2/11- WAM!Stage: Feminists Rock w. Rebe Scarlett, Julia Barry, & Janna Zinzi
Archive for shireensaxena
1/18: “I Had an Abortion” Campaign!
1/18- Wednesday, January 18, 2012 @ 7PM – $5 Suggested
Presentation: URGENT!: A Resurgence of the “I Had an Abortion” Campaign with Jennifer Baumgardner, Soapbox, Inc., and RadFem
In honor of the 39th anniversary of Roe v Wade, RadFem and Soapbox, Inc. host a screening of the “I Had an Abortion” documentary, and a launch of new t-shirts and bags that allow those who’ve had abortions to be acknowledged and to personalize a vicious and abstract debate.
Bluestockings – 172 Allen St between Stanton and Rivington
In 2008 PS produced a screening & discussion of “I Had An Abortion” with Jennifer, Gillian Aldrich (Filmmaker), and several women featured in the film, and we’re thrilled the campaign is moving onward!
REGISTER NOW! 8th Annual National Young Feminist Leadership Conference
Opening online registration for our 8th Annual National Young Feminist Leadership Conference!
The conference is March 31 – April 2, 2012 at the Crystal City Hilton (5 minutes from the National Airport). Our workshops will include the latest developments in feminist political activism around domestic and global women’s health, reproductive rights, student voter participation, violence against women, and more. At the conference, you’ll trade feminist organizing tips with youth activists from across the country, and get their advice for making your feminist group even stronger on campus.
Early Bird Registration (through February 1) is only $25 for individuals and $20 for groups of 4+. After that, those rates will go up to $35 for individuals and $25 for groups, so take advantage of the early bird rate and register today! The conference registration fee includes a full weekend of workshops and a Congressional Visit Day on Capitol Hill on Monday, April 2.
Check out the conference website to start planning your trip to DC – it will be helpful to you as you organize registration, transportation, lodging, and food costs, and which members of Congress you’ll contact while you’re here.
The largest 3 groups to register by March 15 will receive prizes like free “This What A Feminist Looks Like” t-shirts, totebags, and Ms. magazine memberships for each member, so start recruiting today!
To take advantage of the group registration discount, call our DC office at 703-522-2214 and ask to speak with a campus organizer. Don’t hesitate to call or email nyflc@feminist.org if you have any questions or concerns. We’ll see you in DC!
For equality,
duVergne, Francesca, Jacqueline, Laura, Meghan, Myra, and Sarah
The FMF Campus Team
P.S. Be sure to keep checking our conference website over the next few weeks as we continue to add the schedule, speakers, and more content!
Tangled by Cristina Dominguez
Tangled in
her innocent
flower embroidered
nightmares
little girl
strung inside
my cage
you bang your
soft little
fists
scratch the walls
of my subconscious
call out
at the bottom
of the stairs
at the top
of my lungs
I cradle you
in my
sleep paralyzed arms,
interlocking
my grown woman
writers hands with your
feeling finger mitts
we both
love
and
fear
the
water
fighting
to keep out
night gowns
out of the toilet
our legs
out of the
sewer drains
but gulping
it down
in wonder
wandering
to the edge
of the ocean
staring
as a leak
springs into
a flood
try to tie up
the shoe strings
they are
undone
there are ghosts
at the tippy top
of the matching
curtains
there are men
under the bed
a betraying boy
in the closet
we tried to
make safe
burn candles
in the pockets
of my skull
so we can
make
brighter
the room
where we
meet each
other
welding
bravery
to the
terror
waning
between us
wax tears
will have to
suffice
the
suffering
Kickstarter Campaign till 12/21- Support Chantilly, Amazing PS featured singer-songwriter!
Chantilly is your friendly neighborhood singer-songwriter. She’s a crazy cat lady, lifestyle blogger, and happens to write the best rainy day songs you’ve ever cried to. A frequent performer in the NYC scene, she’s been featured in the CMJ Music Marathon, L Magazine’s Northside Festival, and Paradigm Shift’s Artist showcases (2007 & 2009.)
Recently, much time and love was put into creating a magical new set of recordings with producer Saul Simon Macwilliams (Ingrid Michaelson, Jenny Owen Youngs), so she is trying to raise funds for it via kickstarter. The deadline is December 21st to raise $2,000 dollars. The money will go directly towards production costs, as well as giving you access to one-of-a-kind prizes.
If you believe in art and love, consider contributing to this artist’s dream!
www.chantillysongs.com
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/chantillysongs/chantilly-makes-new-ep-needs-kisses-love-hope-and
www.twitter.com/chantillysongs
http://chantilly.bandcamp.com
Change.org Petition Alert: Acid baths as retaliation
Franca Ogbu was the first person in her family to attend college, but her education was cut short when another student at Nigeria’s Federal University of Technology attacked her with acid after she refused to date him.
Franca has spent the last year in a hospital bed recovering from her extreme, disfiguring injuries. She’s undergone 11 surgeries and needs at least 13 more. Meanwhile, her attacker, Chibuzor Bright Nkire, has walked free because Nigerian prosecutors refuse to hold him accountable.
Now, Busayo Obisakin (a Nigerian woman who grew up in a poor family similar to Franca’s)
The attack against Franca wasn’t unique — “acid baths,” meant to disfigure or kill women who are thought to have scorned men, have been described as “incessant” and “disturbingly common” by Nigerian newspapers.
Busayo knows that the longer Franca’s attacker goes unprosecuted, the less likely he is ever to face consequences for his actions. And more women like Franca will be in danger if the criminal justice system lets men think they can get away with acts of violence.
Nigeria’s First Lady has recently taken a stand against violence targeting women and girls, so Busayo and other local activists believe an international outcry about Franca’s attacker will force the government to take action. Please sign Busayo’s petition right now demanding the Nigerian government prosecute Franca’s attacker and regulate the sale of acid as a weapon:
Thanks for being a change-maker,
– Shelby and the Change.org team
- Nilton Deza has seen whole communities destroyed by toxic waste, displacement and abusive labor practices associated with gold mining. Join his campaign asking Macy’s to join the “No Dirty Gold” campaign this holiday season.
- Photoshopped images of models are nothing new, but H&M has taken the practice a step further and started computer-animating images of perfect bodies and pasting on real models’ heads. Join a group of young women calling on H&M to drop the fake bodies.
- Alex Sahlen, a defender for the Western New York Flash, launched a petition to save Women’s Professional Soccer from being disbanded.
- D.C. college student Katie Breslin is petitioning to get Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence (SAFE) kits and trained staff in every D.C. hospital so no sexual assault survivor is turned away without treatment.
- Two men in Cameroon were just sentenced to five years in prison for the “crime” of being gay. Now petition starter Stephane Koche is asking Cameroon’s president to drop the charges and let the men go free.
President Obama Needs to Hear From You
Something like this should not happen with a pro-choice president in the White House.
The Obama administration officials have blocked a change in policy that would have helped prevent unintended teen pregnancies.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was planning to make Plan B®, a brand of emergency contraception, available to all women without a prescription.
But at the last minute, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius intervened and blocked the FDA from removing an age restriction on Plan B®.
What’s worse is that this interference means a policy put in place by the Bush administration will continue.
Add your name to my letter to say that it is unacceptable that this administration chose to follow this path.
Plan B® is emergency birth control that works after sex, and could be used, for example, when the condom breaks or in the cases of rape. Medical experts agree that improving access to Plan B® by making it available over the counter for young women could help reduce teen-pregnancy rates.
When emergency contraception was first approved for over-the-counter sales, anti-choice politicians in the Bush administration intervened and blocked access to women under 18. Medical experts never stopped advocating to remove the age restriction because Plan B® is proven to be safe for women of all ages.
As we predicted, the Bush administration-imposed barrier was unworkable. For example, the rule poses a terrible problem for a young woman who is a survivor of rape or incest and does not have the option of talking with her parents if she is from a violent home or was attacked by a relative. Under the Bush-era policy, many teens still may be blocked from accessing the medication – and could face unintended pregnancies as a result.
We had every confidence that this Bush-era policy would come to an end.
That’s why today’s news is so shocking. The Obama administration has broken a key promise to the American people that it would base its decisions on sound science and what’s in the best interest of women’s health.
In solidarity,
Nancy Keenan
President, NARAL Pro-Choice America
The Obama administration interfered in a policy that would prevent unintended teen pregnancy.
This is not the kind of action we come to expect from a pro-choice administration.
Take Action.
Rally to Save Birth Control!
Rally to Save Birth Control!
Health care reform will let many women access birth control without copay.
But the White House might be caving to pressure from ultraconservative forces. Women whose bosses oppose birth control are at risk of having that coverage taken away.
Join NARAL Pro-Choice New York, Planned Parenthood of NYC, the New York Civil Liberties Union, NOW-NYC, Sistersong NYC, National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health, National Organization for Women (NOW) NY State and NOW NY State Young Feminist Task Force and others on Thursday for an emergency rally at the federal building in Manhattan, which houses the Health and Human Services regional office, to send a message to the White House that all women should have access to affordable birth control regardless of where they work!
Rally to Save Birth Control
This Thursday, December 1
12-1:30 pm
Outside the Federal Building
Broadway between Worth and Thomas Streets, Manhattan
Please RSVP here.
The Obama administration is being flooded with calls and letters from people who oppose birth control. We must send a message that caving to this extreme position is not an option.
Can’t make it to the rally? Follow the rally on Twitter under #NY4BC and tweet your message to HHS – we’ll write your message on a sign for all to see.
Facing Gender Violence on NYC Transit
Monday December 5th
Facing Gender Violence on NYC Transit
Hunter West Building at Hunter College – 1st floor Lobby area, Southwest corner of 68th Street and Lexington Avenue
7:00pm – 8:30pm
Facebook event is at: https://www.facebook.com/events/140351099406402/
This event is free and open to the public.
Sexual harassment and assault is a common problem on public transportation; but the issue rarely gets discussed or addressed. Learn from the experts about who is affected and what you can do to protect yourself and others.
Panelists:
Jerin Afria, Chair of the National Organization for Women (NOW), Young Feminist Task Force;
Emily May, Co-founder and Executive Director of Hollaback!;
Susan Moesker, Coordinator of Community Violence Prevention at the Center for Anti-Violence Education
A representative of Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer
Moderator:
Dr. Gail Garfield, Professor of Sociology at John Jay College and author of Knowing What We Know: African American Women’s Experiences of Violence and Violation