I've long been an advocate for the cessation of discrimination against, and the abuse of, women in our society. Progress has been made, but there remains a long way to go. In the past several days, FaceBook has seen numerous posts of "Me, Too" from women, about having been harassed and/or assaulted (including rape). The sad fact is that most women will be harassed or assaulted at some time in their lives - likely, repeatedly. The awful part of this is that most of the crimes against women are not reported. Why not? Unfortunately, our culture seems all too inclined to blame assault victims for being assaulted!! And all too inclined to allow the perpetrators to get away with it, either being let off scot-free or given a very mild slap on the wrist. And all too inclined to provide little or no support for the victims, in terms of helping them seek justice or in terms of providing care for what many women experience as PTSD as a result of these attacks. "Well, the way she was dressed, she was asking for it!" "Well she should have known better to be in that place at night!" "It was just boys being boys!" Bullshit!! There is no excuse for harassment and rape, and the blame rests solely on the perpetrator, never the victims. If we want to stop these crimes, we must teach our boys not to commit violence of any sort against women. "No!" means no, damn it!
It may surprise some that many such incidents also occur to men. I was molested (raped) by a neighbor when I was a boy. I was so humiliated and shamed by it, I didn't tell anyone (except for my very best friend at the time), for decades - certainly not my parents! This pedophile got away with it, as it seems many do. Rape is not a sexual act - rather, it uses the apparatus of sex as a weapon to degrade and humiliate the victims in what is an act of violence, rather than sex. Pedophiles - a subset of sexual assaulters - often commit assaults on either boys or girls. And it often succeeds in silencing its victims, as it did with me.
My wife tells me that most rapists have committed their crime many, many times, and almost certainly will never stop hunting for new victims unless they're incarcerated ... or die. The actual frequency of rape is not known, owing to the underreporting issue, but I'm pretty certain it's much higher than the actual numbers will show. I know of no other rapes by the man who did it to me, but it seems unlikely to have been an isolated event in his life. His name is Paul Newton, and he lived on our block in my home town in the Chicago suburbs, 3 houses south. I'm sure it's well beyond the statute of limitations, but I hope some other victim had the strength and courage to report him. But probably not.
Another disgusting incident of a different nature occurred when I was working at the National Severe Storms Laboratory. A very famous and honored meteorologist was invited to be a consulting senior scientist there by the Lab Director, Dr. Jeff Kimpel, and it turns out he was sexually harassing women who worked in the lab. After I was made aware of his disgusting behavior, I was going to report him, but one of his victims there begged me not to do it. She felt that reporting him would only make things worse for her!! Reluctantly, I did as she asked, and never reported the evil bastard. She was probably right about the outcome, and that makes me very sad when I think about how many women have gone through this, and been powerless to obtain justice. From everything I've heard during my time there, at that time, the overall treatment of women at NSSL was pretty poor, with an atmosphere of "Boys will be boys" at high levels in the management, despite all the safeguards that had been put into effect.
Fortunately, I've been able to overcome the shame of my molestation and now realize I wasn't to blame in any way. If there can be said to be a "benefit" to being molested, it's that I've experienced what many women have experienced, so I have a sense of what they must go through. The "Me, too!" campaign on FaceBook is allowing many people to come forward and say they, too, have been through harassment/assault. Stories are optional. Our society has looked the other way for far too long and the time has come to seek justice and provide consistent support for the victims. It's time to take a stand against the injustices we've inflicted on victims for too long. If you've never been a victim, just try to imagine how awful it would be. Then use that understanding to get up and speak out against crimes of sexual violence - against women and men, girls and boys!
Me, too!!
A collection of short comments, rants, complaints, tributes, or whatever. This won't replace my existing Web essays. IF YOU WISH TO COMMENT ON ANY ENTRY, YOU MUST INCLUDE YOUR REAL FIRST AND LAST NAME - NO ANONYMOUS OR FIRST-NAME ONLY COMMENTS, OR THOSE USING A PSEUDONYM WILL BE POSTED!
Tuesday, October 17, 2017
Monday, October 16, 2017
Trump is just a symptom of a greater malaise in America
There's an insidious illness that has infected the USA, causing our culture to evolve in ways that will eventually end badly for us. It has become widespread and malignant - like a cancer, it comes from within rather than a foreign invasion. The election of the incompetent, ignorant, narcissistic, racist, misogynist, corrupt clown that only a minority of Americans voted for in last year's November election is but a symptom of the problem.
The founders of this nation, as imperfect as they were, began what is often called "The Great American Experiment in Democracy". The experimental aspect of how our nation was created by those founders, was expressed eloquently by President Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg address:
Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
The Civil War was a rigorous test of those principles, and the nation managed to stay together, sort of. Given that the Confederate battle flag known as the "Stars and Bars" has become symbolic of, not just the Confederacy, but more so of the racism that caused the Civil War in the first place. That racism (not limited to the Southern states), like the HIV virus, clearly lives on to this day within our nation. It has gained widespread support and its persistence is a poison to the principle of equality for all humans in our nation.
Many of these issues surfaced again during the turbulent era of US involvement in Vietnam. Similar divisions were present in the 1960s that had been around during the Civil War. And those same divisions in our society plague us today, without the benefit of the spirit of compromise upon which our nation was founded. Political parties have become a corrupting influence on us, where party loyalty is more valued than service to the American people.
The founders of our nation fell quite a ways short of living up to their own principles, of course. That shortfall is still obvious today in many Americans. Equality for all people actually never has been achieved in America, and we have made at best only slow and erratic progress at making equality a reality for everyone. Women have been given the vote, but they're still being discriminated against in the workplace (and elsewhere) and subjected to sexual harassment and assault (including rape). Justice for the perpetrators of harassment and assault against women remains elusive - power and money buy such criminals a free pass, despite our ideals. Women actually are blamed for these crimes, rather than those committing them. In the face of such inequality, most of the discrimination and the crimes against women are never reported, and in the rare instances where they are reported, that often backfires on the women, not the perps.
After slavery was abolished, racial inequality remains a fact of life experienced on a daily basis for most non-white Americans. The police are charged with enforcing the laws of the land, but some of the police are simply brutal thugs, free to attack and even kill without being held accountable. And the police commit such crimes disproportionately on non-white Americans. Every black family must have "that conversation" with their children to make them aware that justice isn't equal in America. The default assumption among many whites is that non-whites match the stereotypes projected on them by white Americans (who live in an invisible "bubble" of white privilege), and so many whites are completely unaware of the reality of discrimination against non-whites.
Non-christians in America are widely despised by the "religious right", especially Muslims and atheists, these days. Christian notions of morality are being forced on all Americans on a daily basis. I'm not going to go off on a rant against all religion, but here in America, creeping theocracy is generally associated with conservatives, who yearn to impose a mythical vision of America as they imagine it "used to be" when religious discrimination was not being opposed by those who believe in real freedom, not only of, but also from religion. The "Establishment Clause" of the 1st Constitutional Amendment is constantly under attack by the religious right. When people believe their god is on their side, they think that means they can fight for a theocratic USA by any means necessary.
Science and the tools of science - education, logic, evidence - are now widely mistrusted by many Americans. There is a deep thread of anti-science and anti-intellectual thought that has always existed in America, but it seems to be growing more popular. Public education is being threatened by siphoning even the diminishing taxpayer support for education into religious schools via the so-called "vouchers". Too many Americans are monumentally ignorant about science, history, geography, mathematics, civics, and more. Democracy depends on being supported by educated voters, so the attacks on public education are actually attacks on our democratic principles. To make voting decisions in the modern world dominated by technology requires people who understand how things in our society work. Otherwise, they are too easily led astray by would-be dictators.
Many politicians are being corrupted by large corporations pouring vast amounts of money to buy special favors for such companies, at taxpayer expense. The "Trust Busting" era when Teddy Roosevelt broke the power of the corporations, is little more than a distant memory. The Republican party has been taken over by the far right wing of their party and now supports tax breaks for big corporations while taking resources away that have been providing support for indigent people who need external help just to survive. The indigent suffer even as the rich get richer. Income inequality is a capitalist form of slavery and could eventually result in a violent revolution, with the indigent protests likely to be slaughtered by the very police who have pledged to serve and protect them. Look at recent events for small-scale examples, such as the protests by the Standing Rock Sioux.
The trainwreck that is the crypto-fascist regime under Trump and his GOP supporters is simply a reflection of the decay from within that is infecting our nation. Most Americans don't exercise their right to vote, and that tendency is at least part of the reason we have been saddled with this regime. By not voting, Americans are giving up on the American Experiment and our democracy is being threatened by the drift toward fascism. The right-wing extremists seem more interested in voting than the moderate center. What is considered "left-wing extremism" is what used to be considered "liberal" while the true extreme left-wing is left out of the political picture altogether and so is reduced to protests and occasional violence. No one in America wants it to become Communist, and the Communist threat pretty much disintegrated in 1989. Disenfranchising Americans (limited predominantly to those who would cast a "liberal" vote) is also a terrible stain on the democratic experiment here, and the GOP has mastered the tactic.
Our current regime has dedicated itself to erasing any remnant of their sworn enemy - Barack Obama - as if all of the vitriol poured on him during his time as our President were actually true. This is causing the US to lose its role as the world leader. We are alienating our allies and encouraging our enemies. And we have a childish psychopath with his finger on the thermonuclear trigger!
We seem to be tending toward going down a road to total collapse of liberal democracy, unlikely to be identical to, but also not unlike, the experiences of the moderate provisional government in Russia before the revolt by the Bolsheviks that put them in power, and that of the moderate Weimar Republic in Germany before the triumphs of the Nazis. The different ideologies mask the many similarities between the Bolshevk and Nazi dictatorships. History shows us that extremists can win, even when they only represent a small minority of the people in a nation - and we are not immune from having something like that happen! The signs of our willingness to slide toward fascism have been apparent from the start of the 2016 election. Extremists have a clear picture of what they want and are willing to do whatever it takes to "win", no matter how much suffering they create in achieving their cause. Moderates often are paralyzed with indecision about what to do and how to do it - they talk, while extremists act. Are we seeing the last days of the Great American Experiment? American "exceptionalism" is a nationalist myth. There is nothing inherent in American Democracy that will enable it to survive - the testing of its ability to endure has been ongoing since before the Civil War!!
Now we are engaged in a struggle about whether our nation, so conceived and dedicated to the principle of equality for all its people, can endure as a beacon of democracy and freedom. It is altogether fitting and proper we should do this. On this struggle hangs the outcome - whether or not this nation shall have a new birth of freedom so that our government of all its people, by all its people, and for all its people, shall not vanish from this Earth.
The founders of this nation, as imperfect as they were, began what is often called "The Great American Experiment in Democracy". The experimental aspect of how our nation was created by those founders, was expressed eloquently by President Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg address:
Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
The Civil War was a rigorous test of those principles, and the nation managed to stay together, sort of. Given that the Confederate battle flag known as the "Stars and Bars" has become symbolic of, not just the Confederacy, but more so of the racism that caused the Civil War in the first place. That racism (not limited to the Southern states), like the HIV virus, clearly lives on to this day within our nation. It has gained widespread support and its persistence is a poison to the principle of equality for all humans in our nation.
Many of these issues surfaced again during the turbulent era of US involvement in Vietnam. Similar divisions were present in the 1960s that had been around during the Civil War. And those same divisions in our society plague us today, without the benefit of the spirit of compromise upon which our nation was founded. Political parties have become a corrupting influence on us, where party loyalty is more valued than service to the American people.
The founders of our nation fell quite a ways short of living up to their own principles, of course. That shortfall is still obvious today in many Americans. Equality for all people actually never has been achieved in America, and we have made at best only slow and erratic progress at making equality a reality for everyone. Women have been given the vote, but they're still being discriminated against in the workplace (and elsewhere) and subjected to sexual harassment and assault (including rape). Justice for the perpetrators of harassment and assault against women remains elusive - power and money buy such criminals a free pass, despite our ideals. Women actually are blamed for these crimes, rather than those committing them. In the face of such inequality, most of the discrimination and the crimes against women are never reported, and in the rare instances where they are reported, that often backfires on the women, not the perps.
After slavery was abolished, racial inequality remains a fact of life experienced on a daily basis for most non-white Americans. The police are charged with enforcing the laws of the land, but some of the police are simply brutal thugs, free to attack and even kill without being held accountable. And the police commit such crimes disproportionately on non-white Americans. Every black family must have "that conversation" with their children to make them aware that justice isn't equal in America. The default assumption among many whites is that non-whites match the stereotypes projected on them by white Americans (who live in an invisible "bubble" of white privilege), and so many whites are completely unaware of the reality of discrimination against non-whites.
Non-christians in America are widely despised by the "religious right", especially Muslims and atheists, these days. Christian notions of morality are being forced on all Americans on a daily basis. I'm not going to go off on a rant against all religion, but here in America, creeping theocracy is generally associated with conservatives, who yearn to impose a mythical vision of America as they imagine it "used to be" when religious discrimination was not being opposed by those who believe in real freedom, not only of, but also from religion. The "Establishment Clause" of the 1st Constitutional Amendment is constantly under attack by the religious right. When people believe their god is on their side, they think that means they can fight for a theocratic USA by any means necessary.
Science and the tools of science - education, logic, evidence - are now widely mistrusted by many Americans. There is a deep thread of anti-science and anti-intellectual thought that has always existed in America, but it seems to be growing more popular. Public education is being threatened by siphoning even the diminishing taxpayer support for education into religious schools via the so-called "vouchers". Too many Americans are monumentally ignorant about science, history, geography, mathematics, civics, and more. Democracy depends on being supported by educated voters, so the attacks on public education are actually attacks on our democratic principles. To make voting decisions in the modern world dominated by technology requires people who understand how things in our society work. Otherwise, they are too easily led astray by would-be dictators.
Many politicians are being corrupted by large corporations pouring vast amounts of money to buy special favors for such companies, at taxpayer expense. The "Trust Busting" era when Teddy Roosevelt broke the power of the corporations, is little more than a distant memory. The Republican party has been taken over by the far right wing of their party and now supports tax breaks for big corporations while taking resources away that have been providing support for indigent people who need external help just to survive. The indigent suffer even as the rich get richer. Income inequality is a capitalist form of slavery and could eventually result in a violent revolution, with the indigent protests likely to be slaughtered by the very police who have pledged to serve and protect them. Look at recent events for small-scale examples, such as the protests by the Standing Rock Sioux.
The trainwreck that is the crypto-fascist regime under Trump and his GOP supporters is simply a reflection of the decay from within that is infecting our nation. Most Americans don't exercise their right to vote, and that tendency is at least part of the reason we have been saddled with this regime. By not voting, Americans are giving up on the American Experiment and our democracy is being threatened by the drift toward fascism. The right-wing extremists seem more interested in voting than the moderate center. What is considered "left-wing extremism" is what used to be considered "liberal" while the true extreme left-wing is left out of the political picture altogether and so is reduced to protests and occasional violence. No one in America wants it to become Communist, and the Communist threat pretty much disintegrated in 1989. Disenfranchising Americans (limited predominantly to those who would cast a "liberal" vote) is also a terrible stain on the democratic experiment here, and the GOP has mastered the tactic.
Our current regime has dedicated itself to erasing any remnant of their sworn enemy - Barack Obama - as if all of the vitriol poured on him during his time as our President were actually true. This is causing the US to lose its role as the world leader. We are alienating our allies and encouraging our enemies. And we have a childish psychopath with his finger on the thermonuclear trigger!
We seem to be tending toward going down a road to total collapse of liberal democracy, unlikely to be identical to, but also not unlike, the experiences of the moderate provisional government in Russia before the revolt by the Bolsheviks that put them in power, and that of the moderate Weimar Republic in Germany before the triumphs of the Nazis. The different ideologies mask the many similarities between the Bolshevk and Nazi dictatorships. History shows us that extremists can win, even when they only represent a small minority of the people in a nation - and we are not immune from having something like that happen! The signs of our willingness to slide toward fascism have been apparent from the start of the 2016 election. Extremists have a clear picture of what they want and are willing to do whatever it takes to "win", no matter how much suffering they create in achieving their cause. Moderates often are paralyzed with indecision about what to do and how to do it - they talk, while extremists act. Are we seeing the last days of the Great American Experiment? American "exceptionalism" is a nationalist myth. There is nothing inherent in American Democracy that will enable it to survive - the testing of its ability to endure has been ongoing since before the Civil War!!
Now we are engaged in a struggle about whether our nation, so conceived and dedicated to the principle of equality for all its people, can endure as a beacon of democracy and freedom. It is altogether fitting and proper we should do this. On this struggle hangs the outcome - whether or not this nation shall have a new birth of freedom so that our government of all its people, by all its people, and for all its people, shall not vanish from this Earth.