(Note to 
readers on Blogger: a much more graphically sophisticated version of 
this blog -- identical text, slightly different headline due to format 
spacing -- is available at http://lorenbliss.typepad.com/.
 The TypePad version also includes several portfolios of my photography,
 much of it previously published, some of it dating back to the 1960s.) 
NORMALLY I AM uncomfortable writing about feminism because, being male, I can never have an insider's appreciation of its dynamics. Moreover I believe the blessing (or curse) of a womb – and with it the implicit responsibility for mothering (or not) – creates in every female a perspective we males might approach intellectually but cannot possibly comprehend emotionally. Hence my usual response to feminism is akin to the respectfully inquisitive silence with which a hopelessly left-brained student might approach a Zen master. I know I will never achieve enlightenment – at least not in this lifetime – though I am unquestionably willing to learn whatever wisdom the master deigns to impart.
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NORMALLY I AM uncomfortable writing about feminism because, being male, I can never have an insider's appreciation of its dynamics. Moreover I believe the blessing (or curse) of a womb – and with it the implicit responsibility for mothering (or not) – creates in every female a perspective we males might approach intellectually but cannot possibly comprehend emotionally. Hence my usual response to feminism is akin to the respectfully inquisitive silence with which a hopelessly left-brained student might approach a Zen master. I know I will never achieve enlightenment – at least not in this lifetime – though I am unquestionably willing to learn whatever wisdom the master deigns to impart.
But
 twice this year already, the lily-white exponents of a uniquely USian 
brand of feminism – the “material girl” ideology so antagonistically 
antithetical to feminism's socialist roots I am compelled to label it 
“Ayn Rand Feminism” – have sunk their incipiently fascist fangs into 
progressive people and causes, first by public repudiation of reproductive-rights heroine Sandra Fluke  in retaliation for her progressive economic views, now more recently by denouncing the hacker-collective Anonymous and the women's-equality collective UltraViolet
 as “white-knight vigilantes” for their courageous defense of rape 
victims. Thus the Ayn Rand feminists have begun to brandish their fealty
 to the Ruling Class much as the Teabag Party asserts its lockstep 
adoration of the One Percent, which means these particular feminists 
are now – like any other organ of capitalist governance – a legitimate 
target of socialist criticism regardless of the critic's gender. 
What therefore follows is a much-enlarged version of a commentary I posted two weeks ago on Reader Supported News
 in response to a startling piece of gender-war invective entitled “Brad
 Pitt's New Movie on the Steubenville Rape Case Has the Wrong 
Protagonist,” the text cited in the second of the above links. By Tara 
Culp-Ressler, it offers an updated version of the old gender-warrior 
doctrine that no man should ever be allowed to help the women's movement
 lest his good deeds reinforce not only his (despicable) male ego but 
strengthen the shackles of patriarchy as well – and that any woman who 
disagrees is a hopeless reactionary, part of the problem rather than the
 solution. 
I
 ran afoul of that uniquely white-bourgeois dogma nearly 40 years ago, 
when I was an investigative reporter, and its resurrection renews a 
sense of shame that prompts me to reveal now a fact I should have 
disclosed then. Here is the whole story: 
An
 assertively Christian hospital that served a large and populous suburb 
of a major city refused to treat rape victims lest the association with 
sex and violence taint its godly image. Despite the fact an executive of
 the local rape-relief organization was my lover, I got the story not 
from her but because in those days I had the best cop sources in the 
area, probably in the entire state, and the cops complained to me about 
the hospital after one of their fellow officers ran afoul of its 
atrocious policy while seeking emergency-room care for an especially 
distraught rape victim. The cops, who in that era still believed their 
job was to protect and serve the citizenry rather than to serve the One 
Percent as its army of occupation, were genuinely furious. Several 
officers correctly likened the hospital's coldly enforced 
anti-rape-victim policy to psychologically re-assaulting the victim. 
After my usual telephone-and-shoe-leather effort unearthed an extended 
pattern of such abuses, I confronted the perpetrators and wrote my 
report, a blistering story that ran atop Page One. 
But
 to my lingering shame, I omitted from follow-up stories how the local 
rape-relief group had known of the problem for years but had 
deliberately kept it secret – apparently for two reasons: they hoped to 
get sole credit for negotiating a solution, and they feared some (male) 
“do-gooders” might discover the problem, forcefully solve it (exactly as
 the cops and I did), and thereby – or so these gender-warriors reasoned
 – perpetuate male supremacy. In other words, the white, petit bourgeois
 feminists who ran the rape-relief organization believed it was better 
for rape victims to be denied proper care at their local Christian 
hospital (and thus be forced to travel as much as 50 crow-miles to a 
secular hospital), than for anyone other than the feminist movement – 
and better yet this specific rape-relief organization – to get credit 
for solving the problem. 
Again
 to my shame, I half-assedly rationalized my act of self-censorship by 
telling myself my inside knowledge of the group's operations and 
policies was off-the-record information. Now nearly five decades after 
the fact and with the unforgiving, pre-graveyard clarity of old age, I 
confess my rationalization was total bullshit. The truth is I suppressed
 that vital detail merely to sustain my relationship with the 
rape-relief executive; I was living with her in her own house, and the 
alternative would have been instant homelessness. In any other 
circumstances, such a deliberate cover-up of atrocities would have 
either been in my lead or in my second and third grafs. Given a time 
machine to go back to the where and when, here is how I would write the 
story now: 
Rape victims in Gastropoda County are thrice victimized – first by the rapist, then by Gastropoda Christian Hospital, finally by the very rape-relief organization that claims to be the victims' advocate and protector. 
These circumstances came to light after police sources described the chilling ouster of a distraught rape victim from the GCH emergency room two weeks ago. Subsequent investigation brought to light at least a half dozen other such incidents. 
Now GCH executives reluctantly admit it bars rape victims from its emergency room and has forcibly ejected the few who have managed to get past its gatekeepers. 
Meanwhile, Gastropoda County Rape Relief officials just-as-reluctantly admitted they've known about the problem for years but have kept it secret. They claim the secrecy was essential to what they describe as an “ongoing” effort to negotiate with hospital management to change its anti-rape-victim policy. 
But no such negotiations, spokespersons for both organizations concede, have ever taken place. 
Moreover, the hospital's executive director insists he and his managerial colleagues were never asked to undertake such talks. 
The hospital's longstanding opposition to treating rape victims – which inside sources
 say grows out of its owners' fear any association with sex and violence
 will besmirch the institution's image of “Christian godliness” – is confirmed by records in... 
(The
 anonymity with which I am now cloaking this report is in response to 
three facts: [1]-my clips of the original story, and therefore my 
ability to confirm its published details, were destroyed by the same 
fire that in 1983 obliterated all my life's work, and I cannot replace 
the clips as the newspaper's morgue of bound copies did not survive 
corporate bankruptcy in the mid-1980s, nor – for reasons I am unable to 
determine (especially since it was the local paper of record) – were its
 editions ever microfilmed by the local library; [2]-the hospital long 
ago changed hands and is now under secular ownership; [3]-the sources 
and perpetrators are either retired, dead or otherwise unable to defend 
themselves.) 
Significantly,
 my lover had made it clear she was uncomfortable with the story from 
the moment I told her what I was working on. But we never had time to 
discuss the details of her discomfort. Hence I did not foresee her 
anger, much less its intensity. When I with my bottle of celebratory 
wine arrived at our dwelling the night after the story broke, I expected
 a joyful and exuberant welcome – at the very least a thank-you embrace 
and a “well done” in recognition of the quality of the work. Instead I 
was greeted with an unprecedented outpouring of anger and contempt. My 
reporting, she said, had damn near gotten her fired; some of the members
 of her board of directors accused her of using her relationship with me
 to foster publication of the story, thereby perpetuating the 
sex-for-favors dynamic of patriarchy; others condemned her for allowing a
 male to “invade” a realm of advocacy they believed should be 
exclusively female – never mind at least 10 percent of all rape victims 
are male; still others insisted she should have clandestinely pressured 
my editor and even my publisher to reassign the story to a woman. When 
the board voted on her proposed firing, she said, the termination motion
 failed by only one vote. 
To
 say I was shocked is an understatement, but mostly I was enraged by the
 indifference to victims that to me had suddenly emerged as the common 
stance of everyone but the cops and had therefore become the core issue 
of the entire story. Finally I responded accordingly: “You of all people
 know how good a reporter I am; you know I'd have found out about it 
even if you and I had never met – and what I should do now, what I 
fucking-A-tweet would do right this minute if our circumstances were 
different, is write a new story revealing everything you told me 
tonight.” What I did not say, not only because it was too painfully 
embarrassing for me to verbalize but because both of us clearly knew it 
already, is that she could goddamn well thank her lucky stars I was 
living in her house, which meant there was no way I could write the rest
 of the story without condemning myself to instant eviction. Needless to
 say, the confrontation killed the relationship, though the process of 
breaking up would consume another month or two. It also tossed a huge 
bucket of cold water on my journalistic pride. 
Nevertheless
 the story made a helluva big wave – big enough the hospital's 
management was forced to reverse their anti-rape-victim policy literally
 hours after the paper hit the street. They were also forced to pay for 
their emergency-room personnel to get the medical and psychological 
training necessary to provide proper care for rape victims of both 
genders. As ashamed as I am of my act of self-censorship, I remain 
fiercely proud of what my story accomplished. 
(I
 should note here that journalism of that era – at least as it used to 
be practiced on a good many local newspapers here in the 
pre-global-economy United States – was mostly a Working-Class calling. 
It drew from blue-collar families the same sorts of aggressively bright 
kids who might otherwise have gone into the cops or the priesthood or 
maybe the military. Sometimes it even enabled a declassé proletarian like myself to actually better people's lives, which to me was always its biggest attraction.) 
Apropos
 the malice directed at males accused of poaching in political or 
conceptual territory certain feminists believe should be theirs alone, 
that hospital story was not my first encounter with it. A few years 
earlier, when I was an undergraduate, it hamstrung a major research 
project of mine, part of the work that would become the forever-lost 
book “Glimpses of a Pale Dancer,” which was destroyed with all its 
research notes and most of its photography in the 1983 fire. “Dancer,” 
an investigative reporter's 24-year probe of the origins and 
significance of the '60s Countercultural Rebellion, concluded the rebels
 were resurrecting a modern variant of the ancient matriarchal or at 
least pre-patriarchal consciousness. My findings were based on the 
Counterculture's music, poetry, journalism, ritual, social structures, 
economics and the expression of its values in environmentalism, 
feminism, the back-to-the-land movement and the neo-pagan renaissance. 
(It is an aside, but the Jungian Edward Whitmont reached a similar 
conclusion from very different data. But Whitmont's work, unlike my own,
 was carefully apolitical and therefore achieved significant 
publication, for which see The Return of the Goddess, Crossroad: 1982.) 
While
 working on “Dancer,” I had foolishly imagined, exactly as I had while 
putting together the hospital story, that feminists would applaud my 
disclosures. After all, the pioneers in the “Dancer”-relevant fields of 
folklore and myth were themselves males. But by the early '70s, the 
gender-war feminists believed they had appropriated these realms as 
their own, and they defended their conquests with the passive-aggressive
 nastiness and backstabbing that characterizes academic ferocity whether
 male or female. Meanwhile the males associated with my project, an 
undergraduate thesis, seemed to regard me as a traitor to my gender. 
Hence though I got enough credit for the research and writing to win my 
bachelor's degree, my thesis itself was rejected. 
And
 now, decades later, Culp-Ressler has resurrected the same hateful 
doctrine of gender-exclusivity not just to belittle Anonymous and its 
breathtakingly courageous defiance of draconian prison terms, but to 
denounce UltraViolet, which unlike its (white bourgeois) sister 
organizations defends oppressed women without (ironically) 
discriminating on the basis of caste, ethnicity or the presence of male 
allies. 
In
 this same context, the Emily's List endorsement of “fiscal 
conservatism” – a euphemism for the genocidal savagery of Ayn Rand 
economics – is typical of the feminism spawned by capitalist co-optation
 and redirection of the USian second-wave feminist movement. (See again 
the first of the above links.) Because Second Wave Feminism was a 
daughter of the New Left of the 1960s, its dominant vision was 
overwhelmingly petit bourgeois and often fiercely 
anti-intellectual; therefore, despite its “women's liberation” label and
 its use of socialist rhetoric, it was frequently hostile not just to the historical truth of class struggle, 
 but to any analysis based on the revolutionary traditions of socialism 
and Marxism. Stripped of socialist armor, it was therefore easy prey for
 infiltrators and agents provocateur. That's why the USian 
feminism of the so-called “mainstream” remains indifferent to the 
outsourcing of jobs and downsizing of paychecks characteristic of the 
capitalist (Ayn Rand) moral imbecility that subjugates the USian 99 Percent. It 
does not acknowledge the fact that for a Working-Class woman, the loss 
of health insurance inflicted by global-economy outsourcing is often the
 total loss of reproductive freedom, an ugly reality carefully 
suppressed by Emily's List and the (Free Trade) Democrats in general. 
Nor – despite Big Lies to the contrary – is there any guarantee of 
rescue from the theocratic Christian effort to prohibit Obamacare from providing any satisfactory alternative.  Meanwhile, Rand herself has become an USian feminist heroine, 
 which explains not just the Emily's List stance, but bourgeois white 
USian feminism's unabashed support of capitalism itself, particularly as
 exemplified by the all the women who define themselves as “anti-union 
progressives.” 
Could
 it then be a coincidence such divisiveness reappears just as we in the 
USian Imperial Homeland seem to be making genuine progress toward 
proletarian solidarity? Surely not, as every available indication points
 to the Ruling Class mustering all its resources to suppress what it 
fears is looming revolution. This mustering includes not only the 
obvious efforts – for example the attempt by the Democratic Party to 
co-opt (and thereby betray) Socialist Alternative's demand for a 
$15-per-hour minimum wage – but the newly exposed program under which 
secret-police agents accompany the military into overseas combat (for 
which see “Outside Agitation Elsewhere” below). Obviously, such a 
program has only one objective: to ensure the agents are kill-hardened 
enough to reliably follow orders when they are commanded to exterminate 
suspected revolutionaries at home. In this oppressive context, I am not 
surprised by the anti-99 Percent treachery of the feminism discussed 
above. In truth it is an old story, so old we should expect nothing else
 from a movement that was in too-large measure co-opted by the One Percent  from about 1970 onward, with the result its exclusion of impoverished women and women of color has long been infamous. 
******
Outside Agitation Elsewhere:
 The big news is the ongoing neo-Nazification of the United States, the 
result of capitalism maturing into fascism, thereby not only fulfilling 
the predictions of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels and Vladimir Lenin but 
validating Marxism itself. (Aside: what the founders of Marxism called 
“imperialism,” we today know as fascism or Nazism.) Here are two links, 
with brief expositions of outside agitation on each of the comment 
threads: “Now We Know What's Being Done in Our Name,” in which Esquire's Charles Pierce writes about the leaked torture-memo scandal, 
 and “FBI Agents Were Deployed in Hundreds of JSOC Raids Conducted in 
Iraq & Afghanistan,” which describes how the USian equivalent of the
 Okhrana (or maybe the Gestapo) is being trained to suppress  the inevitable uprising against capitalism that is bound to occur here in the post-American-Dream wastelands. 
LB/13 April 2014 
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ReplyDeletehttp://winconfirm.com/category/motivational-videos-inspirational-videos/
Thank you, Ms. Jaiss. As you probably know, this blog has been mostly off-line since December due to a crippling combination of life-crises and computer problems, but as of this weekend I intend to start regular posting as before, once a week, probably late Sundays or early on Mondays, with occasional mid-week "extras" when events demand it. Meanwhile, thanks again.
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