Gloria Cain Says Her Husband “Totally Respects Women.”

Gloria and Herman Cain

Fox News has released a couple of teaser quotes from Gloria Cain’s interview with Greta van Susteren, scheduled to air tomorrow night. The couple both participated, unfortunately. I was hoping the appearance would be sans Herman. Asked about the accusations of sexual harassment against her husband, Mrs. Cain said the following:

“…you hear the graphic allegations and we know that would have been something that’s totally disrespectful of her as a woman. And I know the type of person he is. He totally respects women.”

Right. I guess that’s why he joked about Anita Hill and called Nancy Pelosi “Princess Nancy.” And his respect for women is probably why Cain allowed a group of his supporters to refer to one of his accusers as an “ugly bitch.”

At another point she added, “I’m thinking he would have to have a split personality to do the things that were said.”

Hmmmm…maybe he has dissociative identity disorder (multiple personalities). That would explain why he didn’t remember any of the incidents of harassment or the fact that two women were compensated with $35,000 and $45,000 respectively.

A former spokesperson for Cain, Ellen Carmichael,

said on Twitter that the interview marks “the first time I’ve heard Gloria Cain, even after working for Herman for more than a year.”

The WaPo has a little more.

Cain’s wife, who is said by friends to be a quiet woman, and who is a registered Democrat according to her husband, has steered clear of the spotlight and has not assumed the traditional role of candidate’s wife. Cain has said that his wife has been outraged by the claims against her husband. When Gloria Cain watched accuser Sharon Bialek’s news conference last Monday, she told her husband that the man that Bialek described sounded nothing like the man she’s known for 45 years.

“The things that that woman described, she said, that doesn’t even sound like you, and I’ve known you for 45 years,” Cain recalled his wife saying to him after she watched the press conference from Atlanta. “My own wife said that I wouldn’t do anything as silly as what that lady was talking about.”

That lady? It’s hard to believe that Cain is a baby boomer. He missed out on the consciousness raising part of the ’60s and’70s, that’s for sure.


The Hypocrisy and Failure of Ideology

I have been fascinated by the 1920s and 1930s for as long as I can remember.  This was the period of the ‘modern age’ in which scientists like Einstein were cultural icons. U.S. presidents included the two Roosevelts, who spent much of their time trying to rein in the excesses of too much power in the hands of too few people.  There was a very good reason that the big huge corporate CEOS of their day were called robber barons.

It was a culturally rich period also.  Cultural and religious conservatives who tried to put alcohol consumption in a lock box actually ushered in a period of backlash that brought us jazz, the rights of women, and advances in art and architecture. The oppression of the many by the uptight actually brought on a cultural renaissance from the ranks of the fed up.  My grandparents’ generation were probably the first of American’s youth who decided that the game was rigged against them.

It seems like we would be ripe for similar changes today.  We have both the robber barons and the nastiness of culture/religionist warriors.  What we don’t have is a healthy respect for science, discovery, data, and the geology of our country and a leadership class that has a significant number of people that aren’t completely wound up in either baseless ideology and/or religious narrowness.  You may have read that Einstein was a popular figure back in the day.  Can you imagine any scientist or professor reaching pop status in this day and age–let alone a theoretical physicist?  The only person that may have rivaled him in popularity at the time was Charlie Chaplin. Both were immigrants.  Both escaped an oppressive class system and in Einstein’s case, violent, hateful anti-antisemitism.  Our country is supposed to not have a ruling class and it’s supposed to respect all religions as part of its heritage.  All that seems lost on today’s ideologues.

Let’s just say my heroes have never been reactionaries but visionaries.

It makes no sense to me to continue to support and push failed hypotheses. However, the folks who have taken over the Republican Party–as well as some Democrats these days–do just that.  They have no respect for science, professionals in most fields, researchers, data, or modernity. They just keep spinning yarns and making villans out of the US intelligentsia. Frankly I find it quite scary.  Many of our modern immigrants–like Albert Einstein–came here from fascist states or states that persecuted minorities and would not let them pursue research agendas that flew in the face of fascist governments or oppressive religious institutions.  Because of our openness to rational thought and constitutional protection of minority opinions, researchers in the United States made important discoveries.  Just think how the sequencing of the human genome has validated the theory of evolution beyond anything we thought possible as well as opened the door to new therapies for old diseases.  Yet, we have a series of cretins in charge or running for office who consider those brilliant discoveries on the same level as a creation myth.  We have made many discoveries in climate science, and yet full scale denial of reality is a going business.  Fomenting hate and ignorance is an industry in this country right now.

The same is the case with my field of economics.  We continue to see the rise of thoroughly wrong concepts because denying reality serves the the interests of a few rich and powerful but ignorant people.  The arguments never turn on the research. Like religion, they turn on what people want to believe is true. Easy answers do not necessarily represent the truth.  We  badly need a Renaissance of scientific thought in this country. We will never capture any more “firsts” in anything until we reach for the stars and stop grabbing at easy, unsupported answers.  Many of our politicians should be placed in the category of flat earthers.

The NYT had an interesting commentary up today by economist Tyler Cowen that both raises the flag on the reliance of “conservatives” and “libertarians” on failed memes rather than evidence, yet paradoxically pushes its own set of really stupid canards.  Even the title is disturbing.  “Whatever Happened to Discipline and Hard Work?”  implies that the kids in the Occupy movement and disgruntled others in this country are lazy basement dwellers who hate wealthy people.  Cowen wants to turn the conversation away from wealth to values. This is an extremely slippery slope that rests on some really bad assumptions. He also has a rather limited definition of “values”.

Right wingers seem to think that  the Occupy movement hates people because they are rich or wealthy. I even saw some one on MSNBC ask why OccupyLA doesn’t focus on the richies in the movie industry.  Aren’t Hollywood stars worthy of contempt also? ( I do admit to disliking Tom Cruise and Julia Roberts, but it is because they waste perfectly good screen time and take up roles that could go to talented actors.  It isn’t because of their money.)  This is the false identification of the movement as ‘class war.’

The Occupy movement does not hate the wealthy or have it in for anyone who makes money in a creative or legitimate way.  Ben Roethlisberger may be a perfectly loathsome human being, but he got his money by developing a talent that’s in high demand.  No one hates him for his money. The Occupy movement is against people that get wealthy through ‘crony capitalism,’ which means they set up a system through buying political influence that allows them to draw wealth away from others.  One of Cowen’s first paragraphs absolutely made me cringe.  Does he really think that all CEOs are Hank Reardon?  (Yes, I read that corny book in high school.)

The United States has always had a culture with a high regard for those able to rise from poverty to riches. It has had a strong work ethic and entrepreneurial spirit and has attracted ambitious immigrants, many of whom were drawn here by the possibility of acquiring wealth. Furthermore, the best approach for fighting poverty is often precisely not to make fighting poverty the highest priority. Instead, it’s better to stress achievement and the pursuit of excellence, like a hero from an Ayn Rand novel. These are still at least the ideals of many conservatives and libertarians.

The egalitarian ideals of the left, which were manifest in a wide variety of 20th-century movements, have been wonderful for driving social and civil rights advances, and in these areas liberals have often made much greater contributions than conservatives have. Still, the left-wing vision does not sufficiently appreciate the power — both as reality and useful mythology — of the meritocratic, virtuous production of wealth through business. Rather, academics on the left, like the Columbia University economists Joseph E. Stiglitz and Jeffrey D. Sachs among many others, seem more comfortable focusing on the very real offenses of plutocrats and selfish elites.

Yes, the United States still has a regard for the rags to riches story. However, Bernie Maddoff and Raj Rajaratnam are more typical these days of the kinds of wealth amassed in this country than that amassed by a Thomas Edison.  Back in Teddy Roosevelt’s time, there was just as much outcry against the slash and burn capitalism practiced by John D Rockefellar and J.P Morgan as there is today in the multigenerational Occupy movement.  It is one thing to gain wealth by inventing something worthwhile and bringing it to market,  it is completely another to use practices that lead to monopoly power.  Sachs and Stiglitz do not begrudge Warren Buffet his success.  They rightly point out how trust fund babies like the Koch brothers use their funds to produce bad science and fund flat earth politicians simply to get more rich and more powerful.  No one hates the wealthy.  Americans hate crooks and there are plenty of them in the finance industry these days.  They should be put in jail just like any one who steals.

So, then Cowen comes down to some brass tacks that recognize that Hank Reardon is a fictional character that came from the mind of one woman with a challenging personal history that made her do and write some really odd things.  He makes the argument that I have; nevertheless, he still believes that those of us that eschew his labels are doing anything other than attacking the wealthy.  For some reason, he’s the only one able to see the subtleties.

The first problem is that higher status for the wealthy can easily lead to crony capitalism. In public discourse social status judgments are often crude. Critical differences are lost, like the distinction between earning money through production for consumers, as Apple has done, and earning money through the manipulation of government, which heavily subsidized agribusinesses have done. The relevant question, in my view, is not about how much you have earned but about how you have earned it. To further confuse matters, many right-wing Republican politicians supported corporate bailouts and corporate welfare far beyond what was necessary to stabilize the economy, in doing so further muddying the difference between productive and predatory capitalism.

If you want to talk values, then you have to talk about the number of businesses that have been able to buy political power and create laws that allow them to extract benefits that are not available to anyone else.  In contrast, you’ve got a ton of kids in Occupy that have student loans, degrees, and no jobs.  This doesn’t exactly fit the stereotype of lazy, hippie basement dweller that the right loves to push on Fox News.  Oh, and we even have Republican Congress Critterz saying that it’s some lack of moral fiber to not hold three jobs down while going to get a degree.  I’ll hold my own personal experience up here.  I put myself through two degrees working full time, selling my football tickets, and not taking student loans in the 70s and 80s with my then husband who had a four year scholarship for a perfect SAT score.  I could not do that now. My kids both worked to pay their overhead nearly full time with their tuition paid by us.  If we hadn’t saved for that back in the day, they’d have student loans too.  Actually, Doctor Daughter now has huge student loans.  We just saved for normal degrees, not the cost of med school.   My expenses just have increased more than my salary has the last 10 years.  So, I worked full time to get all of my degrees.  I still could not swing the last ones without student loans.  Then there’s the fact that the unemployment rate is so bad, you’re lucky if you can even get a job in a restaurant in most college towns.  Some of these memes just don’t stand up to hard, cold reality.  That, however, does not count for the spinmeisters of the right.  It’s still some personal shortcoming to get any kind of help from some one else.

There is another meme mentioned here that I totally hate.  The idea that there’s this bunch of people that are “tax weary” out there when we have some of the lowest taxes on the books in modern history.   Thank goodness Cowen at least mentioned that all those tax cuts we’ve had recently have not done a damn thing to create jobs or “spur” the economy.  They’ve just created a deficit debacle that’s put the country’s public goods and assets in jeopardy.

Conservatives’ own culture, and the sheer desire to validate wealth, discipline and reward through law and the tax code, may have convinced them that the tax cuts have been beneficial. Measuring the actual effects of a tax cut isn’t always their main concern, even if they sometimes cite such numbers for rhetorical purposes. They feel in their bones that antagonism toward the rich is a dead end and so don’t favor highly progressive taxes.

That rhetorical line appeals to tax-weary voters, and seems part of a core conservative vision, but it is treading on dangerous ground because it moves away from testable theory: those tax cuts have already been in place for many years, yet it remains to be seen when or if they will spur the economy.

So, we get a short bit on how that entire canard doesn’t stand up to testing, data, or scientific inquiry.  However, when Cowen switches to beating up on the poor, we have paragraph after paragraph of data free statements.  How can you go on and on about personal responsibility when right now our issue is the lack of jobs and the loss of real income by the majority of the public?  Are those stylized facts lost to him?  Why is it that being down and out always has something to do with personal shortcomings and not something like incredibly high hospital bills or a mortgage that you got based on a rigged game?

Conservatives often believe that much of the poverty in the United States is an issue of insufficient discipline and conscientiousness. In this view, not all children grow up inculcated with a strong enough devotion to education and career. Yet how can such a culture of discipline be spread? At least as far back as John Bright, a classical liberal in Victorian England, it has been argued that society should grant respect to business creators and to stern parents who instill discipline. And today, conservatives often say that supportive economic policy, including lighter taxation and greater freedom from regulation, will support this vision.

BUT are such moves, when carried out, actually shifting popular culture in a properly disciplined and conscientious direction? Not really. In fact, in the United States, the red states, where conservatives are more powerful, tend to have higher divorce rates and weaker educational systems than do blue states. Many Americans have not been personally persuaded by all the talk about pro-wealth and pro-discipline norms, least of all in the geographic strongholds of conservatism.

The counterintuitive tragedy is this: modern conservative thought is relying increasingly on social engineering through economic policy, by hoping that a weaker social welfare state will somehow promote individual responsibility. Maybe it won’t.

So what’s the real problem according to this economist?

It seems it’s divorce and lax child rearing.  Again, with the cultural crap and not with the fact that for about 30 years our country has passed laws that go out of their way to promote the interests of the wealthiest at the expense of the weak.  It’s not explicitly stated in the op ed, but I have these visions of of Cowen thinking everything would be easily solved if women would just be forced to stay slaves in a marriage, stay home and forget work, and beat their children into submission.  Is this really the best way to tackle income inequality or lack of jobs for the jobless? Dr. Cowen seems to believe in libertarianism in certain circumstances.  He’s just okee dokee about having government tell us what’s culturally or morally correct by shoving his old time religion–with its designed slavery paradigm–down our throats.

What about the “values” of paying a living wage for a hard day’s work?  What about the “values” of not stealing from people? What about the “values” of not lying to people about what low taxes have actually done to our government and to our economy?  And, if you’re such a great Christian, what about all those values listed in the Beatitudes in the new testament?  You know the ones about being your brother’s keeper, and practicing charity, and helping the poor?  That’s the one thing I’ve really noticed about all these  folks espousing “values”.  They want to deny abortions to poor women and everyone else, but they’ll be the first ones to the clinic with their daughters should they become pregnant.  (That’s a true story, btw, told to me by one of the abortion providers in Omaha.  Big anti-choice activist had him do an abortion on her daughter on an early Sunday morning and was back on the picket line by Monday.)

Here’s Cowen’s ending.

Nonetheless, higher income inequality will increase the appeal of traditional mores — of discipline and hard work — because they bolster one’s chances of advancing economically. That means more people and especially more parents will yearn for a tough, pro-discipline and pro-wealth cultural revolution. And so they should.

What this man needs to do is get off his high horse and spent more time looking at the job market numbers. If he truly believes in rational thought, then he should be able to do better than give a sermon in the NYT.

Just for an added thought, here’s what Mark Thoma had to say:

I am not a sure as he is that as inequality continues to increase, people will adopt conservative values rather than wondering why the playing field needed for those conservative values to express themselves has become increasingly unfair. And if they do conclude it’s unfairness rather than values that is at the root of the growth in inequality, their reaction may be different.

(Also, my view of what is behind society’s problems is also quite different from Tyler’s. I suppose this makes me one of the “academics on the left” who “seem more comfortable focusing on the very real offenses of plutocrats and selfish elites,” but I’ll note that Tyler seems quite comfortable focusing on the problems posed by “today’s elites” himself, i.e. the impediment they pose to the cultural values he’d like to see take hold. The comments on wealth and crony capitalism are also not far from complaints about plutocracy. We on the left have values that we believe in every bit as much as conservatives, but those values differ from those held by conservatives in important ways and that will naturally lead us to focus on different aspects of these problems. The fact that we talk about issues such as crony capitalism and powerful elites does not mean we have abandoned those values any more than it means Tyler has abandoned his values when he raises these issues himself. All it says is that the path to reach these values differs from the path preferred by conservatives.)

Sorry, this ran on so long; but I think, therefore, I occasionally have to rant.


Live Blog: *Another* Republican Debate?! Haven’t We Suffered Enough Already?

Who will crash and burn tonight? Will Perry have another brain freeze episode? Will Romney avoid flip-flopping? What embarrassing, tasteless remark will Cain make about women? What ghastly, nighmarish thing will Santorum say about gay marriage? Will god finally make an appearance and choose which of these nutcases is really the divine choice for president?

Tonight’s debate is sponsored by CBS and the National Journal and will take place in Spartanburg, South Carolina. The topics will be national security and foreign policy. You can watch it beginning at 8PM on CBS TV or at the CBS website.

CBS has more tips about what to watch for. First on the list, of course, is whether Rick Perry “can clear the low bar of expectations.”

Almost every debate has been a challenge for the Texas governor, but after Wednesday night’s face plant in Michigan, there’s really nowhere for him to go but up. He’s tried to make light of he stumbles and turn them into strengths, saying he’s not slick, that he speaks from the heart. That’s all well and good, but the danger for Perry is that voters already have formed an opinion of him–and that based on his past performances, they lack confidence that he is either capable or can persuasively carry the conservative message to victory. Debates matter to voters: In our new poll, 76 percent of Republicans said the candidate’s performance was important in deciding their vote.

You don’t have to be a championship debater–the pundits and the media never gave the debate points George W. Bush. But Bush clearly passed the threshold that he was qualified to be president. In debates, he was able to connect with voters and communicate his message in a way Perry so far has not.

I really do hope that god shows up and tells Rick to go back to Texas and deal with drought and wildfires.

I plan to watch as long as I can stand it. I’m hoping for another horrible goof by one or more candidates. If you’re watching too, please join me in the comments.


Here We Go Again: the Political Prop Wife

I was hoping that maybe this scandal would be different.  When Anthony Wiener was caught in a series of mutually stupid sexting scandals,  wife Huma  Abedin stayed away from the role of adoring political prop wife.  She let him handle the reporters and the public on his own.  I admire Mark Sanford’s wife who has completely turned the stereotype of political prop wife on its head.   After these kinds of public humiliations, the least you should be able to hang on to is your dignity and self respect.  That’s far more important than staying in a marriage with a Lothario.

The worst and most shameful abuse of a wife of a politician had to be by David Vitter who got caught with his diapers down on a prostitute’s call list.

Looks like one more manipulative political husband just can’t resist trotting out his probably long suffering wife just one more time.  Herman Cain may be getting some big donations from men in denial of their treatment of women, but his numbers with women voters–who know that men frequently overstep their boundaries–have dropped like an avalanche.  So, he’s going to do the knee jerk damage control thing and  trot out political man’s best friend, his prop wife.  After enduring the Vitter presser, I’ve decided this is nothing less than domestic abuse.  I still remember Eliot Spitzer’s wife blaming herself for his problem with call girls.  What campaign manager thinks the public humiliation of a wife is good politics?

Introducing … Gloria Etchison Cain.

At long last, the political spouse who has kept the lowest profile of the campaign season is preparing to make a network debut. Mrs. Cain, who has been married to the former restaurant executive Herman Cain for 43 years, is expected to sit down this weekend with Greta Van Susteren of Fox News, for a segment that could air on Monday, according to a source familiar with the planning.

Mrs. Cain has, to date, not appeared on the campaign trail with her husband, and is said to prefer her home life in Atlanta, far away from the national spotlight. But since allegations of sexual harassment began to engulf the Cain campaign almost two weeks ago, it had been rumored that Mrs. Cain would eventually come to her husband’s defense on television.

Mr. Cain has been talking about his wife and family more of late, perhaps to offer a counterpoint to the multiple women who have come forward to accuse him of inappropriate behavior while he was chief of the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s.

While in New York City on Friday for a major fund-raising drive, Mr. Cain stopped at Fox News and was asked about his wife by the host Neil Cavuto. “What’s she saying to you?” he questioned.

Mr. Cain replied, “She’s saying to me that the family has your back. We’re not going to let them, you know, continue to … We are there.”

Worst example to date of making your humiliated wife act as your prop for the purposes of shoring up your hypocritical ass comes from selfish David Vitter.

Gotta admire the former Mrs. Stanford for leaving her bum of a husband and getting on with her life.  She seems to be one of the few wronged political wives that didn’t accept her role as prop and pulled herself away from a man that obviously didn’t have her or her family’s best interests at heart.  I can only imagine what  Gloria Cain will be put through to prop up her husband’s stalled ambitions.


Saturday Morning Reads

Good Morning!

NPR is showcasing a number of articles on the Arab Women’s movements that have resulted from the Jasmine Revolution.  These studies include portraits of women that are fighting backlashes as well as seeking more input to their nation’s governance.  Arab women are planning to flex their new found muscles come March 8 and International Women’s day.

Images of women marching alongside men in countries like Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain and Jordan led to predictions that women’s rights would also make huge strides forward.

She had been optimistic initially, when she celebrated President Hosni Mubarak’s resignation in February. She had spent days sitting in Cairo’s Tahrir Square alongside thousands of others. She said she found the sight of men and women protesting together an inspiration.

“I think the youth that were in Tahrir … people my age or people that were demonstrators or whatever, were OK with the concept of men and women having equal rights,” said Kamel.

“In the months that followed, the feminist honeymoon was lost,” she said.

In the six months since Mubarak was ousted, the only woman who has joined Egypt’s transitional government is a holdover from the old regime. Women are running in the upcoming presidential election, though none is expected to be a serious contender. Most telling, said Kamel, was that the women who took part in the protests in Tahrir have been increasingly painted as vagrant or “loose” women in the Egyptian press.

“They went from being heroes to being vilified,” said Kamel. A few months after the Tahrir Square protests, women hoped to assert their newly found voices in a demonstration on International Women’s Day, March 8.

Though more than 1,000 people joined a Facebook group for the event, only a few hundred ended up marching. They were quickly surrounded and harassed by men led by a sheik from Al Azhar University.

“People just gathered, each woman was standing there — she had like five men around her, and she was trying to argue. It got physically abusive after a while. The protests didn’t last for even an hour,” said Kamel.

Saudi women have been getting mixed signals from a government that is expanding their rights and holding them back at the same time.  This link also comes from the NPR series on Women and the Arab Spring.

The 28-year-old businesswoman and other Saudi women interviewed for this story say they are tired of waiting for rights most other women around the world take for granted.

The mixed signals especially bother them. In a historic speech in September, Abdullah pledged to add women to his all-male advisory council and allow them to take part in the next municipal elections. Two days later, a court in the port city of Jeddah sentenced a young mother to 10 lashes for driving a car.

The king later set the sentence aside. Even so, analysts say it was an unusually harsh punishment for violating a female-driving ban that isn’t enshrined in law.

Ruba, a 21-year-old university student, calls the sentence shameful. She believes it was a backlash against the decision to offer women political rights. Ruba, like several women in this story, asked that only her first name be used to protect her family.

“Of course, it felt like a game of tug-of-war between the liberals and the conservatives,” she says. “When the liberals pulled harder and won, the conservatives pulled even harder.

“So it just felt like women were that rope between the two parties.”

Myanmar is home to one of the most famous Asian woman political leader to have received the Nobel Prize for Peace. An Suu Kyi may be much freer than she has been in previous years but Myanmar’s women continue to suffer.  Forced marriage is up 70%  and the interesting thing is the brides are being shipped off to China.  Rather interesting that a country that has produced a bumper crop of male babies as a result of its population control policies now has to import/kidnap women from other countries.

The women from Myanmar, some arriving as young as 14, went to China with dreams of better-paid jobs that would help lift their families out of poverty.

Instead, upon arrival they are forced to marry. The men, often poor farmers, find Chinese brides hard to come by because cultural preference and a one-child policy enforced since 1978 have led to a higher ratio of men versus women.

The women recount being drugged by traffickers and brokers – distant relatives, friends of friends, neighbours and fellow villagers – and waking up to find they’d been sold as brides. They tell of being paraded in marketplaces, locked up and forced to get pregnant.

“The trafficking of women and girls for forced marriage is quite a serious problem and trends over the last couple of years indicate that it is increasing,” said David Brickey Bloomer, child protection director at Save the Children in Myanmar, adding at least a quarter of victims are under 18.

Forced marriages made up 70 percent of Myanmar’s trafficking cases last year, UNIAP, the United Nations’ inter-agency project on human trafficking, said.

Myanmar authorities recorded 122 cases of forced marriage in 2010, Bloomer told TrustLaw, while UNIAP-supported initiative the Strategic Information Response Network (SIREN) put the 2009 figure at 85.

World Vision, the only other aid agency besides Save the Children which works on anti-trafficking in Myanmar, said 51 women were trafficked this way in the first seven months of 2011 alone. The average price of a Myanmar bride is $5,000, it said.

So, all’s not so well in the US for women as we all know.  Rock Center–the new News Magazine on NBC with Brian Williams–had a compelling story on how North Carolina frequently forcibly sterilized many young girls and women.  Black women were most impacted.  Their stories are heartbreaking.  You can watch the segment at the link.

Elaine Riddick was 13 years old when she got pregnant after being raped by a neighbor in Winfall, N.C., in 1967.  The state ordered that immediately after giving birth, she should be sterilized.  Doctors cut and tied off her fallopian tubes.

“I have to carry these scars with me.  I have to live with this for the rest of my life,” she said.

Riddick was never told what was happening.  “Got to the hospital and they put me in a room and that’s all I remember, that’s all I remember,” she said.  “When I woke up, I woke up with bandages on my stomach.”

Riddick’s records reveal that a five-person state eugenics board in Raleigh had approved a recommendation that she be sterilized. The records label Riddick as “feebleminded” and “promiscuous.” They said her schoolwork was poor and that she “does not get along well with others.”

“I was raped by a perpetrator [who was never charged] and then I was raped by the state of North Carolina.  They took something from me both times,” she said.  “The state of North Carolina, they took something so dearly from me, something that was God given.”

It wouldn’t be until Riddick was 19, married and wanting more children, that she’d learn she was incapable of having any more babies. A doctor in New York where she was living at the time told her that she’d been sterilized.

“Butchered.  The doctor used that word…  I didn’t understand what she meant when she said I had been butchered,” Riddick said.

North Carolina was one of 31 states to have a government run eugenics program.  By the 1960s, tens of thousands of Americans were sterilized as a result of these programs.

This is a shameful period in the state’s history.  It’s something that should never happen but did.

Project Social Art has started a series aimed at shaming men who cat call women on streets.

Last Saturday, we were on our way back from a friend’s birthday celebration when a guy began to harass Marie on the street. He was a young, white male who seemed to be somewhat intoxicated or high. We brushed off his proposition to which he responded with, “Oh, come on. Please! I will pay you.” There he was, blatantly offering to purchase Marie’s body in exchange for money.

Later than night, when Anna was on the subway with her sister, she experienced yet more harassment on a sexual level. A group of about eight Hasidic Jews were staring at Anna and Melania through the glass window in between cars. At first, the ladies thought this was quite funny because it was very entertaining to see eight men trying to squeeze their heads into the window to all get a better look. Nevertheless, the situation turned ugly when one of the men started making oral sex gestures and his friend started gesticulating money offers. Soon, Anna realized they were trying to offer her money in return for sexual services. She looked at Melania who was eating a sandwich at the time and said, “Wrap up that sandwich. We are going into that car.” Melania was hesitant, but Anna told her that they had to do this for all the other women out there, “We have to show these men that they cannot do things like this.”

The Riot has developed a Cat Caller form to query the harasser.  Here’s an example of the ‘survey’ to hand your obnoxious unwanted harrasser.

So, maybe we could just need to show up at Republican Presidential Rallies and just start handing them out to the candidates.

I’m turning into a bit of an admirer of Thomas Edsell.  This is a something he just wrote for the Atlantic and it’s pretty humorous.  “Is God Really Telling Rick Perry to Run for President?”  The article argues that maybe “God” really isn’t very fond of Rick Perry whose state is suffering through a drought of Biblical proportions and whose performance at debates is the stuff comics dream of.  Oh, and then there are all those brush fires.

Earlier in the year, at a May fundraiser in Longview, Texas, Perry told a group of businessmen and women, “At 27 years old, I knew that I had been called to the ministry. I’ve just always been really stunned by how big a pulpit I was gonna have. I still am. I truly believe with all my heart that God has put me in this place at this time to do his will.”

If you accept the idea that individuals can interpret God’s views toward their political ambitions, the available evidence suggests that Perry got it all wrong. From the word go, the signals have been of Biblical proportion — but they are nearly all downright negative. Throughout the summer months, as Perry first considered and then decided to run for the White House, Texas turned into a hellhole. For example: this evocative map of the country produced by the U.S. Drought Monitor lends itself to the interpretation that a terrible punishment has been inflicted on the state Perry was brought up in and which he now governs.

I actually think it’s Mother Earth teaming up with Mother Nature to send him a really big message.

Okay, so that’s a little this and that for a Saturday morning.  What’s on your writing and blogging list this morning?