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| Since 1996 Amazon Watch has been supporting efforts to protect the global treasure that is the Amazon rainforest. We’ve helped protect the sacred lands of the U’wa from Occidental Petroleum in Colombia, backed the Achuar in defending their ancestral lands from Talisman Energy, and supported the Kichwa people of Sarayaku in their fight to keep oil operations out of their territory. We’ve been busy.
And since 2007 we’ve been supporting the Yasuní-ITT Initiative – a bold plan launched by Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa to “keep the oil in the soil” in one of the world’s most biodiverse rainforests. We are disappointed with Correa’s announcement last week to cancel the initiative and allow drilling in Yasuní National Park. The president blames the international community for not pitching in enough over the last six years. But Amazon Watch is not giving up. We’re going to do everything we can to protect Yasuní and the people who live there from oil drilling and all the dangers that come with it. Since last week we’ve been focused on bringing this news to the international community, and it’s worked. We’ve helped garner stories in the New York Times, Washington Post, PBS and The Guardian, among others. In Spanish language media alone there have been over 350 stories around Yasuní. This is big. With your support we can continue to get the word out so that the Yasuní issue cannot be swept under the rug. Please make a donation today. We can only do this kind of work because of your support. Thank you for your partnership in protecting one of the greatest last wild places on Earth. For the Amazon,
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Daily Archives: 08/23/2013
Stop the Anti-Women Gag Rule
Sold into marriage at 12, Sahar Gul lived in a house of horrors. Her in-laws chained her in the basement, beat her with red hot iron pipes, starved her and pulled out all her fingernails when she refused to prostitute herself for them.
Her attackers’ sentence was reduced to a meager one year, and now they’re free again! Worse still, the Lower House of Parliament just passed a bill that would ban aggressors’ family members from testifying in court. This would prevent countless children and women from ever getting justice.
The Upper House has beaten back anti-women legislation before and high-level officials say the Avaaz community could tip the balance and help stop the bill before it goes to a vote. But to do that, we need to act fast. Click below to sign this urgent petition now — when we reach 1 million signers we’ll launch a massive local media campaign targeting key senators until the bill is dumped:
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/justice_for_afghan_women_loc/?biEWLbb&v=28325
As a child, Sahar Gul was sold by her brother for $US 5,000 into a home of horrific abuse. When she was finally rescued, torture left her so weak that she came out of her basement prison in a wheelbarrow. Last year her tormentors received 10-year sentences, but a lower court judge just set them free.
Afghan women’s rights groups, aghast at the rolling back of their rights have been actively supporting Sahar Gul’s case and working to ensure that relatives aren’t banned from testifying against victim’s aggressors. If we join these brave women now, we can show the Afghan politicians that the entire world stands behind Afghan women.
In school now, Sahar Gul is courageously rebuilding her life — her dream is to someday lead a women’s rights organization. Her strength of spirit embodies the hope for a better future for women and girls in Afghanistan, and everywhere — let’s help her start fulfilling her dream by getting Afghan leaders to protect, not persecute women:
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/justice_for_afghan_women_loc/?biEWLbb&v=28325
Afghan women’s rights advocates and extraordinary survivors of abuse have stepped forward time and again to fight for human rights. Over the years, Avaaz members from around the world have consistently rallied to back them up. Let’s do it again.
With hope and determination,
Luis, Alaphia, Alex, Ricken, Bissan, Mais and the rest of the Avaaz team
PS – Many Avaaz campaigns are started by members of our community! Start yours now and win on any issue – local, national or global: http://www.avaaz.org/en/petition/start_a_petition/?bgMYedb&v=23917
MORE INFORMATION:
Sahar Gul: The fears of a tortured Afghan child bride (BBC) http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-23311414
Karzai: A legacy of failure on women’s rights? (Open Democracy) http://www.opendemocracy.net/5050/massouda-jalal/karzai-legacy-of-failure-on-afghan-womens-rights
Afghan judges free three jailed for torture of child bride Sahar Gul (Guardian) http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jul/11/afghan-judges-free-sahar-guls-torturers
Afghanistan: Escalating Setbacks for Women (Human Rights Watch) http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/07/16/afghanistan-escalating-setbacks-women
Women’s rights face new obstacles in Afghanistan (Global Post) http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/rights/womens-rights-face-new-obstacles-afghanistan
Google+Hangout and Cover Oregon
Have questions about how the health care law will impact your business in Oregon? SBA and Cover Oregon are teaming up to bring you a series of Google+ Hangouts that will dive into specific topics of the Affordable Care Act like the Marketplace and the small business tax credit.The second in the series, this Hangout will cover what businesses need to know about the small business tax credit tax credit and eligibility requirements. The first Hangout discussed what businesses need to know about the new Health Care Marketplace in Oregon, Cover Oregon.
Through Cover Oregon, employers and individuals will be able to shop for health insurance plans and access financial assistance to help pay for coverage.
Oregon is among 17 other states and the District of Columbia that have chosen to establish their own State Marketplace.
Join us to learn how Cover Oregon can help you:
Topic: Is my business eligible for the small business tax credits under the ACA and what’s the procedure?
When: August 27, 2013; 10:30-11:00 a.m. PDT
Participants: Meredith Olafson, Senior Policy Advisor at SBA; Marisa O’Brien, Business Marketing Specialist for Cover Oregon; and Mike Roach, Small Business Owner of Paloma Clothing
Moderator: Linda Baker, Editor, Oregon Business Magazine
Republican Rebranding?
a repost
GOP’s Outreach to Women, Minorities Found Wanting
As MSNBC’s Steve Benen noted, the GOP’s outreach to minorities has hit a rough patch — again. Check out this parade of outrageous stories — all from just today:
1.
Republican Congressman comes out as a birther:
Another congressman takes a stand against
and his “phony” birth certificate.
2.
GOP Senate candidate tweets racist attack on African-American opponent Cory Booker:
The tweet, which has since been deleted, read “#breaking just leaked – Cory Booker’s foreign policy debate prep notes,” and included an image of the
divided up according to various ethnicities.
3.
Why is a major publication publishing a piece suggesting white people are smarter than Hispanics?
4.
A woman’s “greatest fear in life” is losing a man’s support, Cotton wrote.
5.
Scott Walker appointee fired after he called undocumented immigrants ‘Satan’:
The third-highest ranking member of Wisconsin’s Department of Transportation sees “Satan” when he looks at undocumented people.
Discrimination Against Women Alive and Well in 2013
by Think Progress
Earlier this week the Center for American Progress and ELLE magazine released a poll that unpacks what professional men and women think about “leaning in.”
Disappointingly, nearly one-third of women reported having personally experienced discrimination at work. Women at the top were 45 percent more likely to say they have experienced discrimination. Some 20 percent of men in the survey agreed that they’d be paid less if they were a woman.
Unfortunately, there are plenty of stories to underscore what women in the CAP/Elle poll reported. ThinkProgress’ Tara Culp-Ressler and Bryce Covert round up five startling examples of how employers turn women into sex objects at work:
A New Jersey judge ruled that casino waitresses can be fired for gaining weight.
Twenty two former cocktail servers sued a popular casino in Atlantic City over a policy that forbids waitresses from gaining more than seven percent of their original body weight. The women were subject to regular weigh-ins, and the policy meant that a 130-pound woman was not allowed to gain more than 9.1 pounds. They alleged it was weight discrimination — but an Atlantic County Superior Court Judge disagreed. In July, the judge ruled that casino waitresses are essentially “sex objects,” and it’s okay to fire them for gaining weight because they are no longer fulfilling their contractual obligations.
A widely-used employee training manual tells women how to make sure they don’t lead men on.
Earlier this week, Jezebel reported that a popular manager training guide — used as companies like Google, Groupon, and Modcloth — essentially tells women that they’re responsible for preventing advances from their male co-workers. The manual tells women who are “touchy-feely or flirtatious by nature” to “dial it back,” suggests women socialize in groups, and advises women to avoid “revealing clothing” or “ending statements with an upward inflection.”
Women at Merrill Lynch have been instructed to seduce their way to the top.
Other employee trainings have similarly gone off the rails when it comes to guidance on women’s behavior in the workplace. Female employees at Merrill Lynch allege they were made to read a book called “Seducing the Boys Club: Uncensored Tactics From a Woman at the Top” and to make use of its advice to get ahead. To get men to do their work, the book suggested “play[ing] on their masculine pride and natural instincts to protect the weaker sex.” To diffuse tense situations, it pointed out that men “puff up” at being told, “Wow, you look great. Been working out?” The women also allege that they were pressured to attend female-only events on “dressing for success” and were told to be more “perky” and “bubbly.”
The Iowa Supreme Court decided it’s okay to fire attractive women if they pose a risk to men’s marriages.
James Knight, a dentist in Iowa, didn’t fire his female assistant Melissa Nelson after 10 years of working for him because of performance reasons. Instead, Nelson alleges that Knight’s wife told him to do it because “she was a big threat to our marriage” given that he was sexually attracted to her. Yet in July, the all-male Iowa Supreme Court stood by an earlier decision that she wasn’t improperly fired because it wasn’t gender discrimination. Instead, her firing was found permissible because of the facts surrounding her relationship with Knight, such as several comments he made about her clothing and the fact that they texted each other after work hours.
Two hotel employees were fired after they complained about being photoshopped onto bikini-clad bodies.
Two sisters, Martha and Lorena Reyes, say they were fired from the Hyatt Hotel in Santa Clara, CA after they complained about photoshopped images of them. In the photos, the women’s heads were photoshopped onto the bodies of women wearing bikinis. Lorena told Jezebel that they were “extremely humiliating and shameful for me” and also said she has never worn a bikini, even at home. While the company says it fired them two days after they complained about the images because they took overly long breaks, the sisters feel it was related to the incident. The Reyes sisters have filed a retaliation charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Check out the rest of the CAP/ELLE poll HERE.







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