By សតិវអតុ
Next
week end there will be a major march for women and women’s rights timed to
coordinate with the Donald Trump inauguration, The Women’s March on Washington.
Women from across the country will come to meet and march on January 21.
According
to their mission and vision the
organizers said:
We stand together in solidarity with our partners and children for
the protection of our rights, our safety, our health, and our families -
recognizing that our vibrant and diverse communities are the strength of our
country.
OUR MISSION
The rhetoric of the past election cycle has insulted, demonized, and
threatened many of us - immigrants of all statuses, Muslims and those of
diverse religious faiths, people who identify as LGBTQIA, Native people, Black
and Brown people, people with disabilities, survivors of sexual assault
- and our communities are hurting and scared. We are confronted with the
question of how to move forward in the face of national and international concern
and fear.
In the spirit of democracy and honoring the champions of human
rights, dignity, and justice who have come before us, we join in diversity to
show our presence in numbers too great to ignore. The Women’s March on
Washington will send a bold message to our new government on their first day in
office and to the world that women's rights are human rights. We stand
together, recognizing that defending the most marginalized among us is
defending all of us.
We support the advocacy and resistance movements that reflect our
multiple and intersecting identities. We call on all defenders of human rights
to join us. This march is the first step towards unifying our communities,
grounded in new relationships, to create change from the grassroots level up. We
will not rest until women have parity and equity at all levels of leadership in
society. We work peacefully while recognizing there is no true peace without
justice and equity for all.
HEAR OUR VOICE.
As
can be expected there are the naysayers that believe the women’s march is a bad
idea. Their reasons vary. Some have attacked the idea of so called “identity
politics.” The Democratic Party is being
advised to dump all of that and focus just on bread and butter issues that
will appeal to the working class. A lot of pundits have noticed that uneducated
white people, many who consider themselves democrats, voted for Trump.
Chris
Arnade, of Quarts
wrote before the election:
The United States is a
place divided by race, class, and education. The 2016 election has divided us
further. While minorities overwhelmingly favor the Democratic nominee for
president, Hillary Clinton, whites are split at historic levels along the lines of educational background. Those with a
college degree, the front-row kids, are much more likely to support Clinton
than those without—the kids in the back.
Much of the reason for
the divide lies in the fact that the front row is doing much better than the
back row. While those in the back row earn about a fifth
less than they did 35 years ago, the front row now earns more.
But the rift between
Americans goes deeper than that. I am a front-row kid who has spent much
of the last five years among those in the back row. And what I have seen are
very different versions of America, with fundamentally different values and
concepts of personal meaning.
It is this divide,
along with the racial divide, that Donald Trump is exploiting now. It is a
divide that blinded many of us in the front row to Trump’s broad appeal despite
his ugly views. It is a divide that led many to underestimate him, and helped
him come within reach of the US presidency.
Likewise
is Kay S.
Hymowitz who wrote for the New
York Times:
I’m not a Trump supporter, but having talked to and read interviews with some of the 56 percent of white women and 43 percent of women overall who are, I think it’s safe to say this kind of talk will fool nobody.
Those women will – correctly – view the rally as organized by and for the women on the other side of the canyon. News media stories about the marchers refer to reproductive health clinic managers, professors, writers, attorneys, fashion designers, university students and an artist who is bringing her bachelorette party. There may well be a few small town factory workers and military wives among the 200,000 women expected to link arms on Jan. 21, but they will be alien creatures in a blue sea of creative and professional class elites.
The women of the other side will – also correctly – know that the marchers look down on them as at best benighted fools and at worst racist haters. On her first show after the election Samantha Bee, one of the spokeswomen for the march, blasted “Caucasian Nation“ women for betraying their sex. Chelsea Handler, who is leading a satellite march in Hollywood-studded Sundance, described them as “self-mutilating.”
If march enthusiasts are serious about wanting to speak for women, rather than laughing along with liberal comedians who treat the rubes like chopped liver…..They might learn that though they disliked Hillary Clinton, especially in the Rust Belt states, a significant number of Trump supporting women voted for Barack Obama. Many of them were eager to vote for a woman president. They put jobs, terrorism and health care before social issues, but that doesn’t mean they weren’t put off by Trump’s sexism.
First of all, there are
those who claim that a march will do nothing. Those people really have no solution
of their own. The election is over and electoral politics has its limitations.
In fact it rarely solves anything. We need to do all we can. Marches don’t get
a lot of change accomplished but we can’t just do nothing.
Second, such a division
can’t be helped. The Republican Party has been waging a class war on the
American working class, the working poor and those in deep poverty. Many of us
on the left have done what we can to reach out and support those classes. But
quite often members of those very classes vote against their own interest. They
vote for Republicans. Earlier last year labor leaders were in despair. They warned their members that Trump was especially down on labor
unions. Most of their members voted for him anyway.
What these articles and
others like them imply is that the better educated classes, of which the above
authors claims were the supporters behind Hillary Clinton and the Democrats,
has un
fairly ganged up on their less fortunate working class democrats. There
may be some truth to this, but to imply we should be more like the Republicans
is not the answer. The less educate may be more likely to look down on gays,
blacks and other minorities. But why should we have to stoop to that level?
Such minorities need our support. We shouldn’t need to become Archie Bunkers
to gain the support of poorer working class individuals.
I’m not sure why these
authors think that the issue of decent jobs is not important to the better
educated. Jobs are a problem for a lot of people. And not all well-educated
professional class people have the jobs they want or need. After all, one of
the things that struck with the Bernie Sanders crowds was the idea of free college
education. Those who spend thousands to go and get a college education are
tired of not finding the jobs they studied and trained for.
It is also puzzling as to
why working people who need healthcare would vote for a man who wants to
dismantle Obamacare (Affordable Care Act). The Republicans never have and never
will want health care reform. They like the system. It is good for business.
It is true that the
Democrats have not done enough to support the working class. They have let them
down. It was easy to see why Hillary Clinton did not appeal to the working
class. The Democrats are not friends of the working classes either. But voting
for the Republicans was like leaping from the frying pan into the fire.
The truth is that we need class war of our own. The Republicans are not the friend of the working man and neither are the corporations that rely on their support. Neither are the Democrats. Working people need to understand this. Corporate America has waged class war on the workers and poor people. The Women’s March on Washington gives us a chance to come together in solidarity for our own class warfare.
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