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Ithaca Panelists Discuss War, Feminism
Copyright © 2003 by The Cornell Daily Sun, Inc. ^ | 3/25/03 | By BRIAN KAVIAR

Posted on 03/25/2003 5:02:49 AM PST by Behind Liberal Lines

ITHACA--With the war on Iraq already underway, a panel discussion called "Women Against War" filled three-quarters of Cornell's Goldwin Smith Hall's Auditorium D last night. The war's consequences on feminism and the international community were the focus of the talk.

Opening remarks were made by Amy Levine grad, a member of the Cornell Anti-War Coalition.

"The idea for this panel was catalyzed with International Women's Day, March 8," she said.

In her welcome address, Levine emphasized the findings of a U.N. study which found that women and children are disproportionately overrepresented in the civilian deaths that seem inevitable with such conflicts as the current Iraq war.

Levine went on to talk about organizations such as Code Pink, which confronts "war as a women's issue." Code Pink claims that current ideologies of international politics are poisoned because they are "dominated by testosterone and a military which engenders a culture of aggression."

The five panelists were Prof. Marcia Greenberg, law; Jane Marie Law, the H. Stanley Krushen Professor of World Religions; Prof. Andrea Parrot, policy analysis and management; Prof. Anna Marie Smith, government and Christine Cuomo, Society for the Humanities postdoctoral fellow.

Smith began the panel with her talk, "How to Be a Feminist in an Empire: Feminism and American Imperialist Expansion."

Smith said that because U.S. women are "situated in a superpower bent on world domination with unprecedented arrogance" where "imperialism and war are often declared in their name," they especially need to make their voices heard.

"We cannot allow the boundaries of the nation to be written on the bodies of women," Smith said. "We have to suspect all that is feminine and homosexual will be held in degradation and as such will be rejected as womanly and wimpy."

Smith went on to point out that already, British antiwar rhetoric has claimed Prime Minister Tony Blair to be a poodle.

She suggested that what is deemed un-American may not necessarily be the best course for women in the United States. "Women need to be un-American enough to shift the current dialogue. We have to suspect the empire will try to use us. Women on the periphery need our solidarity now more than ever."

Smith concluded, "This war will definitely not install democracy. It will either result in a puppet regime or a fundamentalist government. History will judge us by our un-American international solidarity."

Greenberg's talk, "Beijing Platform on Women and Conflict, Human Rights Violations Against Women," focused on the results of a nonbinding 1995 attempt to forge a coherent international stance by women on women's issues from the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing.

"The Beijing platform was an effort to shift focus away from women as victims. That is not to say that women are not all too often the victims of war."

In 2000, a committee reviewed the progress of the international community in upholding the agreements made in the Beijing platform.

The U.N. tried to respond with Resolution 1325 as an effort to create committees such as the United Nations Women's Fund.

Still, the Beijing platform committee found that no progress had been made in key areas such as arms reduction, tolerance among military personnel and the screening of international peacekeepers for criminal records.

Next, Law presented her lecture "Images of Women and Domesticity as a Form of War Propaganda." She focused on the problems of domestic stereotypes and political activism.

Law affirmed that what we are seeing in current politics could very well be "the end of the first republic." She added, "I woke up the other day and felt as if I were in another country."

Law challenged claims that to be a good homemaker is a patriotic act. She gave a story of her experiences with flylady.net, a homemaker's website in which the cooking columnist said that to counter worries of war, women should "go bake their favorite cookie recipes and let the aroma fill their house."

Parrot gave her talk entitled "Connections Between War and Violence Against Women."

Parrot argued that in wartime, rape is often used in concert with other military efforts to defeat an enemy.

"All women and all girls are fearful of being raped," she said. "Rape in war assumes the status of a weapon. Raping women becomes part of the effort to defeat the enemy." She added, "Rape is about power, control, humiliation and revenge."

Parrot said that in almost all conflicts, such as the current war on Iraq, we "hear the accounts of rape."

The final panelist was Cuomo, presenting "Feminist and Women's Anti-War Activism." Cuomo began by saying, "My goal is to get you involved."

She noted her own experiences in antiwar activism, saying that "we are in the midst of a moment with incredible potential to rebuild the American left."

Cuomo also said that current activism borrows heavily from previous feminist organizations and other media-savvy activist groups.

She gave particular note to the organization New Yorkers Say No to War, a group created on Sept. 16, 2001, founded as "a Ground Zero peace movement knowing where the Bush-Cheney regime was going."

"We are using the New Yorker identity to counter military aggression. It is no accident that five of the 11 representatives that voted against the war were from New York."

In the question and discussion section of the panel, Michelle Krohn-Friedson '05 asked, "Where could I go for unbiased information on issues such as these?"

Cuomo responded that the presence of independent media is especially noteworthy because "in order to get good information these days, you cannot be passive; you have to seek it out."

Smith commented on the presence of embedded journalists on the front lines of the current war.

"It is definitely part of the military's psychological operations, but it is still an ambiguous situation and is a testament to the power of the antiwar movement. These journalists can be used to counter claims of the U.S. planting evidence against Iraq, but it is still a huge risk by the Pentagon."

One of the audience members, Almagul Djumabaeva, a visiting scholar of gender sociology from Kyrgyzstan, said that "this is just amazing, to see this during wartime as Americans voicing against the war. Even if they are Americans, they are thinking on a very high global level."

Levine said that the panel was a great success "in a time when it's really necessary; we expressed a lot of ideas that really aren't heard often."

Levine also noted that the panel was so successful that organizers had to turn away professors.

"We had 20 or so professors expressing interest in the five spots on the panel," she said. "With this much of an outpouring, we are considering creating a Women Against War group, and students should contact Students Acting for Gender Equality (SAGE) president Sandra Fluke."

The event was sponsored by SAGE; the Cornell Anti-War Coalition; the Cornell Arab Association; Feminist, Gender and Sexuality Studies and the Student Assembly Finance Commission.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: academialist; cornell; ithaca; thecityofevil; traitorlist
The event was sponsored by SAGE; the Cornell Anti-War Coalition; the Cornell Arab Association....

"The Cornell Arab Association, huh? Hmmmm....

Nope, no agenda there beyond war, nope...nosiree...

And, after all, what nation has a better record on woman's issues than Saudi Arabia?

Code Pink claims that current ideologies of international politics are poisoned because they are "dominated by testosterone and a military which engenders a culture of aggression."

Okay...pretend for a second that some conservative group maintained that "liberal ideology is poisoned because it is dominated by estrogen...." Can you imagine the outcries of sexism? Thought so.

That old liberal double standard comes into play once again.

Smith began the panel with her talk, "How to Be a Feminist in an Empire: Feminism and American Imperialist Expansion."

You know, you can't make this stuff up...
I just surprised there's no mention of the "phallic nature of missles."

"We have to suspect all that is feminine and homosexual will be held in degradation and as such will be rejected as womanly and wimpy."

So...she's admitting that homosexual men are effeminite?!?! Isn't that an "unfair stereotype?" Somebody get "the Gay and Lesbian Anti-Defamation League" on her, stat!

Smith went on to point out that already, British antiwar rhetoric has claimed Prime Minister Tony Blair to be a poodle.

Huh?!?! At first she says that the anti-war types will be derided as "wimps," then she says that pro-war Tony Blair was the one who got derided as a wimp? What the heck is she talking about?

Parrot said that in almost all conflicts, such as the current war on Iraq, we "hear the accounts of rape."

We've also heard a lot MORE accounts of rape that are directly attributable to Saddam's regime. I guess those don't count.

Next, Law presented her lecture "Images of Women and Domesticity as a Form of War Propaganda." She focused on the problems of domestic stereotypes and political activism.

Yeah, it's the military that's fostering stereotypes of "weak women" like these weak kneed gals.

And speaking of sterotypes...

The final panelist was Cuomo, presenting "Feminist and Women's Anti-War Activism." Cuomo began by saying, "My goal is to get you involved."

And who apparently thought this was a costume party, with the theme "dress as your favorite man-hating feminist cliche:"

She noted her own experiences in antiwar activism, saying that "we are in the midst of a moment with incredible potential to rebuild the American left."

Or of insuring complete Republican victory in 2004 and beyond.

Greenberg's talk, "Beijing Platform on Women and Conflict, Human Rights Violations Against Women," focused on the results of a nonbinding 1995 attempt to forge a coherent international stance by women on women's issues from the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing.

Only in Ithaca could America be seen as oppressive, while Beijing be seen as the place to take the lead on human rights....

Ithaca is the City of Evil.


1 posted on 03/25/2003 5:02:49 AM PST by Behind Liberal Lines
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To: governsleastgovernsbest; LibKill; gaspar; bentfeather; NativeNewYorker; drjimmy; Atticus; ...
ping
2 posted on 03/25/2003 5:03:42 AM PST by Behind Liberal Lines (Ithaca is the City of Evil)
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To: Behind Liberal Lines
pong
3 posted on 03/25/2003 5:20:01 AM PST by Soaring Feather
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To: bentfeather
The sister city of the home of The Empire Strikes Back! might as well be Saddamite Baghdad.
4 posted on 03/25/2003 5:50:44 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: goldstategop
Harrumph... typical mainstream American women indeed. ROFLMAO!
5 posted on 03/25/2003 5:52:53 AM PST by goldstategop
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To: Behind Liberal Lines
Good grief! Life is so much easier when you don't deal in reality ... when truth is whatever you want it to be.

These women demonstrate the results of incest in a political movement.

6 posted on 03/25/2003 8:00:12 AM PST by jigsaw (God Bless Our Troops!)
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To: Behind Liberal Lines
Professor Cuomo and Coleen Rowley: Separated At Birth?


7 posted on 03/25/2003 8:19:02 AM PST by Loyalist
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: Black Agnes; rmlew; cardinal4; LiteKeeper; hoppity; Lizard_King; Sir_Ed; TLBSHOW; BigRedQuark; ...
Leftism on Campus ping!

If you would like to be added to the Leftism on Campus ping list, please
notify me via FReep-mail.

Regards...
9 posted on 03/25/2003 9:54:20 AM PST by Hobsonphile (Human nature can't be wished away by utopian dreams.)
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To: Behind Liberal Lines
We are hearing the term "Empire" thrown around a lot lately. On C-Span this morning I heard another lady lawyer use the term in a symposium before I switched before I got sick. I guess Empire is becoming the next code word.

OB
10 posted on 03/25/2003 5:29:07 PM PST by OBone (Support our boys in uniform - TAKE NO PRISONERS)
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To: OBone
I guess Empire is becoming the next code word.

That wouldn't surprise me one bit.

When Reagan rightfully called the USSR an 'evil empire,' the liberals went beserk and asked how DARE he used such strong words.

Twenty years later they use those words against their own country.

Typical damn liberals.

11 posted on 03/26/2003 3:57:05 AM PST by Behind Liberal Lines (Ithaca is the City of Evil)
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To: Behind Liberal Lines
LOne of the audience members, Almagul Djumabaeva, a visiting scholar of gender sociology from Kyrgyzstan,

WTF is "gender sociology"???

12 posted on 03/06/2012 3:15:39 PM PST by Marathoner (Obama has his own 9-9-9-plan: $9.99 a gallon at the pump.)
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