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unhappycamper

(60,364 posts)
Tue Jun 3, 2014, 10:02 AM Jun 2014

Tomgram: Rebecca Solnit, #YesAllWomen Changes the Story

http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/tom-engelhardt/56197/tomgram-rebecca-solnit-yesallwomen-changes-the-story

Tomgram: Rebecca Solnit, #YesAllWomen Changes the Story
by Tom Engelhardt | June 2, 2014 - 8:55am

Where was the NSA? That's the question former State Department whistleblower Peter Van Buren recently asked at his We Meant Well blog — and it couldn’t be a smarter one. After all, the Isla Vista killer, Elliot Rodgers, made both his own sense of disturbance and his urge for “retribution” against women quite public before he went on his terror spree. Shouldn’t the agency, whose unofficial motto (“collect it all”) seems to be meant quite literally, have noticed his messages to the world?

Given the ridiculous mass of human communications the NSA collects, both domestically and globally, perhaps not. But one reason its employees might not have been paying attention was that Rodgers wasn’t an Islamic jihadist-in-the-making or an al-Qaeda wannabe. He didn’t fall among the few fringe figures since 9/11 who have committed domestic acts of Islamic terror, including Army psychiatrist Nidal Hasan, who slaughtered 13 at Fort Hood, Texas, the Tsarnaev brothers who briefly terrorized Boston, or Faisal Shahzad who managed to get a car bomb into New York’s Times Square. Of course, it’s worth remembering that the agency American taxpayers support to the tune of almost $11 billion a year and that has made surveillance in the name of "safety" part of the American way of life somehow missed them, too! Still, for the NSA one thing is clear enough: the Elliot Rodgers of this world may blow Americans away in numbers that put the casualty counts for what we call "domestic terrorism" to shame, but they aren’t considered "terrorists" and the war they are engaged in — against women — doesn’t qualify for any "war on terror.”

The numbers tell a grim story when it comes to this sort of terror in American life. Among other things, if you’re adding up casualties in this unnamed war, 1,500 women are murdered annually by their husbands or boyfriends. That adds up to a 9/11-sized disaster every two years. On the other side of things, in the wake of the killings in Isla Vista, California, and without the NSA stepping in to botch things up, the response to such terror has been extraordinary, and Rebecca Solnit, whose new Dispatch Book, Men Explain Things to Me, focuses on just what violence against women means in our society, offers her usual highly original look at ways in which women (and some men) are reconceiving our world and the horrors in it.
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Tomgram: Rebecca Solnit, #YesAllWomen Changes the Story (Original Post) unhappycamper Jun 2014 OP
This says it all!!!! libodem Jun 2014 #1
Actually this needs exposure libodem Jun 2014 #2
" ... 1,500 women are murdered annually by their husbands or boyfriends. Tuesday Afternoon Jun 2014 #3
Excellent! ismnotwasm Jun 2014 #4
This is an interesting question, Squinch Jun 2014 #5

libodem

(19,288 posts)
1. This says it all!!!!
Tue Jun 3, 2014, 11:23 AM
Jun 2014

Kick. May I steal this and drag it over to one of the women's groups. It would be a shame to have it be missed.

libodem

(19,288 posts)
2. Actually this needs exposure
Tue Jun 3, 2014, 11:31 AM
Jun 2014

In more than one of our women's groups and possibly the men's group. It says a lot about society in general and also our individuality.

Tuesday Afternoon

(56,912 posts)
3. " ... 1,500 women are murdered annually by their husbands or boyfriends.
Tue Jun 3, 2014, 11:57 AM
Jun 2014

That adds up to a 9/11-sized disaster every two years."

Squinch

(50,924 posts)
5. This is an interesting question,
Tue Jun 3, 2014, 03:23 PM
Jun 2014

"Where was the NSA?"

I'm not a fan of the idea of the NSA being in anyone's living room, but as long as they are there, we ought to at least get something back for our billions of tax dollars.

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