I
recently told a sweet but sometimes dense (by his own admission)
male friend that it isn’t all about penises. I meant it in a personal
sense, but when I opened my morning paper and saw a story about a
prostitution ring that involved smuggling women into the country in
packing crates, I was reminded that actually it is.
My birthday fell on the same day that the
story broke about the latest terrorist threat to airplanes (known for
some time, but conveniently made public the day after Lieberman’s
defeat). Next year maybe I can go on a trip and travel in my birthday
suit at the rate things are going. In the meantime, I read that women’s
lipsticks are being confiscated. Hairspray too. We should have expected
this after they tried to take away our knitting needles and started
frisking us if we were wearing underwire bras after 911. I have done
some intensive research on this and so far as I can tell the murder rate
attributed to any of these items is 0%. Unless of course you tell a
woman that she can’t carry them, in which case all bets are off.
But in the meantime, our ports are still unsecured (which no doubt is
why it is probably painfully easy to bring women into the country in
crates). Gun laws are being eased in this country and weapons (many
curiously penis shaped) are raining/reigning down on innocent people all
over the world.
My friend Yanar Mohammed writes from Baghdad, “I do not want to tell
you ugly and disgusting stories we hear around us every day, but it is a
reality.” A reality of impossible living conditions that include
violence specifically targeted against women. She tells me of a young
woman whose uncles have dug her grave in their garden, an honor killing
waiting to happen. She sends me a picture of an achingly beautiful
woman.
At the same time, Cheney lets spew this bizarre rant implying Lamont’s
win in some way helps Al Qaeda and the Bush Brigade can no more
recognize a civil war, let alone their own culpability, any more than
they can admit to the reality of global warming. Well actually they know
that these things are true and that they fit nicely into their real
agenda of destroying entire segments of the population of the world, but
it just isn’t pc to say so publicly.
In Israel and Lebanon, both sides hold up the pictures of children
killed by the other side’s weapons. As if the death of any child is a
call for the death of someone else’s baby. In Africa condoms are
frequently unavailable (yet more of the immoral morality of the Bush
Administration) and even when they are, men won’t use them (why is this
surprising, even in my white privileged world, too many men are still
saying please honey it ruins my penis-centric experience) and women and
children are now dying of AIDS at catastrophic rates.
My local paper proclaims that tomorrow it will print the names of
parents (presumably mostly male parents) who are behind on child
support. But we fail to make the connection between men who won’t
support their children financially in this country and the same men who
have no scruples about going halfway across the world and killing
children as a systemic part of our military policy. It all comes down to
penises.
My male friend tells me I should speak out about my needs and desires.
This should not be hard as I am so outspoken on many issues. But as I
examine my reluctance to talk, I know that this is hardly a personal
issue. Day in and day out we read about the abuse of women, of honor
killings and women stashed in crates. If we dare to make the connections
in our personal lives, we promptly get slapped with the man-hating bitch
label. In Israel, in Iran, in Afghanistan, when women speak out about
the global ramifications (word used intentionally) of penis politics,
they are screamed at, shot at, arrested. But this is a truth that must
be spoken and we dare not be silent.
Lucinda Marshall is a feminist
artist, writer and activist. She is the Founder of the
Feminist Peace Network. Her work has been published in numerous
publications in the U.S. and abroad including,
Awakened Woman,
Alternet,
Dissident Voice, Off Our Backs, The
Progressive, Rain and Thunder,
Z Magazine,
Common Dreams and
Information Clearinghouse. She blogs at WIMN Online.
Other Articles by Lucinda Marshall
*
Involuntary
Motherhood
* Kathleen
Parker’s Duke Rants Miss the Point
* What
Mothers Really Want
* The Harm
that Occurs When Women are Under- and Mis-Represented
* Ending
Terrorism Against Women Begins at Home: The Urgent Need To Fully Fund
VAWA
* President
Bush’s Ken-Doll Performance an Insult to Women
* How Hot
Does it Have to Get?
* 30,000
Iraqis, More or Less
* We're
Melting
* The
Turning Point
* Geena
in 2008
* Before
There Are 2,000 More
* The
Booby Trap: Does Breast Cancer Awareness Save Lives? A Call to Re-think
the Pink
* Were
Women Raped in New Orleans?
* Why I
Do Not Support The Troops
* The
Democratic Unravelling
* Child
for Sale: The Corporate Takeover of Our Classrooms
* The
Dead Children's Society
* Media
Exclusion of Women as Sources Impedes Meaningful Reform
*
Military Pollution: The Quintessential Universal Soldier
*
Honoring the Lives of Women in Perilous Times
* Why We
are Horrified by the Destructive Forces of Nature but Accept Our Own
Violence
* The
Financial Immorality of American Generosity
* The
Surreality Show: Stranger than Fiction
* (Not)
In The News: Media Culpability in the Continuum of Violence Against
Women
*
Yanar
Mohammed on the Impact of the US Occupation on the Lives of Iraqi Women
* The
Misogynist Undercurrents of Abu Ghraib