Posted on 10/06/2004 10:51:50 AM PDT by Area Freeper
The State Department has awarded an explicitly anti-feminist U.S. group part of a US$10 million grant to train Iraqi women in political participation and democracy.
The group, the Washington-based Independent Womens Forum (IWF), will help implement the administrations Iraqi Womens Democracy Initiative, along with a number of other groups that, unlike the IWF, have experience in international exchange and democracy-promotion activities, including the Meridian International Center, the International Republican Institute (IRI), and the National Democratic Institute (NDI).
Recipients of the grants also include the Bangalore-based Art of Living Foundation, a volunteer organization that promotes yoga and other breathing exercises to "eliminate stress, create a sense of belonging and restore human values and has been running classes in Tikrit and other conflicted parts of the Iraq (news - web sites) since last September.
The participation of the IWF, which has escorted Iraqi women selected by the State Department around power and media centers around Washington, is the most controversial.
The organization was founded in 1991 by a number of prominent right-wing Republican women to act as a counterpoint to what they called the radical feminism of the National Organization for Women (news - web sites) (NOW), a grassroots group with about 500,000 subscribing members nationwide.
Among the founders were Lynne Cheney, the spouse of Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites) and former chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities; Labor Secretary Elaine Chao; Kate OBeirne, Washington editor of the right-wing National Review and a former senior vice president at the Heritage Foundation; and Midge Decter, the former co-chair with Donald Rumsfeld of the Committee for the Free World and one of the founders of neo-conservatism along with her spouse, former Commentary editor, Norman Podhoretz.
Undersecretary of State for Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky, who announced the grant at a press briefing last week, has also served on IWFs board of advisers.
Talk about an inside deal, the IWF represents a small group of right-wing wheeler-dealers inside the (Washington) beltway, said Eleanor Smeal, president of the Feminist Majority Foundation.
The IWF, which, according to its mission statement was established to combat the women-as-victim, pro-big-government ideology of radical feminism, has taken a number of controversial positions over the years in pursuit of that goal.
It has strongly opposed the UN Convention for the Elimination Against Women (CEDAW) in part on the grounds that it would permit mandate governments to enforce laws guaranteeing equal pay for equal work. This is comparable worth, a system of government wage setting that Americans have rightly rejected as inefficient and antithetical to free market principles, the IWF has argued.
It has also objected to CEDAWs requirements that governments guarantee maternity leave with pay" and child care facilities as well as its suggestions for minimum quotas to ensure that women are represented at all levels in governments. Ironically, the Bush administration adopted this suggestion for Iraq in the interim law approved by the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) that is supposed to guide elections currently scheduled for January.
The IWF has also opposed affirmative action and federal programs designed to prevent sexual discrimination in educational institutions that receive federal government funding. The Bush administration appointed IWFs president, Nancy Mitchell Pfotenhauer, to the National Advisory Committee on Violence Against Women despite the fact that the group opposed the Violence Against Women Act.
The IWF has also been accused of partisanship for its staunch defense of the Republican Party positions and its attacks on prominent Democrats. Last May, for example, it issued a statement assailing Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry (news - web sites) for demanding that Pentagon (news - web sites) chief Rumsfeld steps down to take responsibility for the Abu Ghraib prisoner-abuse scandal, insisting that Kerry was using it to raise money.
Several weeks earlier, it launched an aborted petition drive to condemn the bitter political grandstanding by Democratic members of the bipartisan 9/11 Commission who were accused of working for Sen. John Kerry, instead of all Americans.
IWF staff, meanwhile, consists primarily of former Republican activists with extensive government and lobbying experience but little or no experience in democracy promotion, international affairs, or the Middle East.
The one exception is Senior Vice President Rieva Holycross, who has a doctorate in anthropology and a 30-year career in academia and working for a multinational engineering firm as chief marketing officer in charge of strategic communication, according to the IWF website. It is not clear she will be working on the project.
Announcing the grant last week, Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites) said that each of the grantees will work with Iraqi partners on the ground to prepare women to compete in Iraqs January 2005 elections, encourage women to vote, train women in media and business skills, and establish resource centers for networking and counseling.
IWF Senior Fellow Michelle Bernard, who has practiced business law and government relations in the Caribbean, Latin America and Africa, said the group had already begun recruiting 150 Iraqi women to participate in a Woman Leaders Program and Democracy Information Center before the grant was officially awarded.
(W)ed like to train 150 pro-democracy women on the fundamentals of democracy, womens political activism in a democracy, and to exchange ideas basically to enable Iraqi women to participate in their country and help Iraq develop a democracy that best suits the needs of that country, she was quoted as saying in a State Department press release.
She also said IWF has planned a five-day conference in December in Amman, Jordan that will be followed by future meetings on a quarterly basis. Rather than recruit women to run for office, she said, were just looking for people who want to participate at the community level, people who are interested in education (or) people who might want to be policy makers in the equivalent of a think tank here.
How can women opposed to slaughtering fetuses possible hope to teach Iraqi women about democracy?
Hell, anything that ticks off Ellie Smeal sounds good to me!
But, are they babes?
NOW is never, ever, ever partisan.
YYYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEEEEESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!
One reason Iraqi extremists oppose the United States is fear that we will export NOW and its sick sisters into Islamic countries.
NOW, like all feminist (socialist) organizations regularly lies about numbers, stats, membership, etc. Some estimate there are actually less than 150,000 active paying members of NOW today.
Is there any way to get a NOW membership roll listing of people in a certain state? I am in search of someone in particular...
A conservative women's group isn't "authentic." Trying to talk to liberals is like a talking to a group of kids with attention deficit disorder. They insist the world is the opposite of the way it works and they grow petulant when you attempt to demonstrate reality to them.
Conservatives appointing conservatives? Why, who would have guessed it? Next thing we know, liberals will be appointing liberals. What's this world coming to?
No they are past that now. Now the liberals fillibuster the Conservatives until they appoint a liberal for them.
(steely)
The IWF is a feminist group, just not a radical left wing feminist group. The article is pure unadulterated spin.
Or until the federal bench is empty.
Seriously, what does everyone think about converting Iraq to a predominately Christian nation? Is it possible? With this kind of support, perhaps it is...
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