Public Flesh is a No-No!

Via Boing! Boing! is the amusing tale of a library that found its own web site blocked by the very net filtering software it was using to filter out “inappropriate” sites.

The library is Piqua, Ohio’s Flesh Public Library, named for local businessman Leo Flesh who 70 years ago donated money for the library to move to its current location. But, of course, in the Internet filtering game, “flesh” and “public” appearing next to each other are enough to raise a red flag and block the site as a likely pr0n site.

So the library actually took the bizarre (IMO) step of changing their URL from www.fleshpublic.lib.oh.us to www.piqua.lib.oh.us. Surreal.

Source:

PiquaÂ’s library has to flesh out its own Web site. Kelly Isaacs Baker, Dayton Daily News, November 22, 2002.

Heather Mercer’s $2 Million Judgment Overturned on Appeal

In 2001 Heather Mercer won a $2 million sex discrimination lawsuit against Duke University — Mercer successfully argued that when she was cut as a kicker from Duke’s football team, that the coach’s decision was motivated by her gender rather than her kicking ability. This month, however, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth District overturned that damage award, though not the verdict.

The trial court had imposed punitive damages but the appeals court ruled that such damages could not be assessed in private Title IX actions. The appeals court relied on a recent U.S. Supreme Court case, Barnes v. Gorman, which disallowed punitive damages in a wide variety of discrimination lawsuits.

Both sides tried to spin the appeals court decision.

John Burness, Duke’s senior vice president for public affairs and government relations said,

We are pleased by the unanimous decision of the three-judge panel of the U.S. Fourth Circuit to throw out the $2 million in punitive damages. Duke University remains committed to aggressively advancing our support for women’s athletics through implementation of our Title IX plan.

Meanwhile Mercer’s attorney, Burton Craige, countered,

This decision in no way diminishes Heather Sue’s victory at trial. This jury heard all the evidence and ruled that Duke discriminated against her based on her sex and that senior Duke administrators knew of the discrimination and responded with deliberate indifference.

Its a rather pyrrhic victory, however, given that the main lesson to emerge from the whole incident is that football coaches should not give female kickers tryouts if they want to avoid such lawsuits (a position that is completely legal under Title IX).

Source:

U.S. Appeals Court Overturns $2 Million Award in Duke University Female Football Player Case. Dave Ingram, The Chronicle (Duke University), November 18, 2002.

Mary Daly’s Feminist Vision of Gendercide

In a post this month about a satirical essay by Martha Burk on controlling male fertility, weblogger Glenn Reynolds offered this parenthetical remark,

Though if you think that calling Burk’s piece “satire” changes the face of feminism you’re showing your ignorance. There are other writings by academic feminists calling for the elimination of men and similar absurdities in dead earnest, though at nearly midnight I’m not going to run them down. But as a guy who once edited Catharine MacKinnon, I know a bit about this stuff.

Barry Deutsch then challenged Reynolds as to whether there are really academic feminists who have called for the complete elimination of men. Reynolds turns up references in Mary Ann Warren’s “Gendercide,” which Deutsch says isn’t good enough.

Well, there is one academic feminist who is both a fan of parthenogenesis and advocates the elimination of men (and most women) — Mary Daly. Until a few years ago, Daly was a professor at Boston College. She was finally forced out there because she refused to allow men to participate in her classroom.

Daly has long advocated for research into parthenogenesis to dispense with men. Her book, Quintessence, is half-science fiction novel, half bizarre manifesto in which she explicitly lays out her views. Daly herself is a character in the book who visits a utopian continent where — thanks to the influence of Daly’s books — a lesbian elite reproduce solely through parthenogenesis.

And there is no doubt that Daly considers this both desirable and possible. Here’s Daly from a 2001 interview with What Is Enlightenment magazine (emphasis added),

WIE: In your latest book, Quintessence, you describe a utopian society of the future, on a continent populated entirely by women, where procreation occurs through parthenogenesis, without participation of men. What is your vision for a postpatriarchal world? Is it similar to what you described in the book?

MD: You can read Quintessence and you can get a sense of it. It’s a description of an alternative future. It’s there partly as a device and partly because it’s a dream. There could be many alternative futures, but some of the elements are constant: that it would be women only; that it would be women generating the energy throughout the universe; that much of the contamination, both physical and mental, has been dealt with.

WIE: Which brings us to another question I wanted to ask you. Sally Miller Gearhart, in her article, ‘The Future, If There is One, Is Female,” writes: “At least three further requirements supplement the strategies of environmentalists if we were to create and preserve a less violent world. 1) Every culture must begin to affirm the female future. 2) Species responsibility must be returned to women in every culture. 3) The proportion of men must be reduced to and maintained at approximately ten percent of the human race.” What do you think about this statement?

MD: I think it’s not a bad idea at all. If life is to survive on this planet, there must be a decontamination of the Earth. I think this will be accompanied by an evolutionary process that will result in a drastic reduction of the population of males. People are afraid to say that kind of stuff anymore.

Of course, what Daly is advocating here is nothing short of gendercide, and yet Daly is taken seriously by radical feminists.

Radical feminist Andrea Dworkin, for example, called Quintessence a “masterpiece.” When the Boston College controversy erupted, Daly’s supporters held a fundraiser called “A Celebration of the Work of Mary Daly” which included Diane Bell, Director of Women’s Studies at the George Washington University; Mary Hunt, Co-Director of the Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics and Ritual; Frances Kissling, President of Catholics for a Free Choice, and others. Daly also counted Eleanor Smeal, Gloria Steinem, and other feminists outside of academia in her corner.

The press release announcing the celebration explicitly includes Quintessence as one of Daly’s celebrated works. Can you imagine for a second the outrage if men in and outside of academia got together to celebrate the works of a misogynist who complained of female “contamination” and advocated “a drastic reduction of the population of females”?

And that, in a nutshell, is what is wrong with contemporary feminism — that such nutcases are not only tolerated but openly celebrated. And they still wonder why so few college-aged women want to self-identify themselves as “feminists.”

Source

Mary Daly event in Washington, DC, Jan. 29, 2001. Mary Hunt, E-mail press release, Jan. 10, 2001.

The Thin Thread Of Conversation: An Interview With Mary Daly. Catherine Madsen, Cross Currents, Fall 2000.

Change Agents in the Church: Mary Daly. Rev. Joan Gelbein, Unitarian Universalist Church of Arlington, Sunday, January 7, 2001.

Alleged Fortuyn Assassin Reportedly Confesses

Dutch prosecutors say that accused assassin Volkert van der Graaf has confessed to the murder of politician Pim Fortuyn.

Van der Graaf, a vegan involved in animal rights-related causes, apparently told prosecutors that he murdered Fortuyn because he considered him a danger to society (as opposed, apparently, to someone who would commit premeditated assassination).

According to a CNN story on the case,

“(Van der Graaf) has admitted that he purposefully shot dead Fortuyn. He had conceived this plan some time earlier,” the public prosecutor said in a statement obtained by Reuters.

The prosecutor’s statement said Van der Graaf had said “he saw in Fortuyn an increasing danger to, in particular, vulnerable sections of society.”

. . .

Van der Graaf said Fortuyn expressed what were stigmatizing political ideas and he threatened to seize huge political power, according to prosecutors.

“Van der (Graaf) saw no other way he could stop that danger than to kill Fortuyn,” Saturday’s statement said.

Van der Graaf will next undergo psychiatric tests ahead of a trial planned for 2003.

Source:

Fortuyn murder case: ‘Confession’. CNN, November 23, 2002.

Not Guilty Pleas from Defendants in Animal Rights Harassment and Extortion Cases

In late October, nine animal rights activists were indicted on charges of harassment and extortion related to threats made against Marsh Insurance manager Robert Harper Jr. Last week six of those activists plead innocent to the charges against them.

Ray Kleinert, 17, of East Brunswick, N.J.; Ryan Smith, 19, of Billerica, Mass.; Laura Lungarelli of Guilford, NH; Lisa Lotts, 23, of Boston, Mass.; Alexandra Doane, 18, of Foxboro, Mass.,; and Lauren Gazzola, 23, of Bethel, Conn., plead innocent to all charges against them.

Two activist, Joshua Schwartz of Chicago, Ill.; and Jennifer Greenberg, 17, of Wheeling, Ill. could not make an appearance in court because they were being held on similar charges in New York.

Additionally, prosecutors dropped charges filed against Jacob Conroy, 26, of Seattle, Wash.

Two as-yet unidentified men and an unidentified woman have also been indicted but not apprehended.

Source:

Animal rights activists plead innocent to harassment charges. Associated Press, November 22, 2002.

Portland State University Faculty Criticize Labeling Extremists as "Ecoterrorists"

Portland State University’s faculty senate passed a resolution earlier this month that criticized use of terms such as “ecoterrorism” saying that they unnecessarily links nonviolent political dissent to terrorism. The resolution passed 46-9.

And what sort of nonviolent political dissent are Portland professors concerned about defending? The kind that involves arson and setting fire to trucks.

The resolution was co-written by Mary King, chair of PSU’s economics department, and Barbara Dudley, adjunct professor of political science. King told Willamette Weekly’s Amy Roe that she was inspired by the plight of one of her former students, Jeremy Rosenbloom.

Rosenbloom received a bachelor’s degree in March but more recently was one of four environmentalist extremists arrested for allegedly setting fire to three trucks belonging to a logging company in June 2001.

King is horrified that society might actually punish Rosenbloom for his crime,

I know him, and the idea of him spending a big part of his life in jail appeals me.

Oh the horrors — that someone might actually be punished for a premeditated arson that destroys property and places firefighter and others in harms way.

The final resolution deleted a phrase that King and Dudley had written that implied that such acts of destruction were not terrorism, but the intent is still clear as Roe describes it,

The resolution decried the use of “inflammatory terms such as ‘terrorism’ and ‘ecoterrorism,'” which could be prejudicial and “dramatically increase potential sentences.” It was sent to the mayor and city commission.

Dudlely says she wanted the resolution to apply to the Muslim community as well as as environmental activists.

What I guarantee you will never see in these sort of resolutions and approving comments is any suggestion that the actions of pro-life extremists or other right-of-center extremism not be considered terrorism.

Had Rosenbloom firebombed vehicles belonging to an abortion clinic instead, you can bet that the faculty senate would have been considering other business — as it should have. So why does environmental and animal rights extremism receive a free pass from Portland State?

Source:

Profs Decry “Terrorism” Label. Amy Roe, Williamette Weekly, November 20, 2002.