Sunday, August 24, 2014

O CANADA-No Kids Please- ONE BILLION RISNG- 47% of girls and women in developed countries- civilized countries are going child free-aged 15 to 44/seen the incredible hard life of their mothers and grandmothers.... opting out. ONE BILLION RISING-no more abuses or excuses/Global Women in Military/Aug-Sept-updated september 2015 kim cattrall

It's my life and i'll do what I want...





I Don't Want Kids, But I'm Not Broken

Posted: Updated:




http://www.huffingtonpost.com/anjali-sareen/childfree_b_1758277.html

 

 

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www.nytimes.com/2008/06/29/magazine/29Birth-t.html?pagewanted=all - Similar
29 Jun 2008 ... No one has yet figured out why some countries are more predisposed to
childlessness than others. ... The broad answer to the “Where are all the
European babies? ... This is a crucial difference between the north — including
France and ... “Europeans say to me, How does the U.S. do it in this day and age
?
www.nytimes.com/.../zoos-divide-over-contraception-and-euthanasia-for-animals.html?... - Similar

2 Aug 2012 ... It is then that zoo officials euthanize offspring that do not figure in breeding plans.
... He acknowledged that American zoos once focused more on the ... prevalent
in North America but that it is starting to expand in Europe.



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O CANADA-No Kids Please- ONE BILLION RISNG- 47% of girls and women in developed countries- civilized countries are going child free-aged 15 to 44/ONE BILLION RISING- Women in the military around the world/Celebrating One Billion Rising- no more abuses-excuses- WOMEN TIRED OF THIS SHEEEET GLOBALLY- poverty, war and not being equal- August 25 2014- ONE BILLION RISING
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00000 École Polytechnique massacre- December 6 1989



 canadian please with lyrics


Screen shot 2013 08 22 at 9.46.19 AM Will motherhood deniers regret ...











O CANADA-  MORE WOMEN REFUSE CHILDREN- RATHER HAVE SINGLE LIFESTYLES-  Indeed, about 47 per cent of women 15 to 44 do not have children- in developed civilized nations- year 2014-  DECREASING POPULATION TREMENDOUSLY/   One Billion Rising- breaking the chains- women in our military globally and women rising around the world-  CANADA LAW - women equal men-  NOT United Nations or USA... it's time/ Abuses must stop- breaking the chains -God my grandmother would be dancing in her 90 year of her life....- am an old tarnished tattered Human Rights, union Roman Catholic with grandchildren... and love my girlfrieds and my gay friends.... and admire youth 2day making the choices we fought so hard 4.... in Canada we have had equality laws since the 60s - women equal men- abortion is a given since 1988-  and we are vicious paedophile hunters...


Canada's Fludd- Cousin Mary- One Billion Rising





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 one billion rising- lunenburg- nova scotia


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What is the Cause of Low Birth Rates?
What is the Cause of Low Birth Rates?
by Baron Bodissey
http://fjordman.blogspot.com/
The noted blogger Fjordman is filing this report via Gates of Vienna.
For a complete Fjordman blogography, see The Fjordman Files. There is also a multi-index listing here.


What causes low birth rates? I have debated this issue at some length with blogger Conservative Swede. Among the reasons frequently cited are the welfare state, feminism and secularism. However, if you look closely at the statistics from various countries, the picture gets quite complex, and there doesn’t appear to be an automatic correlation between low birth rates and any one of these factors.
The United States has the highest birth rates in the West, but this is largely due to ethnic minorities. If you compare white Americans to white Europeans, the American birth rate is somewhat higher than those of the Scandinavian nanny states, but still lower than replacement level. Scandinavian countries such as Norway and Sweden do have elaborate welfare states, high degrees of feminism and are not very religious, yet have some of the highest birth rates in the Western world (though still below replacement level.) They are certainly much higher than those in Catholic Poland, perhaps the most conservative religious country in Europe. And they are much higher than those of South Korea, which has more traditional sex roles and where Christianity is booming these days.
The gap between the Western world and the Islamic world in birth rates is clearly caused by religious factors, but the differences between industrialized nations are far more difficult to explain. If the cause is not welfarism, feminism or secularism, then what is it?
How strange, then, that just as the mommy industry is booming, we’re in the grips of a baby bust. Canada’s fertility rate has been in a free fall for decades. In recent years, though, it has hovered at an all-time low of roughly 1.5 children per woman (we need 2.1 if we’re going to replace ourselves). Social analysts pin it on some jumble of female education and fiscal autonomy, secularization, birth control, Sex and the City, a heightened desire for personal freedom, and increasing uncertainty about bringing a child into a world plagued by terrorism, global warming and Lindsay Lohan. In a hyper-individualistic, ultra-commodified culture like ours, motherhood, for better and worse, is less a fact of life than just another lifestyle choice.
All over the developed world, the same pattern is apparent. Russia, Britain, Ireland, Australia, Spain, Italy and dozens of other countries are contending with fertility rates well below replacement levels. Forty per cent of female university graduates in Germany are childless. In Japan, where the birth rate has sunk to a record low of 1.26, family planning groups are blaming the Internet, charging that fertile men and women are spending too much time online, and not enough having sex.
Many people nowadays find it hard to see why anyone would have children for the sake of old-age security. Surely, they think, people have children just because they like it. Still, they often hear people say they would like to have more children, but they cannot afford it. Moreover, people in less developed countries seem to afford large families, even though their real incomes barely reach subsistence levels.
What can account for these seemingly conflicting observations? The fact that in the absence of social security, the extended family is an informal social insurance mechanism that renders childbearing economically beneficial. But in countries with large social security systems, people no longer have an old-age security motive for fertility, precisely because social security has made fertility economically unwise.
Of course, social security is not the only reason for declining fertility rates. For one thing, the welfare state undermines the family in many other ways too, such as compulsory public education that seeks to replace family loyalty with allegiance to the state. Moreover, the old-age security motive for fertility should become weaker when other ways of providing for old age become available…
One can also look at differences among the developed Western countries. Among these countries, there are practically no differences in infant mortality rates, female labor force participation rates, and other standard explanations of the fertility decline. Yet total fertility rates differ widely — and exactly in the way predicted by the size of social security systems. The United States has a fertility rate of 2.09, whereas the European Union has an average of 1.47.
Also within Europe, where social security benefits are dangerously generous, there are differences among countries. Some of the most generous schemes are found in Germany, France, and the Mediterranean countries — as are the lowest fertility rates in the region. On the surface, it is surprising to find this in countries that used to be family-oriented and fervently Catholic. However, economic incentives shape behavior, and behavior shapes culture…
The best solution is also the simplest: get the state out of the way.
Infertility is killing off the secular world, a number of writers have observed, including Phillip Longman, whose 1994 book The Empty Cradle I reviewed last year. In the former Soviet empire, where atheism reigned as state policy for generations, the United Nations forecasts extreme declines in population by 2050, ranging from 22% for the Russian Federation to nearly 50% for the Ukraine. Secular western Europe will lose 4% to 12% of its population, while the population of the churchgoing United States continues to grow. Is secularism at fault? The numbers do not suggest otherwise.
Humankind cannot abide the terror of mortality without the promise of immortality, I have argue in the past. In the absence of religion human society sinks into depressive torpor. Secular society therefore is an oxymoron, for the death of religion leads quickly enough to the death of society itself.
Why Europe chooses extinction
- – – – – – – – – -
Demographics is destiny. Never in recorded history have prosperous and peaceful nations chosen to disappear from the face of the earth. Yet that is what the Europeans have chosen to do. Back in 1348 Europe suffered the Black Death, a combination of bubonic plague and likely a form of mad cow disease, observes American Enterprise Institute scholar Ben Wattenberg. “The plague reduced the estimated European population by about a third. In the next 50 years, Europe’s population will relive — in slow motion — that plague demography, losing about a fifth of its population by 2050 and more as the decades roll on.”
[S]ecularism promotes a more short term and hedonistic attitude towards life. Since secular people have little faith in God or an after life, the tendency is for them to adopt the attitude of “Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die”. Of course, not all secular people are like that. But in general, secularism promotes such attitudes.
Their time horizon is therefore their own lifetime. Religious people on the other hand are more long term. Their eyes are on eternity. If you go to Europe, you will come across many Cathedrals that took centuries to build. For example, Cologne Cathedral took more than 300 years to complete.
Why did the Medieval Christians start a project that none of them would live to see its completion? The answer is that they look to the hereafter. Their desire was to please God and go to heaven. They say that faith can move mountains. Here a mountain of stone was literally moved to build the great Cathedrals of Europe.
But what of the secular people in now post-Christian Europe? What are the economic consequences of people whose time frame is simply the rest of their lives?
For a start, they (in general) want to enjoy their lives to the hilt. For some, this could mean early retirement with loss of still productive workers to the economy. For others, it could mean fewer or no children for children means responsibility and a tax on their resources which could be used to indulge themselves. Statistics from America have shown that regular church goers tend to have more children than those that seldom attend church.

COMMENT:
Unfortunately we live in the ME generation and having kids in the western world is considered a burden. Feminism has won the battle, women actually believe they can be men.
I am surprised by Scandinavian countries and Europe having a low birth rate. Maybe life there is not so great after all

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business.time.com/.../why-the-falling-u-s-birth-rates-are-so-troubling/ - Cached - Similar4 Oct 2012 ... Only women ages 35 to 39 and 40 to 44 are more likely to have ... that they
couldn't afford to have as many kids in an unstable economy, ... countries need to
have a birth rate of about two children per woman, ... I don't see why lower birth
rates are bad... we can't even provide ... A splendid development.

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 ... Childfree-Couples-30-Plus/ http://photos2.meetupstatic.com/photos

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Childfree - Cached - SimilarChildfree is defined as people who are fertile and intend to not have children, ...
ones has made childlessness an option for some people in developed countries.
... that it is wrong to intentionally have a child when there are so many children ....
"only babies count"—and that this is an outdated idea that is in need of revision.

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Meet the women who won't have babies ... as there are so many children in need of a loving family. ... "When I tell people why I don't want children, ...


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SHANIA TWAIN...



Canada's Shania Twain wrote Black Eyes, Blue Tears back in the 90s.... and put it 2 music and played it around the world.... Shania kicked country music's ass and the black hats... and woke the world up 2 girls count... girls are equal and ... girls can do anything they dream on.... Shania Twain was adopted when she was 2 by Objiway Gerry Twain (she adored her Grandpa Twain) who adored his wife, Sharon. Shania grew up in the 'Reserves, Bands' of First Peoples of Canada - 10,000 and knew exactly what it was like 2 live in poverty, despair and the injustice of the horrible treatment of Canada's First Peoples as all Governments of Canada and all political stripes- throwaway trash..... Shania Twain is a hero to so many women globally.... and has over one billion fans.... shania walked the talk and kept her soul, her honour and the respect of herself and her fans....


Shania started food banks at all her shows, including kids from each and every town, supported and played 4 troops be4 it became noticed, and said - feed your own kids first and those of your communities, villages and cities-  4God's sake look after ur kids..... Shania is one of China's favourite artists-  and one of the world's   - Shania made women matter and girls believe in empowerment of education and freedom... and equality....  Shania kept her honour, her dignity and her courage and the deep devotion of her billion fans... and Shania never sold us out not once.... Shania walked the floor 2 support Toby Keith and the troops when u could NOT find country music 2 do so.... Shania soundly reported 2 media that she admired and respect Michael Jackson's brilliance and found him 2 be a good and gentle man... when u COULD NOT find a star of any colour 2 step up ..... that's Canadian folks....   Canadians are know as the most loyal fans and friends on the planet... and have proven it on the battlefield so often that it's a given by all nations.... Canadian troops are the most respected and trusted out there... and that's not bad.

  ONE BILLION RISING- stop the abuses- stop the excuses- IT'S NOT JUST ABORIGINAL WOMEN BEING ABUSED TORTURED AND MURDERED IN CANADA.... we must fix this.... don't discriminate one woman's scars over another.... AND MISSING MURDERED PROSTITUTES DIE MISSING... AND WAY 2 OFTEN 2 F**KING HARD..... and that's the real inquiry!!!!!! imho





BLACK EYS, BLUE TEARS... SHANIA TWAIN






"Black Eyes, Blue Tears"


Black eyes, I don't need 'em
 Blue tears, gimme freedom
 Positively never goin' back
 I won't live where things are so out of whack
 No more rollin' with the punches
 No more usin' or abusin'

 I'd rather die standing
 Than live on my knees
 Begging please-no more

 Black eyes-I don't need 'em
 Blue tears-gimme freedom
 Black eyes-all behind me
 Blue tears'll never find me now

 Definitley found my self esteem
 Finally-I'm forever free to dream
 No more cryin' in the corner
 No excuses-no more bruises

 I'd rather die standing
 Than live on my knees
 Begging please-no more

 Black eyes-I don't need 'em
 Blue tears-gimme freedom
 Black eyes-all behind me
 Blue tears'll never find me now

 I'd rather die standing
 Than live on my knees, begging please...

 Black eyes-I don't need 'em
 Blue tears-gimme freedom
 Black eyes-all behind me
 Blue tears'll never find me now

 It's all behind me, they'll never find me now

 Find your self-esteem and be forever free to dream 

 
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"Walk A Mile In My Shoes"
(As recorded by Joe South)
If I could be you and you could be me for just one hour
If we could find a way to get inside each other's mind
If you could see me through your eyes instead of your ego
I believe you'd be surprised to see that you'd been blind.
Walk a mile in my shoes, walk a mile in my shoes
And before you abuse, criticize and accuse
Walk a mile in my shoes.
Now your whole world you see around you is just a reflection
And the law of common says you reap just what you sow
So unless you've lived a life of total perfection
You'd better be careful of every stone that you throw.
Walk a mile in my shoes, walk a mile in my shoes
And before you abuse, criticize and accuse
Walk a mile in my shoes.
And yet we spend the day throwing stones at one another
'Cause I don't think or wear my hair the same way you do
Well I may be common people but I'm your brother
And when you strike out and try to hurt me its a-hurtin' you.
Walk a mile in my shoes, walk a mile in my shoes
And before you abuse, criticize and accuse
Walk a mile in my shoes.
There are people on reservations and out in the ghettos
And brother there but for the grace of God go you and I
If I only had the wings of a little angel
Don't you know I'd fly to the top of the mountain, and then I'd cry.
Walk a mile in my shoes, walk a mile in my shoes
And before you abuse, criticize and accuse
Walk a mile in my shoes.

JOE SOUTH- " WALK A MILE IN MY SHOES "








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Today’s low-income countries still have
the world’s highest birth rates (see Map
3.1), although women tend to have fewer
children than before. The reasons for
lowerfertility are varied, but most are
related to developing countries’ eco-
nomic growth
and development (see Fig.
3.3; see also Chapters 4, 7, 8). 

Parents choose to have smaller families when
health conditions improve because they
no longer have to fear that many of their
babies might die, and when they do not
have to rely on their children to work on
the family farm or business or to take care
of them in their old age. In addition,
more parents are sending their daughters
to school, which is important because
women with basic education tend to pro-
duce healthier children and smaller fami-
lies.

 More women now have
opportunities to work outside the home,
so they are starting their families later and
having fewer children. On top of all that,
access to modern contraceptives for fam-
ily planning is improving, making it eas-
ier for parents to control the number and
spacing of their children.


Lower fertility rate does not immediately
lead to lower birth rate and lower popula-
tion growth rate if a country has a larger
proportion of men and women in their
r
eproductive years than before. Population
growth caused by more women giving
birth even though each has the same
number of or fewer children is called
population momentum.” Population
momentum is particularly significant in
developing countries that had the highest
fertility rates 20 to 30 years ago.


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WOMEN IN DEVELOPED COUNTRYS HAVE CUT HAVING CHILDREN BY 47- 60%-


Westin offers new package for solo female guests


STEPHANIE ROSENBLOOM THE NEW YORK TIMES
Published August 15, 2014 - 9:54pm
Several recent trend reports have identified women without children as a new, lucrative nontraditional market for travel opportunities. (HEIDI YOUNGER / The New York Times)

Melissa Braverman, the marketing manager for the Westin New York Grand Central hotel, wanted to create a novel vacation package, a departure from the engagement and babymoon promotions that she helped dream up throughout her career, including a getaway for would-be parents known as the “procreation vacation.”

“I’m kind of in a place in my life where I’m like, ‘What’s the opposite of a procreation vacation?’” said Braverman, who has yet to meet someone with whom she would take such a trip. “Where are the travel experiences for the rest of us?”

As a hotel marketer, her search for an answer was a matter of business. But it was also personal.

“As a woman who is 40 and single and who doesn’t have children, it was a resonant topic to me,” she said.

“There’s a different journey that each of us are on. I think those of us who aren’t following the quote-unquote traditional trajectory are made to feel ‘other’ despite the fact that we represent half the women of childbearing age in this country.”

Indeed, about 47 per cent of women 15 to 44 do not have children, according to census figures. And with the birth rate in the United States at record lows, some travel marketers see an opportunity. Several recent trend reports, including one by the market research firm Euromonitor International and another by DeVries Global, a public relations agency, have identified women without children as a new, lucrative market.

Braverman’s belief that “the greatest ideas come from your own personal experience” has resulted in a four-day getaway package at Westin Grand Central: Womanhood Redefined.

Seemingly the first promotion from a major U.S. hotel brand directed at women without children, it includes (from $234 a night) a consultation about healthful eating with the hotel’s executive chef, a 30-minute meeting with the hotel’s running

expert (and workout clothes and shoes that they may borrow free of charge), a $25 food and drink credit, a 10 per cent discount on classes at a nearby yoga studio, a Westin White Tea candle and a new book, Otherhood: Modern Women Finding a New Kind of Happiness, by Melanie Notkin.

“So much of the travel industry is geared to families and to couples,” said Bella DePaulo, the author of Singled Out and a project scientist in psychology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. “I love the idea that people in the industry are thinking about the idea that we’re not all families and couples.”

But there’s the matter of how the industry will classify travelers. Take the DeVries Global report that refers to women of childbearing age who are not mothers as “The Otherhood,” a play on the title of the memoir by Notkin, who collaborated on the report.

On the eve of Mother’s Day, Notkin wrote in The Huffington Post that the reference to “other” in her book is not meant to be alienating: “While the title of my book, 'Otherhood,' implies childless women are other to mother, the reader learns the truth: If we measure our lives against what the Others believe to be our life’s true meaning ... we will never find happiness because we will not be living our true, authentic lives.”

At the end of “Otherhood,” she concludes: “Once we no longer define ourselves as the Other, as outside of the social norm, we are no longer concerned with how others define us.”

No matter the intention, “other” is a loaded word. Using it to describe women without children might not sit well with some of them.

“Irony is dangerous because some people get it and some people don’t,” said Robin Lakoff, a professor of linguistics emerita at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of the 1975 tome on the relationship between language and gender, Language and Woman’s Place. “Some people have irony deficiency anemia.”

The notion of the “other” has been parsed through the ages by philosophers, sociologists and anthropologists. It’s a label that has been affixed to people of less powerful races, religions, classes, sexual orientations and nationalities.

“Social scientists, of course, have talked a lot about othering,” Lakoff said before ticking off examples such as “The Second Sex” by Simone de Beauvoir (1949) and Edward W. Said’s “Orientalism” (1978). “It’s about somebody who is not us. We are the good, the right, the fully human, the ones who have the right to good treatment.”

“To say someone is an other,” she continued, “is to put them in the category of people who can’t make their own meaning.”

The words marketers use to address or describe people, said DePaulo, ought to be expansive.

“I think single people and people without kids should be thought about, and think about themselves, in terms of what they are, and not in terms of what they are not,” she said. “Whenever you start to say, 'You’re not a mother,' it puts you on the defensive. Why aren’t you? Is there something wrong with you?”

“It has a parallel to the quandary about how to talk about singles or even how to define singles,” she added. “I really don’t like the word 'unmarried’ because it makes marriage the standard and then singles are evaluated against it.”

Braverman anticipated that the term “otherhood” could conjure meanings that are different from what Notkin intended, which is why Braverman and her colleagues named the package Womanhood Redefined instead.

“I think what we really wanted to be clear about is that this

embraces all women where they are,” she said, referring to outmoded timelines and expectations for marriage and children. “It’s not ‘other’ anymore,” she went on. “That’s why we chose to go with something that’s more encompassing. That’s why we chose ‘womanhood.’”

To ensure that prospective guests get the gist of the package, the hotel created a landing page on its website.

“According to U.S. census figures, nearly half of all women of childbearing age are not mothers,” it says. “This means that many women today are creating a new definition of happiness. At The Westin New York Grand Central, we are deeply rooted in offering an oasis of comfort and well-being, and invite you to celebrate your own personal journey with a rejuvenating getaway through our new Womanhood Redefined Package.”

The website goes on to describe the hotel’s partnership with “best-selling author Melanie Notkin - an expert on the growing group of women who don’t have children - to offer an invigorating experience for guests traveling with friends or recharging on their own.”

Westin also has a social media campaign on Twitter and Facebook encouraging women to answer the question “How are you redefining your journey?” using the hashtag #RedefiningMoments.

The definition of an “Otherhood” woman in the book is one who, like the author, wants to be in love and married with children. She is single “long past the time when she thought she’d be settled down,” as opposed to a woman who actively chooses not to have children - or a husband or wife, for that matter. That emphasis has drawn criticism from readers in online forums, such as GoodReads.com.

But Braverman said the book spoke to her and to other women she knows.

“A little bell went off inside of me,” she said. She took the book to Maureen O’Brien, the director of sales and marketing for Westin New York Grand Central. O’Brien has children but she, too, was interested in “Otherhood” because, as she put it, everybody knows “somebody that we love or care about that this book speaks to.” And a package that included the book could jibe with the hotel brand.

“Westin really attracts female travelers,” she said, mainly because the chain promotes wellness with its Heavenly brand beds, 24-hour fitness centers, workout clothes available for borrowing and emphasis on healthy meal options.

“We think girls’ weekends are great,” she said, but “a lot of them are overworked moms looking for a break.” In designing a package for women without children, she said the guiding question was, “How do we offer something that they don’t currently have to make them feel special?”

Efforts to reach out to solo travelers are often welcomed. Time will tell if a vacation inspired by “Otherhood” is, too.

O’Brien’s hope is that many women without children who, as Notkin’s research shows, are passionate about travel will opt to spend a few days in New York “exploring their own otherhood” and coming to the realization that, “Hey, I’m not the only one.”



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The women who choose not to be mothers

More women in the developed world are choosing not to have children. So why do friends, family, colleagues and even strangers think it's OK to question their decision?
We've come a long way, baby. Until a few decades ago, it was widely assumed that a woman would marry and, soon after, the stork would arrive with a special delivery.
Today, there are many more choices - or more openness. To have a baby out of wedlock. To have a baby without a father. To have a baby and return to work. To have a baby and give up work. To have fertility treatment, and then a baby (or not).
Find out more
·         Woman's Hour on Radio 4 had a child-free by choice special on Wednesday 28 July
·         And a phone-in on Thursday 29 July
·         Catch up with the iPlayer
But what about not becoming a mother at all? Studies in the UK, Europe and the United States show this is now the choice of significant numbers of women.
Once this was considered insane or unnatural. Even today, it is viewed with suspicion - women with no desire to procreate say they sometimes face awkward questions and disapproval.
"A woman at work was recently quite shocked by my saying I didn't want children. She said: 'You're a woman, you were born with a womb, God gave a womb so we could procreate'," Jenny Woolfson, aged 25, told BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour.
"My friends and I have occasionally likened coming out as child-free to coming out as a gay person 40 or 50 years ago. There's the same sense of shock - perhaps that's too strong a word. But it's a lifestyle people don't expect and it may challenge their world view," says 31-year-old Rhona Sweeting.
Sociologist Dr Catherine Hakim, of the London School of Economics, has studied voluntary childlessness in the UK and Europe for many years. She says this is a new social phenomenon, with women now open and positive about such a lifestyle choice.
"An early study in Canada years ago found roughly half of all the women who were childless in their 40s actually chose to be that way from a very early age.
"But very many of them didn't say so because of the social pressure they would get if they mentioned a preference for staying childless.
Maybe not baby
·         One in five UK women will not have children, many by choice
·         Among female graduates, this rises to one in three according to some studies
·         US Census Bureau says 36% of American women have no children
"The contraceptive revolution has completely changed perspectives. Whereas before having children just inevitably happened to all people who got married or had sex, now it's something you have to make a choice about."
And the disapproval some experience? "It's a question of generations and age. There was a stigma in the past."
But suspicion of childless women hasn't entirely disappeared.
Julia Wallace, at 40 a step-mother to three children who live elsewhere, says she is questioned about why she has no baby of her own.
"They say, 'you don't know what you're missing, you won't know until you've had a child that that's what you wanted to do'. That's a hypothetical question - if you've got no motivation to have a child in the first place, why would you do it? I wouldn't chose to become a nurse on the chance I might love the career once I get there."
Forgotten something? Actually, no
Natalie Haynes, 35, has been with her partner for four years and has never dreamed of the pitter-patter of little feet. "My parents are very well trained [not to ask]. I worked hard at school and at college, then I ran away and became a comedian - that worked out, so they've already won the lottery. I think my mum might like grandchildren, but I have a brother and it's his problem."
But not everyone is as breezy about their decision as Natalie.
Beth Follini counsels women agonising over whether to reproduce. It's a decision she herself has struggled with. Until her early 30s, she hadn't wanted children and told her partner so. "Then I just started to feel this urge. I spent a year or two battling it out and in the end I decided I wanted a child. But I know that if I hadn't, I would have a very different but equally fulfilled life."
Many of her clients do not want children but feel pressurised. "Often this pressure comes from friends who have had children - 'you don't know what you're missing' or 'you'd make a great mum'. Or joking that you hate children. Sometimes it's from parents hoping for a grandchild."
But it can be the most passing of acquaintances who pass comment.
"Many people assume if you a single and child-free that you haven't met the right man yet. But if you are in a relationship, they ask 'when are you taking the next step?' A woman's fertility status is still very much considered public property. There are still assumptions about women's role in society, about families and about family size."
To work or not? Mothers also find everyone has an opinion on their choices
Lisa Davies, 38, says the assumption is often that she cannot have a baby. "What I'm unhappy about is people looking at me and speaking to me - very often unashamedly - as if there is something wrong with me. As with other choices that you make, the key is it's not for everyone."
In the United States, New Yorker Melanie Notkin, founder of the Savvy Auntie website, wants a national day to celebrate child-free women who are loving aunts or godmothers.
"It would be a chance for these women to feel whole, for everything that they are, instead of having to focus on all the things they're not - ie mothers."
She says modern families need extra hands. "Mothers and fathers are working overtime. So an aunt who is able to give quality time to the family, especially to the children, is very welcome."
Research by Paola Buonadonna and Vibeke Venema, compiled by Megan Lane










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ONE BILLION RISING


Abused women share stories of horror, courage

Journalist, author Armstrong tells ‘scarring’ tales of worldwide oppression



By LOIS LEGGE Features Writer

S ALLY

ARMSTRONG has heard horrific stories of abuse from women around the world.

They’ve been raped and burned and beaten.

Had their genitals mutilated.

And been denied an education.

Often, at the hands of their neighbours and families.

Or with the approval of their communities and countries.

“They’re very scarring stories," says the veteran journalist, auth­or and Order of Canada recipient, who’ll be speaking in Halifax, April 4.

But for the past 25 years she’s kept going back — to Asia and Africa and places like Sarajevo —for more telling stories that people sometimes didn’t want to hear.

“I mean I can leave, I can walk out, fly out, leave a war-torn country and come back to this glorious place where we live," she says during a recent tel­ephone interview.

“But their stories, they play on the back of my eyelids. I think about those women and the girls and wonder how they’re getting along. . . . I tend to go back to these places and I catch up with them again and find out what’s happening.

“I feel very, very privileged that these women share their stories with me and invariably in one country after another they say, ‘Ask your women to be our voice, we don’t have a voice.’ They want the story out."

But for a long time, others didn’t want the stories out. And Armstrong, who lives mostly in Toronto when she isn’t working, had to fight to get them in magazines or newspapers.

That’s changed dramatically over the past few years, she says.

And, as her latest book explores, so have the outlooks and the actions of oppressed women across the globe.

Ascent of Women, Our turn, Our way — A Remarkable Story of Worldwide Change, describes experiences of grotesque horror: soldiers gang-raping civilians; fathers raping virgin daughters because they think it will cure AIDS.

But courage too, as women question, speak out against and openly defy centuries-old, organ­ized oppression, often under the guise of tradition or religion.

The emancipation of women has reached a “tipping point," she says. They’re actively organ­izing in their own countries, fighting everything from sanc­tioned rape to genital mutilation to a system bent on keeping them silent.

And, they’re speaking to like­minded women and girls all over the world.

“There’s an organization called Women Living Under Muslim Law which is smart, it is fast to respond, it has tremendous re­search and it has branches all around the world," Armstrong says. “And in Africa, with the HIV pandemic, African women started to realize (the urgency of action), because they can’t say no to sex. One of them said to me, ‘We’ll all be dead if we don’t do something about this" and so they organized.

“Then, at the same time, the Internet jumped into action, the social networks, and that con­nected the women in Asia, Africa and the West. . . . And to me, the worst thing that ever happened to misogynists and extremists and fundamentalists was the day that women in Asia, Africa and the Americas got together be­cause now they’re talking to each other."

And people are finally listen­ing.

As recent examples, she points to mass media coverage of gang rapes in India and the Taliban’s shooting of a young Pakistani woman for saying girls should be allowed to go to school.

“For a very, very long time the world has seen oppression of women and abuse and violence as kind of a woman’s lot in life, not much you can do about that. I’ve always felt there’s a great deal you can do about that, and now, to my delight, something is happening that is much more rapid than I ever imagined.

“I wouldn’t want anyone to think for one second that this book is saying the trouble is over. We have a long way to go. There is ghastly trouble which I de­scribe in the book in chapter after chapter and women are in danger for speaking up, but the difference today is they are speaking up, and if you can’t talk about it, you can’t change it and they’re talking."

Armstrong will be speaking at 7 p.m., April 4, at the Keshen Goodman Public Library.

(llegge@herald.ca)

‘There is ghastly trouble which I describe in the book in chapter after chapter and women are in danger for speaking up, but the difference today is they are speaking up, and if you can’t talk about it, you can’t change it and they’re talking.’

SALLY ARMSTRONG

Journalist, author




PHOTO

Sally Armstrong has visited countries around the world to tell the horrific ‘stories that people sometimes didn’t want to hear,’ about the way women and girls are abused and mistreated.

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Life & Style
I Just Don’t Want A Child

Deciding not to have a kid is like saying one big no and a million little yeses
By Beth Lapides @bethlapides


Lately, I’m really getting how much energy it takes to not do something. And how much of not doing things I’ve done and sometimes not done. Not eating. Not smoking. Not becoming my mother. Not not becoming my mother. And, most pertinently here, not having kids.

Not having kids is saying one big no. No to the same thing over and over and over. So that you can say yes to everything else.  I picked one big no and a million little yeses. I didn’t want to have to say no all the time. I’m already such a negative person. Cheerful, but negative.

If you don’t believe me, maybe you will believe Greg. Greg is the man I didn’t have children with. Some women meet a man and think This is the father of my children. I met Greg and thought, Now here’s a man I cannot have kids with.

I thought about having kids, of course. But on a gut level, I just didn’t want to. I thought maybe I should anyway. In fact, maybe I should especially because I didn’t want to. Like the way you should exercise especially when you feel lazy. But having kids especially because I didn’t want to? It didn’t seem like bringing another person onto the earth as a contrary action to my character flaws of selfishness and fear seemed wise. Or fair to the kid.

Plus, I just didn’t want to.

(POLL: What Do You Think of the Childfree Life?)

As a grown-up, I’ve met plenty of women who have had careers they loved and also had kids. But I’ve also met plenty who’ve made too many compromises. Plenty of guys who have done the same. I had no dreams of family life. I had a dream of an art life.

Somewhere right around the time I was thinking maybe I was wrong about not having kids, a yoga teacher did an adjustment on me. After the adjustment, the sound of ripping.

“Is that your pants?” he asked, adding insult to injury.

In the following months, I tried to heal the hamstring with every combination of heat and ice I could think of, including whiskey on the rocks. Finally the teacher sent me to see Mimi and Moses Yu. A husband-and-wife team of acupuncturists who ran a low-rent clinic in East L.A. The luck of the draw assigned me to Mimi. She had me pull down my pants and lie on the table. It didn’t not hurt. It didn’t not hurt so much I started to cry.

“You can’t take the pain,” she said. “Jewish girls so spoiled. You better never have baby.” Is that even legal to say?

You don’t notice the absence of pain until there is pain. In the same way, you don’t notice the absence of children until there are children. I like children by the way. It was never that. And they like me. Liking has nothing to do with it.

Because Mimi Yu told me I shouldn’t have a baby, I started thinking about having a baby. I started to want to experience childbirth. Just so I could prove that I could take the pain. I couldn’t really take the pain though.

(MORE: Life Without Kids)

I started thinking maybe there was a way to not have a child but not not have a child. Had no idea what that would be. I’d always said I’d have a daughter if I could have an eighteen-year-old. Ha ha.

And then one day the phone rang.

“Do you ever have interns?” asked a sweet girl on the other end. We never had, but we could. She said she came to our show, The UnCabaret, quite frequently, and really loved it. So she was smart enough to open with flattery. I liked that. So I said come over. We sent her on a Xeroxing run, and she did a good job. I asked if she was hungry. She looked hungry.

“Yes, I’m always hungry,” she said. So I made her some chili. And that was that.

I got to be a mother to an eighteen-year-old. Not a mother mother. Not a stepmother. Not a surrogate mother. Not a foster mother. But what I came to think of as a pseudo mother.

Her name is Jaime. Like J’aime. I love.

I got to be a pseudo mother without tapping into my deep well of negativity. Yes, she could drop out of college for which she was accruing debt to major in a field she was only studying to please her parents who weren’t paying for it. I got to tell her yes she could work for my radio show. I got to tell her yes it was okay to start having sex. And yes to quitting her job so that she could go back to school for pre-med and yes to med school as an older student. And then one day, she was driving away in a new car that her on-again, off-again, big-time screenwriting boyfriend had given her.

I hired her, I encouraged her, I fed her, I gave her clothes. Now I only see her on Facebook. And maybe I will hardly ever get to see her again. But I love her. I love her in that way that isn’t a friend or a lover or anything besides a child. Even though she’s not mine. And maybe for me that was the most important part of not having a child. Learning to love and not want to possess. To put away no and start saying yes.

Excerpted from No Kidding: Women Writers on Bypassing Parenthood edited by Henriette Mantel. Available from Seal Press, a member of the Perseus Books Group. Copyright 2013.

To read the full TIME cover story, “The Childfree Life: When Having It All Means Not Having Children,” subscribe here. Already a subscriber? Click here


comment:
I have a dog... that's close enough.
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nypost.com/.../more-young-women-choosing-dogs-over-motherhood/ - Cached10 Apr 2014 ... Yes women today are just selfish, don't want to lose their shape and form, .... up
and not have kids before people add another statistic to the country. ... Many
male leaders at the companies and the politics spend little time with their kids. ...
women develop to cope with the fact that their lives are unfulfilling.".

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elitedaily.com/women/separate-unequal-countries-worst-gender-inequality-education/ - Cached - Similar18 Dec 2013 ... You Won't Believe How Many Countries Still Won't Allow Women The Right ...
gender inequality in education not only stifles the development of women, ...
children out of school in developing nations, 60 percent are girls. ..... Getting
What You Want Out Of Life Starts With Focusing On What You Don't Want.



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www.forbes.com/.../why-im-not-having-kids-and-you-shouldnt-either/ - Cached - Similar31 Oct 2011 ... If I were to have kids, their quality of life would be less than mine, and I don't want
to ... If you want a sibling for your child, adopt. ... Indeed, birth rates are declining
in many developed countries. Giving women options can go a long way toward
reducing our ..... If you don't want kids, just don't get married.




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IDLE NO MORE CANADA..... IDLE NO MORE CANADIANS.... fix this... fix this now- A F**kING SEX ABUSER ON FIRST NATIONS GIRLS AND WOMEN


Sex offender hired by Metis council to work with abuse victims
STEVE RENNIE THE CANADIAN PRESS
Published June 5, 2014 - 7:36pm


David Chartrand, president of the Manitoba Metis Federation, takes part in a press conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Friday. The Metis National Council enlisted a convicted sex offender in 2011 to work with survivors of residential schools. (CP)

OTTAWA — The Metis National Council enlisted a convicted sex offender in 2011 to work with survivors of residential schools, the church-run institutions where children endured physical, emotional and sexual abuse.

The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the council’s contract with Norman Hansen of the northern Saskatchewan village of Buffalo Narrows, as well as provincial court records showing his prior sexual assault convictions.

Contacted by phone, Hansen, now 70, declined to talk about his work for the council or his sexual assault convictions. He hung up when asked if the council was aware of his criminal record when it offered him a contract.

Court records show Hansen was convicted of two separate sexual assaults against two women in or around Saskatoon. The first assault took place in February or March of 2003, while the second assault occurred on April 2, 2003.

According to media reports from the trial, Hansen sexually assaulted a woman who got drunk at a hotel bar during a job interview with the Metis Nation of Saskatchewan, a group for which he was once a regional director.

In the other incident, reports say Hansen grabbed and forcibly kissed a waitress at a bar.

He was sentenced to three years in prison in June 2004 and prohibited from owning a variety of weapons, including crossbows and guns, for 10 years.

It’s not clear what happened to Hansen after he was convicted. But he resurfaced in December 2011 when he signed a contract with the Metis National Council.

Council vice-president David Chartrand, who signed the contract, said he was not aware of Hansen’s criminal record at the time.

Chartrand said he signed the contract in his capacity as the council’s finance minister, but was not personally involved in giving Hansen the contract and did not know much about the nature of the job.

He would not have signed the contract had he known of Hansen’s past, he added. “If it was something of that nature, I assure you I wouldn’t be signing it.”

Hansen’s job was to help the council commemorate Metis survivors of residential schools, according to a statement of work, which also notes many children lost their language and culture, and suffered physical and emotional abuse.

“The consultant will provide liaison services with Metis survivors and communities to promote the healing, reconciliation and continued commemoration of Metis survivors that attended residential schools,” the document says.

Another one of Hansen’s duties was to provide videography services during a national Metis survivors’ conference held in Saskatoon in March 2012.

The contract paid Hansen $8,000 for work done between December 2011 and March 2013.

According to another document, Hansen’s fees were paid for with funding from a Truth and Reconciliation Commission fund established to commemorate the survivors of residential schools.

An official in the office of Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt, whose department oversees the fund, called the episode “very troubling.”

“Our government has no role in the hiring of contractors linked to this funding,” Valcourt spokeswoman Erica Meekes wrote in an email.

“These allegations are very troubling, and (the department) encourages all aboriginal representative organizations to select contractors within an appropriate process and in support of the rights and interests of Aboriginal Peoples.”

Hansen was one of 34 people who filed a statement of claim in the Court of Queen’s Bench in March 1994 for Metis aboriginal rights and title. One of the lawyers representing him in that case was Clement Chartier, who is now president of the Metis National Council.

Chartier has yet to respond to questions about Hansen’s contract.



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MYSPACE CHANGED AND WIPED OUT THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS OF POSTS ON OUR TROOPS, WOMEN, KIDS AND HUMAN RIGHTS.... 2 my 895 friends of so many years.... there... miss u still



ONE BILLION RISING- breaking the chains


CANADA MILITARY NEWS: Mar29- Celebrating Women Serving Military Globally- One Billion Rising -breaking chains of abuse of girls and women globally




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St. Michael's Choir School, Toronto. Ave Maria Bach-Gounod




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Violence against women won't just disappear – but progress is possible



The Commission on the Status of Women is meeting at a time of heightened awareness of gendered violence worldwide

Jessica Mack guardian.co.uk,



Today, thousands will descend on New York City for the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) at the United Nations. There, governments, international women's groups and a pope-less Holy See will meet and tussle for the holiest grail: gender equality. The theme – for the first time in a decade – is the "elimination and prevention of all forms of violence against women and girls".

Just 45 governments are tasked with ensuring a successful outcome for all: a document encoding agreement on what women deserve – rights, protections, and freedom from violence. Last year's negotiations, centred around rural women's rights, produced no agreed conclusions, just disappointment. That makes this year's stakes quite high, that is, if they actually could be any higher.


Global figures tell us that one in three women will experience some type of violence in her lifetime. It is a powerful soundbite, but whatever picture we have is not the full one.


In the Maldives, a 15-year-old girl faces 100 public lashes for having premarital sex. Last month in Papua New Guinea, a young mother accused of being a "witch" was stripped naked and burned alive. Recent reports from Egypt suggest that sexual violence, amid continuing protests, is on the rise.


Last week, here in Thailand I read about a woman axed to death by her abusive ex-husband while she dined with friends. The week before that, it was a woman stoned by her husband for socialising with another man. In February, South African teen Anene Booysen was horrifically – and fatally – gang-raped, just as a young Indian woman had been several months earlier, more than 9,000 kilometers away.


On Valentine's Day, South African model Reeva Steenkamp was shot and killed by her boyfriend Oscar Pistorius. Though it is not yet clear whether her death was a result of domestic abuse, the way in which Steenkamp has been treated posthumously is revealing of a culture that could enable such a tragedy in the first place. As Marina Hyde put it, while Steenkamp's corpse was fresh in the morgue, her bikini-clad body was splashed on front pages. A former Nigerian minister blamed her for her own death, calling her "a sexy and pretty little model who the devil sent [Pistorius's] way".


These are not isolated incidents. These are symptoms of societies that remain hotbeds of inequality, systematically failing women. This is happening everywhere.


Violence against women is not all bloody lips and black eyes, though. It is emotional abuse and financial control, street harassment and reproductive coercion. At its root, such violence is about power, sex, how we view masculinity and the very fabric of our identities.


We live in societies where rape victims are doubted and blamed, where street harassment is still treated as a compliment, where women's bodies are sleazily ogled or cruelly judged, and where gender norms for both men and women remain uncomfortably restricting. Recent research from Bangladesh found that 98% of men said that to be a man you need to be "tough", while 81% of those who had admitted rape said they were motivated by sexual entitlement.


Last month's One Billion Rising movement, the largest simultaneous global action to end violence against women that the world has ever seen, did not happen for fun. It happened because it had to.


No country is off the hook, including the stewards of this year's CSW. This includes the Democratic Republic of Congo, dubbed "the rape capital of the world"; Iran, where women's rights activists are regularly imprisoned; Russia, where domestic violence is not technically considered a crime; and the US, where it took an embarrassingly long time to re-authorise the Violence Against Women Act, and which is one of only a few countries in the world that has not yet ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.


While the existence of violence against women is as old as the human race, and advocates have been toiling for decades, the time for change is ripe in new ways. The world is focused on this issue in a way it has not been before.


The rape and death of a Delhi woman in December reverberated globally in a way such atrocities really never had before. Just two months later, a high-level commission had reviewed India's rape legislation along with 80,000 public testimonies, and the president had signed a new law. Novel efforts like Women Under Siege's real-time crowdsourced map of sexual assault in Syria is also helping to make the issue unavoidable.


We will never live in a violence-free world, though that is a worthy goal. Efforts to achieve it, at the very least, put us further along the path of progress. We have increased opportunities to shine the spotlight on violence, examining its twisted roots in a new light and consider the ways in which each one of us is implicated. That is certainly something to pay attention to.





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THE WORLD OF WOMEN IN THE MILITARY-  this sounds familiar to all women serving in all nations doesn't it



NATO in Afghanistan - Afghan female security forces fight prejudice



Published on Jan 15, 2013


As Afghan forces grow and develop, taking responsibility for lead security in their country, women too are stepping forward to join the nation's army and police forces. But those who volunteer for their nation's forces often faces prejudice and harassment. At a recent conference in Kabul, women working in Afghan security discussed how best to fight prejudice against them.


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INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY-




MILITARY WOMEN AROUND THE WORLD





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INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY-  Nichola Goddard-Killed  Afghanistan- we remember- and love u- Every day is International Women's Day


(1/2) In the Words of a Soldier (Excerpt) - Part 1









(2/2) In the Words of a Soldier (Excerpt) - Part 2




and..


The Trews - Highway of Heroes




"Highway of Heroes", was co-written and co-produced by The Trews and Gordie Johnson (Big Sugar) and was inspired by the 2006 death of Captain Nichola Goddard from The Trews' hometown of Antigonish, NS. Canada's Highway of Heroes, is the section of the MacDonald-Cartier freeway named to honour those who have sacrificed all in service of country.

You can purchase "Highway of Heroes" world-wide exclusively via iTunes. http://bit.ly/dbVi6d

Net proceeds from sales will benefit the Canadian Hero Fund ( http://www.herofund.ca ), an organization that assists the families of Canadian military personnel through academic scholarships.

The video was directed by Tim Martin.



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Canada's Warrior Women





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CANADA'S WOMEN AT WAR

British Military Women

 Aussie Women in military WWII

 Women in the US Military

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Women in the Russian and Serbian military





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 women in israel military


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canadian women in the services


Women, Peace and Security - Prevention



Women have a significant role to play in NATO to help resolve and prevent conflicts.

War and conflict often affects women and children more than men.

Recognizing the important role women play in building peace, the United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 1325 on 31 October 2000.

The Resolution called for an end to the historic inequality of male and female participation in resolving conflicts.

This short film examines how NATO is working to protect women and children in its areas of operations, and to increase the participation of women at every level to prevent future conflicts.

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Women of the Israeli Army, from "Women of the World"




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Chinese Female Soldiers marching in the 60th year of the Great Peoples Army


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G.I. Jane 2013: Women As Military Troops



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AUSTRALIA


Military: Women on the front lines





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 Facts About Military Women and Women Veterans

AFGHANISTAN WARRIOR DOG SAVED- Military Working Dog- Over 2000 folks and troops saved by this dog


Save-A-Vet Rescues Hero MWD Dexter
MWD Dexter saved over a thousand lives in his tours of duty in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Save-A-Vet rescued him from euthanization and gave him a home where he can live out his retirement years.

Thanks to CBS 58 WDJT-TV Milwaukee for sharing this footage!





 Nichola Goddard.pngAfghanistan-Capt. Nichola Goddard in the Shah Wali Kot district during ...  Captain's death takes Canada's toll in Afghanistan to 16

 ... (right) stand with Afghan commandos in Logar province, Afghanistan


 Thousands honour Canada's Afghan veterans

 improves, nearly one in five women who served during the Afghanistan ...

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Women on the Front Line, with Military Working Dogs













ONE BILLION RISING- BREAK THE CHAIN OF VIOLENCE AGAINST GRLS AND WOMEN




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INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY-CANADA'S FIRST NATIONS-
One Billion Rising - 2013 - Curve Lake First Nation



-One Billion Rising 2013 at Curve Lake First Nation near Peterborough Ontario
-Started at the Whetungs store and went out to the highway, and back (8kms each way)

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INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY- FOR NEDA- IRAN 2009

Another Brick In The Wall (Hey Ayatollah, Leave Those Kids Alone!)

CANADA'S BLURRED VISION- WITH PERMISSION FROM CANADA'S PINK FLOYD




Visit the official Blurred Vision website to connect with the band - http://www.blurredvisionmusic.com

Download the single on Itunes, proceeds donated to Amnesty International.

Directed by Babak Payami





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Shania Twain - She's Not Just A Pretty Face - Chicago










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FROM NOVA SCOTIA TO AFGHANISTAN- WOMEN MARCH- 1 BILLION RISING

The dancing demonstrators of One Billion Rising - EURONEWS- IN AFGHANISTAN- THEY MARCHED-
Breaking the chain of violence against girls and women-





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One Billion Rising-Break the Chains (Short Film)







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One Billion Rising (Break the Chain) performed by New Light girls






About One Billion Rising (http://www.onebillionrising.org)




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One Billion Rising dance - Hong Kong



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One Billion Rising Pakistan




Do you, as a Pakistani, refuse to watch as more than one billion women experience violence on the planet??

"One Billion Rising" is a Global Campaign started by Eve Ensler. It is an activist movement to end violence against women and girls. It is being taken up by different countries across the globe to mobilize the grass root communities, individual men and women, intellectuals, politicians to raise their voices against violence against women.

"More than 1 out of every 3 women on this planet will experience violence during her lifetime. With 7 billion people on the planet, that's one billion women. Stopping this violence is as crucial as addressing the issues of disease, hunger, and climate change," said Eve Ensler. "One Billion Rising" is a global strike, a call to refuse to participate until rape and rape culture ends. It's a solidarity reach, a new refusal, and a new way of being."

One Billion Rising activists are encouraged to focus on local issues affecting women and girls including work places, home life, laws and legislators, media that supports violence against women and girls, and governments or religious institutions that have not done enough to stop it. This is a people's movement. It is not a campaign with one face attached to it. It is a campaign that has millions of women's faces from all over the world. This is an appeal to take proactive activism forward.

This video was made by the non government organization Rozan working on on issues of emotional and mental health.


Like OBR Pakistan on FB at: www.facebook.com/OneBillionRisingPakista­n
Follow us on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/OBRPakistan

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GLOBAL GIRL POWER - One Billion Rising..... breaking the chains of abuse globally 4 girls and women


BREAK THE CHAIN OF ABUSE 4 GIRLS AND WOMEN




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How to: "Break the Chain" Choreography





Learn the Steps to BREAK THE CHAIN

Learn Debbie Allen's choreography to the ONE BILLION RISING dance anthem BREAK THE CHAIN!

Activists in 182 countries are staging One Billion Rising events, many are using "Break The Chain" for flash mobs in high profile locations. Watch this video and dance the day away! And be sure to let us know what you are doing sign up your events on http://www.onebillionrising.org

Special shout out to the incredible Senior dance class at Brooklyn High School of the Arts for teaching Debbie's moves!
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ONE IN THREE WOMEN WILL BE BEATEN, RAPED OR MURDERED ON THIS PLANET....Global Girl Power Rising... and this is NOT just valentine's day...it's every day..... ONE BILLION RISING




One Billion Rising Lunapads & AFRIpads



From Canada to Uganda, sister companies Lunapads and AFRIpads join forces across the world in solidarity with the global One Billion Rising movement to "Strike, Dance and RISE" against violence against women and girls.

Big thanks to Tracy Bee for producing the video, Madeleine Shaw for the creative, and Cortnee Loren Brown | Photography, Leona Fowler, Girlvana Yoga, and Global Girl Power for use of their photos.




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One Billion Rising: Robert Redford on why he is joining Eve Ensler's campaign




READER'S DIGEST CANADA



One Billion Rising


There was a monumental event that took place on February 14 this year that seems went largely unnoticed by much of the mainstream media no, not Valentine’s Day—an event called “One Billion Rising” a global campaign to end violence against women and girls. To be honest, I had heard nothing about it until I came across a news piece done by NPR in the states. The event called for one billion women around the world to join together and dance in a show of collective strength. The word billion refers to the statistic that one in three women will be raped or beaten in their lifetime, or about one billion—that’s shocking. ?The campaign was founded by playwright and activist Eve Ensler who said, ?“Today the dancing begins and with this dancing we express our outrage and joy and our firm global call for a world where women are free and safe and cherished and equal. Dance with your body, for your body, for the bodies of women and the earth.” ?The rally was held in more than 190 countries including most major cities in Canada and was deemed a success by organizers as women from all walks of life joined in mass dance movements and flash mobs around the world—what a joyous way to send such an important message.?To see much more about this movement go to www.onebillionrising.org.

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One Billion Rising - Canada



Published on Jan 27, 2013


I'm Rising Because..."Over 50% of Canadian women by the age of 16 will have experienced at least one incident of sexual or physical violence. Why Would You Not Take Action? "

Toronto City Councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam is Rising with One Billion Rising Toronto on February 14, 2013.


Thank you to fb.com/onebillionrisingtoronto for posting this Canadian perspective. Danya Daccash, M.S.W.



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One Billion Rising - South Africa




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One Billion Rising TĂ¼rkiye / Break The Chain





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One Billion Rising: New York



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One Billion Rising in Taiwan !! ??????????????????






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One Billion Rising PHILIPPINES DANCE.



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Albania joins One Billion Rising


Thousands of women joined today in Tirana,
capital of Albania the initiative "One Billion Rising" under the special care and
under the auspices of the Speaker of the Albanian Parliament Mrs. Jozefina TOPALLI!

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One Billion Rising Peterborough UK Flash Mob




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One billion Rising Cologne,Germany




One Billion Rising: Women Rising up and Dancing to Protest Violence against Women on February 14, 2013 in Köln (Cologne), Germany. Music "Break the Chain" by Tina Clark

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One Billion Rising Poznan Poland


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Break the Chain - One Billion Rising Verona - Italy






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One Billion Rising Flashmob at the European Parliament





On 29 January 2013 in Brussels, the European Parliament rose and danced with Eve Ensler in a One Billion Rising flashmob to call for an end to violence against women and girls.

This initiative was led by European Parliament Vice-President Isabelle Durant (Belgium) with her fellow "V-MEPs" who performed The Vagina Monologues in the European Parliament in March 2012: Franziska Brantner (Germany), Marielle Gallo (France), Ana Gomes (Portugal), Kartika Liotard (Netherlands), Ulrike Lunacek (Austria), Sirpa Pietikäinen (Finland), Renate Weber (Romania), Cecilia Wikström (Sweden). They were joined by many more MEPs, including Michael Cashman (UK), Nikos Chrysogelos (Greece), Leonidas Donskis (Lithuania), Mikael Gustafsson (Sweden, chair of the EP committee on women's rights and gender equality), Jean Lambert (UK), Barbara Lochbihler (Germany, chair of the subcommittee on Human Rights), Baroness Sarah Ludford (UK, Vice-Chair of the ALDE Group), Marisa Matias (Portugal), Martina Anderson (UK), Judith Merkies (Netherlands), Joanna Senyszyn (Poland, Vice-Chair of the Subcommittee on Human Rights), Gabriele Zimmer (Germany, chair of the GUE/NGL Group), as well as staff at the European Parliament.


One In Three Women On The Planet Will Be Raped Or Beaten In Her Lifetime.
One Billion Women Violated Is An Atrocity.
One Billion Women Dancing Is A Revolution.


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canada

One Billion Rising, Peterborough, Ontario




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Shania Twain - She's Not Just A Pretty Face - Chicago


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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NEEDS TO SIGN- HUMAN RIGHTS EQUALITY 4 WOMEN- why would other countries sign- if USA won't?





Archive for the 'Women’s Rights' Category


Event: “Profiles in Courage: Human Rights Defenders and the Struggle to End Violence Against Women”
Published by


UN Watch
- at February 25, 2013 in Women's Rights.

Join UN Watch for parallel event to UN Comission on the Status of Women, 4 March 2013: “Profiles in Courage: Human Rights Defenders and the Struggle to End Violence Against Women”

The situation of women’s rights in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia
Dr. Qanta Ahmed
Human rights activist, associate professor of Medicine at the State University of New York (Stony Brook), author of In the Land of Invisible Women: A Female Doctor’s Journey in the Saudi Kingdom.
The situation of women’s rights in Iran
Roya Hakakian
Author, Farsi poet, founding member of the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, producer for CBS 60 Minutes and other programs. Her most recent book, Assassins of the Turquoise Palace, about Iran’s terror campaign against exiled Iranian dissidents in Western Europe, was named a Notable Book of 2011 by the New York Times Book Review.
Violence against women’s in the Syrian struggle for freedom
Hadeel Kouki
Student activist from Syria
Continue reading ‘Event: “Profiles in Courage: Human Rights Defenders and the Struggle to End Violence Against Women”’
Say No to Iran & Saudis Leading U.N. Women’s Rights Agency
Published by
UN Watch
- at November 1, 2010 in Iran, Saudi Arabia and Women's Rights. 1 Comment


Speak out for women who are hanged, lashed and stoned to death: go to this web page and click “Like.”
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Iran Says “Chastity” is Key to “Preventing Violence Against Women”
Published by
UN Watch
- at June 4, 2009 in Human Rights Council (UNHRC) and Women's Rights. 2 Comments
During today’s annual full day discussion on women’s human rights at the U.N. Human Rights Council, opinions clashed on the role of culture and religion in violations of women’s rights. Continue reading ‘Iran Says “Chastity” is Key to “Preventing Violence Against Women”’
Iranian Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi again slams Swiss FM Calmy-Rey for meeting Ahmadinejad
Published by
UN Watch
- at December 11, 2008 in Human Rights Council (UNHRC), Iran and Women's Rights. 0 Comments


It is rare when the UN hosts an event that speaks truth to power. But that is exactly what happened in Geneva today when Iranian human rights defender and Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi and Nigerian author and Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka appeared on a panel, in the magnificent Salle des Assemblées, to mark the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), organized by the UN Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR).
The event was chaired by UNOG Director-General Sergei Ordzhonikidze and attracted a full room, mostly with students and Iranian expats, as well as diplomats and NGO activists.
Ordzhonikidze opened with a speech, followed by a clip on the adoption of the UDHR, which showcased speeches and key figures behind the document, as well as the actual 1948 vote. The film only showed three positive votes from the roll call, but omitted to mention the 8 abstentions that came from the USSR and its vassals and satellites (Byelorussia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Ukraine), Yugoslavia, apartheid South Africa and Saudi Arabia.
Both Nobel laureates made passionate statements, reaffirming the universality of human rights. They spoke against dictatorships, non-democratic Islamic states and oppression. Both condemned the notion of cultural relativism as an excuse for not implementing human rights.
Ebadi spoke of “human rights defenders [who] are silenced as ‘heretics’”, and dictatorships that use religion to oppress their people. Soyinka deplored the situation in Zimbabwe and also criticized the US Patriot Act.
Following the two speeches, a panel of Swiss journalists asked questions, and, in a Davos-style setting, the floor was opened for questions from the audience.

The first question from a Swiss journalist was to Ebadi, saying how much the Swiss were “shocked” to see Swiss FM Micheline Calmy-Rey meet with Ahmadinejad this year, and asking her opinion.
Ebadi said that she was surprised that a Cabinet Minister from a country with such respect for human rights would agree to meet with such a government and sign an agreement with them, which is to the detriment of the Iranian people, instead of meeting with representatives of civil society. The room gave Ebadi a round of applause.
Ordzhonikidze was quick to respond in support of the Swiss Foreign Minister, saying that he disagreed with Ebadi and agreed with Calmy-Rey. He said that her visit means that diplomacy is working. Diplomats have to meet each other to make peace in the world. Negotiations are happening all around the world between hostile nations. If not, the other option would be war. He said he fully supported what Calmy-Rey did. Few applauded this statement.
The moderator, the head of UNITAR, invited Ebadi to respond. Ebadi said she doesn’t oppose dialogue. It is normal for countries to have dialogue. But Calmy-Rey’s trip to Iran was not to talk of peace or human rights, and she was not prepared to meet with even one person from Iran’s civil society. Agreements were signed, pictures were taken and Calmy-Rey left. It was only done for economic reasons, and to the detriment of the people of Iran. Ebadi received another round of applause.
For the rest of the discussion, Ebadi spoke about women’s rights in Iran. About how a woman is only worth half of a man’s life. How the Bahais are discriminated in Iran and suffer from a “cultural genocide.” How Iranian law establishes religious discrimination. Bahais have no rights under the law. For the last 30 years, they are barred from universities.
When some Bahai leaders were arrested, nobody wanted to represent them, so she did. The official Iranian News Agency sought to defame Ebadi by claiming she was a Bahai convert. In Iran, a convert is liable to execution for apostasy. These discriminatory laws need to be reformed.
A Kurd from Iran also asked a question and Ebadi responded that it is true that Kurdish leaders have been assassinated and she thinks that violence can never be justified.
Ebadi shared a story about the Commission on Human Rights. A few years ago she came to Geneva to meet with diplomats from the Commission and tell them about women’s rights in Iran. She entered the room and saw eight diplomats — five of whom represented countries where the situation of women’s rights is even worse that in Iran! So she said hello, and left the room. She said this needs to change.
Soyinka deplored the weak performance of the Human Rights Council. He also deplored the lack of UN response to the great human rights disaster in Darfur, and said that the UN has still not learned the lessons of the Rwandan genocide. He also criticized China for its support to Sudan.
The event concluded with a speech by the Prince of Monaco, Albert II. The Prince repeated many of the notions of the discussion. He said that today is an anniversary but not a celebration. Relativism has emerged as a new enemy of the universality of human rights. How can it be acceptable to turns one’s back on the oneness of humanity?
The ambassador of Sri Lanka was reportedly quite upset that he was not recognized by the chair to ask a question.
The event was a rare instance of fresh air at the UN. The doors of the UN were opened to human rights defenders and victims, and oppressive regimes were named and shamed.
U.N. Ruling: Islamic Sharia Taboo in Human Rights Council Debates
Published by
UN Watch
- at July 1, 2008 in "Defamation of Religion", Freedom of Expression, Human Rights Council (UNHRC) and Women's Rights. 3 Comments
In its recently concluded June session, the UN Human Rights Council ruled that any references to Islamic Shar’ia law are prohibited in the council chamber. Even outgoing UN rights chief Louise Arbour, who more than once sought to appease the UN’s anti-blasphemy squads, expressed her concern.
It all started when the heroic David Littman, undaunted by malicious attempts to expel him from the UN, tried to deliver a speech on violence against women and what Islamic scholars can do to prevent it. The Egyptian representative interrupted repeatedly and challenged the council president. “Regardless of the result of the vote — I couldn’t care less if I will win or lose this vote — my point is that Islam will not be crucified in this council!”
The president gave in: “Statements should refrain from making judgments or evaluations of a particular religion. . . I can promise that at the next evaluation of a religious creed, law, or document, I will interrupt the speaker and we’ll go on to the next one.”



Following is a transcript from June 16, 2008 debate at 8th Session of the UN Human Rights Council. General debate on Agenda Item 8, “Follow up and implementation of the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action.” The video archive can be seen here under “Points of Order” (requires RealPlayer).
DAVID LITTMAN, IN JOINT STATEMENT BY ASSOCIATION FOR WORLD EDUCATION, INTERNATIONAL HUMANIST AND ETHICAL UNION
In the context of integrating the human rights of women throughout the United Nations system we wish to draw attention to four examples of widespread violence against women that we believe merits far greater attention from the council. One, regarding FGM [female genital mutilation], we are making available our detailed written statement…
PRESIDENT COSTEA
[Bangs gavel.] A point of order raised by the delegation of Egypt. You have the floor, sir.
EGYPT - POINT OF ORDER
Thank you Mr. President. Mr. President, I have a copy of this statement. Continue reading ‘U.N. Ruling: Islamic Sharia Taboo in Human Rights Council Debates’
Saudi women’s tales horrify UN
Published by
UN Watch
- at January 20, 2008 in Saudi Arabia, Uncategorized and Women's Rights.

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One Billion Rising- Every day is International Women's Day-breaking the chains of abuse 4 girls and women




LITTLE GIRLS WILL GO TO SCHOOL IN THE WORLD-  it's time





Taliban victim Malala Yousafzai back at school, in different land



From: AFP

March 21, 2013 12:00AM








ONE BILLION RISING- break the chains 4 girls and women all over the world- UN MEETS THIS WEEK TO STAND UP 4 WOMEN IN THE WORLD'S COUNTRIES.... they must... or disband...











AND GLOBAL GIRL POWER- we love r Afghan girls- they will go to school - Afghan daddies love their little girls too.

Two paintings from the series

"The Wind-Up Dolls" by AMIRI HAGAMA portrays the contemporary Afghan women whom the artist

met upon visit to her home city, Kabul in 2010. 'These paintings give a social dimension portraying

the innermost thought and feelings of contemporary Afghan women.' – says Hangama Amiri

(Canada).



Hangama Amiri







The Wind-Up Dolls of Kabul | 2011

The Wind-Up Dolls, is a painting series about Afghan women whom the artist met on a visit back to her homeland Kabul, Afghanistan in the year of 2010. The research painting project portrays the innermost thoughts, social dimensions, and psychological insights of six Afghan women in contemporary Afghan society.










Raining Stones- Brilliant Artist Depiction- of stoning- Hagama







GLOBAL GIRL POWER- F**K The War.... Malalas and Nedas R going to school






WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION- A Little Girl with a Book called "Education"

Coward Muslim Jihadists- Global Girl Power is rising- r nedas and malalas r going to school -hell yeah!






So cool- Cartoon- Global Girl Power- WHAT TERRIFIES RELIGIOUS EXTREMISTS THE MOST- LIKE THE TALIBAN R NOT AMERICAN TANKS, BOMBS R BULLETS- ... It's a girl with a book




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ONE BILLION RISING 2014








  1. The Childfree Life - TIME - TIME - Breaking News, Analysis ...

    time.com/241/having-it-all-without-having-children
    Having It All Without Having Children. ... 2013. SHARE. Photo-Illustration by Randal Ford for TIME ... adding up to about 1 in 5 American women who end their ...

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    No Kids for Me, Thanks



    Photo

    Credit Trisha Krauss

    Chelsea Handler, the television host and best-selling author of “My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One-Night Stands,” and Geoff Dyer, the critically acclaimed British writer whose 15 books include “Out of Sheer Rage: Wrestling With D. H. Lawrence,” don’t have much in common on the surface, aside from both calling Los Angeles home. But neither has an interest in procreating.
    “I definitely don’t want to have kids,” Ms. Handler, 40, said in a 2013 television interview. “I don’t think I’d be a great mother. I’m a great aunt or friend of a mother.”
    Mr. Dyer, 56, contributed an essay to the anthology “Selfish, Shallow, and Self-Absorbed: Sixteen Writers on the Decision Not to Have Kids,” out last week (the title sardonically appropriates the traditional criticisms against childless couples).
    In it, he related an episode a few years back in which gamboling children kept interrupting his tennis game in London as their mothers did nothing, much to his displeasure. The incident was “a clear demonstration that the rights of parents and their children to do whatever they please have priority over everyone else’s,” he wrote.
    (The disruption of racket sports at the hands of youth seems to be a bĂªte noire for Mr. Dyer. Two winters ago, I found myself playing table tennis with him in a Brooklyn establishment. Within 10 minutes, we were booted out for a child’s birthday party as dozens of children and their guardians swarmed the room. “The only thing I hate more than children,” he told me as we gathered our belongings, “are parents.”)
    Ms. Handler’s and Mr. Dyer’s desire to be childless — or child-free, as some prefer — syncs with nationwide shifts over the last several decades, and with a host of celebrities who have spoken publicly about their decisions, like George Clooney, Oprah and Ricky Gervais.
    The percentage of childless women ages 40 to 44 doubled from 1976 to 2006, when the figure stood at over one-fifth of women. Their ranks have increased enough that the first NotMom Summit will take place in Cleveland this October. (The numbers have tailed off slightly since 2006, to about 15 percent; some explanations may be more-flexible workplace cultures for women, advances in fertility treatments and increasing acceptance of unmarried women who conceive through sperm donors.)
    People’s reasons for not reproducing remain as varied as ever, encompassing the personal, political, financial, environmental or the anti-narcissistic, as in the case of John Warner, the author of the novel “The Funny Man,” who self-deprecatingly wrote in an email, “I’m not convinced my genes are anything to wish on anyone.”


    Photo

    Geoff Dyer. Credit Sasha Maslov for The New York Times

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    But one particular strain may be resistance to the current atmosphere of overparenting and its attendant upper-middle-class signifiers.
    “If I had kids, I can’t see doing it in New York City,” said Kate Bolick, the author of the coming book “Spinster: Making a Life of One’s Own.” “Not just because I couldn’t afford it, but because I don’t like the idea of raising a child in this epicenter of class disparity and extreme wealth.”
    Meghan Daum, the editor of the anthology and a Los Angeles Times opinion columnist, said, “It’s undeniable that watching this culture play out — the helicopter parenting, the media fixation on baby bumps and celebrity childbearing and -rearing — is overwhelming, and it’s natural that people would react against it.”
    “I can’t tell you how many baby showers I’ve been to where the woman who’s having the child has this moment of ‘Oh, my God, what have I signed up for?’ ” Ms. Daum said. “I think there are people in the book who may have made a different decision if they’d been living in a different moment.”
    Still, she cautioned against attributing too much of the recent surge in childlessness by choice to societal trends. “Not to have a child is a very personal, visceral decision,” she said. “Ultimately, it comes from within, not from Park Slope.”
    A few contributors to her anthology do, nevertheless, chalk up some of their misgivings to Park Slope-ish fads that seem intent on creating a generation of Stepford moms.
    Anna Holmes cataloged the “hoary ideas of womanhood” on display in her Brooklyn neighborhood, which has “overpriced boutiques filled with one-of-a-kind maternity clothes and hundred-dollar sets of receiving blankets made of ‘all-organic cotton.’ ”
    Laura Kipnis wrote about her “profound dread of being conscripted into the community of other mothers — the sociality of the playground and day-care center, and at the endless activities and lessons that are de rigueur in today’s codes of upper-middle-class parenting.”


    Photo

    Meghan Daum.

    Both descriptions reflect a few of the ways parenting (at least in this rarefied socioeconomic milieu) has evolved since the 1980s into a competitive and consumerist sport. Partly as a result of this overextension, the culture has begun representing parenting as a less-than-satisfying occupation.
    The news media periodically trot out articles about how parents are unhappier than their childless counterparts. The debatable postulation is often traced back to an influential 2004 study in which working mothers ranked child care the second-most-negative activity on a list of 16 (rated less negatively were commuting and housework).
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    Child care, of course, is just one aspect of parenthood, albeit a significant part, and the mothers were polled on workdays, which likely increased their exhaustion and hostility toward their children. Yet other research followed that has, if not debunked claims of the misery of parenting, then at least made them more nuanced.
    A study last year from the Santa Clara University Leavey School of Business found that “parents’ happiness increases over time relative to non-parents.” Another 2014 paper, from the London School of Economics and the University of Western Ontario, determined that the first two children boost short-term happiness (which later returns to pre-birth levels), but not a third.
    So while the long-held opinion that having children is the key to a fulfilling life may, indeed, be true for most people, contemporary popular culture habitually indicates otherwise.
    Novels like Jenny Offil’s “Dept. of Speculation,” Lionel Shriver’s “We Need to Talk About Kevin” (and the film version) and Elisa Albert’s “After Birth” all portray the ambivalence and agonies of motherhood; the runaway best-seller “Go the ____to Sleep” was a release valve for irritably fatigued parents; and a popular blog is a mocking backlash to “parent overshare on social networking sites.”
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    With a few exceptions like NBC’s “Parenthood,” a paean to the titular vocation’s rewards (but which also didn’t shy away from the challenges of child rearing), TV parents are routinely sleep-deprived, harried, anxious, confused, cash-strapped, sexually frustrated or divorced, a far cry from the days of the comfortable and comforting stewards on “Family Ties,” “The Brady Bunch” and “Father Knows Best.”
    And the children in these offerings are repeatedly depicted as the bratty, tyrannical rulers of their enslaved progenitors. Perhaps this is one reason that Andrea Dickstein, 34, a director of e-business and marketing communications who lives on Long Island, doesn’t want children.


    Photo


    “I think about having to attend or host children’s birthday parties, and it seems exhausting and unappealing,” she said. “Of course, the irony is I’m attending a colleague’s 2-year-old’s party this weekend. Maybe they’ll think I’m there to kidnap one.”
    In a previous time, that statement would have been spoken in a whisper to evade censure. Now it’s anything but heretical, a standard line for people who not only see how difficult raising children can be, but for the generation that came of age as divorce rates spiked in the 1970s and ’80s (and which have since settled down some) and may be less optimistic about the classic nuclear family. For those who aren’t part of a cohesive familial unit that can provide different means of support, it’s far more daunting — emotionally and monetarily — to start a new clan.
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    Nonetheless, spouses without children are still frequently perceived as self-centered; the symbolic couple for this stereotype may be the Machiavellian Frank and Claire Underwood on “House of Cards,” for whom nothing gets in the way of political ambition.
    Frank’s marriage proposal included the romantic pledge that “I’m not going to give you a couple of kids. … I promise you freedom from that.” Claire’s Lady Macbeth has had three abortions, one during one of her husband’s campaigns, which she lied about, claiming the pregnancy was the product of a rape. (She’s also been less than nurturing about other women’s pregnancies.)



    A less toxic on-screen duo would be the 40-something Brooklyn couple played by Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts in Noah Baumbach’s new film, “While We’re Young.” Having suffered through a few miscarriages, and noticeably ill-at-ease around babies and children, they have decided, or at least claim, that they like their lives as they are, which is to say career-focused, responsibility-free and self-absorbed.
    But “it’s the parents who are selfish,” said Mr. Dyer, pointing to families typically own larger cars and use up more resources. Regarding “any environmental consciousness, the needs of their family get ahead of everything else,” he said in an interview. “In terms of behaving in a civic way, I feel my behavior is always exemplary.”
    His assertion is backed up by some studies showing that childless adults volunteer more for their community. In addition, their interest in leaving behind a better world has nothing to do with their own genetic line but with humanity itself. (Ms. Daum said that after she decided not to have children, she believed she “had to compensate by volunteering, doing more work, being there more for my friends.”)
    One could also make the economic case that, with their taxes, childless couples are selflessly subsidizing the education and well-being of other people’s children (who provide tax breaks for their parents). Conversely, it is these parents’ descendants who will be taking care of the childless adults — and keeping society operational — when they are elderly.


    Photo

    Naomi Watts in Noah Baumbach’s new film, “While We’re Young.” Credit Jon Pack/A24 Films, via Associated Press

    “The fact is, everybody is selfish,” Ms. Daum said. “It’s like saying, ‘You breathe.’ Parents and non-parents need to think of themselves as partners. Kids need all sorts of role models, and not have every adult they know be somebody’s parent. We need to reframe the conversation, otherwise it just becomes, ‘Who’s more selfish?’ ”
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    Related to questions of egotism are those of class and reservations about participating in bourgeois child rearing, let alone their inability to meet its expenses.
    Ms. Holmes’s essay touched upon “the creeping commodification of childhood in the form of must-have status symbols — baby carriages, sleeper clothing — and the economic inequalities and educational failures that find parents signing up their toddlers for placement in private elementary schools years in advance” as accounting “for some of the aversion I have for the demands of modern American parenthood.”
    “From the outside, parenting today seems so harried and overwhelmed with Disney and plastic junk,” said Ms. Bolick, the author of “Spinster.” “Or you can be really rich and buy handmade Swedish wooden toys and curate your child’s life.”
    She compared today’s modern accouterments of childhood with the simpler time of “when I grew up in the ’70s, when you sat a kid down with a bowl and a wooden spoon,” she said. (Pressed for clarification as to exactly which century her recreation with kitchenware occurred in, she maintained it was the 1970s, not the 1870s.)
    Even some of the staunchest anti-reproduction advocates, though, concede that they may eventually second-guess their decision.
    “There are regrets, but my entire life is an ocean of regret, and that’s just one drop in it,” Mr. Dyer said. “I would probably, in my 60s, be ready to start having kids, as long as I was spared all the stuff about it that doesn’t appeal to me. By then I’d have lost interest in practically everything, so there’d be no opportunity cost involved.”
    But to do that, he acknowledged, “I’d have to trade in my wife for a younger model,” before cheekily adding, “Younger — and also a model, I’d hope.”
    Mr. Dyer was recently awarded a Windham-Campbell Literature Prize, which comes with $150,000. When it was suggested to him that, after taxes, the money could have been used for almost two years of top-tier college tuition, Mr. Dyer had a less scholastic plan for his winnings.
    “Instead it’s bought 20 years of beer drinking,” he said.
    Teddy Wayne is the author of the novels “The Love Song of Jonny Valentine” and “Kapitoil.” Follow him on Twitter.

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    September 15, 2015 Canada's Kim Cattrall- from Upworthy
     on twitter...NAILS IT



    QUOTE:  "I am not a biological parent, but I am a parent. I have young actors and actresses that I mentor; I have nieces and nephews that I am very close to. ... There is a way to become a mother in this day and age that doesn't include your name on the child's birth certificate. You know, you can express that maternal side of you very, very clearly, very strongly. ... It feels very satisfying."


    @KimCattrall silenced her critics with a spot-on response as to why she doesn't have kids. u.pw/1M9mJRF

    According to Census data, a record number of women are choosing not to have children.

    In 2014, nearly 48% of women between the ages of 15 and 44 had never had kids. That's the highest percentage of women without children since the Census Bureau started tracking the statistic in the 1970s.
    But despite nearly half of American women going child-free, the expectation to have kids is still there. Women who make the choice to forgo motherhood are slammed as selfish or immature. Entire articles are dedicated to the plethora of reasons women choose not to have kids, as if their decision warrants a longer explanation than "works for her, not for me."
    But apparently, even in 2015, even with numerous awards and a successful career to your name — and even with other things to talk about — this is still a choice women are expected to defend.

    Hats off to Kim Cattrall for redefining motherhood.

    Not just for herself, but for being a strong voice and advocate for the many women who choose a path other than raising children. It's not always an easy path to walk, but she does it with grace, grit, and undoubtedly in fabulous shoes.





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