Things that DO need saying
Aug. 21st, 2012 12:46 pmThis talks about people's reactions to recent various high-profile idiotic comments about rape. I'm trying to be positive and I don't refer too specifically to those comments, but this topic may well be upsetting.
"All that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing" is a cliche, but it's a cliche for a reason: people keep saying it. And they keep saying it because there's an element of truth in it.
In a reply to someone else, that Twitter person said "tweeting a hashtag isn't going to achieve anything, is it? Galloway et al won't see it and go 'ooh, I was wrong'." Yes, hashtags might not change George Galloway's mind...but even if they're ostensibly aimed at him, they're being read by tons of people, and who knows what effects it might have on them?
"This is not true" and "This is not acceptable" are messages that are getting more widely heard now, and hopefully not too many people think things as nutty as the headliners Akin and Galloway... but some people will have nutty beliefs that are challenged by, say, the clear and enthusiastic definitions of what really constitutes consent.
The U.S. Republican party's "war on women" this election cycle has made this an uncomfortable time to be an American woman -- even one thousands of miles away who can take for granted some of the medical help, scientific understanding and basic decency that is having to be fought so hard for in the U.S. It's a hostile time and place to be a woman (and so many have it so much worse than me, of course, thanks to systemic racism, LGBTphobia, ableism, the thorough fucking over of the poor, and so on)... so being surrounded all these messages rejecting their fuckwittery makes me feel a lot better. (The only silver lining is that I hope, by no longer continuing the ruse that they care at all about women, poor people, or anyone who isn't them, they will mobilize voters to rise up against them and say "Oh hell no!")
I love that friends, acquaintances, and strangers who just want a better society are speaking up. I love that misogyny and disrespect and fail are being mocked in The Onion and The Daily Mash.
I love it especially because rape and sexual assault/abuse are amongst the most under-reported crimes; the victimes/survivors are so often ignored, shamed, disbelieved, blamed, silenced and even further abused if they try to talk about what happened to them. I am lucky not to have been assaulted in any way, but I can imagine that I had been, and if people I know, blogs I read, friends of mine, are speaking up against rape and similar shitty treatment of people, I might be more likely to feel there are those people I can talk to who will show the kindness and sympathy that anyone in that state deserves. Being "anti-rape" is not "a given." We live in a rape culture. Say something. (But be considerate when you do; even positive things sometimes have negative effects on people if the subject is too traumatic for them.)
Yes, the fucknuggets ye shall always have with ye. We're unlikely to change the minds of the Galloways and Akins of the world. But it's still important to speak up, even about the things you assume everyone knows or should agree with.
Has it really come to people using a hashtag to show they are against rape? Kind of thought it would be a given. I'm anti-murder as well.It's from Twitter, as you can probably tell. Andrew retweeted it -- among others; it's an hour old and has been RTed at the rate of about once a minute so far -- and it's something he's been saying anyway; his blog post is tagged "things that shouldn't need saying" and he's told me how baffling it is that this should have to be pointed out.
"All that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing" is a cliche, but it's a cliche for a reason: people keep saying it. And they keep saying it because there's an element of truth in it.
In a reply to someone else, that Twitter person said "tweeting a hashtag isn't going to achieve anything, is it? Galloway et al won't see it and go 'ooh, I was wrong'." Yes, hashtags might not change George Galloway's mind...but even if they're ostensibly aimed at him, they're being read by tons of people, and who knows what effects it might have on them?
"This is not true" and "This is not acceptable" are messages that are getting more widely heard now, and hopefully not too many people think things as nutty as the headliners Akin and Galloway... but some people will have nutty beliefs that are challenged by, say, the clear and enthusiastic definitions of what really constitutes consent.
The U.S. Republican party's "war on women" this election cycle has made this an uncomfortable time to be an American woman -- even one thousands of miles away who can take for granted some of the medical help, scientific understanding and basic decency that is having to be fought so hard for in the U.S. It's a hostile time and place to be a woman (and so many have it so much worse than me, of course, thanks to systemic racism, LGBTphobia, ableism, the thorough fucking over of the poor, and so on)... so being surrounded all these messages rejecting their fuckwittery makes me feel a lot better. (The only silver lining is that I hope, by no longer continuing the ruse that they care at all about women, poor people, or anyone who isn't them, they will mobilize voters to rise up against them and say "Oh hell no!")
I love that friends, acquaintances, and strangers who just want a better society are speaking up. I love that misogyny and disrespect and fail are being mocked in The Onion and The Daily Mash.
I love it especially because rape and sexual assault/abuse are amongst the most under-reported crimes; the victimes/survivors are so often ignored, shamed, disbelieved, blamed, silenced and even further abused if they try to talk about what happened to them. I am lucky not to have been assaulted in any way, but I can imagine that I had been, and if people I know, blogs I read, friends of mine, are speaking up against rape and similar shitty treatment of people, I might be more likely to feel there are those people I can talk to who will show the kindness and sympathy that anyone in that state deserves. Being "anti-rape" is not "a given." We live in a rape culture. Say something. (But be considerate when you do; even positive things sometimes have negative effects on people if the subject is too traumatic for them.)
Yes, the fucknuggets ye shall always have with ye. We're unlikely to change the minds of the Galloways and Akins of the world. But it's still important to speak up, even about the things you assume everyone knows or should agree with.