#80

WOMAN POWER

[Fort Lauderdale, FL - August 9, 2008] I've just returned home, after an exhilarating day at the 6th Annual Women's Power Caucus at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, organized by publisher Woodie Lesesne of In Focus Magazine and Lesesne Media Group. Attendance was great, the food was good, the fashion show was brilliant and I sold a book and a couple of CDs, got the promise of a gig in November and was nominated to be an awardee of the National Association of Women Business Owners. Whew! What a great day this was but. . .

As always, there's one little thing that puts a damper on things. But, before I get to that one little thing, I ask you to read the column  to the right by Suzanne Brooks, then review the article below by Peggy Simpson. Then, return to my "one little thing" at the bottom of this page.

Looking forward to your responses.

Diva JC, Editor

WORDS WE SPEAK

Womens Media Center

Obama and Women Leaders Get Down to Business
by Peggy Simpson
August 8, 2008

http://www.womensmediacenter.com/ex/080808.html

Summary:  While the media is focusing on the upset within women's rights organizations because of Hillary Clinton's loss, author Peggy Simpson reports another side of the story. In the latest WMC Exclusive, Simpson writes about the recent strategy session which included the leaders of several women's rights organizations and  presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama. She describes the meeting as somber because all parties "knew how high the stakes are, after significant erosion of women's rights under President Bush."  According to Simpson, Obama began the session with several concerns: how the economy is particularly affecting women; the political involvement of a new generation of women; how the next Supreme Court appointment may effect Roe v. Wade; and the reframing of 'women's issues' (Equal Pay, Family Leave, Care Giving) as everyone's issues.  The organization leaders responded to Obama with clear strategies on unifying the Democratic party, after Hillary Clinton's primary run, addressing issues such as abortion rights and Social Security and even suggesting who should be his running mate.  Simpson asked Susan Scanlon, head of the National Council of Women's Organizations, about her thoughts on the strategy session: "People came away impressed and ready to go to work."

Obama and Women Leaders Get Down to Business
by Peggy Simpson
August 8, 2008

Barack Obama got a lot of advice from more than 30 leaders of national women's groups when he met with them in late July. Some columnists have written caustically about the need for Obama to pacify angry feminists who had backed Hillary Clinton.
That's not what this meeting was about. There was no demand for favors, in exchange for bringing Clinton supporters to Obama. This was no showdown meeting, let alone a shouting match between a stereotypical angry feminist and the cool Democratic nominee.

This was more a sober strategy session between savvy political actors mostly already on the same page-but facing many unpredictable hurdles ahead as the general election heats up. Everyone in the room knew how high the stakes are, after significant erosion of women's rights under President Bush and now, in the waning months of his presidency, an executive branch maneuver that could define contraception as abortion, greatly reducing its availability. [See JC's Note #1, below]

There are real concerns by feminist leaders about getting their members on board for Obama, in the wake of the loss to him by Hillary Clinton, even given dire warnings about the positions held by the presumed Republican nominee, John McCain. The fact of the meeting in itself cleared the air. Earlier in July, Obama had talked at some length with Kim Gandy, the president of the National Organization for Women, on the eve of the NOW convention. An open-ended discussion with leaders of feminist groups-large and small, including African American, Asian and Latina groups-was the next step in rebuilding bridges and opening new dialogue.

Obama came with a coterie of campaign officials but also took notes himself. He started out raising four points:

  1. The economic outlook is grim and those most affected are women. [See JC's Note #2]

  2. Many women's groups came of age in the 1960s and 1970s and won major victories, but, now, a new generation of women sees a chance to get involved. [They're awake!]

  3. The next appointments to the Supreme Court will be crucial in preserving many women's rights gains, including the lynchpin reproductive rights ruling, Roe vs. Wade. [JC's Note #1]

  4. An entire array of issues originally sought by women-equal pay, expanding family leave, support for caregivers and others-are no longer women's issues "but affect everybody." [#2]

E. Faye Williams, head of the National Congress of Black Women, was "pleasantly surprised" not by what Obama said but by the reception he got and the nuts-and-bolts interaction with feminist leaders on issues. "There was not even a hint of confrontation," she said. "The tone was how can we help you and how can you help us in working with our members." 

Williams had been an early Obama supporter, which led to alienation with many feminist colleagues backing Clinton. "We suspended friendships. We were so passionate about this race." She had been apprehensive about how the meeting would go with Obama but, afterward, said, "it was all I had been hoping for. . . .I breathed a big sigh of relief."

Alice Cohan of the Feminist Majority said the challenge is to dramatize the stark differences between McCain and Obama on women's rights issues. "It is very clear how terrible McCain is on women's rights. Compare that to Obama who is strong on almost the whole range of women's issues. But that has to become visible, salient." Obama has to get at least 60 percent of the votes of women to win, she predicted. Ellie Smeal, the head of Feminist Majority, strongly recommended mounting a vigorous grass roots campaign for women, with women present on the ground in every key contested district, not just at campaign headquarters or even a regional level. Obama, who began his professional life as a grass roots organizer, nodded and listened and took more notes. [Suzanne Brooks has held this position since Day 1 of Obama's campaign. But, she contends, women of color, who are ignored by NOW, traditionally, are being omitted from this dialogue in many aspects, so much so that she started an egroup on Obama's site - Justice4Allincludeswomenofcolor@yahoo.com]

Barbara Kennelly, a former Connecticut congresswoman who now presides over the National Committee to Preserve Social Security, cautioned Obama to keep to a broad-strokes commitment to save Social Security rather than "get down in the weeds" with a discussion of payroll tax caps or other specifics that can easily be distorted or misstated.

Cecile Richards of Planned Parenthood praised Obama's record on reproductive rights, as did Nancy Keenan of NARAL, whose endorsement of Obama before the primaries ended caused grass roots consternation in some NARAL chapters.

One health care advisor, not at the meeting, said Obama should follow the advice Kennelly gave regarding Social Security on abortion issues as well. He should stay with the broad commitment to protect Roe and provide broad access to reproductive services and not tackle the intricacies of abortion, including the medical necessity in isolated cases for a third-trimester abortion, which tripped him up earlier this summer.

Delores Huerta, the venerable farm workers activist who now heads her own California-based foundation, was the only person to broach the painful subject of Clinton supporters and the hurt many of them feel. She suggested one way to ease that could be to put Clinton on his ticket as vice president. He nodded, took notes-and there was no follow-up question from other leaders.

"And she asked it in the nicest way. She said it not as an accusation but said that, speaking for her people, 'we are terribly heartbroken' and putting Clinton on the ticket would help with the healing," recalled Susan Scanlon, head of the National Council of Women's Organizations.

Scanlon told Obama that, after a running mate has been chosen, NCWO hoped the Obama campaign would participate in a campaign forum on women's issues. "We've been turned down flat by McCain," Scanlon said, and the Obama campaign had equivocated. NCWO is working with Lifetime TV on jointly sponsoring a forum where the candidates-or surrogates-would answer questions from heads of women's groups on key issues.

Overall, Scanlon said she thought that "people came away impressed and ready to go to work." Cohan agreed: "His presentation was very strong, the issues he talked about were very important and he really wanted to listen to what people said."

###

About the Author:  Peggy Simpson worked 17 years for the Associated Press, in Texas and Washington, D.C.; covered economics and politics for the Hearst Newspapers, served as Washington bureau chief for Ms. magazine and reported on Eastern Europe's transition from communism to a democratic market economy, as a freelancer during the 1990s. She has taught at Indiana University, George Washington University and at the American Studies Center at Warsaw University. She currently is a freelance writer in Washington.

WMC Reprint & Credit Requirements: The Women's Media Center grants permission to reprint free-of-charge with the understanding that media outlets credit the author of the piece and the Women's Media Center, as in: "by [author's name] for the Women's Media Center (www.womensmediacenter.com)." If the format allows it, please note at the end: "This article was originally posted by The Women's Media Center at www.womensmediacenter.com. The WMC is a non-profit organization founded by Jane Fonda, Gloria Steinem, and Robin Morgan, dedicated to making the female half of the world visible and powerful in the media."

About us:
The Women's Media Center strives to make women visible and powerful in the media. From our founding in 2005, by Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan, and Gloria Steinem to our advocacy and media relations work, today, we are part of a strong feminist tradition that seeks to hold the media accountable for presenting the world as we know it. 

Our mission is to ensure that:

  1. women and women's experiences are reflected in the media, just as women are present everywhere in the real world;

  2. women are represented as local, national, and global sources for and subjects of the media; 

  3. women media professionals have equal opportunities for employment and advancement. 

  4. In addition to the WMC founders, current board members include Loreen Arbus, Cristina Azocar, Jodie Evans, Gloria Feldt, Carol Jenkins, Teresa McBride, Pat Mitchell, Jessica Neuwirth, Rossana Rosado, and Helen Zia. For more information, please visit www.womensmediacenter.com.

In addition to the WMC founders, current board members include Loreen Arbus, Cristina Azocar, Jodie Evans, Gloria Feldt, Carol Jenkins, Teresa McBride, Pat Mitchell, Jessica Neuwirth, Rossana Rosado, and Helen Zia. For more information, please visit www.womensmediacenter.com.

###

JC's Note #1 - Making laws that regulate "contraception as abortion" is the primary indicator of WOMAN POWER

Men understand, completely, the power women hold over life, death and continuance of the human race. It is women who must awaken, collectively, to this aspect of their power. If they decide, en masse, to stop producing children the race will die out, rapidly, or scientifically cloning people will increase. The proof of this is the over-population of China by males, in the aftermath of centuries of homicide, when the first born was female.

Contraceptives threaten to give women more power over life and death. The Bush Camp understands this  fully and recognizes the power of women. These men are clear that they need to institute laws to avert the possibility and probability that younger women will use contraceptives to enjoy sexual activity without becoming pregnant. Heretofore, Sex Education asserted that males should use prophylactics to prevent impregnation. However, this premise is nullified by a pharmaceutical industry that provides women with a means of avoiding  pregnancy. This is unacceptable, since it is women's will and procreation urge that propagates the human race. Men cannot take the chance of leaving this decision in the hands of women, particularly, without their knowledge. It doesn't matter that a huge percentage of the male population is bi-sexual and have infected thousands, if not hundreds of thousand of women with HIV as a result of their sexual appetites and lack of concern for women and others they mate with. [Back to article]

JC's Note #2 - In her book, Power and Wisdom, New Paths For Women, Dr. Priscilla Marotta states that:

Women are 'having it all' with careers, children, and marriage. A recent poll reported 82% of women and 83% of men are enjoying their lives. The myth needs to be dispelled that women are increasing their involvement in the work force, divorces are decreasing, and fathers are increasing their role in sharing parental responsibilities and joys. Working women keep families together -- not pull them apart. The working woman in 1994, contributed 56% of family income among black couples and 47% of income among white couples. . . .Not only are women welcome and necessary participants in their own economic welfare and that of their families, but the majority of women of all ages work.  [Back to article]

NOW ABOUT THAT "ONE LITTLE THING"

The conference went without a hitch, today, until I began packing up and realized that someone had taken one of the sample bags bearing the WOMEN IN JAZZ SOUTH FLORIDA, INC. logo. This person assumed that the bag was a give-away and just walked away with it. Also, six CDs were missing. 

Most of the attendees were corporate representatives (Macy's, Citibank, Smith Barney, Cisco, Sirrus, etc.), municipal reps (Commissioner, Mayor, etc.) or consultants who started their own business because they'd be released from a corporation. 

On the other hand, I represent two firms, a for-profit corporation, FYI COMMUNICATIONS, INC. and WOMEN IN JAZZ SOUTH FLORIDA, INC.  I am sole proprietor of the first and founder and executive director of the second. I have several clients for whom I build websites and provide musical entertainment through FYICOMMINC. There are 20 paid members that support WIJSF, INC. The products taken from my table cost money and were samples of what they could get at our websites. There was a price list on the back of the table, for anyone curious about the products. That people who took the products didn't think about the value of the items reinforces the "one little thing" that happened immediately following my discovery of the missing products. 

A female DJ from a local radio station passed by and I offered her my card and postcard about my book, IN PURSUIT OF A MELODY. I asked her when her station was going to offer some jazz to their listening audience and she explained that that would not be happening unless the station adopted an HD format, which she assumed I knew nothing about. I asked her to explain what HD was and she did. Then, she told me that she was the sister-in-law of a young woman who tours with a well-known Latin singer and they are planning a panel to educate young people about the music business. I showed her the portion of my book, So, You Want To Be A Singer? A Manual for Up and Coming Divas

She said she would consult with her sister-in-law about putting me on the panel. I explained that my book contains 40 original songs and two lectures about the business of music and the history of Women in Jazz. She went on to name two other singers whom they were approaching about being on the panel. I indicated that I knew all three young ladies and that each of them followed in MY footsteps at each and every club they performed in South Florida, since I am a veteran of 33 years in the music business, that I am a composer, publisher and author of a music book. I said that the three young women she mentioned actually followed in my footsteps in the music scene here in Fort Lauderdale. She became defensive and said, "Well, we're not trying to take anything away from you." I told her that couldn't happen, anyway. Then, I opened the book to show her my composition, Sweet Return, telling her that it was recorded by Freddie Hubbard on Atlantic Record. The record company name struck a note with her and she said, "Ohhhh!" I turned and walked away, throwing up my hands, shaking my head.

I am clear that most women of color hold to the majority belief that women of color should be seen and not heard, even if they purport to be a Powerful Woman, themselves, they are intimidated by women like me who speak who they are! The idea that a woman of color has power really disturbs most people, around the world. It sounds strange, but it is true.

I have been accused of being brash, over-assertive, aggressive, harsh, loud, over-bearing, unfriendly, angry, mad, upset, argumentative, self-centered, and a whole lot of other adjectives that people use to try to define me.

The organizer of the Women's Conference actually asked me to "be sweet." In Dr. Marotta's book [pp. 64-77] that I got at the same conference, a year ago, it states five messages that women get from society:

  1. It is important to be a nice girl and not upset anybody.

  2. Remember good girls are always pleasant.

  3. Put your best face forward, don't let anyone know you are upset.

  4. If you can't say anything nice, keep quiet.

  5. You get more with honey than vinegar.

  6. Be quiet and sweet and you will be rewarded.

  7. Good girls obey at all times.

Marotta believes that these counter thoughts should be engaged in:

  1. I am not responsible for the feelings of others.

  2. Someone liking me is not a life or death matter.

  3. There is more than one way of looking at things and I am entitles to my opinion.

  4. I have the right to express annoyance and do not have to escalate into anger.

  5. I recognize that conflict is an inevitable part of life.

  6. I can engage in constructive conflict and not damage my relationships.

  7. I need to give feedback on problem behaviors so adjustments can be made.

  8. I want to be considerate and effective.

  9. I can be courteous without being deferentially polite.

  10. Efficiency requires initiative.

  11. Rules need to be bent to fit the situation.

ALL HEAR THIS! JOAN CARTWRIGHT DEFINES HERSELF. She doesn't allow anyone else to define her. Not her family, children, husbands, friends, critics, co-musicians, clients, employers, club owners, journalists, etc., etc., etc.

Too many women have been left out of History for lack of stepping up to the plate to write their own stories and tell their own stories, allowing others to do it for them.

And because I've taken the time (60 years of experience and 13 months of writing) to write a book about myself, my career, my loves, my life and my music, I am held at bay, at every turn by people that I assumed would be in my corner or at least consider taking an interest in what I do. Not the case, among women of color, who are so depraved socially that a woman with the magnitude of Power that I know I possess is a threat to them and their search for fame, glory and recognition.

My book also contains brief historical points on more than 25 other women in music. It's not just about me. But the scope is so wide in this book that few take the time to get to know the material in it. They just say, "Oh, you're so talented," and walk away.

Women of Color, particularly, women of African descent, in the United States have a serious problem. Their ingrained sense of self-hate runs so deep that it spills over into the blood of the next woman of color, making it all but impossible for most women of color to collaborate. They must seek confirmation from white women and Latinas in order to be validated. I have this experience over and over and over, again, particularly, since I published my book. 

If my experience is true of the status quo among women of color, particularly, women of African descent, it may explain why white women, Asian women and Hispanic women find it difficult to converse with them, let alone do business with them, unless they are proactively acting like white women, themselves, which is the case with too many women of color.

This is only a thought on my part, resulting from my personal experience, today.

Another problem is that, wherein, older women were revered for their wisdom, today, the opinions of younger women is held higher, even when they don't havethe years of experience needed to formulate concrete ideas about life's elementals.

WHAT DO YOU THINK?

Email me at musicwoman08@yahoo.com or the email you already have for me.

Love and Music,

Diva JC

 

 

 

The terrible, continuing injustice is the refusal of all of these groups and the Obama campaign and the DNC to allow any mention of women of color. These discussions keep women of color at the bottom and only allow the issues prominent to white women, because the foremost concern to women of color is the intersection of racism and sexism and the special problems we experience as a result. This is exactly what happened in the original suffragette movement when black men, including Frederick Douglass, met with the white suffragettes to craft a movement which would give them the right to vote but exclude black and other women of color. This was the circumstance that led Sojourner Truth to give her famous "Ain't I A Woman?" speech. Women of color are still struggling, not only against the white male patriarchal elite but against those who should be our allies but who are still determined to exclude us. I have listened to hours of the DNC platform committee. Every kind of people are included in the platform, except women of color. It is absolutely shameful that people building a platform of so-called change and inclusion are determined to exclude 18 percent of the population, 55 million of us, as if we don't exist and to get angry with us and attack us whenever we point out that we are excluded.

Despite the early dealing, white women were eventually sold out by black men who cut their own deal with white men so that black men got the right to vote and the white women did not. In the interim, both groups have failed to receive full equality in this still sexist, still racist society and still don't get it, that equality cannot be given to some and withheld from others.

It does not matter that Michelle Obama will be first lady. Having Condi Rice as Secretary of State or Indira Ghandi as prime minister of India had no impact on the lives of women of color. Having Queen Elizabeth as queen never reduced sexism either. There have always been a few women aligned with the male power elite, who will call on women to support them when they are in trouble but who do nothing for the sisterhood the rest of the time. This is why so many of us persist in raising the issue of the situation of women of color who are at the bottom of this society. Of course, we are not without supporters among white women and men of all groups, though the prevailing majorities of these groups are willing to step on us to get ahead. We also have other women of color unwilling to collaborate with their sisters. For these reasons, it is important for women of color and our supporters to keep pressing the point that until our situation is acknowledged and addressed, all who benefit while leaving us behind are supporting the racist/sexist elite and undermining their own claims to freedom. I am glad to have the help of all of those who are committed to justice for all, including women of color.

Suzanne Brooks
Founder
IWOCD, Inc.

 

Justice4Allincludeswomenofcolor@yahoo.com

When God/Goddess/All That Is leads you to the edge of the cliff, trust fully and let go, only 1 of 2 things will happen, either She'll catch you when you fall, or teach you how to fly!

God/Goddess/All That Is is shifting things around for you and let things work in your favor. Have a blessed day and remember to be a blessing.