Monday, 14 November 2011

Women's issues / Men's Issues

Women's issues are men's issues first and foremost because everyone is living together in the same world. Any action that one group has, therefore, will have some impact, great or small, on the other group. This works both for the problem as well as the solution: you can’t have either without the participation of both groups.

The women's movement in particular is all about freedom. It's about the freedom to work different jobs and get paid fairly for them; it's about the freedom to express thoughts and opinions on a national and global scale through positions of power like the media and political office. Most importantly it's about the freedom to choose the kind of life that is appropriate for the individual – not what tradition or society dictates is proper.

This kind of thinking opens doors. It makes people question the idea that something is wrong just because it's never been done before, and that kind of thinking can only ever lead to more freedom for all people, men as well as women. If someone sees that a women had been voted into office - into a position that has mostly always been held by a man - and that women is shown to be as competent, effective and successful as any man has been, than that someone might think twice about condemning a man just because he is a stay-at-home dad. In addition that man wouldn’t be able to afford staying at home if his wife wasn't allowed to have a high-paying job, and if education wasn't available to her that allowed to qualify for that high-paying job, and if none of that happened than they might not be able to care for their kids in the first place - something that society condemns both men and women for.

A lot of the issues facing women have to do with stereotyping, whether that's about body shape or clothing choice or education and career options and stereotypes affects men just as much as women. If a women is shown to be appreciated for whatever type of beauty she possesses then it makes it a natural jump for guys with different types of body builds to be appreciated as well. This works the opposite way as well in that if the only women being shown on magazine covers are airbrushed, hourglass-shaped twigs, then the men magazines are going to airbrush muscles onto their cover models because they assume that if the present-day society is buying the women’s magazine then they must value the traditional view of physical beauty.

The issues facing women today aren’t really gender-issues at all but societal, and if we are to change them then our society itself must change, and that means progressing the thinking of everyone in it: all genders and all identities included.

Saturday, 5 November 2011

LGBT Activists

                They say that change is happening. They say that laws are becoming more inclusive; that more and more political parties are using anti-homophobia as part of their platforms. But for the young child sitting at home, struggling with his sexuality and hearing the student’s from school chanting “homo” into his head, this isn’t enough. But if that child turns on his television and sees a person, an ordinary person, gay, like himself, speaking through the television as if directly to that young boy and tells him that that person (he or she or somewhere in between) is fighting for him; that someone just like him is making a difference in ensuring that young people struggling with their sexuality all over the world don’t have to be frightened anymore, then that starts something. Something is implanted in that boy’s mind and the mind of others watching the same thing, and that something is a little like hope and a little like courage and that boy, who might’ve otherwise overdosed on painkillers one day and never woken up, becomes a politician or a journalist or a lawyer to support the LGBT cause. Because activists don’t create change; activists create other activists who all work together to make an obstacle move.

            More than anything, The Laramie Project, showed us just how much work is still left to do for LGBT people to gain equality. Since Laramie is such a small town, what it really lacks is exposure. Without exposure to all kinds of people no new ideas can be created and the practices and mindsets that have been present for many years will continue to stamp out any small sparks lit in their path. So this is when the leaders become useful; people who are already in a position of power or in the public eye who can change people’s definition of normal. When people see celebrities they admire like Ellen Degeneres, Darren Criss, Daniel Radcliffe, Pink - some gay, some not - supporting gay rights, it makes them reevaluate their stances, if only just a little bit, and helps break down the barrier between the straight Us and the gay Them.

            “Celebrity” activists also help by bringing wider media coverage to certain problems. A good example of this is Lady Gaga with the DADT policy, that she brought worldwide attention to by bringing fired soldiers as her guests to the Grammy awards. The amount of people who watch the Grammys is significantly higher than the amount of people who follow the politics of the US army, and because of her small action she got almost all major newspapers and television stations talking about the policy. With her publicity, she was able to get people to focus their energy on a specific way to make change.

This is exactly what Harvey Milk was doing for the entire country when he encouraged supporters not to move to San Francisico so they could vote for him but to go back to their own oppressive towns, “to go back to San Antonio and fight.” He made fans into activists just by giving them a little inspiration and a little direction.

So yes, change is happening, but with the work of the activists, the people saying it aren’t a faceless “they” any longer. “They” have different skin colours, and different hair colours, and backgrounds and families and lives. “They” are Ellen Degeneres, Harvey Milk, your favourite singer who made a video for the Trevor project, and that kid in your class who did a presentation for Homophobia Awareness Day. “They” aren’t stopping the problems themselves but providing the inspiration and the pathways for everyone to do so. And they are giving scared people everywhere the idea that things will change because in Harvey Milk’s words “You’ve got to give them hope.”

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

Thoughts on Crime Bill Article

I personally think that if the government wants to pass a new law on crime legislation, they owe us more information. The article from the Vancouver Sun rightly points out that the Tories have not given us an estimated cost or any idea as to where this money will come from, but my first question for my government would be: is this even necessary?

I know that stopping crime is important; I want to be able to safely walk down the street as much as anybody, but with the recession still around, the current education budget extremely low, and our health care system a topic of debate, is this really our biggest concern right now?

If I go on to Statistics Canada, I can find out that violent crimes dropped three percent in 2009. I can’t find a lot on drug-dealing rates; if they are up, I want to see it. Give me statistics, government. Show me the numbers and the rates of increase; show me the problem (and yes, the budget too) and then I will decide if I am in favour of the solution.

Tuesday, 13 September 2011

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian 1st Chapter Review


The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian is a book that is, like many others, primarily a book about a misfit. In the very first sentence the main character talks about how he was born with extra fluid in his brain and when they sucked out this fluid he was left with brain damage which gave him a stutter and a lisp; so, right at the beginning, he was marked as different from other kids. In addition to this, he has an extra large skull, that causes tormentors to call him “The Globe;” he is super skinny and had gigantic feet so, naturally, he is bullied every time he ventures outside his house.
The skinniness is probably caused not just by his metabolism, but by the fact that his family is so poor that they sometimes go a day without food. This hardship is shared by many on the First Nations Reserve where he lives, so that separates not only him, but his entire community, from the richer part of the world.
The fact that he cannot take solace in his community like the others for fear of bullying is significant in the fact that his best friend is a dog that he cannot afford to bring to a vet. The hardship of having to watch his dog die is by far the most difficult one he has had to face (up to this point).

Wednesday, 7 September 2011

If there was a article written about me in 2015 about how I was changing the world for the better

Dana Neily – a 21 year old from Victoria, British Columbia, has been flung into the headlines by writing the book that has opened everyone’s eyes.

A collection of short stories with a running narrative, the book addresses such issues as bullying, poverty, and environmental non-sustainability and offers solutions using knowledge from the world’s leading scientists and humanitarians. The book is largely fiction but contains some of the life stories of real people. The book exposes clearly the inequality crisis’ raging in the Middle East as well as the ones hiding in our own backyards in North America.

The book has been nominated for several awards and has also been put on the banned books list by several groups that claim it is an alarmist attempt to force sinful views down the throats of law-abiding citizens. This has only seemed to increase the book’s popularity among most demographics.

            Ms. Neily is a known volunteer at both Amnesty International and Free the Children. She is preparing to enter law school to further her causes of human rights, but says that she will never stop writing and will continue to use this talent to make the world a better place.