tinyspiritz:

watch this documentary for free from now until march 10th only! also, nfb has an entire page dedicated to canadian women in film including free films and essays.

“Feminism has shaped the society we live in. But just how far has it brought us, and how relevant is it today? This feature documentary zeroes in on key concerns such as violence against women, access to abortion, and universal childcare, asking how much progress we have truly made on these issues. Rich with archival material and startling contemporary stories, Status Quo? uncovers answers that are provocative and at times shocking.

i’m screening this in my living room tomorrow - if you’re in quebec city, be there.

the dangers of photoshopping Idle No More

i can’t actually begin to express how frustrating it is to come across blatantly photoshopped images like this one circulating without an end in sight. with thousands of notes and tens of thousands of hits:

a poorly photoshopped image of protestors on a highway in the same of a middle finger with the words "HARPER" written in the upper left corner. the original photograph was taken on april 22, 2012 by Jacques Nadeau for Le Devoir.

why does an image like this one get reblogged so much? because it made you chuckle to think protestors would block a highway in the same of a giant middle finger, regardless of the cause? (have you ever been a protest/in a crowd of thousands, do you know how complicated that would be?) because you think all this movement is about is a big fuck you to one individual person named stephen harper and not decades of ongoing disenfranchisement of first nations, métis and inuit people? because you delude yourself into thinking, by pressing reblog, you get to pat yourself on the back for being engaged and support “first nations rights” without even clicking the photo to see the source, when and where it was taken, or whether or not it is even real?

let’s get right down to it: if you are not informed at this point, it is your own choice. idle no more has been going on for over a month, in your own backyard and around the world. here are your visuals, here are your links. idle no more is being reported about by some of the world’s major media outlets now, like al-jazeera.

it is supported by thousands of academics, native and non-native. there have been countless protests, round dances, drum circles, peaceful highway and railroad blockades. and when i say countless, i mean countless: in the last week it has become near impossible for activists, journalists and analysts to keep track of every action taking place around the globe.

attawapiskat chief theresa spence is over twenty days into her hunger strike, demanding simply she be granted a meeting with canada’s prime minister stephen harper and a representative of the queen (in case you needed to be reminded that yes, canada has an ongoing outdated colonial relationship with britain and yes, the fucking queen).

all of this to say, yes, idle no more is worthy of your reblogs, your likes, and your attention. but more importantly, it is worth being taken seriously.

what makes the rampant circulation falsified images like this one even worse is that there are so many actual images that are so much more impressive. images taken by people on the ground with their mobile phones, like this one in the mall of america on december 29th.

image

you can’t stage that kind of photo! “the next big thing is here” juxtaposed over the beautiful round dance! or say, witty protest signs like “if you do not respect our existence, you can expect our resistance,” taken on december 22nd in ottawa. or if you’re not so much into still images, what about this video of protestors in quebec city in the middle of an intense snowstorm on dec 21st, still singing and drumming and smiling even with 100 km winds.

you want to do justice to this movement? read up on it. stop circulating fake images. look for dates, for the author. message people you see circulating photoshopped images. ask them where they found the image. ask them why they are sharing it. ask them if they might consider deleting it, or at least adding a note that it is faked or photoshopped. unfortunately, this is still not enough, seeing as i messaged the person who originally posted this photo to tumblr - who, for the record, claims to have known it was fake “haha” - and still see smart, informed, critical folks reblogging it sans cesse.

at the end of the day, it is important to recognize these kinds of photoshopped falsified images of protest as dangerous. this is misinformation. this is sloppy. if there is anything that has become clear to me after following the occupy movement online (not to mention major weather events and storms, media literacy is increasingly becoming an essential tool for young people. last year so many people came to me asking what i thought of kony the day after the video went viral, without actually taking the time to read and inform themselves. if you don’t have the critical analysis skills yourself, seek out people who do.

start informing and educating yourself. movements like idle no more don’t just want you to use their hashtag and reblog photoshopped images like this, they want your active engagement. they want change. 

follow chief spence on twitter. call and email your elected officials if you live in canada. bother senators and parliamentarians who are supposed to serve your interests as a citizen. see what actions, if any, are taking place in your community. there are over fifteen links just here in this one post - click on at least one of them, read them. listen. and more importantly, ask questions.

edited to add: the original photo is from april 22, 2012 by Jacques Nadeau for Le Devoir. the photoshopped version appears to have cloned a larger crowd and added the “harper” in the upper left hand corner.

"The thought of firing everybody as you know is always on my mind so if one day I stop coming or fire you please respect it and forget about me, I know it is hard for you. Just think about me as a child who died and get along with your life."

Omar Khadr writes his lawyer [pdf] in May of 2010. 

I’m getting emotional about Guantanamo Bay all over again.

(via sexartandpolitics)

fuck.

"

While we were walking past Bloor and Grace, where one of the assaults reportedly occurred, two extremely drunk boys, estimated to be in their teens, staggered towards us and slurred their directions. We obliged them, and watched as they stumbled on their way, towards the subway.

In that moment, I realized they were enjoying a freedom I had never had and could never have. Blind drunk and exposed in the middle of the night, they wandered gleefully, happily and safely, conversing with strangers and inviting attention. The very things the written words that week had told me I wasn’t allowed to do.

The idea of it — their liberty vs. my need to be gratefully, soberly escorted by virtue of my sex — enraged me. In fact, we should all be enraged, every moment of every day, in a way that words can never express.

"

What can’t be published by Stacey May Fowles (September 14th, 2012)

(Source: )

sexxistappeal:

foreverliberal:

Let Transgender People On Canadian Airplanes!
Trans* people are banned from flying on airplanes in Canada due to a new section in the Identity Screening Regulations that are used in airports. The section says that an airplane should not except someone as a passenger if they don’t look like the gender on their identification information. 
Unfortunately, in order to change the sex marker in Canada, a person has to have proof of surgery or that surgery will be happening in at least one year. So for the trans* people that aren’t going to have surgery, haven’t been able to have surgery, or those that are gender nonconforming (or genderqueer), this makes it impossible for them to travel. 
Please tell the Canadian Ministry of Transportation to change this policy immediately and let trans* people fly on airplanes! This is discrimination and it is wrong! 
Petition is here — http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/Canada-Let-Transgender-People-Fly/

If you don’t sign this petition, I will personally canoe over to your house (since I won’t be able to fly) and terrorize the shit outta you with my gender.

i’ve seen a lot of misinformation and contradictory stuff going around about this issue on facebook tumblr and twitter. i think it speaks both to the advantages and disadvantages of social media and activism/social justice. but that’s a whole other kettle of fish… i’m mostly reblogging to share what other resources i’ve found re: this discriminatory law and how we should stop it.
1. first things first? it is not “new” per se, it has been on the books since July 2011. people are just calling attention to how discriminatory it is now. make sure you’ve got your facts right.
2. a lot of the criticisms aren’t addressing how hotly racialized this issue is… the debate, specifically in quebec, around women wearing the niqab in courts, classrooms, and airports is often presented as a “security” concern, arguing that male terrorists would try to disguise themselves as women by wearing a niqab or burqa. yes, this is fucked up. but it’s part of what led to the rule that states “An air carrier shall not transport a passenger if … (c) the passenger does not appear to be of the gender indicated on the identification he or she presents.” we can’t ignore that, while obviously transphobic, this is also part of canada’s increasingly racist public policies (i.e. talking about refugees as being part of “human smuggling” rings, caring about refusing entry to potentially terrorist ”boat people” while ignoring the rampant abuses of the largely underpaid and non-union immigrant labour force, etc.)
BUT! these people lay out these issues better than i do…
RECOMMENDED READING:

New airport screening regs raise questions for trans Canadians - by Mercedes Allen at Rabble.ca (January 30th, 2012)


Transgender people are completely banned from boarding airplanes in Canada by Chris Milloy (January 30th, 2012)


The Canadian Rule which bans transgender flight by Jane Fae at Pink News (January 31st, 2012)

here are also many other petitions out there, with more signatures already:

Change.org’s has 481 signatures


Petition Online Canada’s has 6570 signatures


…the “care 2” petition site has 58.

but you know what i think about petitions. yes, they have a purpose, but at the end of the day: call up your MP. call Minister of Transport Denis Lebel and tell him why you think this law is horrible. call up the people who have brought up these issues in the House, like MP Justin Trudeau, and tell him to put the heat on more. if you’re a canadian who votes, demand more from your “democracy.” get this off the internet, and get this law changed.

sexxistappeal:

foreverliberal:

Let Transgender People On Canadian Airplanes!

Trans* people are banned from flying on airplanes in Canada due to a new section in the Identity Screening Regulations that are used in airports. The section says that an airplane should not except someone as a passenger if they don’t look like the gender on their identification information. 

Unfortunately, in order to change the sex marker in Canada, a person has to have proof of surgery or that surgery will be happening in at least one year. So for the trans* people that aren’t going to have surgery, haven’t been able to have surgery, or those that are gender nonconforming (or genderqueer), this makes it impossible for them to travel. 

Please tell the Canadian Ministry of Transportation to change this policy immediately and let trans* people fly on airplanes! This is discrimination and it is wrong! 

Petition is here — http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/Canada-Let-Transgender-People-Fly/

If you don’t sign this petition, I will personally canoe over to your house (since I won’t be able to fly) and terrorize the shit outta you with my gender.

i’ve seen a lot of misinformation and contradictory stuff going around about this issue on facebook tumblr and twitter. i think it speaks both to the advantages and disadvantages of social media and activism/social justice. but that’s a whole other kettle of fish… i’m mostly reblogging to share what other resources i’ve found re: this discriminatory law and how we should stop it.

1. first things first? it is not “new” per se, it has been on the books since July 2011. people are just calling attention to how discriminatory it is now. make sure you’ve got your facts right.

2. a lot of the criticisms aren’t addressing how hotly racialized this issue is… the debate, specifically in quebec, around women wearing the niqab in courts, classrooms, and airports is often presented as a “security” concern, arguing that male terrorists would try to disguise themselves as women by wearing a niqab or burqa. yes, this is fucked up. but it’s part of what led to the rule that states “An air carrier shall not transport a passenger if … (c) the passenger does not appear to be of the gender indicated on the identification he or she presents.” we can’t ignore that, while obviously transphobic, this is also part of canada’s increasingly racist public policies (i.e. talking about refugees as being part of “human smuggling” rings, caring about refusing entry to potentially terrorist ”boat people” while ignoring the rampant abuses of the largely underpaid and non-union immigrant labour force, etc.)

BUT! these people lay out these issues better than i do…

RECOMMENDED READING:

  1. New airport screening regs raise questions for trans Canadians - by Mercedes Allen at Rabble.ca (January 30th, 2012)
  2. The Canadian Rule which bans transgender flight by Jane Fae at Pink News (January 31st, 2012)

here are also many other petitions out there, with more signatures already:

but you know what i think about petitions. yes, they have a purpose, but at the end of the day: call up your MP. call Minister of Transport Denis Lebel and tell him why you think this law is horrible. call up the people who have brought up these issues in the House, like MP Justin Trudeau, and tell him to put the heat on more. if you’re a canadian who votes, demand more from your “democracy.” get this off the internet, and get this law changed.

(via prudeboy)

decembermcqueen on Flickr.

decembermcqueen on Flickr.

film still from polytechnique (denis villeneuve, 2009) (via film_stills)

film still from polytechnique (denis villeneuve, 2009) (via film_stills)

how not to be a racist jerk when talking about the attawapiskat crisis

lots of people have been asking me about the attawapiskat crisis. every time i have tried, though, i can’t really find the way to without wanting to cry or scream. so i’ll just together a really short recommended reading list.

anyone who is slightly informed about the indian act, the colonial legacy of canada, the state of reservations across this country.

what is really coming to light thanks to this situation and the media attention it has finally garnered after years (yes, years) of asking for assistance, for help isn’t so much the problems certain aboriginal communities in small, northern reserves face - it’s the latent racism, hatred, and spite of a large number of canadians (including many elected officials) are ready to spout at the drop of a hat.

it’s the “why can’t they just live in the south like us” complaints.

it’s the “we gave you money but you don’t know what to do with it so let us handle it” condescending colonization redux.

it’s the “they brought this on themselves because they are uneducated addicts.”

the amount of condescendition, misinformation, and racist vitriol currently found on news website comment forums is nauseating - and i don’t know what to do about it other than try and turn it off. to not read it. to not confront it.

but at the same time i feel like more people need to know and hear these racist statements to understand what native people in canada come up against and are fighting. the leaders of attawapiskat ask the government to provide the housing they promise with the indian act? they shirk their responsibilities. they ask the government to provide access to clean drinkable water that is also promised in the indian act, not to mention the charter of human rights? nah. they declare a state of emergency when they are facing a SECOND winter of living in tents and shacks, entire families huddling together in ramshakle housing in -40 degree weather, around dangerous wood stoves? they get ignored for a month, until a member of parliament published an editorial on the huffington post, and then they get slapped on the wrist. they get blamed.

politicians are talking more about what this says about political parties than what it says about the illusion that all canadians have the highest standard of living in the world. politicians are talking about how this makes them “uncomfortable” to know that hundreds, thousands of people are living in UNLIVEABLE circumstances in their own fucking backyards.

this isn’t politics. this is people’s lived realities. this is people asking for the very basic human necessities. and they aren’t being treated as people, as peers. and as far as i can see, the only reason is because they are native. if that’s not proof that racism is alive and well (hell, even THRIVING) in canada today, i don’t know what is.

sexistappeal:

lols08:

babyslime:

nanettehb:

babyslime:

It’s been three weeks since Attawapiskat First Nation took the extraordinary step of declaring a state of emergency. Since then, not a single federal or provincial official has even bothered to visit the community.

No aid agencies have stepped forward. No disaster management teams have offered help.

Meanwhile temperatures have dropped 20 degrees and will likely drop another 20 or 25 degrees further in the coming weeks. For families living in uninsulated tents, makeshift cabins and sheds, the worsening weather poses serious risk.

Two weeks ago I travelled to this community on the James Bay coast to see why conditions had become so extreme that local leaders felt compelled to declare a state of emergency. It was like stepping into a fourth world. […]

This is Canada, people. CANADA. The blatant racism in these actions is astounding. The way our government treats the first nation peoples is disgusting,

Anyone we can write to? Let them know the world (or at least our little corners of it) is watching?

There’s some contact info in this related post here, http://intercontinentalcry.org/attawapiskat-state-of-emergency-ignored/

What you Can Do

Two petitions are being circulated if you’d like to support the community of Attawapiskat:

You may also want to write a letter to:

  • Prime Minister Stephen Harper: pm@pm.gc.ca
  • Indian and Northern Affairs (INAC): CNAP-NACC@ainc-inac.gc.ca
  • INAC Minister Chuck Strahl: StrahC@parl.gc.ca.

For background and more information, please visit attawapiskat.com, www.attawapiskat-school.com, and Attawapiskat support on facebook

made one minor change - Attawapiskat is the name of the reserve…not the Nation itself

Please take a few minutes to bug the Canadian government and support this First Nations community. Signing a petition on the internet is the absolute least we can do. Tell your friends, family & neighbours!

i was just about to post this. the most depressing thing? yes, this is probably the worst case, but there are countless other native communities across canada facing similar housing shortages, lack of access to clean water, and otherwise lacking in basic human needs and rights.

(via prudeboy)