I’ve had two letters in the Herald this week, one on the Free Trade Agreement and one on Politicians’ Superannuation. Regular readers will observe that they both are based loosely on buggery.org posts from the same day..
I’ve had two letters in the Herald this week, one on the Free Trade Agreement and one on Politicians’ Superannuation. Regular readers will observe that they both are based loosely on buggery.org posts from the same day..
I can’t find this on the web, but I’m hearing on the radio about a UNICEF campaign to highlight the impact of HIV/AIDS on young women.
In the interview included in the piece, the UNICEF spokeswoman (didn’t catch her name, will update when/if) spoke out against the widely-adopted, US-promoted “ABC” approach to reducing HIV transmission.
“ABC” stands for “Abstain from sex, Be faithful, use Condoms,” or at least that’s the current explanation. At the 2002 Barcelona AIDS Conference, USAID representatives were telling anyone who’d listen that it stood for “Abstinence, Behaviour change and Control.”
Whatever it stands for, the approach has drawn a lot of criticism for it’s prioritisation of abstinence at the expense of promoting safe sexual activity. It’s a philosophical question until it translates into policy approaches such as the US refusal to fund safe sex programs, no matter how effective or culturally appropriate, because they don’t promote abstinence.
It’s also flawed because it assumes that people always have the personal agency to implement the ABC approach. In many developing countries, young women in particular have little or no control over their sexual selves: no matter how many times USAID tells them to “choose to abstain” from sex, it’s not going to make much difference when you’re being raped or when you live in a society in which women do what men tell them, regardless of US foreign policy.
UNICEF is promoting a different approach, and one that focuses on community-wide social change, not twelve-step-style personal responsibility. It’s called the “END” approach:
Free trade. It sounds like such an innocuous concept. You let my products into your country, and I’ll do the same for you. If only it were so simple.
Australia and the United States are in the final stage of negotiations to enter a free trade agreement. While you’d imagine (rightly) that any such agreement would surely favour the interests of the big, powerful economy at the expense of the small, here in Australia we’ve been told that free trade with the US will be good for our economy, will stimulate growth, expand employment, bring investment, remove the salt from the Murray and turn the rivers inwards to irrigate the parched deserts … and anyone who can’t see this is a dill.
Well, call me a dill, ’cause I can’t see it.
Continue reading
Thank the lord that the folks at American Decency dot org are fighting the good fight against the recently-defunct Abercrombie & Fitch catalogue.
From their PDF “Fact Sheet” on this important topic:
Most recently, A&F’s Back to School – fall – catalog 2003 portrays a topless woman in a convertible with two nude men. Now anyone who comes in contact with the catalog – from mail carriers to children who pass by the displays of the Quarterly in A&F stores are exposed to sexual allurement.
Oh, to be exposed to sexual allurement, now that summer’s here.
(Photos collected off the net)


(Recycled from the House of Love)
I know all my readers are committed culture-jammers, politically aware and active, so no doubt you’ve all been participating in TV Turnoff Week. Here’s a sample of what we’ve been missing. Continue reading
(Recycled from the House of Love)
Today is National Sorry Day.
Some Australians will take a moment today to make a personal apology to the ‘stolen generations’, the thousands of aboriginal Australians who were forcibly removed from their families from the beginning of European settlement in Australia in 1788 until as late as 1970.
"… I just couldn’t stop crying. All I could see was our little camp. My baby brother’s bottle was laying on the ground. And I could see where my brother and sisters were making mud pies in a Sunshine milk tin that we used for our tea or soup. I didn’t know where my parents were. I was sad, crying, lost; didn’t know what I was going to do …"
— from Rose’s story in Bringing Them Home
Below is my personal apology.