Are some Black men going to continue slamming Beyonce for looking gorgeous and sexy on GQ, showing skin, while their own avatars are shirtless with low hanging pants and they spend time begging for naked Twitpics and sexting?
Are some Black men going to continue making erroneous…
—
Allan G. Johnson (via wretchedoftheearth)
What men lack, women didn’t take from them, and it isn’t up to women to give it back.
What men lack, women didn’t take from them, and it isn’t up to women to give it back.
What men lack, women didn’t take from them, and it isn’t up to women to give it back.
(via wretchedoftheearth)
FOREVER REBLOGGING
(via bowtiesandjamjars)
What is SAFER?
The SAFER Act (H.R. 1523/S. 3250) is a no-cost bill that will create the Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence Registry (SAFER), which will track the status of DNA evidence collected in rape cases (commonly known as rape kits).
Why We Need It:
There’s a huge backlog of DNA evidence from unsolved rape cases that has never been sent to the lab for analysis. Until we test this evidence and identify the rapists, those criminals remain free to attack more victims.
How SAFER Will Help:
SAFER will bring transparency to the DNA rape kit testing process, help us efficiently target resources to cities that have the biggest backlogs, and empower the communities with information about the rape kit testing status in their area. It will help eliminate the evidence backlog and take thousands of rapists off the streets.
How You Can Help:
Call or email your U.S. Representative and Senators (calling is more effective, but an email will help, too). Below are samples of what to write or say.
The Violence Against Women Act is up for reauthorization this year, and despite overwhelming bipartisan support in the past, Republicans have expressed concerns over new provisions in the bill.
Here’s what you need to know about it in one infographic.
notes found in the girls bathroom on my campus
I fucking love Jackson Katz. Many of my colleagues have worked with him directly, and I’m currently very active in a project he is very much involved with here in Los Angeles. The people running the project love me because I’ve proven time and time again that I am one of the most committed members of the group, because I am that passionate about women’s rights and the fact that men need to learn to love instead of hate.
ETA: And yes, the project is very heavily focused on men and their role, not on women and their victimization. The moment I became involved I said “YES, finally, we can teach men not to rape, instead of teaching women how not to be raped.”
Kolkata, India: Supporters of the All India Mahila Sanskritik Sanghathan (AIMSS) protest violence and political attacks against women and girls. April 16, 2012
Photos by Ajanta Sinha Ghosh
Save Wiyabi Project
“Wiyabi” is Assiniboine for “Women”. This project is dedicated to bringing awareness to the epidemic of sexual and domestic violence towards Native American women. In the United States, Native women are more likely to be raped and physically assaulted than any other group. We encourage you to support the Re-authorization of the Violence Against Women Act and the SAVE Native Women Act.
You can now follow us on Twitter at @SaveWiyabi and on Facebook at Facebook.com/Save.Wiyabi.Project
LUCHA POR ELLAS…
“PROTESTA CONTRA LOS FEMINICIDIOS EN LATINO AMÉRICA”
Fight for them
Protest against femicide in Latin America
[TW: street harassment] When my confident, curious, adventurous 12-year-old daughter asked if she could go get ice cream by herself (we live in a city) the first thing that I thought of was how to prepare her to hear:
“Where’s my smile, baby?”
“Wanna go for a ride?”
What if she is surprised? Looks down? Doesn’t give the guy speaking to her the positive response that he seems to think he’s entitled to? What hurtful, explicit things will he then say to put her in her place?
From now on, she’ll have to be on alert. How many times will she have to go out of her way, take longer routes, not go certain places, alter her clothes? Not forget to hold her keys poking through her fingers? Not take certain buses, and pay for a cab instead of taking a metro? Take her lighthearted moods and tuck them away behind earphones and fake phone conversations?
How will it make my daughter feel? Powerless? Angry? Sad? Scared? It’s stressful and depressing to have to acknowledge the underlying threat of violence, especially in a culture that is dedicated to equality for all, a concept predicated on equal and safe access to public space and free speech. Her loss of innocence will have as much to do with the betrayal of this myth of equality and equal access as with understanding her physical vulnerability.
— Audre Lorde (via ethiopienne)