Category Archives: Politics

Feminism

Advances on abortion

In a definitive study, the American Psychological Association has reported that: “The best scientific evidence published indicates that among adult women who have an unplanned pregnancy, the relative risk of mental health problems is no greater if they have a single elective first-trimester abortion or deliver that pregnancy.”

Of course you’d like to think that this will stop anti-abortion groups quoting false “statistics”, and causing unnecessary stress and worry – but somehow I doubt it.

(And yes this only refers to one abortion – the association says the evidence is simply unclear on more.)

Another interesting quote in the piece: “Approximately half of women in the United States will face an unintended pregnancy during their lifetime, and about half of those who unintentionally become pregnant resolve the pregnancy through abortion,” the report says.

In the Australian state of Victoria, meanwhile, reports suggest there’ll be a considerable advance next week, with the introduction of a bill to give women the legal right to choose abortion.

“It is believed the bill will ensure that a woman’s consent provides lawful authority for an abortion up to 24 weeks’ gestation. After that, terminations would be unlawful unless doctors deemed continuing the pregnancy would pose a risk of harm to the woman.
Health Minister Daniel Andrews, who will introduce the bill, is expected to argue that it is designed to bring the law into line with community expectations and clinical practice.”

Politics

Compassion and savagery

Sometimes you can feel good about being a member of the human race: in Dallas (of all places) there’s a big row going on over the best place for a psychologically traumatised elephant to live. That this much care and attention is being given to another sentient species is a fine example of humanity.

Local protesters, world-renowned elephant experts and national animal rights groups are crusading to have her sent to a 2,700-acre sanctuary in Tennessee where 17 other traumatized elephants are kept in seclusion.
“Jenny is a special-needs elephant,” said Margaret Morin, a Dallas nurse who leads Concerned Citizens for Jenny. “She’s unique; she’s afflicted with crippling depression. The elephant sanctuary is the right choice.”

And then of course other events make you despair – here in Britain, a mother of eight (including a disabled three-year-old and a baby) has been jailed for stealing her neighbours’ credit cards and using them to buy groceries. This is obviously a woman who isn’t coping with her life, so let’s lock her up (and put all of her children into care). That’s such a great solution to the situation; it will really sort it out.

Politics

Green Party leadership coverage

Jim on The Daily (Maybe) has the unofficial hustings.

Caroline is interviewed by the >Independent, and by Total Politics.

Politics.co.uk has interviewed Caroline and Ashley Gunstock.

Feminism Politics

Exploited workers

I’ve been excavating my living room floor and I know that I’ve got to April, since I found the paperwork from the Fem08 conference*, which reminded me that I wanted blog about a report on homework in the UK from the Newsletter of Homeworkers Worldwide, Jan 2008, which reports the result of a survey from 2007. Most of the workers surveyed were paid piece rates, and they averaged £4.41 per hour – well below the minimum wage. “Some were paid as little as £1 an hour.”

Nearly half (48%) were not receiving any employment rights at all. The report says “the law in this area is unclear and inadequate” – and calls for reforms.

What are they doing? Sewing is the most common (23%), then packing and print finishing (22%), followed by delivery and distribution (10%).

The report doesn’t comment on gender, but I very much suspect that this is an overwhelmingly female group, making this very much a women’s issue.

*I try very hard not to pick up paper and new books — I’m trying to go almost entirely electronic — but somehow the cellulose still accumulates faster than I can manage to control it.

Environmental politics

RIP the Australian environment

I often have random conversations with people about Australia (somehow my accent is still almost instantly recognisable despite some 15 years of not living there) and people are shocked when I say that the Australian environment has, on a broad scale, at least in the most productive parts of the country, been wrecked. While the human toll of environmental degradation and climate change might not be as large here as in parts of Africa, the overall damage is at least as bad if not worse.

So it is that the government is about the flood with seawater what had been a major wetland area in South Australia – near the mouth of the stricken Murray-Darling system.

Much further upstream, governments have just spent a very large sum on buying a major cotton farm in an attempt to save another seriously threatened wetland, even though there’s no guarantee at all that the plan will work. That’s because while the purchase included its licence for irrigation water, the dam that would supply it is only 18% full, and therefore there’s no water to be had. What’s REALLY obscene about this is that the farm was only developed in the 80s, when the water problems were already all too evident.

But to finish on a slightly positive note, as the New York Times reported it shipping costs are starting to crimp globalisation.

The cost of shipping a 40-foot container from Shanghai to the United States has risen to $8,000, compared with $3,000 early in the decade, according to a recent study of transportation costs. Big container ships, the pack mules of the 21st-century economy, have shaved their top speed by nearly 20 percent to save on fuel costs, substantially slowing shipping times.

And the campaigners are battling on – Jim on The Daily Maybe is keeping track of press coverage of the Camp for Climate Action here in the UK.

Politics

Illuminating fact

In the Second World War, 22 MPs were killed in action.

Ummm … so how many have been killed in the Iraq War?

(Source: Andrew Marr’s A History of Modern Britain, p. 4)

And no, I know it isn’t an even comparison, but still food for thought.