August 31, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Diane Lefer, Economy, Politics
Having It All By Having Choices…
by Diane Lefer
When you walk into a room and fewer than 50% of the people there are women, “it should look peculiar,†said Madeline Di Nonno, executive director of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, “and it doesn’t.â€
Marianne Williamson, in her lead-up to the upcoming November conference SISTER GIANT: Women, Non-Violence and Birthing a New American Politics, points out that woman make up only 16.8% of our elected representatives in Congress — a figure very close to the 17% cited by Di Nonno as the percentage of female characters we see “in the environment†in film and on TV. What’s going on here and how do we change it?
Last week, the West Hollywood Women’s Advisory Board observed Women’s Equality Day with Understanding Our Power, a roundtable discussion moderated by Dianne Callister, academic, theologian, and director of foundations that benefit children and mothers around the world. Di Nonno brought her expertise in media; attorney Angela Reddock spoke from her experience in labor and employment law and city politics while licensed clinical social worker Judi Miller Levy based her remarks on extensive work in the field of domestic and sexual violence. In spite of the power women clearly have and 92 years after we won the right to vote, the speakers considered why, in Di Nonno’s words, “women have stalled out.†Read the rest of this entry →
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August 30, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Economy, Guest Author, Politics
It’s Not a Dirty Word…
by Jody Williams
HUMAN SECURITY FOR GLOBAL SECURITY: Demilitarization is not a dirty word, nonviolence is not inaction, and building sustainable peace is not for the faint of heart.
The political, social and economic changes we all face are serious. Some might call the state of the world today chaos. The ongoing, dramatic changes in technology and communications are other elements adding to uncertainty and the feelings of insecurity that people around the globe are confronting. No one can predict the future but we can work hard to shape the outcomes.
Clearly there are huge obstacles to creating a world of sustainable peace with justice, equality and an end to impunity. A world free of militarism, armaments and the arms trade in which human and other resources are focused on meeting the needs of humanity rather than fueling conflicts and war. A world of sustainable development that nurtures our planet instead of continuing to devastate the environment and threaten life on earth. This will not happen over night. But worrying about the future is not a strategy for shaping it. Read the rest of this entry →
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August 29, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: David Swanson, Politics
Soldiers Finding Freedom in Resistance to Senseless Militarism
by David Swanson
One of the most inspiring events at the Veterans For Peace National Convention in Miami was a presentation by several
veterans who have refused to participate in war. Typically, they have done this at the risk of significant time in prison, or worse. In most cases these resisters avoided doing any time. Even when they did go behind bars, they did so with a feeling of liberation.
Gerry Condon refused to deploy to Vietnam, was sentenced to 10 years in prison, escaped from Fort Bragg, left the country, and came back campaigning for amnesty. President Jimmy Carter pardoned resisters as his first act in office. Condon never “served” a day, in either the military “service” or prison.
Jeff Paterson of Courage to Resist refused to fly to Iraq, choosing instead to sit down on the tarmac. Ben Griffin from VFP’s new chapter in the U.K. refused to participate in our nations’ wars and has been issued a gag order. He’s not permitted to speak, and yet he speaks so well. Mike Prysner of March Forward and Camilo Mejia of VFP in Miami described their acts of resistance. Read the rest of this entry →
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August 28, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Politics, Robert C. Koehler
Rape, Patriarchy, and the Bomb
by Robert C. Koehler
“Every sperm is sacred. . .â€Â Todd Akin could have worked on the script for the 1983 Monty Python movie, The Meaning of Life: “If it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.â€
But wait, there’s more. “But let’s assume that maybe that didn’t work or something,†the Missouri Senate candidate said in his recent, now infamous TV interview. “You know, I think there should be some punishment, but the punishment ought to be at the rapist and not attacking the child.â€
This is where I heard the bell toll. He hypothesizes that the rape is “legitimate†but the woman manages to get pregnant anyway. So punish the rapist, he says, not “the child†(i.e., embryo) by, presumably, allowing it to be aborted. Who hovers in utter irrelevancy in this scenario? The woman. She’s no more than a fertile medium for the rapist’s “child†and has no say in what should happen next.
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August 27, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Community, Culture, Current Events, Michael N. Nagler
Creating a Sane Culture, One Mind at a Time
by Michael N. Nagler
“The only thing that you can control, and you must therefore control, is the imagery in your own mind.” –Â Epictetus
Until today I didn’t even know there was such a thing as white supremacist music. Wade Michael Page knew; the “domestic terrorist†who killed six people at the Oak Creek Sikh temple in Wisconsin a week ago Sunday had played in a neo-Nazi band called “Definite Hate†and started one called “End Apathy†in 2005. So Page, when you think of it, has something in common with his immediate predecessor in mass murder, James Holmes, who perpetrated the Aurora, CO shooting two weeks earlier. Despite their differences, in his case also a form of contemporary “art,†namely the Batman film, played some role in the buildup to his murderous violence. Read the rest of this entry →
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August 24, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Ecology, Guest Author
What Ecology Can Teach Us About Responsible Media Practice
by Antonio López
New media and cultural practices mirror each other in the same way that contemporary gamers now view the world differently than gamers of old. Consider how baseball evolved with radio. Its slow pace is perfect for the
narrative storytelling style of the oral tradition. American football, on the other hand, is perfect for television, its visually impressive and vignette-driven coverage timed perfectly for the commercial break. In both cases, though, their dissemination requires top-down distribution and offers clear and definitive outcomes, making them excellent fodder for discussion, distraction, and catharsis. Not surprisingly, politics have come to mirror sports spectacles with teams (parties) and strategies (platforms) that have a way of eschewing actual discussion of issues, substituting real politics with horse-race-like coverage.
No wonder the native intellectuals of the colonial media system can’t deal with the open-ended politics of kids raised on “infinite†games. Infinite games are about keeping the gameplay going, not about definitive winners and losers. The goal of infinite games is not an “end game†— as so many corporate media pundits search for in the narrative of the movement — but sustainability. How do you keep it going? “It,†in our case, is just life for those of us who want to raise our children on a healthy planet and in a prosperous and just society. Read the rest of this entry →
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August 23, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Community, Ecology, Economy, Evaggelos Vallianatos
Large Farms Are the Emperors of Rural America
by Evaggelos Vallianatos
Large farmers, with farms thousands of acres in size, have tremendous power.
You can visualize that power standing on the border of any such large farm. You see nothing but the horizon in the far distance touching the flat land. Coming as I did from Greek culture where farms are tiny, each bordering the neighboring farm with beautiful small stone walls or trees, the vast expanse of merely land without any fences or houses or trees, is always shocking. But after my bewilderment wears thin, I realize these monstrous farms produce most of America’s food.
Large farmers are the emperors of rural America. The federal government lavishes more than $20 billion of subsidies on them every year. Other long-term subsidies in water, science and technology are worth trillions. Read the rest of this entry →
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