BOGANETTE - Horns Up.

Month

February 2011

44 posts

Feb 24, 20111 note
Feb 23, 20112 notes
Al Jazeera obtains this recording of a phone call from a woman in Tripoli.

aljazeera:

Feb 21, 201196 notes
Feb 21, 201125,683 notes
Is it just me or do most atheists seem like...bitter...and angry...? → corruptpolitics.tumblr.com

goodreasonnews:

I wonder if they said something like this about abolitionists. I know they continue to say it about feminists. Statements like this aim to marginalize anyone who dare question religion. It’s ad hom. It’s a distraction, like a magician’s technique. As long as people can talk about the atheist’s attitude or disposition and make the conversation about that, they’re dodging the real conversation, the content of the atheist’s challenge.

If I say “Jesus, as described in the Bible, is almost certainly a mythical figure.” Someone who opposes that view could face the possibility of having a logical debate about a character who could turn water into wine with the wave of his hand, but couldn’t make nails and wood vanish into thin air. Or, they could call me angry or bitter or mean-spirited and try to force me into a position in which I defending my character and suddenly the theist is no longer in the position of logically defending an absurd claim.

Feb 21, 201154 notes
Wait guys, wait. I wrote Justin Bieber's next hit.

telescopics:

And I was like “baby, baby, baby”, ooh
Don’t kill the baby, baby, baby, nooo!
Cause it’s a baby, baby, baby, ooh
I thought I’d offer an uneducated, privilege denying, apologist opinion about personal circumstances regarding a body that isn’t miiiiiine~~~

Feb 16, 201142 notes
“‘Level of professionalism’? What professionalism? You mean the professionalism where she got famous by singing a song that sexualises queer women by portraying them as only dating other women for the pleasure of straight men? The professionalism where she followed that up with a single that encourages sissyphobia and stereotyping of gay men? Or the professionalism where she found a photo of a naked trans man and mocked him on her twitter?” —mikey james on Katy Perry (via glasscoffin)
Feb 16, 20116,117 notes
Feb 15, 20114,661 notes
“

How To Be an Ally To Sex Workers

1) Don’t Assume. Don’t assume you know why a person is in the sex industry. We’re not all trafficked or victims of abuse. Some people make a choice to enter this industry because they enjoy it, others may be struggling for money and have less of a choice.

2) Be Discreet and Respect Personal Boundaries. If you know a sex worker, it’s OK to engage in conversation in dialogue with them in private, but respect their privacy surrounding their work in public settings. Don’t ask personal questions such as “does your family know what you do?” If a sex worker is not “out” to their friends, family, or co-workers, it’s not your place to tell everyone what they do.

3) Don’t Judge. Know your own prejudices and realize that not everyone shares the same opinions as you. Whether you think sex work is a dangerous and exploitative profession or not is irrelevant compared to the actual experiences of the person who works in the industry. It’s not your place to pass judgment on how another person earns the money they need to survive.

4) Watch Your Language. Cracking jokes or using derogatory terms such as “hooker”, “whore”, “slut”, or “ho” is not acceptable. While some sex workers have “taken back” these words and use them among themselves, they are usually used to demean sex workers when spoken by outsiders.

5) Address Your Prejudices. If you have a deep bias or underlying fear that all sex workers are bad people and/or full of diseases, then perhaps these are issues within yourself that you need to address. In fact, the majority of sex workers practice safer sex than their peers and get tested regularly.

6) Don’t Play Rescuer. Not all sex workers are trying to get out of the industry or in need of help. Ask them what they need, but not everyone is looking for “Captain Save-A-Ho” or the “Pretty Woman” ending.

7) If you are a client or patron of sex workers, be respectful of boundaries. You’re buying a service, not a person. Don’t ask for real names, call at all hours of the day/night, or think that your favorite sex worker is going to enter into a relationship with you off the clock.

8 ) Do Your Own Research. Most mainstream media is biased against sex workers and the statistics you read in the news about the sex industry are usually inaccurate. Be critical of what you read or hear and educate yourself on who exactly is transmitting diseases or being trafficked.

9) Respect that Sex Work is Real Work. There’s a set of professional skills involved and it’s not necessarily an industry that everyone can enter into. Don’t tell someone to get a “real job” when they already have one that suits them just fine.

10) Just because someone is a sex worker doesn’t mean they will have sex with you. No matter what area of the sex industry that someone works in, don’t assume that they are promiscuous and willing to have sex with anyone at any time.

11) Be Supportive and Share Resources. If you know of someone who is new to the industry or in an abusive situation with an employer, by all means offer advice and support without being condescending. Some people do enter into the sex industry without educating themselves about what they are getting into and may need help. Despite the situation, calling the police is usually never a good option. Try to find other organizations that are sensitive to the needs of sex workers by contacting the organizations listed below.

12) As you learn the above things, stand up for sex workers when conversations happen. Share your personal stories if you so choose. Don’t let the stigma, bigotry and shame around sex work continue. Remember it’s important that sex workers be allowed to speak for themselves and for allies to not speak for sex workers but to speak with sex workers.

Realize that sex work transcends ‘visible’ notions of race, gender, class, sexuality, education, and identities; sex workers are your sisters, brothers, mothers, fathers, lovers, and friends. Respect them!

Get Active! Contact your local SWOP Chapter to find out what you can do or form your own in the city you live in.

This list composed by the members and allies of Sex Workers Outreach Project-Chicago. Visit us on the web at www.swop-chicago.org

Other Resources-

www.swop-usa.org
www.desireealliance.org
www.boundnotgagged.com

”
—http://redlightchicago.wordpress.com/how-to-be-an-ally-to-sex-workers/ (via grrrlvirus)
Feb 15, 2011763 notes
Feb 14, 2011
Feb 13, 20118,305 notes
Feb 13, 20111,687 notes
Tangerina: Privileged desperate white male with superiority complex seeks subservient cleaner/cook/sex slave with unlimited faux... → coleytangerina.tumblr.com

coleytangerina:

Hey guys, interested in getting together with a “potentially hot foreign chick”? One who is probably so desperate to leave her country that she’ll overlook all the reasons why you’re still single in NZ? Or are you just generally sick of those lippy NZ girls and keen for a subservient Ukrainian?

…

Feb 11, 201130 notes
Feb 9, 201119 notes
LADYTIME TONIGHT

coleytangerina:

What: The Feminazi Boner-Killers Drinks
When: Wednesday 9 February from 4PM
Where: Apartment Bar, 25 Allen Street
Who: Any Wellington feminsty bloggy types
Why: Because we are awesome, and we need a drink.

Hat tip Boganette

Feb 8, 20112 notes
Feb 8, 20112 notes
La Socialista: Dealing with my Pākehā privilege.  → lasocialista.tumblr.com

lasocialista:

This whole Hone Harawira kerfuffle (a.k.a: The Māori Party’s Chickens Come Home to Roost) has got me thinking about the privilege I have by virtue of being Pākehā (white or Caucasian for non-kiwis) in New Zealand. Which is testing me a little.

A long while back, when Harawira made some…

Feb 8, 20113 notes
“

Second-wave feminism grew out of a lot of things. Yeah, there was dissatisfaction with horrific job discrimination and middle-class housewives were finally getting mad that their supposedly perfect lives left them feeling unfulfilled and directionless and women were haemhorraging to death in hotel rooms after botched abortions. And some women were feeling a wee bit angry about that.

But one thing that really helped kick things off? Leftwing men. Leftwing men who could talk your ear off about the oppression of workers but let the women volunteers stuff the envelopes and make the coffee. Leftwing men who were all about opposing men being drafted for a capitalist war but didn’t have time to think about how, war or no war, women got drafted into producing the next generation of cannon fodder.

Leftwing men who tried to tell us (and the people of colour, and the people with disabilities, and everyone else) that the problem was capitalism, obviously. It was all about class and once we got rid of that mean ol’ power dynamic all those other oppressions – those oppressions that didn’t matter quite so much – would just vanish.

Now could you please go make some coffee while the boys are talking?

”
—Guest post: Why the left needs feminism « The Standard (via alisdee)
Feb 8, 2011157 notes
Feb 8, 2011107 notes
Feb 8, 201113,167 notes
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