Are Women Human?

On this International Women’s Day I will suggest Catharine MacKinnon’s book Are Women Human? And Other International Dialogues. Catharine MacKinnon, a Minnesotan, is an international lawyer at the Hague. Her background is impressive. However, last fall I heard her speak at the University of Chicago and I can attest that she is even more impressive in person.

“MacKinnon is the Elizabeth A. Long Professor of Law at the University of Michigan Law School.[3] In 2007, she served as the Roscoe Pound Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School.[4] MacKinnon is a highly cited legal scholar.[5][6] She has frequently been a visiting professor at other universities and regularly appears in public speaking events.”

She writes of the necessity to define women’s rights and the systemic denial of them:

Regarding the Inter-American Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence Against Women (Convention of Belém do Pará) she explains it explicitly states that women have “The right to freedom from violence notably includes ‘the right of women to be valued and educated free of stereotyped patterns of behavior and social and cultural practices based on concepts of inferiority or subordination’ (9).

Further, “Women are half the human race. To put the individual accounts in context, all around the world, women are battered, raped, sexually abused as children, prostituted, and increasingly live pornographic lives in contexts saturated more or less with pornography. Women do two-thirds of the world’s work, earn one-tenth of the world’s income, and own less than one-hundredth of the world’s property. Women are more likely to be property than to own any. Women have not even been allowed to vote until very recently and still are not in some countries” (21, italics, author’s, stats from United Nations, The State of the World’s Women 1979 quoted in Burns H. Weston, Richard A. Falk and Anthony A. D’Amato, International Law and World Order 578-580 (1980) footnote 12, p 291).

She observes that the violence against women is a war and we need to recognize it as such.

“ To be on the bottom of a hierarchy is certainly different from being on the top of one, but it is not simply difference that distinguishes the two. It is, in fact, the lesser access to resources, privileges, credibility, legitimacy, authority, pay, bodily integrity, security, and power that makes the two unequal. The issue here is not entirely how to make access to those things nonarbitrary, because the situation we are confronting is anything but simply arbitrary. It does have an inner logic. The issue is systematic male supremacy and how to end it.” (74).

Women have the power to demand and make systemic change.

“The idea that these acts violate women’s human rights has been created by women, not by states or governments. National laws seldom effectively recognize that women are violated in these ways and sometimes even make them criminals for being raped (having sex outside marriage) or having abortions (resisting forced motherhood). Women across cultures have created the idea that women have human rights, refusing to believe that the reality of violation we live with is what it means for us to be human – as our governments seem largely to believe.” (181).

“Women have created the idea of women’s human rights by refusing to abandon ourselves and one another, out of attachment to a principle of our own humanity –  one defined against our context and our experiences.” (181).

Are women human? Not according to state, national and international laws that allow ongoing violence to women around the globe. Not as evidenced by the systemic abuses against women perpetrated by educational, religious, social, cultural, corporate and governmental institutions run primarily by men.

But we can and will change that. We are half the world.

You may also like New Books, and A Fine Balance.

Into the Desert – Fasting for Lent

Do you fast during Lent? Here’s an idea. Instead of fasting from favorite foods, chocolate and other physical indulgences, why not fast from those things that destroy our hearts and minds?

Deep spirituality is about becoming whole. This is what it means to be “holy.” With this in mind why not –

  • Fast from gossiping about others.
  • Fast from self-talk that is self deprecating.
  • Fast from comparisons with others.
  • Fast from the “victim” mentality.
  • Fast from emotionally abusive relationships.
  • Fast from people who lower your self-esteem.
  • Fast from telling yourself that you’re not good enough, smart enough, capable enough.
  • Fast from thinking you need more _______ (fill in the blank).
  • Fast from negative thinking of any kind.

I’m fasting this Lent.  40 days is all it takes to re-train my mind to think differently!

You may also like Lent – Into the Desert, Visio Divina Reflection, and Other Ways to Simplify.

Life’s Beautiful Doors

Everyday life offers us many doorways. Some lead us into amazing new life. Others lead us to delightful places we could never have envisioned for ourselves. We choose to walk through some and not others.

If you would like your life to be different then definitely walk through a new door.

Why? As DH explained, if you stay where you are it is certain that your life will remain just as it is- NO chance for a better life. Remember the definition of “insanity” – continuing to do the same thing expecting a different result.

If you walk through a new door there is at least a 50% chance that your life will improve. The fearful fatalist will note that there is also a 50% chance that things could get worse, but that is true even if you stay where you are!

Since I am a believer in a loving God I actually believe that the percentage that things will improve by walking through a new door is much, much higher than 50%.

Life beckons – urgently.

Watch and see the many doors your life places before you today. Can you find them? Which new door will you open?

alvhemmakleri.se

 

alvhemmakleri.se
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You may also like The Doors of Dublin, Back Door Makeover and Live a Little.

 

 

Art In Bloom Valentine

Here’s for DH: Happy Valentine’s Day and to help ease the winter doldrums… Enjoy these winners of the Minneapolis Art Institute’s Art In Bloom Exhibit from 2011.

Photo The Birthday Party, Arts MIA
Photo Saint Severin, Arts MIA
Photo Mill Stream, Arts MIA
Photo Allegory Four Elements, Arts MIA

Note for DH: Look on the top of the LH side of the closet. Now look on the bottom of the LH side as well. XOXO

You may also like Art In Bloom, Patio Zen Garden Update and Cabin Fever.

Simple Living

Feeling hassled, rushed and harried is not living – not a life. Busyness and complexity are over rated. Being overscheduled is not the mark of importance or goodness. It is a mark of not carefully considering the content of one’s life.

Simplify your life. Here are some ideas to get started. Pick one that you would like to try for awhile. See how it works.

  • Get rid of the TV(s). It’s too negative, mind-numbing and junk food for the soul.
  • Stop cable, newspaper and magazine subscriptions.
  • Cancel cell phone(s) and use Skype.
  • Stop buying bottled water, soda, juices, vitamin drinks, sweetened teas or other bottled beverages.
  • Live in a smaller space – less to furnish, cool, heat, clean, paint, etc.
  • Leave your car at home. Bike, use public transport when possible.
  • Take a technology vacation. Check personal email at the end of the day or only once a week.
  • Read more. Join a book club.
  • Stop spending time with people who don’t make you feel good – even if they are “friends” or “family” because they aren’t.
  • Spend more time with real friends and cultivate new, healthy relationships (try the book club).
  • Get healthy on the inside. Stop negative or “victim-hood” self-talk. Practice healthy, affirmative and empowering self-talk every day.
  • Pay off bills. Stop buying stuff. Save more. Donate more.
  • Cook more. Use local food. Eat out less.
  • When you cook use meat as a flavoring. Eat more vegetables.
  • Make your own no-knead bread. Make your own Greek yogurt.
  • Make a pot of soup and share it.
  • Laugh more.
  • Write. Journal. Reflect.
  • Walk more.
  • Try one new thing each week.
  • Use a down comforter. Turn down the heat.
  • Let the sunlight in. Let in fresh air. Keep it clean.
  • Detach. Give away half your clothes, CDs, books, collections, etc.
  • Enjoy the empty space, cupboards, closets, cabinets, bookshelves. Much easier to keep clean.
  • Sit in silence. Do nothing for at least 20 minutes every day.
  • Do yoga, walking, running, swimming or any exercise you enjoy.
  • Drink less caffeine, more water or herbal tea.
  • Enjoy fresh flowers – inside or out.
  • Play more. Have fun.
  • Orient your life toward those who struggle. Learn about the root causes of poverty.
  • Love yourself deeply.
  • Share your life with others.
  • Love your life, where you are, just as it is.

There’s more. Simple Wardrobe and Simple Furniture posts coming soon . . .

You may also like Secret of Wealth From Ancient Babylon, Fill Your Life With Fabulous, and Simplify, Simplify, Simplify.