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Archives for January 2013

“It makes me almost paranoid to walk down the street”

January 16, 2013 By Contributor

I am 20 years old, and when I walk down the street and I am wearing a nice dress, nothing too provocative, but just a simple dress, I get whistles, people address me as baby, and people yell things at me from their cars or honk when i pass, which is very embarrassing when I am with a friend or when anyone I know is watching me.

It makes me almost paranoid to walk down the street with someone because I know I am going to get a catcall or yells from someone in their cars or passing by and it is humiliating.

The only other thing i can do is put a paper bag over my head and my bottom. Because this happens everyday, it’s just when i wear a dress it happens more frequently and ostentatiously.

This guy was whistling at me over and over and i chose to ignore it until a guy walking by said, “Hey! You know he’s whistling at you, right?”

I can’t avoid it even if i want to.

I’ve heard comments like “You can ride on the handlebars of my bike if you want” and when i am just waiting for the bus a guy comes up and says, “Hey this describes you” showing me a perfume for “hot women” and i try to ignore them but then they say i am mean.

I walk to my house and a mailman gets out of his delivery truck and yells at me, “Hey baby!” and I say leave me alone and he continues to harass me until I walk away more quickly. I think it’s degrading and i want it to stop. If someone thinks I am attractive they can stop and talk to me politely but whistling, harassment, and referring to me as “baby” are not polite and they are not compliments.

It’s not that I don’t feel safe physically, it’s just i don’t feel safe mentally, or emotionally. I don’t feel safe to walk down the street in not even heels, but wedges, because guys pass by me really close and mutter incoherently, and I get whistles from cars, and it is agony. This shouldn’t be happening.

– Anonymous

Location: Miami, FL

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

North Dakota: Unsafe for Women

January 16, 2013 By HKearl

Trigger Warning.

Via the New York Times:

“Jessica Brightbill, a single 24-year-old who moved here from Grand Rapids, Mich., a year and a half ago, said she was walking to work at 3:30 in the afternoon when a car with two men suddenly pulled up behind her. One hopped out and grabbed her by her arms and began dragging her. She let her body go limp so she would be harder to drag. Eventually, a man in a truck pulled up and began yelling at the men and she got away, she said. The episode left her rattled. Going out alone is now out of the question…

Some women have taken aggressive steps to protect themselves. At the urging of her family, Barbara Coughlin, 31, who recently moved to Williston after her 11-year marriage ended, is now getting her concealed weapons permit so she can carry a Taser. Ms. Coughlin, who wore silver glitter around her eyes at work as a waitress on a recent day, said her mother and stepfather, who live here, advised her to stop wearing the skirts and heels she cherishes, so she does not stand out like “a flower in the desert,” as her stepfather put it. Her family hardly ever lets her go out on her own — not even for walks down the gravel road at the housing camp where they live.”

There’s been much demonizing of “Indian men” when the world heard about the brutal gang-rape and murder of a 23-year-old woman in Delhi in December, but it’s time to acknowledge that there are plenty of American men who are just as bad.

Sexual violence in public spaces is a problem worldwide. Delhi is unsafe for women. Cairo is unsafe for women. London is unsafe for women. Williston, North Dakota is unsafe for women.

In North Dakota, men far outnumber women, especially young men, many whom have migrated to the area for well-paying jobs in oil towns.

“At work, at housing camps and in bars and restaurants, men have been left to mingle with their own. High heels and skirts are as rare around here as veggie burgers. Some men liken the environment to the military or prison.

“It’s bad, dude,” said Jon Kenworthy, 22, who moved to Williston from Indiana in early December. “I was talking to my buddy here. I told him I was going to import from Indiana because there’s nothing here.”

This has complicated life for women in the region as well.

Many said they felt unsafe. Several said they could not even shop at the local Walmart without men following them through the store. Girls’ night out usually becomes an exercise in fending off obnoxious, overzealous suitors who often flaunt their newfound wealth.

“So many people look at you like you’re a piece of meat,” said Megan Dye, 28, a nearly lifelong Williston resident. “It’s disgusting. It’s gross.”

Prosecutors and the police note an increase in crimes against women, including domestic and sexual assaults. “There are people arriving in North Dakota every day from other places around the country who do not respect the people or laws of North Dakota,” said Ariston E. Johnson, the deputy state’s attorney in neighboring McKenzie County, in an e-mail.”

Street harassment and sexual violence stems from the perpetrator’s disrespect for the target, often, disrespect for women. I think disrespect for groups of people is stronger when you’re not around them much and you don’t have the chance to interact with them as friends/neighbors/colleagues/classmates. This is one reason why I think sexual violence is so blatantly strong in countries with sex segregation, such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and India, and is one of the reasons why I’m opposed to sex-segregated public transportation, schools, and places of worship.

And this seems to be partly why gender violence is high in North Dakota. There are tons of single men in a male-dominated workplace and male-dominated community who don’t have the chance to interact with women in platonic or respectful ways and, given all the messages they receive from the media, politicians, and other men that it’s okay to objectify women, without those respectful interactions, it’s easier for them to give into the messaging of sexual objectification and disrespect.

I’m not sure what the solution is to the problem in North Dakota – but at least the New York Times article is raising our awareness and that’s a start.

(Thanks go to my dad for sending me the article)

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Filed Under: News stories

T.I., “Gender Night,” and Unlearning Misogyny

January 16, 2013 By Contributor

By Joel Anderson

Who knows what @doope_4evr was really looking for when he ventured onto @starquality’s Instagram account and asked her the following: “Can we fuck?”

Maybe he lacked the confidence to earnestly ask a pretty girl out for a date. Maybe he lacked the decency to better disguise his most base urges. Maybe he just wanted some attention.

If it was the latter, @doope_4evr should consider his indecent proposal a success: he got all of the attention of @starquality’s father, hip-hop and reality TV star T.I.

“U ever disrespect me and mines like that again,” he warned, “I’m gon throw more $$$ at ya head than it cost to build yo mama a new house.”

And on and on it went.

It all made me wonder where @doope_4evr developed the temerity to approach a woman in such a manner, and whether T.I. was suffering from a total absence of self-awareness.

Of course, few people could blame T.I. for his anger and protective instincts. That’s his daughter — “mines,” he said.

He’s also the same guy who once rapped, “Ay T.I.P. been bangin’ thick dames since he was 15/the click came ran trains if her shit clean.”

This woman, real or imagined for musical purposes, is someone’s daughter. Maybe girlfriend. Possibly mother. Someone else’s “mines.”

Before we go any further, here’s an admission: I love T.I. and his music. As far as hip hop artists go, he’s fairly progressive in his attitude toward women. Check “Freak Though,” if you don’t believe me.

I know I have my own hypocrisy to deal with, from my previous romantic entanglements to my music choices.

But at the least, I got a headstart on confronting that hypocrisy. It started in earnest when I was 17, the summer before my senior year of high school, at a leadership camp just outside of Houston.

There were about 75 of us, teenagers who came from all over southeast Texas. We were there to challenge our beliefs, confront our prejudices, and push our boundaries. I was also there to meet cute girls and earn the service credits needed for graduation, but I didn’t share that with anyone.

It was a great week. I met one of my very best friends there. We put on a moderately entertaining talent show. Every night had a theme: the one I remember most vividly, 17 years later, was Gender Night.

Camp counselors separated us, boys and girls, and told us we couldn’t sit together or speak to each other until later that night at a so-called “War of the Sexes.” This would be our summer airing of grievances.

Imagine the ripple of excitement that went through our camp.

Fledgling misogynists that we were, it didn’t take long for the boys to come up with a lengthy list of complaints about girls: too much talking, putting out too much, not putting out enough, excessive whining, no swallowing. Basically, the kind of mature discussion points you’d expect from guys who had little experience with women or girls other than with their mothers or sisters.

So before the big event, the boys were told to get into a single line as we gathered outside the camp’s central building. Then, a twist: we were told we had to go in one at a time. The girls would be waiting on us.

I was first in line. The room was dark. All was silent.

I nervously walked inside and briskly walked down the narrow path to the other side of the room. The girls were lined up on each side of the path, and bombarded me with the sorts of lewd catcalls that I had laughed off for much of my life.

No, I wasn’t scared or intimidated. In fact, I was flattered at the attention because I didn’t know any better. I was later told the girls had turned their backs and gone silent to the boys who made a game of it.

Later, and even more affecting, were the stories of harassment from our female campers. Virtually everyone had a story to tell.

One girl told of being followed home by a stranger during one of her evening runs. Another told us of her daily walk to school, which was essentially the experience our camp counselors had tried to recreate for us a few minutes prior. The last story of the night was told by bright-eyed girl who had caught my eye earlier in the camp: her laughter sounded like wind chimes, she moved with uncommon certainty for a teenager and, yes, I made my way over to the pool when she laid out to get some sun.

She had all of my attention. And soon enough, she had everyone’s attention.

A couple years ago, she told us, she and one of her friends had been gang-raped after leaving a house party. That was all I remember because, for me, it was enough.

Just like that, the war was over. This was no longer a silly teenage exercise in unpacking our most lewd thoughts.

Either we could be complicit in a culture that permitted the mistreatment and harassment of women, or we could hold ourselves, our friends and our family members accountable for the misogyny. 

We had a responsibility to unlearn.

As boys, we had to learn that all women and girls deserved better than our crude war-room banter, whether it came at camp or from our favorite musicians. We would need to, from that point forward, respect more than “mines.” And as men, we have to pass these lessons on to our boys.

Which brings me back to @doope_4evr, @starquality and T.I.

I’m fairly certain T.I. never envisioned his daughter as the thick dame getting a train ran on her. How could he?

But I do wonder what he thought when that world he created for other women showed up on his daughter’s Instagram account.

Joel Anderson is an award-winning reporter at the Tampa Bay Times and a regular contributor to PostBourgie, a blog that deals primarily with issues of class, race, gender, culture and media.  He has previously worked at the Shreveport (La.) Times, the Associated Press in Dallas, Oklahoma City and Houston and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Anderson has also contributed to publications including The Huffington Post, The Root, and The American Prospect, among many others. He is better known in the blogosphere and Twitter-verse as J.D. Bell, @blackink12 and@jdhometeam.

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Filed Under: male perspective

“I left with rage, fear and stress inside me”

January 15, 2013 By Contributor

I am a young Moroccan woman who lives in North America. I recently traveled to Morocco and wore conservative clothes (traditional long and large jellaba). I was not covering my hair most of the time. I am pretty but nothing extraordinary and I do look Arab.

This was the first time I was traveling alone in Morocco and I left this country feeling sick and exhausted because of the constant harassment. I started to avoid leaving my hotel room and got some symptoms of panic attacks at the idea of going back in some souks or streets where I had reacted to being harassed.

Men would follow me, every minutes men would say to me, “Ca va? or whisper to me things that I could not always understand. I was particularly distressed by cars or vans following me then stopping and men inside inviting me to join them in their cars.

One time, I was so distressed by these cars following me that i shouted in English to one driver, “I will call the police if you don’t stop that.” He got scared and went away but I was left feeling miserable, afraid and stressed.

I felt rage when I saw men in uniforms (gardeners in parks, men working at gas stations, workers) talking to me as well even though I did not ask them anything. They would say in Arabic things like, “So what do you want?”

Many times I wanted to cry when I would go in souks and see virtually all the men staring at me with their eyes wide open and no shame at all.

One time, a man jumped from a taxi to talk to me. He had been following me in the taxi.

Going out was too uncomfortable and draining so I stopped going alone outside.

When I was back in North America, I felt a wonderful sense of relief and understood how affected I had been by all this harassment. One month after the trip, I was still thinking about it. I do believe that it was a traumatic experience.

I went back to Morocco to reconnect with my roots and was so proud of my heritage but I have to say that I left with rage, fear and stress inside me. The saddest part is that I am no longer particularly proud to be Moroccan as I felt that streets were a savage environments for women.

It made me think as well about the fact that this harassment is coming form a population who is deeply religious, Muslim. It did really affect me on many level and I want to define myself as a North American from now on. I don’t anymore recognize my values of respect, honesty, kindness in Morocco. Sad trip.

– Anonymous

Location: Morocco, big and small towns

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

India: 25 Men March in Skirts to Condemn Victim-Blaming

January 14, 2013 By HKearl

Image via the Deccan Herald

In India, 25 men in their 20’s restored my faith in humanity when they marched through their town in skirts to condemn victim-blaming and to say that wearing a skirt is not an invitation for rape.  Their walk name? Skirt the Issue.

A crowd of 100 gathered at the end of the walk and the men pledged: “I promise that I will be sensitive to gender issues in the way I speak and act. I promise not to be passive. I will step in if I hear offensive speech or views. If I see something wrong happen in front of me, I will create a discussion and talk about my beliefs.”

One of the participants, Adithya Mallya, said, “Clothes and personal attitudes cannot cause sexual assault. Don’t waste time highlighting elements that have no importance. Instead address areas which require change.”

Another participant, Deepak, declared, “We joined the issue to share our voice, facilitate an awakening and stir the consciousness of narrow minded. Rape is not always determined by circumstance. It is our duty as men to take responsibility for our unforgivable actions.”

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Filed Under: male perspective, News stories

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