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Subject: Secours / Where are the Voices of Reason and Dissent? / Nov 09

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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2005-11/07secours.cfm

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ZNet Commentary
Where are the Voices of Reason and Dissent? November 09, 2005
By Molly Secours

Four years ago last week I published an article in local papers and across the
internet asking "where are the women"?

In September 2001 this was the chant reverberating throughout a stadium
flooded with 10 thousand participants during the NGO closing ceremonies at the
World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa.  This was the
conference that the Bush Administration refused participation.

Fidel Castro was the honored speaker along with five dark suited
dignitaries--all males-who took seats at a table behind him.  Before Castro
began to address the attendees, a lone voice shouted across the vast crowd:
"where are the women"?

Within seconds the mantra rumbled from the masses crossing lines of race,
gender and nationality. The entire stadium echoed and shook with the chorus
"where are the women?"

There we were celebrating the end of a two-week world conference in which
oppression and the marginalization, of the disenfranchised was center stage
and there was not a woman to be seen or heard from at the podium-apart from
the interpreter.

At the time, no one imagined that in just a few days the World Trade Center
would be demolished and a month later the United States would stage a war in
Afghanistan in which few voices of reason or sanity were audible.

First in Afghanistan, and now in Iraq, the voices of reason--and noticeably
women--have been muted throughout the four years of destruction and devastation.

In 2001, Congresswoman Barbara Lee courageously voted against the 40 billion
dollars for the military to retaliate against the terrorist attacks.  In a
vote of 420-to-1 she was the lone dissenting voice that said no, we should not
go to war.

Ms. Lee had the audacity to suggest--and the courage to declare--that the
annihilation of civilian men, women and children abroad wasn't an appropriate
response to the terrorist attacks in the U.S. and that we should not rush to 
war.

During an interview in September 2001 Ms. Lee said "We don't know the real
nature of terrorism in the true sense of the word. We have not invested in
combating terrorism the way we should have, which involves many issues. I am
convinced that military action alone will not prevent further terrorist 
attacks."

And four years later, it turns out the lone voice drowning in a sea of
testosterone was right.

This wasn't "women's intuition". It was a perspective based on a broader and
more informed viewpoint of American foreign policy.

As a result of speaking out Ms Lee was ostracized and rewarded with death
threats that required her to secure police protection.

More recently Cindy Sheehan, a grieved mother who lost her son in Iraq raised
her voice and requested a meeting with the White House.  She was rebuffed, and
eventually handcuffed and arrested and labeled 'unpatriotic' for being
unwilling to sacrifice her son--good-naturedly.

This week it seems only fitting to highlight the importance of women and the
role the feminine has played in igniting the conscience of the nation during
the week of Rosa Parks' death.

What is the feminine perspective? It is a perspective that values life above
all else but it is one that is also adept at negotiations and communication.

The feminine perspective (which is not soley the possession of women) weighs
humanitarian issues along side of the political--rather than in place of it.
And historically-like it or not-- it is primarily the masculine that destroys
human life through war, aggression and greed and the feminine which
counterbalances the tendency to dominate, conquer and exterminate.

Without a feminine perspective, the masculine gender regrettably seem to
'misplace' their humanity. Often times it is in the presence of the feminine
that the masculine remembers itself-as a member of the human family.

Whether sitting in the back of the bus or refusing to give up their seat to
intimidation, women in history have always been the stalwart shepherds of
movements to ensure civil rights, human rights, women's rights and workers
rights.  Harriett Tubman, Fannie Lou Hamer, Ida B. Wells and the list goes on.
And quite often it is the feminine perspective that has pricked the national
conscience and forced politicians and policy makers to adopt more reasonable
policies regarding human rights violations in war.

This could be the very reason why feminine voices are so often absent or
marginalized in discussions involving politics and war. Because the value
placed on human life might interfere with a war-for-profit agenda.

If you are skeptical about the lack of feminine perspective or influence, pick
up a daily newspaper or tune into television news. How many images feature
women negotiating with world leaders or women signing bills that violate civil
rights or target immigrants for the greater good?

Many argue Condoleeza Rice is proof that the feminine perspective is
represented on the world stage. Let's keep in mind that Ms. Rice is a double
minority in an organization that does not tolerate dissent.  She has by all
accounts obeyed this administration to the letter without faltering in support
of her boss in the U.S. led Iraqi invasion.  She would certainly not be there
if she did otherwise-as is evidenced in the recent White House indictments.

And now this administration would like us to somehow believe that women have
been fully and seriously considered in the quest for a supreme court judge to
replace Sandra Day O'Connor by the absurd nomination of the underwhelmingly
qualified Harriet Myers-a long time friend and crony of the president.

Are we really to accept that Harriet Myers is the best and only female
candidate we can come up with and that because she was nominated that the
president did his best to 'balance' the Supreme Court?

Both conservatives and liberals have made it clear that believing the
president to be the smartest man Myers has ever met hardly ensures a Supreme
Court nomination.  In fact, that statement alone probably prompted both
parties to further question her qualifications.

There are many worthy women who are appropriate nominees for the conservative
male-heavy Supreme Court.

And now, after combing through and exhausting all the possibilities from his
senior year book, the president has moved on to a considerably more qualified
candidate, A man.  A conservative white man from New Jersey named Samuel
Alito-often referred to as "Scolito."

The very week of Rosa Parks death, the president nominates a man who might
very well undermine and undo the heroic efforts of this woman-a black
woman-who risked her life and challenged the nation.  Ms. Parks act demanded
that the nation look deep within ourselves and root out the racist precepts
that have dictated and dominated governmental policies that have supported
racial oppression and discrimination for several hundred years.

Although Ms. Parks actions were considered dangerous in the 1950's, we have
discovered in the last several years of terror, that disruptive voices of
dissent are still roundly criticized, discredited and dismissed.  It takes a
lot of courage--and maybe a death wish--to stand up and confront U.S.
leadership about the current crisis--especially if you are black and a woman
like Barbara Lee.

Ms. Parks faced it all.  Although she is now acknowledged as a heroine, during
the 50's Ms. Parks, like Dr. King, was considered dangerous, was spit on and
hated for insisting on receiving equal treatment under the law.

The voices and actions of woman like Rosa Parks are needed as much in 2005 as
they were in the 1950's.  And they are needed in high places, like the Supreme
Court.

In a democracy, the voices of dissent are imperative. Without them we are
doomed to lapse into an unconscious sleepy obedience that ultimately results
in domination and usually death and destruction.

Thank God for the Rosa Parks of the world and the many voices of reason and
dissent who shed light on wars and injustice.

They are certainly present, we just don't get to hear from them very often.

Molly Secours is a writer/filmmaker speaker and frequent co-host of Behind The
Headlines on WFSK 88.1 FM.  She can be reached at www.mollysecours.com
------- End of Forwarded Message -------


---
TCB'n,
Noah

"The foundation of all mental illness is the unwillingness to experience
legitimate suffering."
        - Carl Jung

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