Monday, April 16, 2007

It's the Hypocrisy, STupid

From Robin Morgan (www.RobinMorgan.us)


Beyond Imus—It’s the Hypocrisy, Stupid!

April 16

Periodically, some new wound rips the scab off our national, livid scar where sex and race intersect: the young law professor, Anita Hill, shaming Congress by her dignity and inspiring women with her truth; the O.J. Simpson circus trials; the Duke-Lacrosse mystery; Don Imus v. the Rutgers Women’s Basketball Team.

We’re an adolescent country, ahistoric, not that well educated. Most Americans still don’t know that “races” do not exist, that what gets termed “races” are miniscule physical variations across our species, due to different survival adaptations we’ve developed since our human ancestors migrated from Africa to other geographical regions. (One instance: in a sun-drenched sub-Saharan climate, melanin in our pigmentation created darker skin as a protective necessity; under cloudier northern skies, paler pigmentation suppressing melanin became necessary so we could absorb more Vitamin D from the sun.)

Yet ironically, while believing “race” is real, many Americans think racism, sexism, and other bigotries are myths—a staggering feat of collective denial. How many times have you heard someone start (or finish) a diatribe with “Well, I’m no racist (sexist, homophobe, etc.), but . . . ?

Michael Richards follows his melt-down by proclaiming he’s not a racist; Mel Gibson weeps he’s not an anti-Semite; actor Isaiah Washington calls a colleague “faggot,” but insists he’s no homophobe. Politicians spew blatant or coded hate speech, then muster blame-the-victim, nonapology apologies (“Sorry if anyone mistook what I meant”).  They all scuttle behind the excuse of work-stress or alcoholism while fleeing to the latest damage-control hideaway: rehab.

Howard Stern, who built his career on every form of bigotry, “libertarian” Bill Maher, and new neocon Dennis Miller all boast about attacking “the Establishment” while they parrot and reinforce its basest values, and hide behind the “equal-opportunity insulter” justification—as if pain lands with the same impact on the powerless as on the powerful. A few others walk a fine line of satirizing prejudices while trying not to reinforce them. Stephen Colbert has built a not-so-bright, archconservative character deliberately to skewer that character’s politics. Yet even Jon Stewart, whose work I admire, at times jettisons his political conscience where sexism is concerned—perhaps too eager to court that age 18 to 24 pale-male consumer demographic?

But all of these “truth-telling,” “ground-breaking,” “ballsy,” so-called rebels, however much they might now tiptoe around “the N word,” tiptoe more around words that would be really dangerous to use, especially in self-examination:

The R word: Racist. The S word: Sexist. The H word: Homophobe.

Well, after a lifetime of activism—from the civil-rights movement through antiwar, antipoverty, the birth of lesbian and gay rights, the founding and flowering of the contemporary feminist movement in the United States and globally—I am still a racist, a sexist, a homophobe. How could I not be? How can any of us—no matter our sex or ethnicity—not be sexist, racist, and all the other –ists? Our society sowed these seeds in our formative consciousness.

I remember my mother and aunts—good women, liberal whites, working-class, apostate Jews, proud members of the NAACP—unthinkingly saying “That’s white of you,” or “I’m free, white, and 21,” or even “You can’t wear those new shoes yet! Stop acting nigger-rich.”  Yet these women once soaped out the mouth of a playmate who used “nigger” as an epithet; all the while they chuckled at “Amos and Andy” stereotypes on the radio and made “No tickee no washee” jokes at the Chinese laundry. Conveniently, they didn’t connect the dots.

As a child, I sure got their double message, though. Never since have I been able to cleanse myself totally of those messages, not under the blast of Southern sheriff’s fire hoses, not on picket lines or at sit-ins or in jail cells. I wrestle with those toxins—whispery, seductive, semiconscious—every damned day, in myriad ways, and will do so until I die. Hannah Arendt termed this a necessary vigilance about “the Eichmann within,” who gets loose only when not acknowledged. It’s the hypocrisy. I believe that each of us truly commits to fight bigotry only when we get royally pissed at how it has warped our own humanity. At least then, with enlightened self-interest, we’re less likely to play Lord or Lady Bountiful but abandon the direct victims when the going gets rough. There’s no vaccine for these poisons siphoned into our systems, no individual-case cure. But recognition is the prerequisite step in treating such diseases until we can eradicate them outright. For that we need to come off it and tell the truth.

It’s not about blame, but about responsibility; not about guilt, but about change.

The same is even truer of sexism—where denial and collaboration are epidemic. Racism is still taken more seriously because men suffer from it, too—and whatever any men do or feel must be more important than what happens “only” to all women. When a man says “I’m no sexist, but . . .” I groan inside. But when the rare guy begins, “I guess I must be a sexist, but I don’t want to be, so how . . .” he gets my attention: he’s owning up to reality, and already addressing not what but how.

Everyone over age 45 shares some version of my childhood brain-soiling experiences. Younger Americans share different pernicious messages: It’s cool to make fun of geezers, fat people, spastics, amputees. If certain hip-hop lyrics reek violent woman-hatred, it’s hip for everyone to echo that (and it rakes in dough for the pale-male-owned record companies). If chic fashion spreads celebrate sado-porn rape poses, well, that’s just edgy. If talk-radio’s crude propaganda spews words like “feminazis,” “retards,” “Lezzies,” “ragheads,” and “wetbacks,” gee, lighten up, nobody takes that seriously. (Who is nobody?) If “Hey, man,” “What’s up, dude,” or “You guys” have been resurrected as generic terms for greeting a friend/friends, then to point out wearily that these terms erase female presence is to invite rebuttals revived word-for-word from the 1970s: to be overly sensitive, uncool, and, naturally, one of those humorless, dreary PC types. (About 15 years ago, I wrote a Ms. editorial explaining “PC” as really standing for Plain Courtesy.) D’uh. We’ve been here before, oh yeah.  But it still hurts.

It hurts. What part of “It hurts” don’t they understand?

I know, I know, it’s positive (however maddening) that our memory-challenged  pundits now claim the Imus affair will “open” a national dialogue about which some of us Americans are already hoarse, yet still babbling. I know patience is not my strong suit. I know that over time, consciousness is contagious. Once you start connecting dots, you can’t help but connect more. Rep. Linda Sanchez recently suspended her membership in the Hispanic Congressional Caucus, the second to leave the group charging sexism; her sister, Rep. Loretta Sanchez resigned after accusing caucus chairman Rep. Joe Baca of referring to her as a “whore.” Star athletes, members of Congress, law professors, single moms dancing at frat parties to support their kids, presidential candidates—when in doubt, call ‘em whores. We’re none of us immune to the hurt. And we’re none of us immune to being agents for the hurt.

I don’t only mean obvious offenders, serial right-wing purveyors of hate like Ann Coulter, Bill O’Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, et al. What about liberal compartmentalizers? Wasn’t that left-leaning Hollywood awarding an Oscar to the song “It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp”? In a coyly intellectual version of “Ooops, my bad!” progressive politicians and journalists—Senators Barack Obama and Joe Biden, Rep. Harold Ford, Frank Rich, Jeff Greenfield, a depressingly long list—now sheepishly admit to having been (caught as) enablers by appearing on “serious” segments of Imus shows, while they conveniently overlooked vicious sexist and racist “jokes” bracketing their discussions. I’ve heard feminist spokeswomen defend appearing on shock-jock shows or political shout-fest programs claiming the “need to reach those audiences.” To help generate more heat than light? To be a guest or a dartboard? To do outreach or to collaborate—conveniently compartmentalizing while hyping a book or oneself?
 
Language  reflects and defines attitudes. Attitudes reflect and define action. It’s the hypocrisy, stupid.
 
From the media, as usual, we relearned Compartmentalization 101: Whatever Men Say and Do is More Interesting than Whatever Women Say and Do.
 
Feminist movement support for the Rutgers team has been close to eradicated in coverage, which positioned Reverends Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson as leading the protests. Most pundits chose to play a sick Competition of Oppressions game, presenting the Imus debacle as more a racist story than a sexist one—as if human suffering should be compared, women appear in only one skin tone, and bigots can’t hate and chew gun at the same time. The Sunday morning TV political shows ignored the sexism entirely. Some commentators justly praised pressure brought by a 200,000 member African American women’s organization joining the protests, but neglected to mention that The National Council of Women's Organizations—11 million multiethnic women in 210 organizations—was among the first to demand firing Imus and his producer. Eleanor Smeal of the Feminist Majority Foundation met privately with the team at the start, and her speech brought down the house at their Rutgers rally. NOW’s President Kim Gandy has been denouncing Imus for years, and from the first moment this story broke, she, together with heads of other national feminist organizations, attended those same pressure meetings with CBS and NBC executives. These were meetings where Sharpton and Jackson—each bearing personal baggage as an apologist for his own past sexist actions and ethnic hate speech—garnered the media spotlight.
 
The fall-out from such destructive divide-and-conquer reporting implies that African American male leaders cared, but women of all other ethnicities did not. Erasure again—partial-truth reporting that feeds racism and sexism.
 
By now, we ought to know better, right? We ought to know that, despite persistent, erroneous media references otherwise, women are not another minority: we’re 52% of the population—and of the species. And you can damned well bet we come in all sizes, shades, shapes, ages. You name it, we are it. That’s the F word: Feminism.
 

At least the women athletes from Rutgers (two of whom are stereotype-breaking European Americans, by the way) got it right. Refusing to compartmentalize, and continuing to demonstrate not only physical but moral grace, they made clear they felt all women had been degraded by Imus’s remark. As team captain Essence Carson said:  “We’re just trying to give a voice to women who suffer from sexism. . . . Not just African American women, but all women.” 

Slam dunk.

 

1 Comments:

At 2:16 AM, Blogger Bhavana said...

Indian security forces and police rape women if they protest, Indian Parliament rocks


In Nandigram the massacre of farmers and rape of women by security forces and police stalled proceedings in Indian Parliament for the fifth consecutive day on Tuesday, forcing adjournment of both Houses.


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Wed, 2007-03-21 03:32
By Subash Mohapatra

At least 14 people were killed and 71 injured in Nandigram in East Midnapore, about 150km southwest of Kolkata on March 14 as police opened fire to quell mobs protesting acquisition of farmland for a special economic zone (SEZ).

Two women, who are under treatment at the Tamluk hospital, had filed a formal complaint with police. In a statement, the victims, both housewives aged 27 years and 25 years, alleged that police personnel cornered them during the melee after the firing at Sonachura village on March 14 and raped them.

Indian security forces and police are charged with many allegations of rape and torture, and mostly the incidents are denied without any investigation. This is not an isolated case or an exception. It exposes the inhuman and barbaric face of Indian law enforcement officials.

On March 9, the National Commission for Women in India received a petition stating that 8 tribal women were raped in Sirisguda village of Chhattisgarh including a student in the 10th standard on Feb 26. The victims were dragged out of their home in the morning and gang raped by police personnel, some in uniform. These women victims were opposing the land acquisition by the government for the TATA Steel Company. A rape victim was able to read the nameplate of one of the men who raped her and his surname is Sahu. The Superintendent of Police refused to register the complaint in a first information report.

On February 3rd 2007, while returning from the market at 5 P.M., a young tribal woman was dragged into the forest and gang raped by 4 members of the Mizo Security forces deployed in Dantewada. The men of the Mizo Security force gagged her to prevent her from shouting and she lost consciousness. When she regained consciousness, she was alone and naked in the woods. Her back was badly injured and her arms and legs were scratched and bruised from rocks and branches in the forest and now she can hardly move.

The officer-in-charge of Nakulnar police station denied her the right to register the case. With help from two other women, the victim submitted a written statement of the incident seeking justice but the Superintendent of Police of Dantewada refused to accept it and denied her case without investigation. However, she asked for help from the media, and finally, one week after the incident the complaint was registered against the un-identified persons. So far, no arrest has been made.

On November 28th, the UT Chandigarh Head Constable Ramkumar and three others brought Santosh Kumar from Karnal to Chandigarh and kept her in police lock-up on charges of illegal sale of alcohol despite claims by her husband and neighbors that she was innocent. She was sexually harassed and raped in the police station by Ram Kumar and an unidentified policeman. She was then moved to the Burail jail, where she was kept for 14 days until she was granted bail by the court.

“I was sexually exploited in the police station lock-up by two police personnel on the night of November 28,” Santosh Kumar alleged. She added “I kept telling the police that I had never even seen a police station in my entire life and that they were wrongly arresting me. My neighbors, too, stood by me, but the police refused to listen to anybody and sent me to jail here.”

On 27 December 2006, after the guilty party – another woman from the village named Santosh Singh - confessed in court, a fact-finding inquiry was marked to the Sub-Divisional Police Officer (South) DSP K I P Singh. Instead of expediting the matter and providing justice to the innocent Ms. Kumar, who had endured the mental agony, trauma and humiliation of being in jail for 14 days through no fault of her own, the inquiry officer took her fingerprints and sent these to the Fingerprints Bureau.

The inquiry report, which was received in the court of Chief Judicial Magistrate on 19 January 2007, clarified that Santosh Singh was found guilty and Santosh Kumar was innocent of the charges.

Despite the fact that the victim Santosh Kumar has been repeatedly raising serious allegations of sexual harassment she experienced while inside the police lock-up, the Chandigarh Police denied her allegations without any investigation

In an alleged murder case 3 tribal women were arrested and taken to Sundarpahar police station on January 9. The women were allegedly physically assaulted, and witnesses confirm that there were marks of police brutality on their bodies. The three female victims (all aged between 28 and 31) claimed that they were illegally detained, and that during that detention they were subjected to torture, raped, stripped and paraded naked around the police station.

They also claim that the police stole Rs.120 from them. The victims have identified the perpetrators as the officer-in-charge Dipnarayan Mandel and another officer, Mahadev Oraon. Rajmahal Member of Indian Parliament Hemlal Murmu claims to have visited the ladies at the jail where they are being detained. He alleges to have seen marks of violence on the women’s bodies. A doctor from Godda sadar hospital who examined the women also confirmed (on condition of anonymity) that the bleeding of one of the victims had not yet stopped.

According to Indian National Human Rights Commission, there were 1,039 cases of human rights violations by the security forces from 1990-1999, an average of 109 per year. The National Human Rights Commission reported a marked decline since that period, with 16 cases reported in 2003, and 4 in the current year. The NHRC reported that it registered 756 cases against the military, 172 against paramilitary forces and 109,902 against the police since 2001.

The National Crime Record Bureau records report that the courts tried 132 policemen for custodial rape in 2002 but only 4 were convicted. The Ministry of Defence reported that it filed 17 rape cases against army personnel from 2003-2004. To date only one rape case ended in a guilty verdict. In the remaining cases, the investigations are still in process.

- Asian Tribune -

 

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