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The DLJ Goes Dark

11-26-06 3:45 A GMT-07

This will be my last post here at the DLJ blog. My decision to discontinue posting here is actually far more positive than it may seem. That’s because my current situation will allow me to focus on the thing that got me into activism and publishing the DLJ in the first place.

There are others who are quite ably covering the issues, such as Teri Stoddard, Wendy McElroy, and of course, Men’s News Daily and Mensactivism

The hundreds of good people all over the world I’ve met in the years since the DLJ was first launched (in 2001 as an e-mailed newsletter) have all taught me a lot, and given me the tools which I can use to effectively run a program that provides practical help for a group of people that sorely need it.

There are far too many of those who’ve helped along the way to list by name but my gratitude for each and every one of you is boundless.

I will be focusing my efforts on setting up a program for abused men in my local area of Yuma, Arizona. Under the auspices of the Domestic Abuse Helpline for Men and Women, I will establish first an online presence, (at least part of that will be a blog here at Blog-City)  and then an in-person peer counseling group. We’ll see where it goes from there.

Otherwise, about six weeks ago, I launched a blog on cooking, the Elementary Chef, and just yesterday was asked to contribute material to Dean’s World, which is much more widely-read than the DLJ ever was. On Dean’s World I’ll be chronicling my efforts to get my abused men’s program up and running, as well as other things that present themselves.

Happy trails!

Renew! Redocorate! Rework!

08-16-06 9:12 A GMT-07

I've got a couple of book projects that need finishing, one of which is a resource manual for DAHM.  As you know, things are changing rapidly, as evidenced by these stories:

Wife charged with murder

Wife of former Seahawk Chad Eaton arrested

I'm also going to be doing some re-working of the blog, as Blog City has upgraded to a new version.

I have to say something here…

08-11-06 11:59 P GMT-07

There is yet another hunger strike by a disenfranchised father going on. I have been asked to support this action, and have ignored all requests.

That’s because this particular strategy has been proven wrong, not only by many good Irishmen in 1981 who might now be more concerned with the antics of their grandchildren had they lived. Also by a disenfranchised father I knew for some time.

His name was Len Miskulin. You will not remember him, since his work and his quest was to no avail. All that happened with Len was that he lost his kids, and lost his health.

He hung on for some 53 days, if memory serves. He had some publicity for a time, since he was the first; at least in the UK. He came out of it so damaged he told me if he’d known how bad it was he’d try something else.

It’s been about five years, and I’ve lost track, but if I could find him and drag Len here to the US, I’m sure he’d tell anyone trying this radical stunt to STOP!!!

Today there are far more effective ways to influence public opinion. On a personal level, the reality is that this kind of stunt only causes harm. You might get a couple of media mentions, but the truth is nobody today wants to hear about divorced men acting so irresponsibly they can’t even consider their own health.

That’s the way it plays.

Why on Earth would any court want to allow a man with so little concern for life to be the custodian of his children?

How does this make any sense???

It really doesn’t.

I know I got a lot of extremely angry and barely coherent e-mails from a guy. I remember asking a perfectly civil question, and he came back with nonsense. I was supposed to buy his full package without question.

Gentlemen, there are so many fucking loose cannons in this movement I despair of ever being able to make positive gain.

Now there are claimed anti-feminists supporting insanity, I have no idea what to think.

The mothers and wives of the 1981 Irish protestors had no benefits. Nowt but the body comin out after death.

Dave Winer is Right About Sexism

08-11-06 2:43 A GMT-07

Like a lot of other things, he's right about this, too.

Maybe I assign too much wonderfulness to this guy, but he was my blogfather in actuality. One day in early 2003, a media newsletter I got had a reference to Scripting News. Being a non-programmer myself, i wondered why it was this kind of deep geek lore merited a place among media references.

So I went, and read, and drank that particular Kool-aid. I've been a blogger ever since.

Entirely separate from anything Dave has ever done, I used my blog to work for men's rights, father's rights, and the most important : unserved victims of domestic violence. These were things I'd already been working on. I just used the blog to go further.

Even though we've exchanged a few e-mails over time, he still isn't quite sure who I am. That's OK, I really can't expect somebody who likely gets hundreds of real e-mails every day to focus on one quirky lady.

Yesterday he said this:

Men know what we have to do, we've had it drilled into us for at least a generation. But there's a long to-do-list for women, and because men have been forced into silence on this subject, that list hasn't had a chance to develop. Liz, it's time to bend over backwards to create safety for men to speak on this subject. Many of your colleagues are already doing this. There are still a few standouts, and you are one of them. No more gender-bashing, lecturing and name-calling, and no more tolerance for that. I will consider what you have said. Now it would be great if you would do the same.

The man understands the ideals of equality, and expects women to do the same. He is far more diplomatic and decent than I would be in the same situation.

As a woman of education and influence, I feel diminished and insulted by events such as BlogHer, because that is precisely what they are designed to do. They have been created in order to congregate angry women who feel the rules of society don't apply to them, add fuel to their discomfiture, and eventually verify their paranoid fears of an oppressive patriarchy.

They are certainly divisive. Feminism has always been about division, and disdain for those who will not believe. I wish those otherwise-intelligent, and decent women who have bought that mess of pottage that feminism really is would recognize that it's time to stop hating, time to stop blaming, and most important : time to stop setting women up as any kind of special class of anything!

...and let the rest of us live our lives with our men in peace.

There's a quite easy test to apply: if you think something said about a man is funny, try replacing a woman in there. If you think it's hateful when applied to a woman -- bingo! It's sexist.

I'm old enough to know that there are far more bad, hateful things being said about men today then there ever were said about women in the last forty years.

Nobody has any right to diss an entire class of people. Nor to make any presumptions about them.

I thank God that Dave Winer had the cojones to bring it up.

Storyblogging Carnival Needs Help

08-11-06 1:42 A GMT-07

Doc Rampage reports that only one entry was sent this time. That's not nearly enough! c'mon, kids, put on your writing boots and compose!

Remember, a short story can be as little as 500 words. That's called flash fiction. Everything does NOT hafta be a 30,000 word Heinlein piece.

Send here;

Dave Gudeman
http://docrampage.blogspot.com/

 

Category: Writing

Call to Action – does the Tech Community know what it is supporting?

posted 06-03-05

The National Domestic Violence hotline is asking for millions of dollars in both donations from a number of tech companies and federal funding through HR 696. They are asking for a complex and highly technical system in order to, as the press release below claims, “to serve more people.”  Note that nowhere in the release is there any mention of the fact that the NDVH only serves women, preferably those without male children over the age of 12.

In other words, they are not looking to serve more people, but to spend more money continuing to serve only those they deem “deserving.” Services are still restricted, and male victims cannot get help from this agency. These same victims are paying this agency’s bills through their tax dollars, and in many cases, the very company they work for may be supporting and propagating their male employee’s inability to access aid.

If you work for or use products made by these companies, please let them know that the dollars given to NDVH go to a feminist propaganda machine that actively obstructs objective research, and does little more than enable divorce, and gender division in the community.

NDVH has never effectively served the needs of domestic violence victims, and throwing money at them will not encourage them to change!

Companies interested in serving their communites as a whole without promoting gender bias should support DAHM.

Here is the full text of the release:

Domestic Violence Hotline Calls for Support
http://www.esri.com/news/releases/05_2qtr/domestic-violence.html
Funds Needed to Implement Map Locator and Telecommunications System
Redlands, California—ESRI, the world's leading developer of geographic information system (GIS) software, is teaming up with other corporate sponsors to design and implement a GIS to provide a faster, more reliable response to victims of domestic violence. Advocates at the National Domestic Violence Hotline (NDVH) receive more than 500 incoming phone calls a day from victims and their families, and the hotline needs donations to ensure they can answer each and every call and quickly provide connections to help.

"When you feel like you are alone or do not have a safe place to be when you are calling from a pay phone at the supermarket, you can imagine how devastating it is to not get an answer," says Sheryl Cates, executive director of the NDVH, based in Austin, Texas, and of the Texas Council on Family Violence. The hotline answers 16,000 calls a month, a volume its basic equipment can barely manage. Last year, more than 30,000 calls went unanswered when callers were either put on hold too long or got a busy signal.

According to Cates, the NDVH needs $900,000 in donations to help answer every call and update antiquated telecommunications, computer, and database systems. The funds complement pledged contributions from corporate sponsors that include ESRI, Tele Atlas, IBM, Microsoft, and others. The latter three are members of the ESRI Corporate Alliance group. All are cooperating in a public/private sector Connections Campaign Corporate Partner Consortium that teams telecommunications and technology companies with the federal government to generate a plan for solving the hotline's technical problems.

The consortium is the result of a bill sponsored in 2004 by U.S. Senator Joseph R. Biden (D-DE), who is also an original sponsor of the 1994 Violence Against Women Act that led to creation of the NDVH. Consortium members have donated services, hardware, and software to support the plan.

ESRI ArcGIS software will provide the platform to support the variety of geographic datasets used to connect callers with assistance providers. ArcView coupled with ArcGIS Spatial Analyst will also be used to determine trends and/or patterns from historical calls. Such analysis will help the NDVH address agencywide needs as they grow and change over time. A Web-enabled portion will run on either ArcIMS or through ESRI ArcWeb Services. Along with the $500,000 in software, services, and support that ESRI is providing, Tele Atlas (http://www.teleatlas.com) is contributing digital map products. The overall application is slated for completion in October 2005.

Lindsay Hernstrom, ESRI technical marketing analyst and member of the technical team for the NDVH call center application, explained that they are designing an integrated on-screen system that automatically identifies the general geographic area of the incoming phone number, allows search and selection of appropriate services from the database of providers and shelters, and can map the street locations of the selections. The system will maintain caller anonymity.

"The call is not geocoded to the street but to a general geographic level because it is designed to pick up only the area code and three-number prefix," says Hernstrom, adding, "The advocate on the phone needs to be able to drive the application and say, for example, find me a shelter within five miles of the caller that accepts children and has Spanish speakers."

"Since they are often providing a life-saving service, it is important for them to quickly find the most accessible help for the caller. We are proud that our technical expertise and software will help make that possible," says ESRI President Jack Dangermond.

"We know this is going to make a huge difference in the way that we work. Our goal is to make sure that we can help more people," says Cates, adding, "The hotline is depending on donations to implement the final stages of the plan."

To donate or for more information on the NDVH and the Connections Campaign, visit the NDVH Web page at http://www.ndvh.org or call 512-794-1133. For assistance with domestic violence issues, the hotline's 24-hour number is 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) or 1-800-787-3224 (TTY for the Deaf).

# # #

Press Information:
Susan M. Harp, ESRI
Tel.: 909-793-2853, extension 1-2860
E-mail (press only):
press@esri.com
General Information: info@esri.com