Okay so what I didn't have time to write back on Equal Pay Day was this: while white women make about 77 cents to the dollar that white men make, women of color and trans women make even less.
According to TransGriot, black women make 68 cents, and Latina women make 59 cents. WHAT. So let's all keep these numbers in mind when we talk about how much women make: we should be working with the lowest common denominator, not the highest. Since ALL women should be making as much money as their male counterparts (and not be punished for little things like gestating the next generation), we need to focus less on this 77 cents, and more on this 59 cents.
Also: this. Sweet lord, let's not forget about transpeople. They are more often likely to be discriminated against in all areas of life, so the fact that they face serious uphill battles in work is not surprising. We need a lot more local and state-wide non-discrimination laws for the workplace, y'all.
Low Income
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Happy Equal Pay Day!
(shamelessly stolen from Feministing)
It's Equal Pay Day! Well, now it's the very end of it because I spent all evening at the climbing gym instead of studying and writing blog posts. I will add more to this tomorrow - I have much to say!
Friday, April 13, 2012
Welfare Queens!
I wish I could say my posts are so rare because I'm off living an extraordinary, exciting life, but really I'm just hanging out with my dog or climbing up big walls of rocks (not a metaphor for difficulties, just my obsession). I'm going to try to do better for the rest of the semester!
Last month, I read this article (I learned how to do links, guys!) and was pretty blown away. First of all, Good magazine is covering so many awesome things, so y'all should check it out if you get a chance. Their print magazine is pricey, but their site is really beautiful (and free!).
To my point: the people in this article are amazing. Profiled here are Dee and Tiny, a mother-daughter team that works tirelessly to help not only themselves, but the poverty-stricken around them through art, writing, and performance. They have created POOR magazine, they have founded MamaHouse (a rented building housing the homeless), and they have plans for a permanent Homefulness: a cohousing project by and for her the homeless.
Tiny is inspiring, and her work with POOR is incredible. These people are advocates and activists, are writers and performers, are teachers and learners. The whole article is really worth your time. I could outline it til the end of the day, but Jess Hoffman's article will still be better. Go!
Last month, I read this article (I learned how to do links, guys!) and was pretty blown away. First of all, Good magazine is covering so many awesome things, so y'all should check it out if you get a chance. Their print magazine is pricey, but their site is really beautiful (and free!).
To my point: the people in this article are amazing. Profiled here are Dee and Tiny, a mother-daughter team that works tirelessly to help not only themselves, but the poverty-stricken around them through art, writing, and performance. They have created POOR magazine, they have founded MamaHouse (a rented building housing the homeless), and they have plans for a permanent Homefulness: a cohousing project by and for her the homeless.
Tiny is inspiring, and her work with POOR is incredible. These people are advocates and activists, are writers and performers, are teachers and learners. The whole article is really worth your time. I could outline it til the end of the day, but Jess Hoffman's article will still be better. Go!
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
New Hampshire and its lack of state-appointed defense lawyers
New Hampshire, like most states, is facing a budget crisis. To cope with this, they've joined Mississippi in not providing lawyers to low income parents being accused of child abuse or neglect. I mean if we're talking about people who are beating their children, that doesn't sound so cruel, right? But that's not what NH is talking about.
In an NPR story that aired yesterday, a father who cannot currently provide a home for his child is attempting to represent himself with the looming threat of his child (a four year old) being taken away from him permanently. This particular man has a 10th grade education and, due to his dyslexia, can barely read. Imagine attempting to keep the state from taking your child away with these limited tools.
The state prosecutor in this case laments that his job is like "shooting fish in a barrel." These people cannot properly navigate the legal system or properly represent themselves, and a lawyer going up against them clearly has the upper hand. Judges and lawyers alike are dissatisfied, and families are being torn apart.
The father interviewed is not abusing his child. This issue is economical, not physical. Yet he risks losing his child permanently, with no parental rights or responsibilities. It seems likely that this will be true of the vast majority of NH cases, as the vast majority of parents do not abuse their children. Let's call this what it is: an attack on low income families.
In an NPR story that aired yesterday, a father who cannot currently provide a home for his child is attempting to represent himself with the looming threat of his child (a four year old) being taken away from him permanently. This particular man has a 10th grade education and, due to his dyslexia, can barely read. Imagine attempting to keep the state from taking your child away with these limited tools.
The state prosecutor in this case laments that his job is like "shooting fish in a barrel." These people cannot properly navigate the legal system or properly represent themselves, and a lawyer going up against them clearly has the upper hand. Judges and lawyers alike are dissatisfied, and families are being torn apart.
The father interviewed is not abusing his child. This issue is economical, not physical. Yet he risks losing his child permanently, with no parental rights or responsibilities. It seems likely that this will be true of the vast majority of NH cases, as the vast majority of parents do not abuse their children. Let's call this what it is: an attack on low income families.
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Paul Ryan's budget plan
It passed! I would be worried, but the Senate will put the kibosh on this. Oh, lord.
So the plan will cut $5.3 trillion below President Obama's budget. Sounds good right? I mean I am a big fan of cutting the spending, after all. We are spending money we don't have and all that. However, this doesn't sound good if you're not in tip top shape. It doesn't sound good if you're poor. It doesn't sound good if you're old. It doesn't sound good if you like to drive over roads and bridges.
Here are the numbers. Medicaid and other health programs will be slashed by $770 billion, Medicare by $205 billion. Programs including welfare, transportation, and agriculture subsidies will be cut by about $2 trillion.
Cutting spending is great, right?! It comes at absolutely no cost - at least not for the wealthy. Ryan's budget also reorganizes the tax structure, granting the top 25% a tax cut.
I personally believe in a social construct. I want people to make as much money as they can, and I want those who make a lot to help those who haven't or who can't make as much. I don't think this is asking a lot, and I honestly don't believe I'm in the minority. I understand that the wealthy pay a huge portion in taxes. SO DO I. The difference is that what I have left over isn't as much as they have left over.
At the end of the day, this budget will not pass through the Senate. I can rest easily. But the principle of it, the very idea that people care so little for the people serving them food, cleaning the buildings they work in, caring for and teaching their children, or constructing the very world around them is TERRIFYING.
This-pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps ideal that the GOP still subscribe to will never work for those it was never intended for (ie anyone who is not white and male and Christian). This plan will not work for this nation's poor, its uninsured (or insured, in fact), its aged, its farms, or its infrastructure. It will work quite nicely for the nation's wealthy, so we can rest easy that they'll still be just fine.
So the plan will cut $5.3 trillion below President Obama's budget. Sounds good right? I mean I am a big fan of cutting the spending, after all. We are spending money we don't have and all that. However, this doesn't sound good if you're not in tip top shape. It doesn't sound good if you're poor. It doesn't sound good if you're old. It doesn't sound good if you like to drive over roads and bridges.
Here are the numbers. Medicaid and other health programs will be slashed by $770 billion, Medicare by $205 billion. Programs including welfare, transportation, and agriculture subsidies will be cut by about $2 trillion.
Cutting spending is great, right?! It comes at absolutely no cost - at least not for the wealthy. Ryan's budget also reorganizes the tax structure, granting the top 25% a tax cut.
I personally believe in a social construct. I want people to make as much money as they can, and I want those who make a lot to help those who haven't or who can't make as much. I don't think this is asking a lot, and I honestly don't believe I'm in the minority. I understand that the wealthy pay a huge portion in taxes. SO DO I. The difference is that what I have left over isn't as much as they have left over.
At the end of the day, this budget will not pass through the Senate. I can rest easily. But the principle of it, the very idea that people care so little for the people serving them food, cleaning the buildings they work in, caring for and teaching their children, or constructing the very world around them is TERRIFYING.
This-pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps ideal that the GOP still subscribe to will never work for those it was never intended for (ie anyone who is not white and male and Christian). This plan will not work for this nation's poor, its uninsured (or insured, in fact), its aged, its farms, or its infrastructure. It will work quite nicely for the nation's wealthy, so we can rest easy that they'll still be just fine.
Friday, March 16, 2012
SXSW and homeless hotspots
I'm sure everyone has heard about the "homeless hotspots" at South by Southwest this week. It's gotten play on innumerable blogs, on Twitter, and even on the Daily Show. At first I sort of shrugged it off: if people want to dehumanize themselves for some money, is it my business? I'm not offended by porn or prostitution (legalize it!), why should I be offended by this?
And I'm not. While I think it would have been better for BBH Labs (the creator of this idea) to generate positive publicity, I also don't think they've committed some terrible crime against humanity. SXSW has become a ridiculous event filled to the brim with tech-obsessed yuppies. I haven't seen any news of the event bringing attention to the issue of homelessness in any other way. While I in no way believe we should see the homeless as hotspots rather than, oh I don't know, humans?, I also don't think attendees of SXSW don't know a human being when they see one. Hopefully they are being courteous and chatty, maybe tipping their hotspot a couple extra dollars for his or her troubles.
After all, these men and women are not being paid a lot. They're making $20/day to stand in the sun so that men and women (presumably with homes) can access their twitter feeds. Maybe BBH should have added a little something to the t-shirts aside from "I'm so-and-so, a 4G hotspot" - maybe something about an organization that works with homeless communities dealing with mental health or addiction issues. They didn't, and that sucks, but I still don't think the whole thing was an affront to our collective humanity.
And I'm not. While I think it would have been better for BBH Labs (the creator of this idea) to generate positive publicity, I also don't think they've committed some terrible crime against humanity. SXSW has become a ridiculous event filled to the brim with tech-obsessed yuppies. I haven't seen any news of the event bringing attention to the issue of homelessness in any other way. While I in no way believe we should see the homeless as hotspots rather than, oh I don't know, humans?, I also don't think attendees of SXSW don't know a human being when they see one. Hopefully they are being courteous and chatty, maybe tipping their hotspot a couple extra dollars for his or her troubles.
After all, these men and women are not being paid a lot. They're making $20/day to stand in the sun so that men and women (presumably with homes) can access their twitter feeds. Maybe BBH should have added a little something to the t-shirts aside from "I'm so-and-so, a 4G hotspot" - maybe something about an organization that works with homeless communities dealing with mental health or addiction issues. They didn't, and that sucks, but I still don't think the whole thing was an affront to our collective humanity.
Monday, March 12, 2012
Tanya McDowell and the price of public schooling
I realize this title is nearly identical to a previous title. Bear with me, I clearly possess no creativity of any kind.
In April of last year, Tanya McDowell of Connecticut made headlines because she lied about her address in order to get her son into a better public school district. She lied because she is homeless. Last week, she was sentenced to five years in prison and will pay no more than $6,200 to the Norwalk, CT school system for her son's "stolen" education.
This is a difficult issue, and it has been from the time it first made headlines to the present, now that McDowell's verdict is in. While I don't necessarily approve of people lying in order to get ahead, I do approve of parents who ferociously advocate for their children. Ms. McDowell wanted her son to go to a better school than the one in her town, and she found a way (by telling a lie) to do it. Can we all do this? No. If we did this in the Boston area, Brookline and Newton would be overrun. But should we all have to go to jail if we did? I don't think so.
Of course, the press has not been able to separate the issue of the lie from the fact that she is/has been a drug dealer. She was caught selling narcotics to undercover officers, for which she will also serve time. I don't see the connection between these two: why she was dealing drugs is irrelevant to her decisions regarding her son.
What it comes down to for me is this: public school is public. It is free for all through our taxes, and we need to work harder in our communities to make our schools decent. While I understand that what Ms. McDowell did was wrong, I can't say that I blame her. We all want better for our children, and I can't condemn anyone who will work so hard and risk so much for hers.
In April of last year, Tanya McDowell of Connecticut made headlines because she lied about her address in order to get her son into a better public school district. She lied because she is homeless. Last week, she was sentenced to five years in prison and will pay no more than $6,200 to the Norwalk, CT school system for her son's "stolen" education.
This is a difficult issue, and it has been from the time it first made headlines to the present, now that McDowell's verdict is in. While I don't necessarily approve of people lying in order to get ahead, I do approve of parents who ferociously advocate for their children. Ms. McDowell wanted her son to go to a better school than the one in her town, and she found a way (by telling a lie) to do it. Can we all do this? No. If we did this in the Boston area, Brookline and Newton would be overrun. But should we all have to go to jail if we did? I don't think so.
Of course, the press has not been able to separate the issue of the lie from the fact that she is/has been a drug dealer. She was caught selling narcotics to undercover officers, for which she will also serve time. I don't see the connection between these two: why she was dealing drugs is irrelevant to her decisions regarding her son.
What it comes down to for me is this: public school is public. It is free for all through our taxes, and we need to work harder in our communities to make our schools decent. While I understand that what Ms. McDowell did was wrong, I can't say that I blame her. We all want better for our children, and I can't condemn anyone who will work so hard and risk so much for hers.
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