincing those men who rape that women are actual human beings etc. I’m no expert, but most motivations for rape are treatable; relatively few people rape for the sheer heck of it or with a long-term goal in mind. Perhaps these remedies should be administered within the community, perhaps the perpetrator should be taken out of their environment to receive them (in hospitals, rehabilitation centres, perhaps just a really, really long way away from the victim). In some cases, confinement might be a last resort. This would depend on the specifics of the case, but the guiding principles should be ensuring that 1) the victim feels as safe as possible and 2) the rapist does not rape again.

d) to take steps to ensure the reasons people believe that rape’s ok, however fleetingly, are minimised or eradicated within our society. This is where society really needs to up its game (and what so much of the women’s movement is thankfully dedicated to). Why do we trivialise male prison rape? Why does mainstream pornography fetishise coercive sex as more pleasurable than consenting sex? Why does seemingly every non-explicit conversation about sex we hear or read assume heterosexual penile-vaginal penetration? WHY THE FUCK do magazines like Cosmopolitan and Company tell women that if they don’t feel like having sex, they should have a “quickie” instead (I was 14 when I first read this)? Why do we consider it shameful for a man to be raped? Why did my school teach me how to use a condom but not how to ensure my partner(s) was actively consenting, or what consent even is?

Take Back The Night march Alamogordo 2010 Want to stop rape? Dont put rapists in prison.

Take Back the Night March in New Mexico against sexual violence.

Our response as a society should not be:

i) taking someone who has been convicted of rape, placing them in a large warehouse of people who see little or nothing wrong with rape (some of whom may have convictions for the same crime and continue to commit it in prison), leaving them there for an arbitrary period of time determined by a politician, and then letting them out again.

ii) getting upset that many people who have committed rape don’t get put in the large warehouse for an arbitrary period of time and then let out again.

iii) being in any way surprised that people continue to be raped because large swathes of our movement are all doing ii) in stead of b), c), or d).

512px Blurry Prison Want to stop rape? Dont put rapists in prison.

Putting someone in a cage is not a solution to anything.

Critical Resistance, an abolitionist group in America has this to say about sending violent offenders, including murderers, rapists, and paedophiles to prison: “Many people do not believe that locking someone in a cage is an answer to drug addiction or poverty. If locking someone up does not address these problems, why would locking someone in a cage be any more of an effective answer to harm between people?

Prisons are not about reducing harm in our communities and in fact, our own experiences and studies have found that imprisonment actually serves to destabilize our communities. Prisons are violent institutions that only perpetuate violence and prisons as a public policy solution have failed to create safe communities.

Abolition does not mean that we don’t hold people accountable for their actions. But punishment creates the opposite of accountability — a sense of social isolation instead of responsibility to others. If anything, punishment makes future harm more likely since it encourages people to lash out. People who have seriously harmed another need appropriate forms of support, supervision and social and economic resources.”

65,000 people are raped every year in Britain, and the criminal justice system are providing justice to approximately none of them. I fail to see how trying to increase the number of people being failed by our system serves any one of them, or any of the people that convicted rapists go on to assault later on in their lives. We cannot, and should not, close down all prisons and release all rapists tomorrow, but a good first step would be for committed feminists to end their calls to have more people sent there. We need to stop rapists. Prison, as it currently stands, is evidently not stopping them.

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“The personal is political” – some thoughts from Christopher Hitchens

Monday, July 19th, 2010

141 x600 over ChristopherHitchen The personal is political   some thoughts from Christopher Hitchens

I am currently reading the extremely interesting autobiography of Christopher Hitchens at the moment. Besides the vast, vast , VAST amount of name-dropping, the work is enthralling, the narrative compelling, and the prose grandiloquent. But Hitchens’ recollection of the time he spent as a young Marxist revolutionary while at university is the part I find most intriguing. I didn’t realise it when I first came across his work, but Hitchens has a criminal record as extensive as his capacity for alcohol, the product of many demonstrations and altercations with the police, and in his time at Oxford managed to have an Oxford Debating Union meeting indefinitely suspended for the first time in its 147 year history due to his rather well planned disruption of a debate on the ethics of Vietnam. It’s all fascinating stuff (especially the parts where he talks about all the sexual encounters he’s had with men – but that’s my own personal, ahem, research interest…).

The part I wanted to share, however, is brief, but interesting:

“As 1968 began to ebb into 1969, however, and as “anticlimax” began to become a real word in my lexicon, another term began to obtrude itself. People began to intone the words “The Personal Is Political”. At the instant that I first heard this deadly expression, I knew as one does from the utterance of any sinister bullshit that it was – cliche is arguably forgiveable here – very bad news. From now on, it would be enough to a member of a sex or gender, or epidermal subdivision, or even erotic “preference”, to qualify as a revolutionary. In order to begin a speech or ask a question from the floor, all that would be necessary by way of preface would be the words, “Speaking as a…” Then could follow any self-loving description. I will have to say this for the old “hard” Left: we earned our claim to speak and intervene by right of experience and sacrifice and work. It would never have done for any of us to stand up and say that our sex or sexuality or pigmentation of disability were qualifications in themselves. There are many ways of dating the moment where the Left lost or – I would prefer to say – discarded its moral advantage, but this was the first time I was to see the sell-out so cheaply. ” – p121, Atlantic Books (2010)

I’m not so what my friends and comrades in the liberation movements or the Left make of that, but I think he has a point. Not to say that those who work, hard, on feminism and other liberation movements are not making advances on behalf of us all, but that it is their work which matters and not the features they have which qualifies them to be termed “activists”. Sadly, many seem to believe otherwise.

Check out Hitch 22: A Memoir The personal is political   some thoughts from Christopher Hitchens on Amazon.co.uk.

51JLWO%2BqphL. SL500  The personal is political   some thoughts from Christopher Hitchens

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