Flap Your Lips Friday
Posted by Michelle Moquin on January 25th, 2013
Good morning.
I have my share of disappointments in life like everyone. However, I have not experienced many disappointments that linger and come into my immediate mind when I think about my life. But today when I was required to write down my life’s/business disappointments, it wasn’t the end of my marriage (Yes, that is a disappointment but not one that will linger for years to come.) that came into my mind first, but thoughts of women here and around the world.
I realized over the years how much I have been reading and posting about the plight of women on this planet. Something, that until I started blogging, I never realized how prevalent the abuse and the war on women truly was and continues to be to this present day, all over the world.
So when I was asked this question, the first thing I wrote was how disappointed I was in humanity, more specifically the men on this planet, and their lack of love for women, the beautiful beings who give them life.
Then this write came across my plate, and I felt I must post it.
A Rape a Minute, a Thousand Corpses a Year
Here in the United States, where there is a reported rape every 6.2 minutes, and one in five women will be raped in her lifetime, the rape and gruesome murder of a young woman on a bus in New Delhi on December 16th was treated as an exceptional incident. The story of the alleged rape of an unconscious teenager by members of the Steubenville High School football team was still unfolding, and gang rapes aren’t that unusual here either. Take your pick: some of the 20 men who gang-raped an 11-year-old in Cleveland, Texas, were sentenced in November, while the instigator of the gang rape of a 16-year-old in Richmond, California, was sentenced in October, and four men who gang-raped a 15-year-old near New Orleans were sentenced in April, though the six men who gang-raped a 14-year-old in Chicago last fall are still at large. Not that I actually went out looking for incidents: they’re everywhere in the news, though no one adds them up and indicates that there might actually be a pattern.
There is, however, a pattern of violence against women that’s broad and deep and horrific and incessantly overlooked. Occasionally, a case involving a celebrity or lurid details in a particular case get a lot of attention in the media, but such cases are treated as anomalies, while the abundance of incidental news items about violence against women in this country, in other countries, on every continent including Antarctica, constitute a kind of background wallpaper for the news.
If you’d rather talk about bus rapes than gang rapes, there’s the rape of a developmentally disabled woman on a Los Angeles bus in November and the kidnapping of an autistic 16-year-old on the regional transit train system in Oakland, California — she was raped repeatedly by her abductor over two days this winter — and there was a gang rape of multiple women on a bus in Mexico City recently, too. While I was writing this, I read that another female bus-rider was kidnapped in India and gang-raped all night by the bus driver and five of his friends who must have thought what happened in New Delhi was awesome.
We have an abundance of rape and violence against women in this country and on this Earth, though it’s almost never treated as a civil rights or human rights issue, or a crisis, or even a pattern. Violence doesn’t have a race, a class, a religion, or a nationality, but it does have a gender.
Here I want to say one thing: though virtually all the perpetrators of such crimes are men, that doesn’t mean all men are violent. Most are not. In addition, men obviously also suffer violence, largely at the hands of other men, and every violent death, every assault is terrible. But the subject here is the pandemic of violence by men against women, both intimate violence and stranger violence.
What We Don’t Talk About When We Don’t Talk About Gender
There’s so much of it. We could talk about the assault and rape of a 73-year-old in Manhattan’s Central Park last September, or the recent rape of a four-year-old and an 83-year-old in Louisiana, or the New York City policeman who was arrested in October for what appeared to be serious plans to kidnap, rape, cook, and eat a woman, any woman, because the hate wasn’t personal (though maybe it was for the San Diego man who actually killed and cooked his wife in November and the man from New Orleans who killed, dismembered, and cooked his girlfriend in 2005).
Those are all exceptional crimes, but we could also talk about quotidian assaults, because though a rape isreported only every 6.2 minutes in this country, the estimated total is perhaps five times as high. Which means that there may be very nearly a rape a minute in the U.S. It all adds up to tens of millions of rape victims.
We could talk about high-school- and college-athlete rapes, or campus rapes, to which university authorities have been appallingly uninterested in responding in many cases, including that high school in Steubenville, Notre Dame University, Amherst College, and many others. We could talk about the escalating pandemic of rape, sexual assault, and sexual harassment in the U.S. military, where Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta estimated that there were 19,000 sexual assaults on fellow soldiers in 2010 alone and that the great majority of assailants got away with it, though four-star general Jeffrey Sinclair wasindicted in September for “a slew of sex crimes against women.”
Never mind workplace violence, let’s go home. So many men murder their partners and former partners that we have well over 1,000 homicides of that kind a year — meaning that every three years the death tolltops 9/11’s casualties, though no one declares a war on this particular terror. (Another way to put it: the more than 11,766 corpses from domestic-violence homicides since 9/11 exceed the number of deaths of victims on that day and all American soldiers killed in the “war on terror.”) If we talked about crimes like these and why they are so common, we’d have to talk about what kinds of profound change this society, or this nation, or nearly every nation needs. If we talked about it, we’d be talking about masculinity, or male roles, or maybe patriarchy, and we don’t talk much about that.
Instead, we hear that American men commit murder-suicides — at the rate of about 12 a week — because the economy is bad, though they also do it when the economy is good; or that those men in India murdered the bus-rider because the poor resent the rich, while other rapes in India are explained by how the rich exploit the poor; and then there are those ever-popular explanations: mental problems and intoxicants — and for jocks,head injuries. The latest spin is that lead exposure was responsible for a lot of our violence, except that both genders are exposed and one commits most of the violence. The pandemic of violence always gets explained as anything but gender, anything but what would seem to be the broadest explanatory pattern of all.
Someone wrote a piece about how white men seem to be the ones who commit mass murders in the U.S. and the (mostly hostile) commenters only seemed to notice the white part. It’s rare that anyone says what thismedical study does, even if in the driest way possible: “Being male has been identified as a risk factor for violent criminal behavior in several studies, as have exposure to tobacco smoke before birth, having antisocial parents, and belonging to a poor family.”
Still, the pattern is plain as day. We could talk about this as a global problem, looking at the epidemic ofassault, harassment, and rape of women in Cairo’s Tahrir Square that has taken away the freedom they celebrated during the Arab Spring — and led some men there to form defense teams to help counter it — or the persecution of women in public and private in India from “Eve-teasing” to bride-burning, or “honor killings” in South Asia and the Middle East, or the way that South Africa has become a global rape capital, with an estimated 600,000 rapes last year, or how rape has been used as a tactic and “weapon” of war in Mali, Sudan, and the Congo, as it was in the former Yugoslavia, or the pervasiveness of rape and harassment in Mexico and the femicide in Juarez, or the denial of basic rights for women in Saudi Arabia and the myriad sexual assaults on immigrant domestic workers there, or the way that the Dominique Strauss-Kahn case in the United States revealed what impunity he and others had in France, and it’s only for lack of space I’m leaving out Britain and Canada and Italy (with its ex-prime minister known for hisorgies with the underaged), Argentina and Australia and so many other countries.
Who Has the Right to Kill You?
But maybe you’re tired of statistics, so let’s just talk about a single incident that happened in my city a couple of weeks ago, one of many local incidents in which men assaulted women that made the local papers this month:
“A woman was stabbed after she rebuffed a man’s sexual advances while she walked in San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighborhood late Monday night, a police spokesman said today. The 33-year-old victim was walking down the street when a stranger approached her and propositioned her, police spokesman Officer Albie Esparza said. When she rejected him, the man became very upset and slashed the victim in the face and stabbed her in the arm, Esparza said.”
The man, in other words, framed the situation as one in which his chosen victim had no rights and liberties, while he had the right to control and punish her. This should remind us that violence is first of all authoritarian. It begins with this premise: I have the right to control you.
Murder is the extreme version of that authoritarianism, where the murderer asserts he has the right to decide whether you live or die, the ultimate means of controlling someone. This may be true even if you are “obedient,” because the desire to control comes out of a rage that obedience can’t assuage. Whatever fears, whatever sense of vulnerability may underlie such behavior, it also comes out of entitlement, the entitlement to inflict suffering and even death on other people. It breeds misery in the perpetrator and the victims.
As for that incident in my city, similar things happen all the time. Many versions of it happened to me when I was younger, sometimes involving death threats and often involving torrents of obscenities: a man approaches a woman with both desire and the furious expectation that the desire will likely be rebuffed. The fury and desire come in a package, all twisted together into something that always threatens to turneros into thanatos, love into death, sometimes literally.
It’s a system of control. It’s why so many intimate-partner murders are of women who dared to break upwith those partners. As a result, it imprisons a lot of women, and though you could say that the attacker on January 7th, or a brutal would-be-rapist near my own neighborhood on January 5th, or another rapist here on January 12th, or the San Franciscan who on January 6th set his girlfriend on fire for refusing to do his laundry, or the guy who was just sentenced to 370 years for some particularly violent rapes in San Francisco in late 2011, were marginal characters, rich, famous, and privileged guys do it, too.
The Japanese vice-consul in San Francisco was charged with 12 felony counts of spousal abuse and assault with a deadly weapon last September, the same month that, in the same town, the ex-girlfriend of Mason Mayer (brother of Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer) testified in court: “He ripped out my earrings, tore my eyelashes off, while spitting in my face and telling me how unlovable I am… I was on the ground in the fetal position, and when I tried to move, he squeezed both knees tighter into my sides to restrain me and slapped me.” According to the newspaper, she also testified that “Mayer slammed her head onto the floor repeatedly and pulled out clumps of her hair, telling her that the only way she was leaving the apartment alive was if he drove her to the Golden Gate Bridge ‘where you can jump off or I will push you off.’” Mason Mayer got probation.
This summer, an estranged husband violated his wife’s restraining order against him, shooting her – and six other women — at her spa job in suburban Milwaukee, but since there were only four corpses the crime was largely overlooked in the media in a year with so many more spectacular mass murders in this country (and we still haven’t really talked about the fact that, of 62 mass shootings in the U.S. in three decades, only one was by a woman, because when you say lone gunman, everyone talks about loners and guns but not about men — and by the way, nearly two thirds of all women killed by guns are killed by their partner or ex-partner).
What’s love got to do with it, asked Tina Turner, whose ex-husband Ike once said, “Yeah I hit her, but I didn’t hit her more than the average guy beats his wife.” A woman is beaten every nine seconds in this country. Just to be clear: not nine minutes, but nine seconds. It’s the number-one cause of injury to American women; of the two million injured annually, more than half a million of those injuries require medical attention while about 145,000 require overnight hospitalizations, according to the Center for Disease Control, and you don’t want to know about the dentistry needed afterwards. Spouses are also theleading cause of death for pregnant women in the U.S.
“Women worldwide ages 15 through 44 are more likely to die or be maimed because of male violence than because of cancer, malaria, war and traffic accidents combined,” writes Nicholas D. Kristof, one of the few prominent figures to address the issue regularly.
The Chasm Between Our Worlds
Rape and other acts of violence, up to and including murder, as well as threats of violence, constitute the barrage some men lay down as they attempt to control some women, and fear of that violence limits most women in ways they’ve gotten so used to they hardly notice — and we hardly address. There are exceptions: last summer someone wrote to me to describe a college class in which the students were asked what they do to stay safe from rape. The young women described the intricate ways they stayed alert, limited their access to the world, took precautions, and essentially thought about rape all the time (while the young men in the class, he added, gaped in astonishment). The chasm between their worlds had briefly and suddenly become visible.
Mostly, however, we don’t talk about it — though a graphic has been circulating on the Internet called Ten Top Tips to End Rape, the kind of thing young women get often enough, but this one had a subversive twist. It offered advice like this: “Carry a whistle! If you are worried you might assault someone ‘by accident’ you can hand it to the person you are with, so they can call for help.” While funny, the piece points out something terrible: the usual guidelines in such situations put the full burden of prevention on potential victims, treating the violence as a given. You explain to me why colleges spend more time telling women how to survive predators than telling the other half of their students not to be predators.
Threats of sexual assault now seem to take place online regularly. In late 2011, British columnist Laurie Penny wrote, “An opinion, it seems, is the short skirt of the Internet. Having one and flaunting it is somehow asking an amorphous mass of almost-entirely male keyboard-bashers to tell you how they’d like to rape, kill, and urinate on you. This week, after a particularly ugly slew of threats, I decided to make just a few of those messages public on Twitter, and the response I received was overwhelming. Many could not believe the hate I received, and many more began to share their own stories of harassment, intimidation, and abuse.”
Women in the online gaming community have been harassed, threatened, and driven out. Anita Sarkeesian, a feminist media critic who documented such incidents, received support for her work, but also, in the words of a journalist, “another wave of really aggressive, you know, violent personal threats, her accounts attempted to be hacked. And one man in Ontario took the step of making an online video game where you could punch Anita’s image on the screen. And if you punched it multiple times, bruises and cuts would appear on her image.” The difference between these online gamers and the Taliban men who, last October, tried to murder 14-year-old Malala Yousafzai for speaking out about the right of Pakistani women to education is one of degree. Both are trying to silence and punish women for claiming voice, power, and the right to participate. Welcome to Manistan.
The Party for the Protection of the Rights of Rapists
It’s not just public, or private, or online either. It’s also embedded in our political system, and our legal system, which before feminists fought for us didn’t recognize most domestic violence, or sexual harassment and stalking, or date rape, or acquaintance rape, or marital rape, and in cases of rape still often tries the victim rather than the rapist, as though only perfect maidens could be assaulted — or believed.
As we learned in the 2012 election campaign, it’s also embedded in the minds and mouths of our politicians. Remember that spate of crazy pro-rape things Republican men said last summer and fall, starting with Todd Akin’s notorious claim that a woman has ways of preventing pregnancy in cases of rape, a statement he made in order to deny women control over their own bodies. After that, of course, Senate candidate Richard Mourdock claimed that rape pregnancies were “a gift from God,” and just this month, another Republican politician piped up to defend Akin’s comment.
Happily the five publicly pro-rape Republicans in the 2012 campaign all lost their election bids. (Stephen Colbert tried to warn them that women had gotten the vote in 1920.) But it’s not just a matter of the garbage they say (and the price they now pay). Earlier this month, congressional Republicans refused to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act, because they objected to the protection it gave immigrants, transgendered women, and Native American women. (Speaking of epidemics, one of three Native American women will be raped, and on the reservations 88% of those rapes are by non-Native men who know tribal governments can’t prosecute them.)
And they’re out to gut reproductive rights — birth control as well as abortion, as they’ve pretty effectively done in many states over the last dozen years. What’s meant by “reproductive rights,” of course, is the right of women to control their own bodies. Didn’t I mention earlier that violence against women is a control issue?
And though rapes are often investigated lackadaisically – there is a backlog of about 400,000 untested rape kits in this country– rapists who impregnate their victims have parental rights in 31 states. Oh, and former vice-presidential candidate and current congressman Paul Ryan (R-Manistan) is reintroducing a bill that would give states the right to ban abortions and might even conceivably allow a rapist to sue his victim for having one.
All the Things That Aren’t to Blame
Of course, women are capable of all sorts of major unpleasantness, and there are violent crimes by women, but the so-called war of the sexes is extraordinarily lopsided when it comes to actual violence. Unlike the last (male) head of the International Monetary Fund, the current (female) head is not going to assault an employee at a luxury hotel; top-ranking female officers in the U.S. military, unlike their male counterparts, are not accused of any sexual assaults; and young female athletes, unlike those male football players in Steubenville, aren’t likely to urinate on unconscious boys, let alone violate them and boast about it in YouTube videos and Twitter feeds.
No female bus riders in India have ganged up to sexually assault a man so badly he dies of his injuries, nor are marauding packs of women terrorizing men in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, and there’s just no maternal equivalent to the 11% of rapes that are by fathers or stepfathers. Of the people in prison in the U.S., 93.5% are not women, and though quite a lot of them should not be there in the first place, maybe some of them should because of violence, until we think of a better way to deal with it, and them.
No major female pop star has blown the head off a young man she took home with her, as did Phil Spector. (He is now part of that 93.5% for the shotgun slaying of Lana Clarkson, apparently for refusinghis advances.) No female action-movie star has been charged with domestic violence, because Angelina Jolie just isn’t doing what Mel Gibson and Steve McQueen did, and there aren’t any celebrated female movie directors who gave a 13-year-old drugs before sexually assaulting that child, while she kept saying “no,” as did Roman Polanski.
In Memory of Jyoti Singh Pandey
What’s the matter with manhood? There’s something about how masculinity is imagined, about what’s praised and encouraged, about the way violence is passed on to boys that needs to be addressed. There are lovely and wonderful men out there, and one of the things that’s encouraging in this round of the war against women is how many men I’ve seen who get it, who think it’s their issue too, who stand up for us and with us in everyday life, online and in the marches from New Delhi to San Francisco this winter.
Increasingly men are becoming good allies – and there always have been some. Kindness and gentleness never had a gender, and neither did empathy. Domestic violence statistics are down significantly from earlier decades (even though they’re still shockingly high), and a lot of men are at work crafting new ideas and ideals about masculinity and power.
Gay men have been good allies of mine for almost four decades. (Apparently same-sex marriage horrifies conservatives because it’s marriage between equals with no inevitable roles.) Women’s liberation has often been portrayed as a movement intent on encroaching upon or taking power and privilege away from men, as though in some dismal zero-sum game, only one gender at a time could be free and powerful. But we are free together or slaves together.
There are other things I’d rather write about, but this affects everything else. The lives of half of humanity are still dogged by, drained by, and sometimes ended by this pervasive variety of violence. Think of how much more time and energy we would have to focus on other things that matter if we weren’t so busy surviving. Look at it this way: one of the best journalists I know is afraid to walk home at night in our neighborhood. Should she stop working late? How many women have had to stop doing their work, or been stopped from doing it, for similar reasons?
One of the most exciting new political movements on Earth is the Native Canadian indigenous rights movement, with feminist and environmental overtones, called Idle No More. On December 27th, shortly after the movement took off, a Native woman was kidnapped, raped, beaten, and left for dead in Thunder Bay, Ontario, by men whose remarks framed the crime as retaliation against Idle No More. Afterward, she walked four hours through the bitter cold and survived to tell her tale. Her assailants, who have threatened to do it again, are still at large.
The New Delhi rape and murder of Jyoti Singh Pandey, the 23-year-old who was studying physiotherapy so that she could better herself while helping others, and the assault on her male companion (who survived) seem to have triggered the reaction that we have needed for 100, or 1,000, or 5,000 years. May she be to women — and men — worldwide what Emmett Till, murdered by white supremacists in 1955, was to African-Americans and the then-nascent U.S. civil rights movement.
We have far more than 87,000 rapes in this country every year, but each of them is invariably portrayed as an isolated incident. We have dots so close they’re splatters melting into a stain, but hardly anyone connects them, or names that stain. In India they did. They said that this is a civil rights issue, it’s a human rights issue, it’s everyone’s problem, it’s not isolated, and it’s never going to be acceptable again. It has to change. It’s your job to change it, and mine, and ours.
******
Readers: Aren’t those statistics shocking? Isn’t it just mind blowing to read about all of these heinous incidents toward women all in one write? It’s brutal to read. But nothing compared to those who endure the brutality.
Are you in tears yet as I am? And yet, that is not even 1% of the atrocities against women every day, when you consider a rape happens every minute and a woman is beaten every 9 seconds, just in the U.S.
It is truly sickening and so disturbing, that there are no words to describe how horrific it is. I just feel sad and disappointed and angry…and so many other feelings that I can’t even put into words…
No…not all men are bad. But I say to the good men out there…where are you in the fight to end the plight of women? Women cannot do this alone. Please do not stand by, walk away or turn a blind eye and do nothing. Please, don’t gape in astonishment. It is real and we need your help. Be one of the men who gets it, and make it your issue too by standing up for us women and doing something.
Where’s the LOVE? Blog me.
Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.
Gratefully your blog host,
michelle
Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)
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January 25th, 2013 at 8:51 am
Thanks, Robert, RT for standing up for the woman who expressed her heart in french. As for you #53Anonymous Says:
January 24th, 2013 at 11:31 pm
HAHAHA
How’s my french, Fuck You!
January 25th, 2013 at 9:03 am
One Food That Diabetics Really, Really, Really Need
A humble everyday food is amazingly good at helping to control diabetes and prevent the complications of this deadly disease—yet many diabetes patients ban it from their diets.
I’m talking about legumes—beans, chickpeas, lentils—which truly are close to magical when it comes to their health effects, particularly for folks with type 2 diabetes.
So if you’re among the crowd that I call the “bean holdouts,” I’m hoping to convince you to give beans and other legumes a place of honor in your daily diet.
Your life could depend on it! Here’s why…
BEANS AND YOUR BLOOD SUGAR
For diabetes patients, keeping blood sugar levels as close to normal as possible is crucial…but controlling those fluctuating levels can be a real challenge.
Many patients take antihyperglycemic drugs for this purpose, yet diet remains a major factor in diabetes management.
A lot of people with diabetes focus on high-fiber foods such as whole grains to help avoid problems like heart disease. And fiber does help (though the exact mechanism is unknown).
But now a new Canadian study shows that beans and other legumes do the job even better.
The secret behind legumes’ awesome power lies in their low glycemic index (GI) status. The GI is a scale from 0 to 100 that ranks foods based on their immediate effects on blood glucose levels. The lower its GI, the less of a blood sugar spike a particular food causes.
BEANS BEST THE COMPETITION
The study included 12l men and women with type 2 diabetes. Participants were divided into two groups and assigned to follow one of two healthful diets that were fairly equal in total calories, fat, protein and carbohydrates consumed.
As part of their diet, the first group was told to consume about 190 grams (two half-cup servings) of beans or other legumes each day.
The second group’s diet included an equal amount of whole grains, such as whole-wheat cereals and breads and brown rice. Each group also avoided the alternate food—in other words, the bean group avoided whole grains and the whole-grain group avoided beans.
After three months: The whole-grain group did benefit from their diet—but the bean-eaters benefited even more. Specifically…
Hemoglobin A1C values—indicated by a blood test that measures average blood glucose levels for the previous three-month period—dropped significantly more in the legume group than in the whole-grain group.
Using an equation that calculates risk for coronary heart disease (CHD), researchers found that the legume group’s CHD risk score fell from 10.7 to 9.6. This was largely the result of the legume eaters’ decrease in systolic blood pressure (the top number of a blood pressure reading) from 122 to 118.
In contrast, in the whole-grain group, neither the CHD risk score nor blood pressure decreased significantly. Also: In the legume group, the average weight loss and waist-size reduction slightly exceeded those of the high-fiber group.
GIVE A HIGH-FIVE FOR LOW GI
When I spoke with the study’s lead author, David Jenkins, MD, PhD, DSc, he told me that his team purposely chose study participants who already had reasonably good diets. “We wanted to see how people doing well could make further improvements,” he explained.
And in fact, both the legume group and the high-fiber group did improve. On the hemoglobin A1C test, for instance, both groups got their levels down below 7.0—a benchmark that often allows patients to eventually decrease their diabetes medication.
Still, the legumes came out ahead for several reasons. Unlike whole grains, beans are a very good source of protein—and protein does not cause blood sugar to fluctuate the way carbs can.
Beans also provide plentiful potassium, which may reduce blood pressure by counteracting the effects of sodium. But the primary factor in beans’ favor, Dr. Jenkins said, is that they are among the lowest-GI foods because their complex carbohydrates are digested slowly.
WHO SHOULD GIVE A HILL OF BEANS
Legumes are particularly good for diabetes patients, but just about everyone can benefit from better blood sugar control. Are you hesitant because you don’t care for the taste or texture?
There are many types of beans and other legumes to choose from—so keep experimenting until you find some you enjoy!
It’s easy to incorporate one cup of these potent orbs into your daily diet since they are so versatile.
Tasty suggestions:
Add white beans to vegetable soups and meat stews…use black or kidney beans plus tofu as the basis for chili…top salads with edamame (boiled green soy beans)…
serve lentils as a side dish or salad…enjoy the many varieties of hummus, made from chickpeas…or purée any type of bean to make dip, adding what tastes good to you—olive oil, pepper and/or other spices you love.
And don’t worry about gas. Despite the “musical” reputation of beans, the study participants registered few complaints in this department.
However, if you are concerned about bloating or flatulence, Dr. Jenkins advised starting with just one-half cup per day and increasing gradually over several weeks to give your digestive system time to adjust.
Source: David Jenkins, MD, PhD, DSc, professor, department of nutritional science, and Canada Research Chair in Nutrition and Metabolism, University of Toronto, Canada.
He also is director of the Risk Factor Modification Centre, St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, and lead author of a study on legumes and diabetes control published in Archives of Internal Medicine.
January 25th, 2013 at 9:07 am
Misch, good to finally chat. Thanks for all the topics to google. This article is sickening, and I have heard men say rape is so wrong and he should go to jail, etc…but not really address why it is done to begin with, the violence and power may be something they, good men, cannot relate to so they stand outside of it perplexed as hell also? I have no answer…perhaps a good man out there does…please explain it to us all, I am def all ears on this one.
RobertRt, good to see you express good ole humor at the white heart, your response was poignant and so appro, leave it to you!
Howie, sooo glad you’re back!
Al, sooo glad you’re back!
Luv, Zen Lill
January 25th, 2013 at 9:19 am
C’est une autre angoisse.
As he said way too much time on your hands or just an evil son of a POS.
that what you are too a Piece Of Shit.
January 25th, 2013 at 10:22 am
Michelle, I couldn’t finish that article. It was too horrific. I intend to make it my business to defend women at every level.
Today I called my son and informed him that if he ever threatens his wife in my home again I will throw him out and never allow him to return.
That is my start and I told my wife that if she continues to support our other son when he uses foul language towards his wife in our home I will remind her in his presence that a woman deserves better.
I have never raised my voice or hand to my wife. I don’t understand her condolence of our three sons being cruel to their spouses.
January 25th, 2013 at 10:36 am
I have seen the entitlement to control women thing since I could read here in India. The ballyhood movies censorship is a direct result of men feeling they are entitled to tell women what they can do with their bodies.
Every day in my country I live in fear of being raped maimed and killed.
What is a woman to do? Reading your article says it is no better in America. We have no hope.
January 25th, 2013 at 10:55 am
Michelle, even on this blog there are men who get so angry when women voice their concerns about violence against them by men.
They write in angry and defensive terms. Some try to belittle, demean and intimidate us.
I like your blog because I know if they got to crazy Madaline would kick some ass.
January 25th, 2013 at 11:26 am
There is only one thing that most women are interested in, as far as a man’s role is concerned: What are exactly the steps that you will take as a politician and our representative to impose laws to stop or punish men who commit femicide.
January 25th, 2013 at 11:46 am
Here is the story of a doctor Melissa Ketunuti who called an exterminator to get rid of rats in her home and he ended up strangling her and tying her hands behind her back and setting her on fire killing her because he said she was telling him how to do his job and belittling him.
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/01/24/suspect-charged-with-murder-in-death-of-center-city-doctor/
———————-
Police say that Smith confessed to the crime and sources say that Smith told investigators that he committed the crime because he felt like Ketunuti was “disrespecting” him and was making fun of him.
==========================
I guess he felt entitled to discipline a woman telling a man what to do.
January 25th, 2013 at 12:10 pm
No one really knows the truth about what really happened! It is his word what he said about their communication ! Background checks are great however, sociopaths, rapists and the lot of them may never have gotten caught after their crimes and would not have a record! What a senseless tragedy!
January 25th, 2013 at 12:13 pm
The US needs to be more Harsh when dealing with killers such as this. Vengeance sounds bad but you know what I have read so many injustices in this world.
Rapist, killers, child murderers go free. Why? They are not afraid of the law because they know the system has a major loophole.
If only the US instills fears in criminals. Torture them, Show the world that is how you are going to be punished if they commit crimes. Sometimes an Eye for an Eye is the only thing to do here in the US. So much senseless murders.
January 25th, 2013 at 12:22 pm
I also heard that this guy wasn’t even licensed to do the work he was hired to do. Makes you wonder how many other companies out there are doing the same thing.
I’m amazed that someone can brutally murder someone over a few spoken words, then go on with your day like nothing ever happened.
January 25th, 2013 at 12:24 pm
This is such a sad story – A wonderful doctor killed by a piece of garbage. He most likely tried to put the makes on her and she rebuffed him so he took her life.
One word of caution, whenever a service person comes to your home make sure that a family member or a neighbor is present just in case a rogue person like this piece of garbage shows up.
January 25th, 2013 at 12:25 pm
This lunatic has been in my home 2 times to exterminate for ants!!!!! I am freaking out right now!!!
January 25th, 2013 at 12:27 pm
I want to read how he acted at the next job in new jersey,and what those clients thought of this.
January 25th, 2013 at 12:30 pm
I don’t believe there was an argument! I think this guy was a pervert and he wanted to rape her but he was too aggressive with her and totally knocked her out and panicked.That’s why her pants were missing!
January 25th, 2013 at 12:31 pm
Her pants were missing?
January 25th, 2013 at 12:38 pm
Lesson learned: an MD degree doesn’t give a bitch the right to talk down to men….
January 25th, 2013 at 12:39 pm
Tom, On day one the story said she had on a shirt and no pants.
January 25th, 2013 at 12:40 pm
There is more to this story than we know. I bet this is a serial killer. He went to his next job as if nothing had happened.
January 25th, 2013 at 12:59 pm
I await your appearance, my sweet.
January 25th, 2013 at 2:01 pm
Michelle, white males come on to our lands and rape at will. They know that they can leave the reservation and not have to answer to the law.
White law refuses to prosecute rape charges from American Indians.
January 25th, 2013 at 2:09 pm
Hi Michelle, the Zen Lady, Linda, Mona and everyone else:
Thank you all for the welcome backs and the like. Feel like I’ve gone back to “CHEERS” after a period of sobriety. You know the place “where everybody knows your name”.
Recognition feels kinda good, especially when it is not always negative. So, without further ego inflation, it has been good to be commenting these last few days and I’ll try to not stay away for so long, unless of course the BABE herself requests it.
Michelle: Today’s topic is very serious, I too had trouble finishing. I try to do whatever seems appropriate in support of women’s right’s and safety, just like other men are supposed to do. Good write today, I was really feeling it………..
Al
January 25th, 2013 at 2:10 pm
Michelle, it is not different here on Guam. The men are brutal because the system encourages a sense of entitlement for men.
I experienced the same nausea when I read the above article. Who is this Kathy Ann Brown in New Mexico who is trying to get a law passed to force a woman to have the baby of a rape or be charged with destroying evidence.
What is with the majority of white women?
Hafa Adai
Anna
January 25th, 2013 at 2:56 pm
Michelle:
Your very moving post is unfortunately true. Those statistics are shocking. It is mind blowing to read about all of these heinous incidents toward Women all in one write. It’s brutal to read. But nothing compared to those who endure the brutality.
I am a Man and this truly put me in a somber mood. I really never had it thrown at me in such detail at one time enough to be ashamed of the male gender because as you have so eloquently stated, rape beatings and atrocities against Women are done by Men worldwide. Not just in so-called third word countries who have practiced the abuse of their Women for centuries using their religions as excuses.
When I consider that a rape happens every minute and a woman is beaten every 9 seconds, just in the U.S., It is truly sickening and there really are no words to describe how horrific it is. You have succeeded in bringing anger and many other emotions that I can’t even put into words.
Women cannot and should not have to suffer this mistreatment alone. Many Men do walk away or turn a blind eye and do nothing when they hear a Woman screaming out “Please Help Me.” Women are told to scream out “FIRE” instead because it will draw more attention from people — especially Men — instead of running away with their tails between their legs for fear of becoming “INVOLVED.”
Intervene — Be a REAL MAN. Especially if you see mistreatment of a Woman in your own Family, speak up and throw the bully out of your home. These assholes need to be humiliated in front of the entire family no matter what the occasion.
Michelle, you got through to me loud an clear flapping your lips on this Friday. It needed to be said and read.
HOWIE
January 26th, 2013 at 8:49 am
Ditto Howie!
January 26th, 2013 at 8:49 am
Ditto Howie!
January 26th, 2013 at 8:53 am
Michelle, I tried but I could not finish this article. But for men like Anonz, Howie, Al, and Doug what would it really be like for women.
January 26th, 2013 at 9:07 am
Howie, I am writing this for us women in Israel that couldn’t serve in the military for one reason or another. My sister writes in under different names all the time. She is one of your biggest fans.
Until recently she claimed that you were representing the “strength,” of Israel and the “strength of Israel is its military.” So she says you are speaking to her a member of Israel’s military not me or those like me.
The last week your comments have shown that you are more than than and “all things alien.”
Now you are our hero too.
אנחנו אוהבים אותך האווי.
Abichail
January 26th, 2013 at 9:19 am
My cousin lives in one of those states which allow the rapist to have paternal rights. He served 4 of a seven year sentence for raping her.
When he got out he learned that she had decided not to have an abortion because of her catholic beliefs. So he sued to force her to have a DNA test.
Then he went to court and forced her to allow him visitation and then custody rights. She now shares custody with a man that she never knew before he dragged her off her jogging path and brutally raped her for three days until she escaped.
January 26th, 2013 at 9:30 am
” There are lovely and wonderful men out there, and one of the things that’s encouraging in this round of the war against women is how many men I’ve seen who get it, who think it’s their issue too, who stand up for us and with us in everyday life, online and in the marches from New Delhi to San Francisco this winter.”
Thank you Howie and Al you are stars of this group.
Lucy
January 26th, 2013 at 9:38 am
My daughter sent me your article Michelle today. I had to write and say, I have been guilty of abusing my wife vocally. This has opened my eyes to why my daughters have stayed away from our home after they got jobs and went out on their own.
I have apologized to my wife and I am committed to taking anger management courses to learn how to control my temper.
As Howie said this is a true revelation of the terror our females live with every day.
Mark
January 26th, 2013 at 9:58 am
Jacob #5:
Way to go and Mucho Kudos. Every change starts first in the person and secondly in the home. From what I read I believe you mean what you say and say what you mean. You have made a great start in my opinion. The world and it’s women need more men like you! Right girls?
Michelle:
I will defend a women being abused or beaten even if it requires a vigilant but descretionary show of insistance. While trying to mind my own business at the same time.
But witnessing physical violence of a woman by a man, well I think that would qualify as being made into being my business. Haven’t been in or witnessed such a situation in quite a while.
Men are not supposed to turn their backs on women who are obviously in need of help, or those who are in immediate physical danger. My two cents worth……….
Al
January 26th, 2013 at 10:07 am
Howie, Israel opened combat roles to women in 2000. The Israel Defense Force is also the only army to conscript women.
Your input is very much appreciated. We enjoy reading your post. Keep them coming.
January 26th, 2013 at 10:23 am
Helen #30:
That is a very sick and deluded man who had raped your cousin. Four years is way too short of a prison sentence for such a brutal crime and this guy should be in prison still.
Lucy #31:
Anyone can be a star if they decide to shine.
Mark #32:
I think it took real courage to make that addmission and to recognize the problem. Nobody can change yesterday, but you can change by not scaring or verbally abusing your wife or any other women anymore. And that is a milestone of progress right there, at least I think so.
Al
January 26th, 2013 at 11:05 am
Al, my daughter has often sent me copies of your posts. In the past I used to just delete. But I asked her to re sent your post.
Thank you for your concern.
January 26th, 2013 at 11:08 am
Canada, France, Germany, Australia all have Women Serving in the Front Lines. The American Women is not Weaker then any of these other Women serving around the World! Remember there are also 7 Latin American Countries who also have Women serving in the front lines.
So Howie you have lots of military women fans.
January 26th, 2013 at 11:08 am
Michelle, Love intelligent, articulate women who are not afraid to dismantle an old fraud!
January 26th, 2013 at 11:19 am
Meditation Staves Off Loneliness and Disease
Forty healthy adults were divided into two groups—one group attended an eight-week course in mindfulness meditation, an ancient practice that focuses on creating awareness of the present moment, while the other group did not.
Result:
The meditation group reported lower levels of loneliness (a risk factor for death) and had lower levels of C-reactive protein and pro-inflammatory gene expression (which contribute to cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases and cancer).
Mindfulness meditation is taught throughout the US.
For locations, consult the Center for Mindfulness at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, http://UMassMed.edu/cfm/stress.
Source: J. David Creswell, PhD, assistant professor of psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh.