ARTICLES

The Women's Right to Vote!

A very important article to read about how women have struggled for a long time to be able to give US the right to vote today!

Spread this on and Keep in mind that we have an upcoming election and that we need to exercise our right to vote!

2008-09-23

Progress Can Kill: Why Imposed Development Destroys the Development of Tribal Peoples

This very in-depth and informative article outlines information about the following: An Introduction of Land and Life, long term impacts of settlement on health, Effects on Identity, freedom and mental health, aternal effects,sexual health, and health care. As well as a conclusion on health and the future.The reason that this article is being placed on the website is because it is important to understand that we have all contributed to this 'modern' world. The question is, how do we go from here? Ask questions, demand answers.

This article is very important to circulate. Please feel free to do so!

2008-08-14

Darfur's rape camps

Dear friends,

On Monday, the International Criminal Court indicted Sudan's President Omar Al Bashir for genocide. He is charged with killing hundreds of thousands of people in Sudan and its Darfur region, and corralling the surviving women and girls into terrifying camps where they are being quietly and systematically raped until their peoples are destroyed.

In response, Al Bashir's regime is threatening more terror against Darfurians and the UN, and appealing to powerful international friends who buy oil from and sell weapons to Sudan to give him protection. Al Bashir knows that he will be caught only if other governments, especially Arab and African governments, agree to help the International Criminal Court (for example by arresting him when he travels abroad).

Targeting Al Bashir is our best hope to end the terror of Darfur's rape camps, and take a major step forward for international justice. Many of Sudan's neighbours are Muslim countries where rape is a scandalous crime – and Al Bashir's henchmen have killed and raped thousands of Muslim women. To raise awareness of this, Avaaz is launching a large regional ad campaign, urging leaders to help the ICC. Our ads will run in just a few days, and a full page ad in an Egyptian newspaper is just 3000Euros($5000), so we need just 50,000 Euros ($75,000) to get our message across. Click below to help:

https://secure.avaaz.org/en/save_darfur

Many in the international community are concerned that this indictment will undermine attempts to make peace with Al Bashir, and even blame the ICC for threatening peace. Some of those concerns are just a cover for Sudan's oil and arms dealing partners. Others are more legitimate, but must contend with Darfur's victims and survivors, who have the most at stake, and are universally supportive of justice. They say they have seen Al Bashir break every agreement he has signed for 20 years, and that no lasting peace can be signed that leaves a genocidaire with the power to commit his crimes again.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) is a giant step forward for humankind – a single global court, with the power to try any person who has committed the worst crimes against humanity. It has an independent prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo of Argentina, and judges from Brazil, Latvia, and Ghana. This is the first time the ICC has indicted a sitting head of state, and all the world's worst current and future mass criminals are watching closely. Let's send them a clear message: that justice, and the rule of law, are on the march. Let's help make it happen, and make sure that all our governments help the ICC to succeed in this first test, and end the terror of Darfur's people.

With hope,

Ricken, Mark, Graziela, Pascal, Paul, Veronique, Iain, Ben and the whole Avaaz team.

PS – You can see report backs and achievements of recent Avaaz campaigns here: http://www.avaaz.org/en/report_back_1
Avaaz is a legally registered not for profit organization, and we do not receive any money from governments or corporations. We are funded and driven by our members, who come from every nation of the world.

PPS – Here are some links to more information:

The full text of the International Criminal Court statement:
http://www.icc-cpi.int/library/organs/otp/ICC-OTP-Summary-20081704-ENG.pdf
he Enough Project: "The Merits of Justice" (in Sudan)
http://www.enoughproject.org/files/reports/ICC_report_071408.pdf
New York Times: "Catching a war criminal in the act"
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/15/opinion/15goldstone.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
BBC: "Profile: Sudan's Omar al-Bashir"
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7502973.stm
2008-08-08

A Speech by Sunera Thobani

Here's an excerpt:

We, and this "we" is really problematic. If we in the West are all Americans now, what are Third World women and Aboriginal women to do? If Canadians are Americans now, what are women of colour to do in this country? And I'm open to suggestions for changing this title, but I thought I would stick with it as a working title for getting my ideas together for making this presentation this morning.

2008-08-06

White House Defines Contraception as Abortion

An article that needs to be read!!
2008-07-23

Emma Goldman- The Individual, Society and the State

An article written by Emma Goldman in 1940!!

http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/goldman/works/1940/individual.htm

2008-07-14

IMPLICATIONS OF THE SHRINKING SPACE FOR FEMINIST ANTI-VIOLENCE ADVOCACY

An article written in 2005 by Mandy Bonisteel and Linda Green

2008-07-14

Islam recognizes homosexuality

Islam 'recognizes homosexuality'
Abdul Khalik , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Fri, 03/28/2008 1:38 AM | Headlines
Homosexuals and homosexuality are natural and created by God, thus permissible within Islam, a discussion concluded here Thursday.
Moderate Muslim scholars said there were no reasons to reject homosexuals under Islam, and that the condemnation of homosexuals and homosexuality by mainstream ulema and many other Muslims was based on narrow-minded interpretations of Islamic teachings.
Siti Musdah Mulia of the Indonesia Conference of Religions and Peace cited the Koran's al-Hujurat (49:3) that one of the blessings for human beings was that all men and women are equal, regardless of ethnicity, wealth, social positions or even sexual orientation.
"There is no difference between lesbians and nonlesbians. In the eyes of God, people are valued based on their piety," she told the discussion organized by nongovernmental organization Arus Pelangi.
"And talking about piety is God's prerogative to judge," she added.
"The essence of the religion (Islam) is to humanize humans, respect and dignify them."
Musdah said homosexuality was from God and should be considered natural, adding it was not pushed only by passion.
Mata Air magazine managing editor Soffa Ihsan said Islam's acknowledgement of heterogeneity should also include homosexuality.
He said Muslims needed to continue to embrace ijtihad (the process of making a legal decision by independent interpretation of the Koran and the Sunnah) to avoid being stuck in the old paradigm without developing open-minded interpretations.
Another speaker at the discussion, Nurofiah of the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), said the dominant notion of heterogeneity was a social construction, leading to the banning of homosexuality by the majority.
"Like gender bias or patriarchy, heterogeneity bias is socially constructed. It would be totally different if the ruling group was homosexuals," she said.
Other speakers said the magnificence of Islam was that it could be blended and integrated into local culture.
"In fact, Indonesia's culture has accepted homosexuality. The homosexual group in Bugis-Makassar tradition called Bissu is respected and given a high position in the kingdom.
"Also, we know that in Ponorogo (East Java) there has been acknowledgement of homosexuality," Arus Pelangi head Rido Triawan said.
Condemnation of homosexuality was voiced by two conservative Muslim groups, the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) and Hizbut Thahir Indonesia (HTI).
"It's a sin. We will not consider homosexuals an enemy, but we will make them aware that what they are doing is wrong," MUI deputy chairman Amir Syarifuddin said.
Rokhmat, of the hardline HTI, several times asked homosexual participants in attendance to repent and force themselves to gradually return to the right path
2008-07-02

Our girls are not guinea pigs

Our girls are not guinea pigs

Is an upcoming mass inoculation of a generation unnecessary and potentially dangerous?

CATHY GULLI | August 27, 2007 |

The morning after Emily Cunningham got a shot of Gardasil, the new vaccine that protects against four strains of the human papilloma virus(HPV)that can cause cervical cancer and genital warts, she woke up with a headache, and neck and back pain. By 9 p.m. that evening in April, she had a fever so high "you could feel the heat rising from her a foot away," according to her mother, Laurie. She was delirious during the night, and the following day couldn't walk without assistance. Bedridden for nearly a week, the 18-year-old from Wyoming missed school, and took Tylenol every four hours. "If Emily had been the only one to get sick we would have said she must have had something else [like the flu]," explained Laurie, "but we know of three other students to have reactions, that is why we are concerned."

Emily's story is only one of 1,637 complaints involving Gardasil, filed as of May to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System(VAERS), a national surveillance database sponsored by the Food and Drug Administration(FDA)and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC)in the United States. One could discount what happened to Emily because she had a flu shot that same day, but other really bad reactions have been reported, including seizures, paralysis -- and worst of all, three deaths, including one girl who "died of a blood clot three hours after getting the Gardasil vaccine," reads one complaint. Elsewhere in the world there have been reports of similar reactions. In Melbourne, Australia, where a national HPV vaccination program started in April, 26 girls reportedly fainted and were mildly paralyzed after getting one shot each.

 

In almost every instance, the response of medical authorities and government officials is the same: bad reactions are rare. When they do occur, there's no evidence that Gardasil was the cause. Arguably, both points could be true. Some say the problem, however, is that no one really knows, medically speaking, just how dangerous this vaccine could be. "Usually at this stage in the life span of a vaccine we would not have this kind of action," Maclean's has heard from Abby Lippman, an epidemiologist at McGill University who recently aired her concerns about the speed with which Gardasil has been adopted in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. "We're making guesses that it's going to last long, that [we're immunizing] the right age [of girls], and that it's effective. We don't have a solid basis for this thought."

And yet, nearly every province in Canada has, in recent weeks, put forth some plan to implement an HPV vaccination program that will see the mass inoculation of an entire generation of girls -- some as soon as this September -- with no serious acknowledgement of the potential health risks they might face. While everyone debates the moral and political consequences of endorsing Gardasil, the fundamental, essential medical and scientific debate remains untouched. So, in a few weeks, when thousands of girls concerned about Facebook and who will be in their class this year -- not HPV -- go back to school, many will become part of the biggest Canadian science experiment in decades. They will be the guinea pigs.


To find out the worst case scenario when it comes to Gardasil, one need only hear the stories of parents whose children have become ill or died after receiving the vaccine. Recently, one angry father from Chicago phoned up John Driscoll, an attorney at the law firm Brown & Crouppen in St. Louis, Mo. Shortly after receiving Gardasil, his daughter was diagnosed with Guillain-Barré syndrome, an autoimmune disease. It starts with tingling sensations in the legs, which then travel to the upper body, and finally become so intense in the muscles they paralyze, though often they diminish over time. "He believes it was linked," says Driscoll, and wants to sue Merck & Co., Inc., the U.S. pharmaceutical company that manufactures Gardasil. This will be the first such lawsuit, but Driscoll, who believes the vaccine was rushed to market, predicts that, "unfortunately, we'll get more and more calls about this in the future."

In fact, Guillain-Barré syndrome is one of the more serious adverse reactions noted in the hundreds of complaints filed to VAERS. "When you go to your doctor's office, the list of symptoms is very short: dizziness, fainting. But there's a whole laundry list of potentially serious side effects," says Dee Grothe, an investigator at the Washington-based watchdog organization Judicial Watch, which filed freedom of information requests to access details about negative reactions relating to Gardasil. "This is information that everybody receiving the shot should know," she says.

2008-06-26

'Coming out' not easy for gay kids; Religious and cultural values cause fear, anger - and backlash

'Coming out' not easy for gay kids; Religious and cultural values cause fear, anger - and backlash
The Toronto Sun
Wed 25 Jun 2008
Page: 10
Section: News
Byline: BY AMY CHUNG, SUN MEDIA
Coming out of the closet is never easy. For some youth, it has been tremendously difficult, especially when staunch religious and cultural values are involved. Jen Blaser, 18, has experienced a lot of backlash for coming out. She has been a victim of an array of hate crimes that no teen should ever experience: Sexual assault, bullying, death threats, you name it, she's been through it. Growing up in a small rural town in Ontario that is predominantly Christian, her sexual orientation was not welcomed. "I was the only gay person in my high school and in town," said Blaser. It was made known that being "different" was not going to be tolerated. "I would find death threats in my locker, the hood of my car and I was constantly teased and beaten on." After relentless bullying and rejection from friends and family, Blaser dropped out of high school in Grade 10 and joined the Triangle Program. Part of the Toronto District School Board, the program allows homosexual youth to complete their high school education in a gay-sensitive environment. 'INSULAR COMMUNITY' Although Canada has progressed with implementing discrimination policies and laws, some immigrant parents hold on to old-school values. Sukhshinder, 25, is out to friends, but not to his traditional Indian parents. "Although my parents have been in the country for 30 years, they still have not adopted Canadian culture. They live in a very insular community in the suburbs with other people (from India) and do not have interactions with Canadians, let alone gay people. In Punjabi, 'gay' is a derogatory term. There is also this expectation that their sons and daughters will marry someone from the opposite sex and give them grandchildren," says Sukhshinder. Despite being caught with a Playgirl one day, that was not evidence enough for his parents to clue in. "We don't discuss sexuality. They just pretended nothing happened." Sukhshinder, like many gay youth, is afraid what may happen if he comes out. "I'm afraid I will be shunned and excommunicated." In some countries, homophobia is entrenched in the culture and law. Lakeem Pemberton is a 22-year-old Centennial College student from St. Kitts, where punishment for male homosexuality means years in prison. "In my hometown, being gay is not tolerated. Gay people cannot even go to church because it is not considered right in God's eyes. I have seen friends get beat up and mobbed," said Lakeem, who is estranged from his father. El-Farouq Khaki, a gay refugee and immigration lawyer, who works with LGBTQ, HIV/AIDS claims and same-sex sponsorships, said there needs to be discourse about sexuality. TOLD 'IT WAS A PHASE' "I remember coming out at 16 and went back in the closet because my parents told me it was a phase. This was back in the 1970s where even Canadian society was in a different time," says Khaki, 44, who came out again at 29. The reason why people think Canada is progressive is because we have changed our laws, therefore demanding change at the same time, adds Khaki, citing same-sex marriage and same-sex benefits as examples. For some parents, sensitivity and acceptance are difficult to conjure. But parents like Pat Hinds say, in the end, "it's your child and you should love them for who they are." © 2008 Sun Media Corporation. All rights reserved.
2008-06-26
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