Waterbored
May 15, 2009 by Zack Rawsthorne
Filed under For Your Entertainment, zTab
Tell the truth — which would be worse? Getting waterboarded, or having to listen to those two all night, arguing about the dialects of radical feminism?

Mr. President: Mind the Gender Gap
November 11, 2008 by Phyllis Chesler
Filed under News and Opinion
The people are talking about it on television and in newspapers and magazines. Of course, I refer to the positive effect that President Obama’s election is expected to have on young African-American men and on the conversation about race.
Jonathan Kaufman and Gary Fields, in “Election of Obama Recasts National Conversation on Race,” in The Wall Street Journal.
WSJ describe African-Americans who feel that they can now hold their heads a “little higher” and, as important, hide behind fewer excuses in terms of their own achievement. In addition, white folk may feel that, in voting for Obama, they have atoned for their considerable historical sins and either are no longer “racists,” or will no longer be perceived as such…Continue reading on Jewcy
Women and the American War Effort
May 30, 2007 by Jenn Sierra
Filed under News and Opinion
(Updated 01/30/09)
I was recently asked to help with a local project, by locating photos of women involved in the various American war efforts, including soldiers and nurses in combat as well as women who remained at home in various roles. Thanks to Google Images, this task was quite easy, but I was struck by the differences in the images seen the published photos over the years.
The photos of the women in service have more similarities than differences through the years. Only the styles and, in some cases, the duties have changed. For example (please click photos for source):



Likewise, published photos of nurses through each war have highlighted their serene sense of purpose, grace and class:



It is the differences in the published photos of the women that stayed at home that struck me.







Yes, every war has had its protesters and subversives, as well as its patriots..both male and female…and much of the difference may not actually be individual women over the centuries, but in the type of behavior and attitudes that are glorified in the media. These images, however, speak volumes regarding the roll of women in supporting the American war effort, then and now.


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