Women

Black & women judges trailblazed the crucial nomination.

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Roy Wilkins in press conference with Autherine Lucy and Thurgood Marshall, director and special counsel for NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund]." 1956 March 2. Prints and Photographs Division of the Library of Congress.
                              h/t Denise Oliver Velez

TheConversation further describes how Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Supreme Court hearing is a flashback to how race and crime featured during Thurgood Marshall’s 1967 hearings

The above article includes a huge photograph showing the nominee at a smallish table in middle of the hearing chambers literally surrounded by the hundreds of people involved…

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Equal Pay Day graphic from NOW NYC
           h/t Bill in Portland Maine

EQUAL PAY DAY 2022 was March 15 —

This date usually changes annually, in symbolizing how far into the year women must work to earn what men earned in the year before.

This year, women are about 23% behind men. Still!!!!

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From CalMatters email, signing into law a bill eliminating out-of-pocket costs for abortions and abortion-related services, Gov. Newsom decried “continued attacks on reproductive freedom throughout the country”, calling California a counterweight to Texas and Florida in particular while Dem Cal lawmakers continue to advance reproductive health legislation, including a bill to combine state funding with philanthropy for helping low-income women here and from out-of-state access abortions.

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Patricia Guerrero’s nomination to the California Supreme Court has been confirmed and her swearing-in as the first Latina to serve on the state’s highest court is scheduled for March 28. In November, voters will decide whether to keep her in that office for the remaining four years of her predecessor’s term; former Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar stepped down last year to lead the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. [dk diary by Gabe Ortiz HERE]

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                                   h/t dtruth

HOW the future of the world’s largest group of religions is female and Black.

I research women in global Christianity and am frequently asked what percentage of the religion is female. The short answer is 52%. But the long answer is more complicated – women make up a much more substantial part of Christianity than that…

…At the start of 2019, Bill and Melinda Gates released a list of facts that had surprised them the previous year. Number four on their list: “Data can be sexist … There are huge gaps in the global data about women and girls…” My interest was piqued – not only as a demographer, but as a woman and mother of girls…

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                           h/t  LaFeminista

Colleges ROUTINELY fail to ask about new hires’/interviewees’ sexual harassment histories.

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Protesters hold signs as they rally in support of Planned Parenthood and pro-choice and to protest a state decision that would effectively halt abortions by revoking the center's license to perform the procedure, near the Old Courthouse in St. Louis, Missouri, May 30, 2019. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP)        (Photo credit should read SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)
                                 h/t AKALib

New research finds that Abortion pills are just as safe to prescribe based on a patient’s medical history as after an in-person exam,

and

New abortion law in lets relatives of the “preborn baby” sue the medical practitioner who aborts after 6 weeks.Incest and rape are the exceptions providing the girl/woman files a police report & gives the practitioner a copy. Idaho’s governor signed it while admitting “I fear the novel civil enforcement mechanism will in short order be proven both unconstitutional and unwise,”

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Does giving moms cash MAKE kids smarter?

WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 13: Local residents, Cara Baldari and her nine-month-old daughter Evie (L) and Sarah Orrin-Vipond and her eight-month-old son Otto (R), join a rally in front of the U.S. Capitol December 13, 2021 in Washington, DC. ParentsTogether Action held a rally with parents, caregivers and children to urge passage of the Build Back Better legislation to extend the expanded Child Tax Credit that will expire on January 15, 2022. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)
                  h/t Laura Clawson, dk staff

In his first State of the Union address, Pres. Biden broached a tax policy question of interest to public health experts, neuroscientists and pediatricians too — he urged lawmakers to extend the Child Tax Credit so no youngster has to grow up in poverty. (it’s worth noting the true moral outcome, that helping the individual tends to benefit society: healthier people cost society less and enjoy better lives.)

Apart from the usual political and budgetary calculus, science has turned to brain scans and rigorous studies to [learn] the effects of being raised in poverty and the difference [that could be better for] child development and long-term health…

Initial results from an ongoing study known as Baby’s First Years suggest that providing extra money to mothers may influence brain activity in infants in ways that reflect improvements in cognitive ability….

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                                 h/t dmhlt 66

“How prosthetic penises in shows like HBO’s ‘Minx’ reinforce existing stereotypes and taboos.”

…As prosthetic penises have become more common in film and on TV [the media eagerly documents the trend with sly, coy, slang-laden headlines… But to me, [this costuming], and the way actors wielding them are deceptively [reported as] “full frontal nudity,” often reinforces existing taboos under a guise of progressivism and gender equality.

What’s wrong with just showing the real thing?…

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Martha Cowan at age 100 on March 24, 2021, and during WWII. Pilot, ship-building engineer, trainer of astronauts.

Did you know June 23 is International Women in Engineering Day? The Society of Women Engineers does!

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                  h/t Kelly Macias, dk staff

So. Dakota hotel & corporation accused of refusing service to at least 2 Native American women and threatening to ban all Native Americans.

For Women’s History Month Penn State Univ Libraries will host a virtual Wikipedia editathon focusing on Native American women activistsfrom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Tuesday, March 29.

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h/t Christopher Reeves, dk staff

First Native American woman ever to serve as chair of the Kansas House of Representatives is asked by Republican house member whether her gavel is a tomahawk. At the “mix of laughter and vocal disapproval” he “if”-apologized” to Rep. Ponka-We Victors-Cozad, Wichita Democrat in the chair, rejected the nonapology saying

she wouldn’t devalue Wheeler’s religion, place of worship or culture. She expected Wheeler to offer the same reverence and respect of other Kansans as he did his own religion and culture.

“I would like to think our elected public officials would know and understand this principle,” Victors-Cozad said.“This is women’s history month and I am a proud Native American mother making history for the state of Kansas, and Representative Wheeler did his best to tarnish these accomplishments. I firmly hold him accountable to his words and actions.”

Wheeler, 74, is a member of the Legislature’s joint committee on state-tribal relations [which] provides a bridge between the Legislature and the state’s four federally recognized tribes…

Before the House’s weekend adjournment, Topeka Dem Rep. John Alcala returned to Wheeler’s comment to requesting a genuine apology to Kansas’ three Native American women house members: Victors, Christina Haswood and Stephanie Byers. This incident follows Kansas Commissioner of Education Randy Watson saying in youth he tried to teach children safety (some reports say this was a metaphor for tornadoes) with the warning “You’ve got to worry about the Indians raiding the town at any time.” Gov. Laura Kelly called for Watson’s resignation, he submitted it to the Board of Education, they unanimously rejected it and instead suspended him for 30 days without pay.

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MMIW — Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women state task forces’ progress around the US

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Close up photo of a handcuffed elderly woman

HOW Melissa Lucio went from abuse survivor to death rowexplains the ways interrogations traumatize their targets. And Petition from the Innocence Project Stop the execution of Melissa Lucio.

Melissa Lucio is facing execution on April 27, 2022, in Texas for the murder of her 2-year-old daughter Mariah — a crime that never occurred. Mariah died two days after accidentally falling down a steep flight of stairs and Melissa has maintained her innocence on death row for more than 14 years…..
 

…..Coerced false confessions are a leading cause of wrongful conviction and even more prevalent among women wrongly convicted of killing a child, like Melissa. As a survivor of lifelong sexual abuse and domestic violence, Melissa was especially vulnerable to police coercion, but at trial she was prevented from presenting any evidence that would have explained why she falsely confessed during the interrogation.

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Why are Women Disappearing From Research Careers? And How to Get Them Back —

Meme Generator and/or Cheezburger
Get the science right. h/t DoctorH

Male MD+PhD article writer, a SCIENCE professional, describes the situation and suggests remedies. Interestingly, as supportive as he intends this article to be, its wording also illustrates how even well-intentioned & workplace experienced male feminists are suffused with misogynistic cultural assumptions (probably in the same way that antiracism and antipoverty advocates etc may be): ■ verbs and verb-forms that depict women as essentially passive ■ rights depicted as having been “given” rather than battled for to force out of the hands of men wanting to restrict rights ■ UN’s rights campaigns said first to “commemorate” women’s past achievements and contributions —as if saying we earned equal human status across history hence should be given our rights, rather than that we ARE equally human hence ENTITLED to equal rights— and that such campaigns “propose ways” to remedy inequities, not that they demand implementation of proven strategies for priotizing equal rights, which by golly are also proven to benefit the world and society as a whole. ■ implications that women create the obstacles and burdens of conventional motherhood & family through freely desiring and choosing it, rather than that psychological, financial, and legal factors FORCE women into that position, when the removal of force and an equal role for men would vastly decrease both the actual LACK of “choices” and bring the massive societal cost of remedies into manageable scale. ■ No acknowledgment that women might be choosing to work in applied science rather than research, far less what the factors in such choices might be…

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      — see also An emphasis on brilliance creates a toxic, dog-eat-dog workplace environment that discourages women with values about high achievement through cooperation rather than

a “masculinity contest culture” – [an] atmosphere of ruthless competition that glorifies the more negative aspects of masculinity, like aggression. To thrive or even survive in these work cultures, employees must appear tough, conceal any weakness, put work above all else, be willing to step on others, and constantly watch their backs.

…And for both women and men in our study, the perception of a masculinity contest culture was associated with feeling like an impostor who does not belong….

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Returning to Our Roots:How Nature Prescriptions Can Help Patients

According to the Environmental Protection Agency, Americans spend approximately 90 percent of their time indoors, and an additional 6% in enclosed vehicles…

Central Park was created largely as a solution to a health problem. In the mid-1800s, New York City saw a rapid rise in population that created “crowded, unhealthy conditions,” and the park was devised as a way for city dwellers to experience a more rural environment without leaving town. In 1858, workers began constructing the park, planting half a million trees, shrubs, and vines. The end result cemented the city’s status as a “world-class destination.”

Coopers Hawks nesting and bringing sticks,  Magnuson Park, Seattle
                                  h/t Jeff Graham

Today, the link between nature and human health is as clear and as urgent as ever. There is a growing body of evidence to suggest that simply spending time in natural environments can have significant positive effects on a wide range of mental and physical health issues, from diabetes to anxiety. Over the last decade, a rising number of health professionals have begun to prescribe “doses” of time in nature to patients and to advocate for the rise of nature prescription programs throughout the world.

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Like the construction of Central Park, the nature prescription phenomenon is, in part, a response to urbanization. Over the past few centuries, the rise of agriculture, the Industrial Revolution, and the development of increasingly complex technologies have led to westerners leading highly sedentary, screen-centric lifestyles in manmade surroundings….

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ATLANTA, GA - MAY 21: People hold signs during a protest against recently passed abortion ban bills at the Georgia State Capitol building, on May 21, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. The Georgia "heartbeat" bill would ban abortion when a fetal heartbeat is detected. The Alabama abortion law, signed by Gov. Kay Ivey last week, includes no exceptions for cases of rape and incest, outlawing all abortions except when necessary to prevent serious health problems for the woman. Though women are exempt from criminal and civil liability, the new law punishes doctors for performing an abortion, making the procedure a Class A felony punishable by up to 99 years in prison (Photo by Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images)
                         h/t Joan McCarter

from medscape —Does the US [even] Have Enough Abortion Providers? (nope)

and

from KHN As States Impose Abortion Bans, Young Clinicians Struggle to Travel Far To Learn the Procedures because medication-abortion alone cannot meet the full range of needs, but the numbers of those practitioners is constantly dwindling.

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Graphic used by the IFT (Institute of Food Technology) to promote its 2022 annual FIRST (= Food Improved by Research, Science, and Technology) conference shows apparently only 2 men, no women. STEM gender-gap.

WOMEN INVISIBLE IN STEM?

Aside from farmers on behemoth tractors at one extreme and famous male chefs at the other, food is usually considered ‘women’s work’. Yet the Institute of Food Technologists’ promotion of their annual FIRST (= Food Improved by Research, Science, and Technology) conference offered THIS graphic, demonstrating yet another STEM awareness recognition gap.

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”In a time of destruction, create something.” –Maxine Hong Kingston.h/t  njm5000

Asian-American Mothers confront multiple crises of of pandemic, anti-Asian hate and caregiving

In memory of the Atlanta massage spas shootings on March 16, 2021, that killed eight people, including six Asian women, communities around the country gathered a year later to mourn and demand responses to violence against Asian Americans, especially women who work in service industries.

A woman holds a sign that reads "Respect Our Elders" during the "We Are Not Silent" rally against anti-Asian hate in response to recent anti-Asian crime in the Chinatown-International District of Seattle, Washington on March 13, 2021. - Reports of attacks, primarily against Asian-American elders, have spiked in recent months -- fuelled, activists believe, by talk of the "Chinese virus" by former president Donald Trump and others. (Photo by Jason Redmond / AFP) (Photo by JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty Images)

In addition to being exposed to risks at their workplaces, Asian American women who care for children and elders are especially vulnerable to anti-Asian violence. As sociologists and scholars of gender, race, immigration and Asian American studies, we focus on the particular challenges facing Asian American mothers.

Trish Villanueva (C) of Seattle holds a sign with the hashtag "stop AAPI hate" during the We Are Not Silent rally organized by the Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) Coalition Against Hate and Bias in Bellevue, Washington on March 18, 2021. - The shooting rampage in Atlanta by a 21-year-old white man that left six women of Asian origin dead has laid bare the fears of an Asian-American community on edge over a spike in hate crimes because of the coronavirus pandemic. (Photo by Jason Redmond / AFP) (Photo by JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty Images)

Though they face challenges similar to those faced by other mothers confronting the COVID-19 pandemic, Asian American women have the added burden of being seen as the cause of the virus and being disproportionately targeted by hostility and violence that such misconceptions bring on.

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Madeleine Albright May 15, 1937 – March 23, 2022

 Official portrait of former United States Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, circa 1997 -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madeleine_Albright

Madeleine Jana Korbel Albright[1] (born Marie Jana Korbelová) was an American diplomat best known as the first female secretary of state in U.S. history, serving in Pres. Bill Clinton’s administration, among the 64th in that office overall by then.

Albright immigrated with her family to the United States in 1948 from Czechoslovakia. Her father, diplomat Josef Korbel, settled the family in Denver, Colorado, and she became a U.S. citizen in 1957… graduated from Wellesley in 1959 and earned a PhD from Columbia University in 1975, writing her thesis on the Prague Spring.[7]  She worked as an aide to Senator Edmund Muskie before taking a position under Zbigniew Brzezinski on the National Security Council [and] served in that position until Pres. Jimmy Carter left office in 1981.

…Albright then joined the academic faculty of Georgetown University and advised Democratic candidates regarding foreign policy.  After Clinton’s 1992 election, Albright helped assemble his National Security Council.  In 1993, he appointed her U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, a position she held until becoming Secretary of State, 1997-2001, the end of the Clinton administration.

Albright served as chair of the Albright Stonebridge Group, a consulting firm, and was the Michael and Virginia Mortara Endowed Distinguished Professor in the Practice of Diplomacy at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service.] In 2012, she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Pres. Obama. Albright served on the board of the Council on Foreign Relations.…. [full article at the top link]

Abe Foxman, who often dealt with Albright when he headed the ADL and she was first UN Ambassador and then Secretary of State, put it: “She was tough on negotiating and debating issues but a warm caring human being in one-on-ones…. she could extract an encyclopedia from a passer-by, and make him grateful for it.”

Never fully trusting State Department bureaucrats, she was known to refer to them as “The White Boys.” Adept at outmaneuvering statesmen — always men — who thought they knew much better than she did, she also delighted in subsequent years in the fact that two close friends, Hillary Clinton and Condoleezza Rice, later held the office of Secretary of State, too.

She hated macho posturing. If she had a credo, she stated it at the U.N. Security Council in 1996, after the Cuban air force shot down two small civilian craft attempting to flee the country, killing four people aboard. “… this is not cojones,” she said. “This is cowardice.”

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NEW YORK, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 17:Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks during the 2022 New York State Democratic Convention at the Sheraton New York Times Square Hotel on February 17, 2022 in New York City. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton gave the keynote address during the second day of the NYS Democratic Convention where the party organized the party's platform and nominated candidates for statewide offices that will be on the ballot this year including the nomination of Gov. Kathy Hochul and her Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin.  (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
               h/t Laura Clawson, dk staff

Opinion: Hillary Clinton Madeleine Albright Warned Us, and She Was Right. “We can honor her memory by heeding her wisdom….”

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NYT What Is Driving Vladimir Putin?By Alexandra Alter— March 25, 2022

In an interview more than two decades ago, Vladimir V. Putin described his younger self, with a hint of self-congratulation, as “a hooligan.” When the interviewer asked if he was exaggerating about his tendency to get into brawls as a schoolboy, Putin took offense.

“You are trying to insult me,” he said. “I was a real thug.”

Masha Gessen, a Russian American journalist and Moscow native, recounts this exchange in a 2012 biography, “The Man Without a Face: The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin,” which was praised as “part psychological profile, part conspiracy study” in The New York Times Book Review. To Gessen, Putin’s unabashed description of himself as “a thug” was key to his self-image: someone who could not be bullied, who would lash out unpredictably if he felt slighted and who relished violence.

Understanding Putin and the forces that shaped him has become an urgent global concern, as leaders around the world try to determine his motivations in launching an unprovoked and disastrous invasion of Ukraine, how to best engage with him and how the conflict might evolve………..



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