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Male Feelings of Entitlement Can Kill

May 25, 2014 By HKearl

“Elliot Rodger, like most young American men, was taught that he was entitled to sex and female attention…He believed this so fully that he described women’s apathy toward him as an “injustice” and a “crime”…If we need to talk about this tragic shooting in terms of illness, though, let’s start with talking about our cultural sickness – a sickness that refuses to see misogyny as anything other than inevitable.. – Jessica Valenti for The Guardian

Some men’s feelings of entitlement to women’s attention and bodies results in #streetharassment, #rape and even murder. Sadly,  Rodger’s killing spree in Santa Barbara on Friday is evidence of the latter. Our hearts go out to the UCSB community and those who lost loved ones in this senseless violence.

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Filed Under: News stories

Stories about being #Grabbed trended on Twitter

May 18, 2014 By HKearl

Last week, The Everyday Sexism Project started a conversation on Twitter about being #grabbed against one’s will (sexual assault). You can read the Storify.

Everyday Sexism founder Laura Bates wrote about it for the Guardian, saying:

“These are just a tiny selection of the thousands of stories that poured in when I started the hashtag #Grabbed on Twitter to document experiences of being touched, grabbed and groped without consent.

Within a few hours, according to the International Business Times, the hashtag had been used more than 6,000 times. By that evening it was the top trending topic in the UK.

As suggested by the overwhelming number of personal testimonies that flooded in, the experience of being touched in a sexual way without your consent is devastatingly common.”

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Filed Under: News stories, Stories, street harassment

Pardon Cecily McMillan and no more NYPD policy to confiscate condoms

May 15, 2014 By HKearl

There’s been good and bad news this week relating to police and justice and harassment in public spaces in New York City:

The bad first –

Via The Nation:

“On Monday, May 5, Occupy Wall Street protester Cecily McMillan was found guilty of assaulting NYPD Officer Grantley Bovell at the OWS anniversary protest on March 17, 2012. She now faces two to seven years in prison, with the possibility of probation.

Her conviction was a terrible miscarriage of justice. Abundant evidence of McMillan’s abuse at the hands of police—photos of bruises on her breast and arms, testimony that she suffered a seizure once handcuffed—were questioned in the spirit of what we’ve come to call rape culture: maybe, the prosecutor suggested, she faked it. Maybe she inflicted the bruises herself. Reports of NYPD misconduct during the Occupy protests were deemed inadmissible as evidence in court, as were the more violent parts of Officer Bovell’s record. In the absence of substantive background, the jurors came to their verdict based on a grainy video.

Upon hearing the terms of sentencing—which were, somehow, unknown to members of the jury—Charles Woodward (Juror #2) wrote a letter on behalf of nine of the twelve jurors asking Judge Zweibel for leniency in sentencing. They expressed remorse. One anonymous juror told Jon Swaine of The Guardian, “Most just wanted her to do probation, maybe some community service. But now what I’m hearing is seven years in jail? That’s ludicrous. Even a year in jail is ridiculous.”

You can sign a Change.org petition calling for a pardon.

Now the good, via USA Today:

“The New York Police Department will no longer confiscate unused condoms as evidence of prostitution by people suspected of being sex industry workers, abolishing a practice criticized by civil rights groups for undermining efforts to combat AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Monday.

Advocates for sex workers and civil rights groups had long pushed for the policy change, noting that the city spends more than $1 million every year to distribute free condoms.

For decades, police in New York and elsewhere had confiscated condoms from sex work suspects ostensibly for them to be used as evidence in criminal trials, even though the overwhelming majority of prostitution cases never go to trial.”

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

Egypt’s New Anti-Sexual Harassment Law

May 8, 2014 By HKearl

At long last! This has been in the works for years.

Via Albawaba:

“Egypt’s cabinet approved on Wednesday a new anti-sexual harassment law…The cabinet had amended the law and sent it to the justice ministry for revision last month. The justice minister then revised it and sent it back to the government for final approval.

Previously, there had not been a specific law proscribing sexual harassment in Egypt. However, three articles in the penal code were sometimes applied in cases of sexual harassment.

The new draft states that a sexual harasser is one who “accosts others in a public or private place through following or stalking them, using gestures or words or through modern means of communication or in any other means through actions that carry sexual or pornographic hints.”

The new law punishes sexual harassment with a prison sentence, a fine or both.”

Thoughts?

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

Street harasser arrested in Egypt

May 1, 2014 By HKearl

Verbal sexual harassment in public spaces is now illegal in Egypt. This is how one woman used it to stop her street harasser.

Via Egyptian Streets

“An Egyptian court has sentenced a man to one year in prison and fined him EGP 10,000 (1,427 US dollars) for verbal sexual harassment, reported Aswat Masriya.

The man, in his 20′s, had been accused of verbally harassing a woman at the Dokki Metro station. The woman reported the incident to a local police station where a report was filed and charges were laid.

A Cairo court found the defendant guilty of attacking the modesty of the victim, added Aswat Masriya.

While five sexual harassers were found guilty on various charges last year, this is the first case under new anti-sexual harassment laws in Egypt.”

Check out our Know Your Rights toolkit to find out the laws in the USA.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

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