Barry to be interviewed on “Word & Pictures” radio show on Thursday

The press release from Words & Pictures, a Portland radio show devoted to comics:

Tomorrow morning (Thursday December 9th) from 11:30am to noon (PDT), Words & Pictures celebrates its seventh anniversary on the air by returning to its local roots. This month’s guest is up-and-coming Portland author Barry Deutsch, who’s just published his first graphic novel Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword, the adventures of a troll-fighting eleven-year-old Orthodox Jewish girl.

Words & Pictures airs on KBOO community radio, 90.7fm, Not near a radio? You can listen to the real-time webstream at http://kboo.fm/listen via iTunes or Abacast. And look for the webcast version on KBOO’s home page shortly after the show airs.

More info and links to recent webcasts can be found at http://www.tooningin.com

Jake Richmond, Hereville’s colorist, will be there as well. Should be fun!

Posted in Hereville, Syndicated feeds | 1 Comment

Rape Myths and Julian Assange

I don’t want to write about Julian Assange or the rape charges he is facing. I don’t speak Swedish, a lot of the material in English misrepresents the Swedish legal system and. I don’t have time to unpack all that.

However, I need to write about the way people have been talking about these rape charges. A facebook friend (who is political enough to know better) quoted from a a Daily Mail article* “The prosecution’s case has several puzzling flaws, and there is scant public evidence of rape or sexual molestation.”

Most women who have been raped had little public evidence of their experience. By repeating these rape myths in defence of Julian Assanger people are attacking not just the women involved, but other women who have been raped and had their experiences dismissed. They are also contributing to a culture where rape is denied, minimised, and distorted.

Left-wing defenders of Julian Assanger have been using rape-myths over and over again (as have his right-wing defenders, although they will not be the focus of this post). I think it’s both disgusting and unnecessary to uphold rape-culture to defend Julian Assanger. I want to explain why.

“There is scant public evidence of rape or sexual molestation.” As opposed to what? Is the person who stated this really arguing that usually there is an abundance of public evidence of rape? It’s a ludicrous statement, but a damaging one. Because while the antithesis of ‘scant public evidence’ sounds ridiculous when it is spelled out, it has a lot of power when it’s implied: women’s statements about their experiences cannot be public evidence and cannot be relied upon. “No-one will believe you” – rapists say that to women and women say that to themselves. So many of the repsonses to Assange’s case give that statement more weight, more power – they tell women all over the world “No-one will believe you.”

Then there’s the idea that some women are unrapeable. People uphold this rape myth if they describe some characteristic of a woman – most often, but not only, that she’s a sex worker – as evidence that she wasn’t raped, and can’t be raped. The left-wing version of this du jour appears to be that one of the accusers had connections with the CIA. But there’s a problem with this women who have had contact with the CIA, even CIA agents, can be raped.

There’s a huge difference between stating “She has X Y and Z connections with the CIA. If she was working for them then this may be a set up.” and “She has CIA connections you know.” One is making the argument – the other is constructing some women as unrapeable.

Added to this we get a re-run of the Polanski trial and an argument that what happened to these women isn’t ‘rape-rape’. People were running these lines, before they even knew what the charges are. The charges are actually really clear cut: he had sex with one woman while she was asleep, and he didn’t stop when another woman said stop. It doesn’t require a very in depth and complex understanding of consent to understand that that is rape. But there is a constant narrative that anything other than stranger rape where force is used is somehow a lesser form of rape. That narrative is really damaging to rape survivors.

But I think that defenders of Julian Assanger do the most damage when they construct a way that rape victims behave and imply that the woman involved isn’t acting like a rape victim: she tweeted about him, or she seemed happy, or she saw him again.

I lose it at this point. There is no way that rape victims act – there is no way that rape victims don’t act. Seriously. If you don’t know this then you have no right to say a word about rape.

It does so much harm to so many women, the idea that there’s a way that rape victims act. It’s not just some idea that you’re spinning off into cyber-space. It’s something that women who are going through trauma have to struggle through – their own, and other people’s expectations of how they should be behaving. And it doesn’t stop – the idea of the acceptable behaviour of a rape victim gets used as a weapon again and again.

Most rape myths are about women, about attacking suvivors of rape, discrediting them trashing them – and there’s been a lot of that. But some are about men John Pilger said that he had a very high regard for Julian Assange. And? The rhetorical rapist – the scary man, who no-one holds in high regard – is a weapon that is used against actual victims of rape all the time.

And what is most ridiculous about this spreading of rape myths by left-wing supporters of wikileaks is that these myths are completely unnecessary to stand in solidarity with the wikileaks project.

It is states and companies that are attacking Wikileaks and Julian Assange, not two women. It is perfectly possible to criticise the actions of prosecuters, interpol, judges and government’s without invoking rape myths.

Believing the women, or at least not disbelieving the women, does not mean that you have to stop criticising the way the (in)justice system operates or decide that that wikileaks is a bad project.**

The rape myths are unnecessary, and damaging. By repeating rape myths, you give them power. Doing so doesn’t just hurt the women involved, but strengthens rape culture, and makes it harder for many, many, many other rape survivors.

Stop it.

* If you must look at it yourself the link is here – but no good ever came of reading the Daily Mail.

** On the other side of this, having a feminist analysis of rape does not necessitate accepting that the (in)justice system prosecuting rape is a victory for rape culture. I think these are actually flip sides of hte same argument, and brownfemipower has made some really interesting points about the limits of posts like this one.

Posted in Rape, intimate violence, & related issues | 5 Comments

Twenty links about Assange, consent, and rape

[Crossposted on Alas and on TADA. Anti-feminists, conservatives, “feminist critics,” and MRAs may post in the comments on TADA, but not in the comments on Alas.]

Here’s how James Joyner describes the accusations against Julian Assange:

Assange had consensual sex with two women, unbeknownst to one another, who were friends. They had hurt feelings afterwards and confided to a female police officer that Assange had engaged in sex with one of them without a condom, having worn a condom the night before. In the case of the second woman, Assange’s condom broke but he continued to climax, anyway.

Now here’s how the Press Association describes the charges:

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been remanded in custody in London after appearing in court on an extradition warrant.

The 39-year-old Australian is wanted by prosecutors in Sweden over claims he sexually assaulted two women. […]

Gemma Lindfield, for the Swedish authorities, told the court Assange was wanted in connection with four allegations. She said the first complainant, Miss A, said she was victim of “unlawful coercion” on the night of August 14 in Stockholm.

The court heard Assange is accused of using his body weight to hold her down in a sexual manner.

The second charge alleged Assange “sexually molested” Miss A by having sex with her without a condom when it was her “express wish” one should be used.

The third charge claimed Assange “deliberately molested” Miss A on August 18 “in a way designed to violate her sexual integrity”. The fourth charge accused Assange of having sex with a second woman, Miss W, on August 17 without a condom while she was asleep at her Stockholm home.

I guess I just don’t find anyone in this case trustworthy. A lot of the press accounts — like this article by Mark Hosenball, which Glenn Greenwald called “informative, credible” — seem very biased. The first two pages are filled with anonymous claims. Buried on the third page, Hosenball finally mentions the actual charges against Assange by saying:

Tuesday, a lawyer representing the Swedish government laid out for a British judge four specific charges of sexual misconduct, three related to Miss A and one related to Miss W. The word “rape” was not part of the charges but “unlawful coercion” and Assange’s alleged reluctance to use condoms was.

Funny how Hosenball doesn’t mention that Assange is being accused of physically holding one woman down with his weight during the alleged sexual assault, and of having sex with another woman while she was asleep.

Although I’ve had opinions about some cases in the past, I don’t have an opinion in this case. But I’m really bothered by the way the apparent charges against Assange are being soft-pedaled, including by some liberal sites, and by big-name feminist Naomi Wolf.

Anyway, here are some very good posts about this case — or really, most of the time, not about the case itself, but about the way people are discussing and framing the case.

  1. Almost Diamonds responds strongly to the “she didn’t act like a rape victim! She socialized with Assange afterwards!” argument: How Must She Behave to Have Been Raped?

    What did I do when I was sexually assaulted? I went on with my plans for the evening, which were to lose my virginity. Yep, that’s right. Within hours of being sexually assaulted, I had consensual sex.

    Why? Hell if I know that either. I do know it doesn’t make any sense, but that’s because I wasn’t rational. I’ll remind you that I’d just been assaulted (and suffered another type of betrayal right alongside it). I had no idea what to do. I did the easiest thing, which was to go along as though it hadn’t happened.

  2. Jill at Feministe’s post is especially good, focusing on legal questions around rape, consent, and withdrawal of consent.
  3. Kate Harding’s post at Salon is the best post I’ve read responding to the smears against the accusers.
  4. Feminism and Tea has a good post about how rape myths are coming up in discussions of Assange’s case.
  5. An Open Rant Against the Perpetuation of Rape Myths
  6. Sexual Offense Laws of Sweden (Not sure if this is complete or not.)
  7. When you assume about Assange, you make an ass of you and me
  8. Feminism, Assange rape charges, free speech, and Wikileaks
  9. Assange Arrested Because Of “Radical Feminist” Bitches
  10. On Consent
  11. Julian Assange, the arrest and why we should not protest. Yet. | The River Fed
  12. A Feminist Lawyer on the Case Against Wikileaks’ Julian Assange
  13. Pandagon on how it’s possible to both admire Assange’s Wikileaks activism, and not automatically dismiss any sexual assault charges against him as baseless or a conspiracy.
  14. Right-Wing Blogger on Date Rape: ‘You Buy the Ticket, You Take the Ride’
  15. The arrest of Julian Assange – a reality check
  16. Naomi Wolf really needs to read the internet
  17. Feminist Conspiracies and Julian Assange
  18. Wikileaks and Rape (and left wing hypocrisy)

(Due to posts added in future edits, the number of links no longer adds up to 20. Sorry!)

Posted in crossposted on TADA, Rape, intimate violence, & related issues | 13 Comments

This Week’s Cartoon: “Hedge Fund Nation”

Only in a nation that is truly ill-informed could Republicans block unemployment aid for millions unless the most fortunate among us get tax cuts, while simultaneously talking out the other side of their mouths about deficits burdening our children. All this while we live in a new Gilded Age of mind-blowing income inequality. It’s almost too absurd to contemplate. But you knew that already. As for my thoughts on the Great Compromise: I think Obama could have used his rhetorical abilities to put the GOP on the defensive. But caution is his middle name (it has officially replaced “Hussein,” in fact), and it’s going to come back and bite him on the butt.

One almost gets the impression from the GOP that something is wrong with you if you’re still doing actual, useful work (or would like to, except for the fact that there are five available workers for every job opening), as opposed to occupying the loftier realms of high finance. So I decided to play around with the idea of everyone becoming a banker. Related cartoon from 2004 (a personal fave): “The Labor Chain

Posted in Syndicated feeds | 19 Comments

Persian Poetry Tuesday: Forugh Farrokhzad's "Grief"

Forugh Farrokhzad was the most significant female Iranian poet of the twentieth century, corresponding most closely, in terms of American poetry, to Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton. Her poems are political, feminist, sexual, erotic, breaking almost every taboo that existed for women in the 1950s and 60s in her country. For her commitment to her art and her vision, she earned the scorn of her society and her family. She was committed to a mental institution and had her only biological child removed from her custody. Today, she is recognized for the great artist that she was, both in and out of Iran. A selection of her work has been beautifully translated by Sholeh Wolpe in the book Sin, published by The University of Arkansas Press. This poem, Grief, is from her book Asir (Captive), which was published in 1955:

Grief

Like the disheveled locks of a woman
the Karun river spreads itself
on the naked shoulders of the shore.
The sun is gone, and the night’s hot breath
wafts over the water’s beating heart.

Far in the distance the river’s southern shore
is love-drunk in moonlight’s embrace.
The night with its million brilliant bloodshot eyes
spies on beds of innocent lovers.

The cane field is fast asleep. A bird
shrieks from amid its darkness,
and the moonbeams rush to see
what fear has driven it to such despair.

On the river’s skin, palm shadows
tremble at the sensual touch of the breeze,
and inside the silent secret deep of night,
frogs sing their loud frog songs.

In this rapturous night’s bliss
the distant dream of your hands draws near,
your scent rushes in like a wave, your eyes
glimmer on the water’s face, then go dark.

My pitiful heart, eager and hopeful,
fell captive to the hands of your love.
You sailed away on your own river, left this land–
O snapped branch of my passion’s storm.


Cross posted on The Poetry in The Politics, The Politics in The Poetry.

Posted in Iran, literature | Tagged | 2 Comments

LGB Teens Punished More By Authorities

From the Washington Post:

Gay and lesbian teens in the United States are about 40 percent more likely than their straight peers to be punished by schools, police and the courts, according to a study published Monday, which finds that girls are especially at risk for unequal treatment. […]

The study, from Yale University [found] substantial disparities between gay and straight teens in school expulsions, arrests, convictions and police stops. The harsher approach is not explained by differences in misconduct, the study says.

“The most striking difference was for lesbian and bisexual girls, and they were two to three times as likely as girls with similar behavior to be punished,” said Kathryn Himmelstein, lead author of the study, published in the journal Pediatrics.

Why the punishment gap exists is less clear.

It could be that lesbian, gay and bisexual teens who got in trouble didn’t get the same breaks as other teens – say, for youthful age or self-defense, Himmelstein said. Or it could be that girls in particular were punished more often because of discomfort with or bias toward some who don’t fit stereotypes of femininity.

In the comments of Box Turtle Bulletin, Kat wrote:

I see this result as being in line with other research, such as the finding that gender non-conforming women are more likely to be sexually harassed than those who present more femininely (link).

I’d guess, like the lead author, that when police or other agents of authority “eyeball” people to see who’s a troublemaker/suspicious or whether or not they’re worth being lenient towards that gender non-conforming appearance/behavior can contribute to being seen as a less savory character.

The research doesn’t appear to have measured punishments of trans versus cis people, but I strongly suspect that a similar “extra punishment” effect applies to trans teenagers.

Posted in Lesbian, Gay, Bi, Trans and Queer issues | 2 Comments

Signed Slowpoke Books

…are now available in the Slowpoke Bookshop, just waiting to be personally-inscribed by moi, and shipped off via Priority Mail for the holidays. Whomever you give them to will love you forever. This concludes our public service announcement.

Slowpoke books

Chuckles aplenty!

Posted in Syndicated feeds | Comments Off on Signed Slowpoke Books

Krugman: Let The Tax Cuts Die

The Republicans have filibustered tax cuts for all Americans who pay income tax, because they want the extra-large cuts only for those who earn more than $250,000 a year extended. Paul Krugman argues that rather than compromising, Obama should veto any bill that includes extra tax cuts for the rich:

…while raising taxes when unemployment is high is a bad thing, there are worse things. And a cold, hard look at the consequences of giving in to the G.O.P. now suggests that saying no, and letting the Bush tax cuts expire on schedule, is the lesser of two evils.

Bear in mind that Republicans want to make those tax cuts permanent. They might agree to a two- or three-year extension — but only because they believe that this would set up the conditions for a permanent extension later. And they may well be right: if tax-cut blackmail works now, why shouldn’t it work again later?

America, however, cannot afford to make those cuts permanent. We’re talking about almost $4 trillion in lost revenue just over the next decade; over the next 75 years, the revenue loss would be more than three times the entire projected Social Security shortfall. So giving in to Republican demands would mean risking a major fiscal crisis — a crisis that could be resolved only by making savage cuts in federal spending.

And we’re not talking about government programs nobody cares about: the only way to cut spending enough to pay for the Bush tax cuts in the long run would be to dismantle large parts of Social Security and Medicare.

So the potential cost of giving in to Republican demands is high. What about the costs of letting the tax cuts expire? To be sure, letting taxes rise in a depressed economy would do damage — but not as much as many people seem to think.

A few months ago, the Congressional Budget Office released a report on the impact of various tax options. A two-year extension of the Bush tax cuts, it estimated, would lower the unemployment rate next year by between 0.1 and 0.3 percentage points compared with what it would be if the tax cuts were allowed to expire; the effect would be about twice as large in 2012. Those are significant numbers, but not huge…

A visual of the competing tax plans:

As for me, I favor extending the tax cuts only if something genuinely worthwhile is gotten in return. Which (according to Ezra Klein) currently seems like a possible outcome:

The White House has stopped negotiating for ideal — or even acceptable — tax policy and moved to negotiating stimulus policy. The Bush tax cuts will pump about $100 billion into the economy over the next two years. They’re not the most stimulative way to spend $100 billion, but they’re more stimulative than not spending it, or than raising taxes. And they won’t be alone.

The deal isn’t done, but right now, Democrats look likely to get a 13-month extension of both unemployment insurance and many of the tax breaks built into the stimulus (Making Work Pay, the bump in the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Tax Credit, the business tax breaks and so on). That totals about $180 billion over two years. So if the White House gets the deal that the early reports suggest are close — and that they seem to think they’ll be able to get — this is a two-year stimulus package that approaches $300 billion.

In other words, rather than paring the tax cuts and the deficit back, they’re making both larger. If you’re of the mind that the economy needs all the extra help it can get right now — and you should be — this is a lot more extra help than anyone expected Republicans and Democrats would agree to give it. And from a political perspective, if you believe that what matters for elections is the economy — and you should — then it’s worth it for the White House to lose news cycles in 2010 if it means adding jobs by 2012.

And in theory, if the economy is stronger in 2012 (when the Bush tax cuts would come up for renewal), that would make it a much better time for Democrats to fight against huge, deficit-busting tax cuts for the rich. However, it’s hard to have much faith in the Democrats (and in particular, Obama’s) ability to fight the Republicans effectively in 2012 (it’s not like they did a great job of it in 2010).

Posted in crossposted on TADA, Economics and the like, In the news | 32 Comments

Mandolin's Fantasy Story, Viewed Through A Science Fiction Lens

From an interesting post at tansyrr.com:

For some reason this got me thinking of a couple of this year’s stand out stories which are most definitely fantasy, but which benefit from a reader viewing them through a science fictional lens.

“My story should have ended on the day I died. Instead, it began there.”

The first of these is Rachel Swirsky’s “The Lady Who Plucked Red Flowers beneath the Queen’s Window,” a marvelous novella published in Subterranean Online. While this is undoubtedly a fantasy story, with elements that would not seem out of place in an antique copy of Weird Tales, it is very much a treatise on immortality, or the effects upon humanity of living beyond one’s natural time period, through a conceit that works very similarly to time travel.

Much like classic science fiction novel The Forever War, the protagonist skips across aeons as she is resurrected again and again to advise a series of leaders, and sees the world change into something utterly unrecognisable. She is particularly confronted by changes in perceptions towards gender and sexuality which alienate her from the societies that need her help.

While it is entirely framed as a fantasy story, with the teaching and sharing of magic an essential plot point, not to mention a ghost constantly at the beck and call of her former employer’s descendants, the structure of the story is strongly science fictional. It feels like a science fiction story at its core.

“The Lady…” (which is my personal favorite of Mandolin’s stories, so far) definitely feels, to me, like it includes elements of both sf and fantasy.

Posted in Mandolin's fiction & poems | 1 Comment

A Popular Christian Belief I Find Offensive


Heaven and Hell diagram

Not just a Christian belief — I’m sure some other religions share this belief, and it’s just as offensive to me if they do — but I live in a majority-Christian culture, so Christian beliefs are what I’m familiar with.

In his most recent post, Richard wrote:

Christianity, of course, is not the only religion that thinks its truth is the only truth; most religions, in fact, do. So I am not here trying to suggest that Christianity, or at least the kind of Christianity promoted by The Salvation Army, is any worse than any other religion…

I disagree with Richard here — I do think that Christianity is worse than “any” other religion — Judaism, for example.

There are two beliefs held by many Christians that I find objectionable:

1) Non-Christians will burn in Hell, a place of eternal torment.
2) God is just and good.

I don’t find either of these beliefs, on their own, offensive. For instance, if someone believed that a depraved and unjust God had set up a system in which good Heathens burn in Hell, I’d find that a depressing belief, but not an offensive one. But the two beliefs combined indicate that I (atheist Jew that I am), nearly all my friends, and my entire family are going to burn in Hell — and that it’s just and good that we burn in hell.

This is a grossly insulting belief for anyone to hold — indeed, I can’t imagine a more insulting belief than “in a just universe, you burn in Hell forever.”

There is an iconic and painful story told of the prosecution of Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem in 1961. Eichmann was the highest official in the Nazi hierarchy who was brought to trial after the war. His crimes were historic in their wickedness. The tales of horror that unfolded during the proceedings remain etched in the collective conscience of humanity. After he was condemned to death, a Christian pastor asked the Israeli court for permission to see him and encourage him to repent.

Do you mean, one of the justices asked incredulously, that if Eichmann accepts Jesus he will go to heaven, and yet all his Jewish victims will go to hell?

That, replied the pastor, is the miracle of salvation.

Nor is believing that non-believers go to Hell something all religions share. Jewish belief is that virtually everyone, non-Jews included, goes to Heaven. (Jews are also considerably less focused on the afterlife question than Christians.)

To their credit, large minorities of American Christians “take a non-exclusivist view of salvation,” in that they believe that any good person — even atheists, Hindus and Muslims — can get into Heaven.

Depending on denomination, some Christians implicitly reject their Church’s official beliefs by refusing to accept that a just and good God would set up a system in which good Muslims/Jews/atheists/Hindus to Hell. Those are the Christians I admire! As for the rest… I’ve had Christian friends who believe I’m doomed to burn if I don’t accept Christ as my savior. No one’s perfect, and I don’t demand perfection from my friends.

But it remains an ugly belief, and one I hope all good people, including my friends, will eventually reject.

Posted in Anti-atheism, crossposted on TADA, Whatever | 48 Comments