Category Archives: Politics

Feminism Theatre

Long-awaited revenge

Just landing in my inbox is a piece recalling Mary Daly’s “The End of God the Father: A little castration is called for if we are ever to get away from phallus-centered faith,” an article from 1972, which is appropriate really, since I’ve just returned from seeing Linda Marlowe’s very fine Believe, in which the women of the Old Testament really, really get their revenge on malekind. My review is on My London Your London – but in short: go and see it if you possibly can.

Environmental politics Science

The facts on efficient lightbulbs

Some of the rightwing press was “sticking it to the greenies” with undisguised glee over the weekend, with claims that the new energy-saving lightbulbs were going to murder innocent families in their beds.

Well here’s the facts from Royal Society of Chemistry – in short that there is a tiny fraction of the mercury found in thermometers, that it is in ALL flourescent bulbs, including the strip type, which have been around for a very long time, overall, that this is a storm in a teacup.

Current methods of correct disposal no doubt are inadequate – but that’s true of many others things, including batteries. Everything we use has an environmental cost – that’s simply a fact.

Feminism

Only in America…

I read:

Florida’s “Choose Life” license plates, of which more than 40,000 have been sold, have raised more than $4 million for low-income single moms. But there’s a catch: only women who choose adoption qualify. A woman who wants to keep her baby can just go starve in hell. Since only a handful of women want to give away their babies — even among pregnant women who plan on adoption, 35 percent change their mind once the baby is born — the money is just sitting there.

Babyfarms anyone?

Politics

Don’t get too excited

… about the new Australian “Labour” government, given facts such as this:

The Rudd Government has locked itself into a controversial Commonwealth formula that delivered to NSW private schools a 22 per cent increase in annual funding from $1.2 billion in 2003 to $1.6 billion last year, taking into account inflation. Last year’s figure is the federal budget estimate.
State Government support for independent schools has risen by 18 per cent, to $708 million, over the same period.
Schools continued to receive more public money even though they were making profits from parents who will face fee increases of up to 10 per cent this year.

Feminism

Risk and fear and precautions

Just landing in my inbox is the following:

www.safewomen.info is the website side of a recently started women’s community aimed at women’s safety. The website is just one side, Safe Women also has a secure server kept at a separate location, that is not accessible via the internet, for you to send picture messages or texts to so that there are details held of where you are or who you are with.
For example, you take a cab home after working late or on a night out. You take a picture of the registration number of the cab and send it to the Safe Women number. Once in the cab you let the driver know that you are a member of Safe Women and that you have sent the details of the cab to a secure server.

It is easy to say good idea – taking control. Sure if this encourages women to go out when they want to when they otherwise might not through fear, then it could be a good thing.

But is this dealing with the worst risks that women actually face – which is being in a vehicle on the road in the first place, rather than that of assault by a male? Wouldn’t a tyre tread gauge to help judge if the vehicle is roadworthy be more useful?

AND, is it not further promulgating the idea that public space is a dangerous place for women where they have to take precautions – quite elaborate precautions – to look after themselves?

The risk of assault from a stranger is exceedingly low – and higher for men than for women – so why is this not directed at men?

Environmental politics

Behaviour can change

Australian cities are running out of water. But this does provide a case study showing that human behaviour can change when the urgency of a problem:

In 1974, daily use per person was 464litres. In 2006-07, it was 328litres.

But, unfortunately, Australian cities are still running out of water…