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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPoverty Is Sexist
That's the provocative title of a new campaign to promote girl-power.
On May 13th, ONE.org, the international advocacy organization, co-founded by Bono, that works to end extreme poverty and preventable disease, particularly in Africa, launched its latest campaign, Poverty Is Sexist, which aims to empower girls and women in the poorest countries, so that they can lift their own communities out of poverty. Fueling the charge is a girl power packed anthem, social media blitz, and petition.
Consider this, Across every key gender indicator, life is significantly harder for girls and women in the least developed countries compared to those living in other countries, as stated on the ONE.org site. While men in poor countries are also disadvantaged, the gender gap between males and females is even larger in the poorest countries.
Of course, any movement worth it's salt these days needs good music. Here ya go!
Read More http://immasmartypants.blogspot.com/2015/05/poverty-is-sexist.html
Strong Girl Anthem, #Strengthie Photos Aim To Crush Extreme Poverty With Girl Power
Read More http://www.womenyoushouldknow.net/strong-girl-anthem-strengthie-photos-aim-to-crush-extreme-poverty-with-girl-power/
You go girl~
bettyellen
(47,209 posts)And when following up found that more often than not, they partied it away- sharing little to nothing with their own children and wives. This was in polygamous Masai communities. When they partnered with women, they found that the money went to food for everyone - especially the kids, but also men- and everyone's standard of living and health improved. And that the women were much more open to literally working with them (creating crafts, performing songs) to sustain or increase the stream of funding coming in. This came up because I noticed that the men just stayed on the sidelines in a group during our visit, and basically paid no attention to anything except when the money came out. Then they looked interested. I understand there can be a resentment to tourism, but it's kinda bullshit if your happy to let your loved ones do all the work and share the profits without lifting a finger.
sheshe2
(83,661 posts)It is the women that have the nurturing souls. They are the mothers, the teachers and caregivers of the world.
bettyellen
(47,209 posts)Being wives by agreeing who needed more resources at what time (new mothers, the ill) and working to make sure that happened. If there were grievances, the women banded together like union members to gain power that they could never possess individually in that society. Because while their husbands did indeed have to have some wealth when paying the family their dowry for additional wives, there is never a guarantee that he would not be greedy once they were "his". So they evolved a model of cooperation to band together and balance his power as best they could.
The things you have to do to survive!
Response to bettyellen (Reply #1)
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ismnotwasm
(41,967 posts)NYC_SKP
(68,644 posts)sheshe2
(83,661 posts)http://www.womenyoushouldknow.net/strong-girl-anthem-strengthie-photos-aim-to-crush-extreme-poverty-with-girl-power/
daredtowork
(3,732 posts)Welfare policy is designed so single people won't be able to "depend" on it. Even though you wouldn't be in that situation in the first place unless there were significant barriers to work, people are deliberately placed in a position of find instant employment or become homeless and starve as punishment. This is the source of the homeless people you see on the street: this is the result of GOP Shock and Awe welfare policy.
But women, who make up the majority of the indigent poor, supposedly have "another option". The system pressures them to hook up with a man because most aid is family oriented: better yet they can find a man to "take care of them". If all else fails, they can at least have children to qualify for family aid. Then all the world will kvetch about their "irresponsibility", but the truth is these women weren't inherently valued enough as individuals for society to offer them a means of survival. Poverty is sexist and always pushing women to place themselves under the thumb of the first man they meet on the highway.
Wounded Bear
(58,605 posts)Makes a lot "ists" more damaging to all people. No matter how anyone tries to spin it, the vast majority of the 1%, 0.1%, and .01% on up are white males.
And that makes most everything harder for the rest of us. As a while male who spent most of my life in the middle class and having it fairly easy along the way. I can appreciate the sentiment here. Women everywhere, and minorties, get victimized.
Our economic system is sexist, racist, ageist, etc ad nauseum. One big problem, of course, is that women tend to get hit by all of those in combination.
sheshe2
(83,661 posts)Wounded Bear
(58,605 posts)I try to support women's issues as much as possible, and for me, the really really big thing is not abortion, or pay equality, or education, though those are important.
The really, really BIG elephant in the room problem is that women just don't get the opportunities that men do. Anybody that can't see that is willfully blind. Women end up not having choices, especially when they desperately need real options when dealing with the normal day to day exigencies of life, let alone the big stuff.
I guess I should add that our politics and the economy are so intimately intwined that wresting power from the wealthy class gets harder and harder by the year
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)We need to fight for all of it.
sheshe2
(83,661 posts)We need to fight for all of it.
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)We don't agree on everything, but we do agree on THIS.
ETA: I will stand up for women fighting for their rights. I will NEVER tell someone that that they shouldn't fight for their rights. I will fight for mine and for those I love and praise anyone who wants to join me. I will also join others in fighting for theirs. Nothing is mutually exclusive. It's time we say that equality for all in all things is something worth fighting for. We may not win, but it is worth the fight.