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THE DFL FEMINIST CAUCUS ISSUES!

Take Action!

 Welcome to the Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor Party (DFL) Feminist Caucus Issues page!

This page is dedicated to keeping our membership informed of issues and legislation that may be of interest. We have also created a Yahoo Group for posting information at:  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DFLFC/.

In addition we send out updates and newsletters. Join us!

Subject(s): (click on subject)

Take Action! 

      Co-Sponsor The International Violence Against Women Act

E

very year, violence devastates the lives of millions of women and girls globally.  Violence against women and girls is a tremendous human rights problem around the world. It includes rape, domestic violence, acid burning, dowry deaths, so-called “honor killings”, human trafficking, female genital cutting and more.  The United Nations Development Fund for Women estimates that up to one in three women globally will be beaten, coerced into sex, or otherwise abused in her lifetime with rates reaching 70 percent in some countries, according to the World Health Organization.  Violence destabilizes countries, impedes economic progress, and prevents women from raising healthy children.

Current U.S. efforts to address violence against women are well-intentioned but fragmented and piecemeal. There is no systematic review of best practices and little measurement of programs’ impact. There is no coordination within or between the agencies that administer the few small projects.

Senators Joseph Biden (D-DE) and Richard Lugar (R-IN), Chairman and Ranking Republican of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, have authored the bi-partisan International Violence Against Women Act (S.2279). Representative Howard Berman (D, CA), Chair of House Foreign Affairs Committee, introduced the bill House (H. R. 5927). The International Violence Against Women Act (I-VAWA) creates a comprehensive, integrated approach to addressing violence. Decreasing violence against women and girls would help achieve US foreign policy goals of defeating terrorism, creating prosperity, supporting good governance, and ending the HIV epidemic.   The legislation was designed by AIUSA, Family Violence Prevention Fund and Women Thrive Worldwide with input from 40 international and 150 US-based groups with relevant expertise.

Specifically, the bill would:

  • Support survivors, hold perpetrators accountable, and prevent violence.
  • Integrate efforts to end violence against women and girls into existing, appropriate U.S. foreign assistance programs.
  • Establish one central State Department Office for Women’s Global Initiatives to coordinate the United States policies, programs, and resources that deal with women’s issues.
  • Create a five-year strategy to fight violence against women in 10-20 selected countries.
  • Incorporate best practices on addressing violence against women into programs that prevent violence, encourage legal reform and changes in public attitudes, promote access to economic opportunity projects and safe schools, and support healthcare. It authorizes $175 million for these programs.
  • Enable the US government to develop a faster and more efficient response to violence against women in humanitarian emergencies and conflict-related situations. It requires training and reporting mechanisms for humanitarian and other workers.
  • Enhance the capacity of the US government to develop emergency measures to respond to mass rape including efforts to provide direct services to victims and hold accountable perpetrators.
  • Encourage U.S. collaboration and funding for UN efforts to end violence against women.
  • Build the effectiveness of overseas non-governmental organizations - particularly women’s nongovernmental organizations – in addressing violence against women.

ü      Like Amnesty International the DFLFC recommends that Members of Congress should co-sponsor the I-VAWA (S.2279 & HR 5927) and seek its speedy adoption.  Call your representative today and encourage them to support this important Act.

 

Talking Points on Statute of Limitation Legislative Proposal (click to read proposal)

  • Our proposal would:  First, clarify the 1989 legislation that allowed victims of child sexual abuse to bring civil actions six years after the discovery of injury as a result of the abuse.  Second, provide that the determination of when the discovery occurred be decided by a jury—based on medical or psychological testimony.  Finally, the proposal includes a “window” provision that would allow child abuse victims whose claims have been barred in the past to file a claim within three years of the effective date of this bill.

 

  • Why a clarification?  In 1996, the Minnesota Supreme Court misinterpreted legislative intent and essentially ruled that, like when a person who is injured as a result of a car accident knows the injury and cause immediately, the child who is sexually abused knows at that time that they are injured as a result.  This not what the legislature intended.

 

  • Delayed discovery of injury:  A victim of fraud may not know they are “injured” for some time after the actual crime; and therefore, the statute of limitations on fraud does not commence until the victim actually “discovers the injury is a result of fraud.”  The same should apply to a child who is sexually abused.  A child sexually abused may not discover their injuries—and that their injuries are a result of the sexual abuse—until much later in their lives.

 

  • Injuries as a result of childhood sexual abuse:  Like a person who has been exposed to asbestos will much later in life realize the physical injury , it has been clearly established in the mental heath field that latent injury from childhood sexual abuse may not manifest itself for a long time.

 

  • Another reason it is important that victims be able to bring claims many years later:  We know that those who sexually abuse children often will continue to offend even into their 70’s and 80’s. If a child was sexually abused at the age of 12 and brings a claim at the age of 50, the perpetrator could be still offending.

 

  • Never ending claims:  Some say this law will result in “never ending claims” that are so old that it would be impossible to defend.  There is no honest basis for this claim.  Minnesota has strict rules covering frivolous lawsuits and it is the plaintiff who must prove their case.  Therefore, the age of a case is a natural impediment to the plaintiff.  Indeed, if there are no records, or no credible memories, there should be no worry.

 

  • Unanimously endorsed by the Minnesota County Attorneys Association:  Why?  Because criminal prosecution of child sexual abuse is difficult and rare.  Therefore, county attorneys are supportive of civil actions as a way to expose predators, and institutions who allow the abuse, as an additional tool in preventing further victimization.

 

Subject: V-Day
 

About V-Day: V-Day is a global movement to end violence against women and girls that raises funds and awareness through benefit productions of Playwright/Founder Eve Enslerʼs award winning play The Vagina Monologues. In 2007, more than 3000 V-Day events took place in the U.S. and around the world. To date, the V-Day movement has raised over $50 million and educated millions about the issue of violence against women and the efforts to end it, crafted international educational, media and PSA campaigns, launched the Karama program in the Middle East, reopened shelters, and funded over 5000 community-based anti-violence programs and safe houses in Kenya, South Dakota, Egypt and Iraq. The 'V' in V-Day stands for Victory, Valentine and Vagina. http://www.vday.org

Until the Violence Stops
Provided by V-Day
 

 

V To The Tenth
By Eve Ensler

2008 is V-Day's ten-year anniversary -- V to the 10th-- the celebration, the call, the decision, the next step. Welcome to the next ten years where together we will raise the stakes, go further, go deeper, increase the power and CHANGE THE STORY OF WOMEN.

In the past ten years there have been so many victories: women speaking the word where it was never uttered, women standing up against local and national governments, religious forces, parents, husbands, friends, university administrators, college presidents, the voice inside them that judges and censors. College students across the world have made V-Day a radical annual event (it's been noted that there are two things on every college campus: a Starbucks and a V-Day), women reclaiming their bodies, telling the stories of their own violations, desires, victories, shame, adventures. Women finding their power, their voice, their leadership ability by becoming accidental activists, women finding each other, women standing up for women in other parts of the world, women releasing memories that have numbed their bodies and depleted their energy, women standing on stage, on edge, in reds and pinks, with New York accents, southern accents, African accents, Indian accents and British accents; speaking, screaming, whispering, laughing and moaning.

There are so many tales, so many images: a group of about 30 Comfort women between the ages of 70 and 90 chanting PUKE (vagina in Tagalog) with their fists raised (most had never said the word in their entire life), the President of Iceland declaring himself a Vagina Warrior, hundreds of girls in Kenya dancing in the African sun as the first V-Day safe house was opening and their clitoris would not be cut, a Catholic girls school in Cap Haitian overflowing with more than 500 people, packed with men screaming back to the performers, an armed sirened motorcade in Port au Prince, Haiti traveling through the streets, with Stop Violence Against Women signs on all our cars, nurses at the Panzi Hospital in Bukavu, DRC reading The Vagina Monologues, performing Congolese orgasms on a roof top, women in Islamabad, Pakistan dressed in red Shalwar Kamiz and Saris, performing for their sisters who were there from Afghanistan-everyone laughing and weeping, thousands in the streets of Ciudad, Juarez coming from every direction, from all over the world, standing up at the V-Day march to stop the murders and mutilation of women, Mary Alice (brilliant New York actor) taking down the Apollo in Harlem with her moans at the first V-Day celebrating African American, Asian and Latina women and girls, a 14 hours bus ride to Himachal Pradesh in India to open a sanctuary for women, the mayor of Italy opening the Rome V-Day Summit, a walk through a 7 foot vagina in the lobby of the San Francisco V-Day, My Vagina was My Village, the monologue about a raped Bosnian woman being performed at the UN, at Madison Square Garden, in Bosnia by college students who were there during the war, at the Royal Albert Hall, in Johannesburg, Macedonia, Athens, a seven-language performance of the monologues in Brussels, during the V-Day European Summit, the word vagina standing out, the only English word in an Arabic article written in the Beirut Times, red feathers being handed out at the Indian Country production of the play in Sioux Falls or Rapid City, learning to sign clitoris in a performance by deaf women in Washington DC, vagina lollipops, buttons, puppets, quilts, panties, posters, votes attitudes and style.

So much has happened. So much has changed. We can point to places where violence has been reduced or has been stopped altogether or where the consciousness has most clearly shifted. We have had huge victories.

Then of course there is the opposite. The world is still profoundly unsafe for women. Violence escalates. War abounds.

In the last year, during V-Day's Spotlight on Women in Conflict Zones, I traveled to Haiti and the Democratic Republic of Congo. I visited women in cities throughout the U.S. and Europe. I met with our V-Day sisters from Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Iraq, Lebanon and Afghanistan.

In Haiti I found rape, a tool used in the war, now essentially normalized, now rampant--so much so that hundreds of women report rapes each and every month.

In the DRC, I heard the stories of atrocities towards women- sexual torture and raping of hundreds of thousands of women and girls, heinous and soul cracking.

Throughout North America and Europe, the story of women still raped in colleges, beaten in their homes, trafficked and sold in the streets.

In Iraq, the destruction of women's rights since the U.S. invasion, a rise in honor killings, rapes and murders of women.

In Afghanistan, war lords, former rapists and murderers in power, the Taliban coming back, girls afraid to go to school, women teachers murdered, outspoken women in parliament threatened and censored.

In Egypt and throughout Africa, still women are genitally cut-nearly 2 million a year.

We have broken through many barriers, we have changed the landscape of the dialogue, we have reclaimed our stories and our voice, but we have not yet unraveled or deconstructed the inherent cultural underpinnings and causes of violence. We have not penetrated the mindset that somewhere in every single culture gives permission to violence, expects violence, waits for violence, and instigates violence. We have not stopped teaching boys to deny being afraid, doubtful, needy, sorrowful, vulnerable, open, tender and compassionate.

We have not yet elected or become leaders who refuse violence as a possible intervention, who make ending violence the center of everything rather than amassing more weapons and proving how macho and unbending they can be. As Paul Hawken has noted in Blessed Unrest, his brilliant and inspiring new book: "Our largest export after food is weaponry, sent to governments with repressive regimes. Governments who destroy indigenous cultures to pay debts incurred by weapons purchase. Violence, the manufacturing of violence is at the core of u.s. economy, core of our soul." We have not elected or become leaders who understand that you cannot say you believe in protecting women and children and than support bombing Iraq. Exactly whose children do you believe in protecting? We have not yet elected or become leaders who understand that the same mechanisms of occupation, domination and invasion on a international level influence and role model what happens in the home, on a domestic level. We have not elected or become leaders who are brave enough to make ending violence against women the central issue of our campaign or office.

If we are going to end violence against women, the whole story has to change. We have to look at shame and humiliation and poverty and racism and what building an empire on the back of the world does to the people who are bent over. We have to say what happens to women matters to everyone and it matters A LOT.

Even raising money to stop violence against women can make it some thing other, something separate from the human condition, from every moment of our daily lives. It creates a strange fragmentation and an even more bizarre fiction. We concretize what is abstract and integral because we need to raise money and people feel better writing checks. And so we have constructed an anti-violence movement that has built shelters and hot lines and places for women to run to be safe. And although these places are crucial, they keep the focus on things or places rather than the issue, on rescue rather than transformation. It is the culture that has to change--the beliefs, the underlying story and behavior of the culture.

I have said from the beginning that ending violence against women cannot be the thing we get to later. Yet we are still, all these years later fighting for crumbs--morally, politically, financially. V-Day now raises more money than any group in the world to stop violence against women. This is not good news. In one year we raise 4 to 6 million dollars. That is the cost of 10 minutes of the war in Iraq. One out of three women on the planet will be beaten or raped. You do the math.

Ending violence against women is actually about being willing to struggle to be a different kind of human being. It means not accepting force as a method of coercion and oppression. Ending violence against women means opening to the great power of women, the mystery of women, the heart of women, the wild unending sexuality and creativity of women, and not being afraid.

On April 12, 2008, V-Day will stage a once in a lifetime event - V TO THE TENTH - featuring international performances of The Vagina Monologues, musical guests, V-Day activists from across the globe, including Kenya, Afghanistan, Iraq, the Philippines, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eastern Europe, men standing up for women and much more.

Calpernia Addams, Glenn Close, Rosario Dawson, Ellen DeGeneres, Jane Fonda, Salma Hayek, Ashley Judd, Jennifer Hudson, Julia Stiles, Marisa Tomei, Kerry Washington, Oprah Winfrey and musicians Peter Buffett, Eve, Toni Childs, Common, Charmaine Neville, and Joss Stone have already signed on.

The evening will open minds and hearts and raise much needed attention and funds for groups working to end violence against women and girls around the world, and in New Orleans and the Gulf South.

In addition, over the weekend, Friday - Saturday, April 11 -12, the Superdome will be transformed into SUPERLOVE. Activities will strengthen the V-Day model of empowerment by linking art and activism; building bridges across class, nationality and racial divides; and providing a center of caring, learning and healing for the local community. During the two days V-Day will reclaim the dome, transforming it into a place of empowerment and action.

Special wellness programs are being planned for the women of the Gulf South free of charge throughout the two days. The space will feature events and programming - OPEN TO ALL - with international and local speakers (Carole Bebelle Rosario Dawson, Jane Fonda, Dr. Denis Mukwege, Suze Orman, NYC Council Speaker Chris Quinn, Rha Goddess, Kerry Washington and more), spoken word and performances, art installations, and more. V-Day activists from around the world can meet at the Superdome to network and connect with each other, and the women of the Gulf South.

What happened in New Orleans and the Gulf South after the flood and storm represents the challenges that women face worldwide- violence, global warming, racism, lack of healthcare and education, financial insecurity, and the failure of local and national governments. All these are pieces of the story of violence that continues to impact women in the United States and around the world.

V to the Tenth is a celebration, it is the call, the decision, the next step. Join Us!

***

Other V-Day Features at Feminist.com:

  • Action Alert: End Sexual Violence in Democratic Republic of Congo
  • V-Day/Feminist.com Anti-Violence Resource Guide

    Other Eve Ensler writings at Feminist.com:

  • Interview with Eve Ensler
  • Excerpt from Insecure at Last
  • Excerpt from The Good Body
  • The Real Meaning of Security
  •  

     

    Subject:2008 UNITY WOMEN'S RIGHTS RESOLUTION
     

    Respectfully submitted by MN DFL Feminist Caucus,

    Mari Pokornowski, Chair
     

    WHEREAS in the 2004 Presidential Election, Women's Issues were ignored in favor of saber-rattling, chest-beating strength and security stances; and
     

    WHEREAS, Women account for 40.5% of the full-time, year-round workforce over age of 16, yet we earn only 76.7% of what full-time, year-round male workers earn; and
     

    WHEREAS In the U.S., 14.7% of the female population live below the poverty line, while 11.6% of the male population live below the poverty line; and
     

    WHEREAS within U.S. family households without children: 5.0% of married households, 13.8% of male-headed households, and a whopping 29.4% of female-headed households live below the poverty line; and
     

    WHEREAS within U.S. family households with children: 6.9% of married
    households, 18.1% of male-headed households, and a record 37.7% of
    female-headed households live below the poverty line; and
     

    WHEREAS between 1998 -2002, women represented 84% of spouse-abuse victims and 86% of boyfriend/girlfriend abuse victims; and
     

    WHEREAS there has been a distinct downward slide of reproductive rights because of the recent actions of state legislatures and our more conservative U.S. Supreme Court;
     

    BE IT THEREFORE RESOLVED THAT the 2008 Democratic Presidential candidates address Pay Equity, Poverty, Domestic Violence, and Women's Reproductive Rights; that they acknowledge the negative impact current policies have on the well-being of women and children; and that they clearly define their strategies to achieve equal rights for women.

     

    Take Action!

    Subject: 07/2007 Mastectomy Surgery (Below was written by a surgeon)

    I'll never forget the look in my patients eyes when I had to tell them they had to go home with the drains, new exercises and no breast. I remember begging the Doctors to keep these women in the hospital longer, only to hear that they would, but their hands were tied by the insurance companies.

    So there I sat with my patient giving them the instructions they needed to take care of themselves, knowing full well they didn't grasp half of what I was saying, because the glazed, hopeless, frightened look spoke louder than the quiet 'Thank you' they muttered.

    A mastectomy is when a woman's breast is removed in order to remove cancerous breast cells/tissue. If you know anyone who has had a mastectomy, you may know that there is a lot of discomfort and pain afterwards. Insurance companies are trying to make mastectomies an outpatient procedure. Let's give women the chance to recover properly in the hospital for 2 days after surgery.


    Mastectomy Bill in Congress
    It takes 2 seconds to do this and is very important .. please take the time and do it really quick!
     

    Breast Cancer Hospitalization Bill - Important legislation for all women.

    There's a bill called the Breast Cancer Patient Protection Act which will require insurance companies to cover a minimum 48-hour hospital stay for patients undergoing a mastectomy. It's about eliminating the 'drive-through mastectomy' where women are forced to go home just a few hours after surgery, against the wishes of their doctor, still groggy from anesthesia and sometimes with drainage tubes still attached.

    Lifetime Television has put this bill on their web page with a petition drive to show your support. Last year over half the House signed on.
    PLEASE!! Sign the petition by clicking on the web site below. You need not give more than your name and zip code number.

    http://www.lifetimetv.com/health/breast_mastectomy_pledge.html

    This takes about 2 seconds. PLEASE PASS THIS ON to your friends and family, and on behalf of all women, THANKS.

     

    Subject: Sexual Abuse Legislation
     
    At the April meeting, the DFLFC voted to support the legislation indicated here.  It was decided that we would  articulate our feelings through letters, phone calls and emails.  Please take a moment, as a member of the caucus, to have your voice heard.  Also, email House leadership to stress the importance of this bill.  Continue by sending this information on to friends, relatives, and co-workers!

    Open letter from DFL FC President to legislators in support for victims of sexual abuse to sue their aggressors

    Representative Simon and Senator Kubly:

     The DFL Feminist Caucus is writing to voice our support for HF 1239 and SF 1096.  The bill extends the statute of limitations for victims of sexual abuse to sue their aggressors.  We strongly believe in the principals this bill is hoping to enshrine.

    ·         Every two and a half minutes, somewhere in America, someone is sexually assaulted.

    ·         One in six American women are victims of sexual assault, and one in 33 men.

    ·         In 2004-05, there were an average annual 200,780 victims of rape, attempted rape or sexual assault.

    ·         About 44% of rape victims are under age 18, and 80% are under age 30.

    More Than Half of Sexual Assaults Go Unreported Rapes Still Not Being Reported
    The National Crime Victimization Survey includes statistics on reported and unreported crimes in America. Sexual assault is one of the most underreported crimes, with more than half still being left unreported. Utilizing services such as The National Sexual Assault Hotline can help encourage victims to get help and report what has happened to them so that more perpetrators can be brought to justice.

    Males are the least likely to report a sexual assault, though it is estimated they make up 10% of all victims. Young females are four times more likely than any other group to be a victim of sexual assault.

    Sincerely,

    Mari Pokornowski

    President – DFL Feminist Caucus

    mariurnessp@yahoo.com

    320.286.5626

     


     



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