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The South And Marriage Equality, Part II: Are States' Rights A Wrong?

Apr 04, 2013 / Sarah / Our Folks Blog
While racial, reproductive, and economic equality are the apples and oranges of modern social justice and should not be compared too intensely, one thing remains certain: They have all taken–and continue to take–a long time to make their way to the American South. The projected trajectory of marriage equality will likely follow that of abolition, … Read More

Lo Que Los Fanáticos Religiosos Se Esconden

Apr 03, 2013 / Amanda / Our Folks Blog
“that which the religious zealots are hiding” So I’m a little bummed today. The legislation in Kansas we’ve been fighting against was passed in both the House and Senate. It waits to receive its guaranteed signature from Governor Sam Brownback, who has continually proven to support harmful legislation that further endangers and marginalizes women. This … Read More

The South And Marriage Equality, Part I: Between A Rock And A Hard Place

Apr 02, 2013 / Sarah / Our Folks Blog
Days after the landmark U.S. Supreme Court hearings for Proposition 8 and the Defense of Marriage Act, Sue Everhart, a chief figure in Georgia’s Republican Party, voiced disdain over the proceedings. “Lord, I’m going to get in trouble over this, but it is not natural for two women or two men to be married,” Everhart … Read More

On Privacy and Reproductive Health: California's Confidential Health Information Act

Apr 01, 2013 / Guest Blogger / Our Folks Blog
Elizabeth McElvein is a member of the Choice USA chapter at Scripps College The federal Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires health plans and insurers to offer coverage to dependent children up to age 26. While the expansion of health care coverage is a momentous step forward, the ACA leaves matters of patient privacy relatively ambiguous; … Read More

Olivia Pope Strong Powerful and Dependent : When can Women Truly be Independent?

Mar 29, 2013 / Samantha / Our Folks Blog
I’m not much of a television buff simply because I usually never have the time to devote to it, but a show that has caught my attention and interest (thanks to my lovely roommate Drae) is Read More

How to Get an Abortion

Mar 27, 2013 / Amanda / Our Folks Blog
Let’s imagine five years from now we lose the rest of what remains of our civil liberties and all abortions are outlawed. Obviously just because it is illegal, does not make it unwanted. So what’s a girl to do when she experiences an unplanned pregnancy? Well don’t worry; I’ve compiled a list of options compiled … Read More

Expanding Access to Abortion in California Could Be a Model for the Country

Mar 26, 2013 / Guest Blogger / Our Folks Blog
By Katherine Sheldon, Co-Vice President of Choice USA at Sacramento State Let us start by taking a moment on behalf of uteruses everywhere to give thanks to Roe v. Wade for allowing us to do what we want, when we want, with our bodies. Forty years after becoming law, there are still people fighting to … Read More

Babies with three parents are one step closer to becoming reality

Mar 22, 2013 / Samantha / Our Folks Blog
This week I had the opportunity to read an article titled, )” target=”_blank”>In vitro Fertilization), and if successful, the resulting baby would have DNA from three parents (Most of its DNA from two and a small amount from the donor mitochondria from the third). As I was reading this I couldn’t help but become a … Read More

Yes Means Yes: Rape Culture and Teaching Sexuality

Mar 20, 2013 / Lydia Stuckey / Our Folks Blog
*Trigger Warning* Fuck the police. When this phrase is used, I argue that it refers to “police” collectively, rather than each individual.  Although some folks may curse and spit at every police officer they see, generally this phrase doesn’t target the individual but instead the system in place. Much like when I say “I hate … Read More

*Trigger Warning*

Fuck the police.

When this phrase is used, I argue that it refers to “police” collectively, rather than each individual.  Although some folks may curse and spit at every police officer they see, generally this phrase doesn’t target the individual but instead the system in place.

Much like when I say “I hate men.”  I don’t actually mean that I hate every individual man.  What I mean is that I hate that our society values and favors men over women.  I hate the Patriarchy and how it socially conditions.

This past week, I finally got my hands on “Yes Means Yes!: Visions of Female Sexual Power and a World Without Rape,” a book edited by Jaclyn Friedman and Jessica Valenti that deconstructs the way our society views and treats rape and female sexual pleasure.  Because the book is an anthology and made up of numerous perspectives, picking just one to discuss proved difficult, but one particular resonated with me this week: the sixteenth chapter by Brad Perry, “Hooking Up with Healthy Sexuality: The Lessons Boys Learn (And Don’t) About Sexuality, and Why A Sex-Positive Rape Prevention Paradigm Can Benefit Everyone Involved.”

In the chapter, Perry gives a personal account of his boyhood – specifically at age 13 – and the messages he received about sex and sexuality.  He writes, “growing up in white-bread, middle-class, suburban Virginia, we no doubt received plenty of messages in our social environment casting sex with girls (and only girls) as a one-sided affair where the boy makes the moves and calls the shots.”  From talking to one of his snot-nosed little friends’ hormone driven teenage older brother, Perry and his friends learned the following about sexual encounters with girls:

  1. It is possible that girls will actually want to do sexy things with you
  2. Getting girls to do stuff with you usually requires what he called a “loosening agent” – alcohol or marijuana
  3. The guy usually makes the first move

He goes on to write that because our society teaches us that sexual desire is weakness or deviant, we detach from it; and because we detach from it – seeing it as something to act upon or that acts upon us – we are shamed from embracing sexuality as an integral, positive part of ourselves and limited in our sexual expression.  He connects this idea – which he calls the “objectification of sexuality” – to the socialization of boys in the United States, saying that boys learn that sexuality was to be characterized by action, control and achievement – boys learn that sexuality is tied to his ability to “play and win the get-some game.”

Let’s look at this concept in action.  Does Steubenville High School sound familiar to you?  In sum, a video was leaked by a group of hackers, “Knight Sec,” featuring players from Steubenville High’s Big Red football team making jokes about a girl who was passed out and being raped.  You can check out the disturbing 12-minute video here, if you have the stomach.  Just to give you a head’s up, one of the boys refers to the survivor as “deader than” Trayvon Martin, and adds, “she is so raped her p**s is about as dry as the sun right now.”  Yeah…

This case has surprisingly gotten a lot of internet buzz, which is great.  Celebrities have been spreading the word on Twitter and other social media sites.

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Nathan Blansett, a high school sophomore from rural Georgia, wrote an impressive article on Huffington Post Teen about the Steubenville High School case and rape culture in America.  He writes:

“When I learned people on Twitter were threatening the survivor, saying that she deserved to be raped and was a ‘whore,’ I realized something. When Candy Crowley and Poppy Harlow both expressed empathy and lamented how these boys had had such ‘promising’ futures on CNN, I realized something. We need to accept that we live in a culture that shames and tries to discredit rape survivors, that some of them “deserved it.” We need to accept that we live in a culture where rape has become a topic of humor. We need to accept that when we make excuses for rapists and for their actions, we are perpetuating the existence of a rape culture.”

Blansett is the same age as the boys from the “rape crew,” and yet he has a better understanding of how sick our society truly is than most of his seniors.

I cannot feel sympathy for an individual who sexually violates and degrades another human.  I cannot feel sympathy for an individual who makes jokes about a rape survivor.  I can acknowledge that we live in a society that allows and encourages such behavior, and that the way gender performance and (gendered) sexuality is taught must change if we have any hope of bringing about a post-rape culture.

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