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The project "Strengthening Governance with a Gender Perspective and the Political Participation of Women at the Local Level in Latin America", has contributed to greater debate around the issue of women’s political participation at the local level in the political, academic and media fields.
United Nations/UN Women[1]
Though my opponent might find it convenient otherwise, I shall not limit the debate to one nation, but shall display that there are still some places on this earth where women are in fact still not allowed to vote, or run for office!
Sweden has the second highest percentage of female parliamentarians in the national parliament. 45.3 percent of the elected candidates were women in the 2002 election. This means that 158 seats of the total 349 seats are taken by women. And in the cabinet, almost 50 percent of ministers are female (10 out of 22). Today all the parties acknowledge the importance of involving women in politics and have well defined goals for women’s participation in politics. As such, we can conclude that Sweden has been very successful in encouraging more women to take part in politics.
[2]PDF
However, there is no longer unanimous agreement about these rules – and not only among women: A survey conducted in November 2004 by the Centre for Research and Information on Canada showed that 55 percent of Canadians wanted to see major changes to political institutions to make them more open and Democratic.Among the proposed changes, increasing the number of elected women representatives received the most support (9 out of 10) because, according to survey results, Canadians associated it with a well functioning political system.
[3]PDF
Socratic Question #1: Do you believe that Judaism, Christianity, and Islam have significantly influenced today’s laity and congregants to embrace Patriarchal concepts.
Socratic Question #2: Do you believe “It’s a man’s world?”
Socratic Question #3: Omitted For Count
Socratic Question #4: Omitted For Count
Socratic Question #5: Omitted For Count
The typical American believes in God (92 percent)
Reason being that advances in technology and communications have made moot the reasons why historical gender roles and attitudes were assumed and enforced during those many centuries.
What is the rate of incumbency retention of political office?
After a woman has won a political office, how would you quantify any advantage or disadvantage she has in doing her job?
What other factors, besides gender, may negatively effect a woman from gaining office and working with her colleagues?
As we have seen in the past century, many women have been elected and appointed political office (some major leadership roles as well). Would you say that it is impossible for there to ever be a woman majority in the House And Senate, specifically referencing the United States?
What relevance does religion have in the selection of female candidates for office?
Husbands left heavily pregnant wives or spouses struggling with prams and pushchairs to fend for themselves as they and all other male passengers got on at the front of the bus.
Originally posted by ProtoplasmicTraveler
The United States is not even 250 years old, and the Patriarchal Christian and Roman concepts it is largely founded on are thought to be over 2,000 years old.
Socratic Question #1: If you truly feel that there is no bias against women and they are not held to dual behavioral standards, how do you explain why so many authors, bloggers, and government bodies are concerned as evidenced by websites, blogs, books, and official reports on this phenomenon?
Socratic Question #2: Can you honestly say you as a man you have no biases or prejudices against women in any way shape or form?
Socratic Question #3: Assuming as a male you do not wear dresses, high heeled stiletto shoes and makeup, can you explain why you don’t?
Socratic Question #4: You are in a woman’s home or sharing a home with a woman and spending the night with her, she wakes you up and says “I hear a strange noise; I think someone has broken into the house, I am going to go check” do you protest and insist checking yourself, or would you ‘accept’ she wants to do it herself?
Socratic Question #5: You have invited a woman to dinner, and you are driving her there in your car, when you park at the restaurant she says “Hold on don’t get out I want to get your door for you!” would you agree to this and 'let' her?
Please hire a secretary to do your research...
Since 1954, the average incumbent reelection rate in the House is 93%.
[1]
In sum, incumbents tend to win because they enjoy significant advantages over their challengers. The widely-accepted conventional wisdom about these advantages is that they make congressional elections unfair. It is true that it is difficult to beat an incumbent, but that is generally the case not simply because the incumbent enjoys the perks of office and has a large campaign bank account. Members of Congress are reelected because their constituents have not been provided with a compelling reason to vote for someone else.
[2]
Unrealistic, cavalier and disingenuous attitudes like my opponent’s who pretends, yes pretends, that these dual standards no longer exist, -Snip-
Love her or hate her, Americans seem to be intrigued by former Alaska governor and 2008 Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin. First indications of this appeared when her book Going Rogue topped national bestsellers' lists. Now, her fame is showcased in the success of her new reality show on the TLC network, "Sarah Palin’s Alaska." According to About.com, the series has quickly become the most watched debut in TLC history, having attracted 5 million viewers. [3]
The former governor and 2008 vice presidential candidate backed scores of congressional and gubernatorial candidates this election, a sought-after endorsement that helped lift several Republicans to victory.
[4]
A female incumbent enjoys this behavioural advantage as much as their male counterparts.
McCain's running mate – now hit by revelations of a lavish shopping spree – is starting to hurt his poll ratings. David Usborne reports
McCain himself rarely spoke to Palin during the campaign, and aides kept him in the dark about the details of her spending on clothes because they were sure he would be offended. Palin asked to speak along with McCain at his Arizona concession speech Tuesday night, but campaign strategist Steve Schmidt vetoed the request.
Denise DiStephan Denise Distephan – Wed Nov 17, 7:32 pm ET
The Nation -- Women fell two votes short on Wednesday to coming closer to getting paid the same as men for the same work
The bill, which will not be brought up again in this Congress, faces more of an uphill battle in the next one
Regarding the link you provided regarding the different bus doors for men and women in Israel, has Israel ever had a female Prime Minister?
Socratic Question #2 - Does gender bias in the day to day interactions of 'average' citizens preclude the capacity for objective reasoning in a professional capacity?
Socratic Question #3 - How does Sarah Palin's status as a female and politician, with regards to the last two years, qualify as a disadvantage?
Socratic Question #1 - How has modern technology effected societies perception of the traditional gender roles?
Socratic Question #5 - Are there regions in the world where religion influences politics more than others?
Originally posted by ProtoplasmicTraveler
He admits to erroneously posing a non-specific Socratic Question that resulted in him being given a very direct answer while claiming to have had the statistics he was looking for through this Red Herring.
He desperately tries to score procedural points through this while misrepresenting the value of the information he first conspired to withhold in favor of such a ploy.
He claims the incumbency rate for reelection is 93% when in fact 12 incumbent Senators, 32% chose not to even run for the 37 Senate Seats in this election.
Of the 25 incumbent Senators running 6 failed to win reelection, so 16% lost.
Combined the incumbency rate of reelection for the 2010 Senate is only 51%!
In the house incumbents, Ann Kirkpatrick, Betsy Markey, Suzanne Kosmas, Melissa Bean, Debbie Halvorson, Dina Titus, Carol Shea Porter, Mary Jo Kilroy, Kathy Dahlkemper, Stephanie Herseth Sandlin all lost to men.
Colleen Hanabusa, Vicky Hartzler, and Nan Hayworth were the only women to defeat incumbent men.
he then goes on to cite a single example of a woman in politics that he claims shows there is not only progress, but displays there are no dual standards.
His example Sarah Palin, who not only holds no political office, whatsoever but…
Conservative Republican Neoconservative gains, whose religious dispositions, are still inclined to view women as Eve, that trouble causing female who got us all kicked out of the Garden of Eden will now have a majority!
Women who can not even receive equal pay as men, has caused more women to run for congress and focus on women’s issues.
however importantly this is likely due to Meir’s personal behavior best described by Former Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion who frequently referred to her as “The best man in government” establishing that it was necessary to behave like a man, and not a woman to command the Israeli people’s respect. A respect no other woman has since captured since 1974.
Yes, -Snip-
Answer to Socratic Question #1
IWhen an anonymous online member of a dating site claims to be a woman when contacting me, I ask for first a photo and then a voice recognition call to make sure I am not talking to a man.
Socratic Question 1: Did you vote in the November 2, 2010 U.S. Election?
Socratic Question 2: Have you ever researched the cost of a male political candidate’s wardrobe?
Socratic Question 3: Why do awards shows like the Academy Awards and Grammys result in ‘red carpet’ reviews and critiques on TV Shows and Periodicals of the fashions the women wear to these events but not what the men wear?
Socratic Question 4: Which major U.S. Television Networks have a Female CEO?
Socratic Question 5: Respectively Donnie and Marie Osmond were a little bit rock n’ roll, and a little bit country. Is it conceivable that their Mormon upbringing and faith played some part in preventing them from fully embracing those genres to the extent of being a Satanic Heavy Metal performer, and Country Superstar Diva?
The social, economic, and political roles of women and men have been transformed in
dramatic ways. In 1981, the first woman was nominated to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court.
The term the gender gap came into use for the first time following the 1980 presidential
election. Relatively few women held elective office. Only 23 women served in Congress in
1981, making up 4.3% of members (CAWP 2009a).
In contrast, a record number of women hold elective office today. A total of 90 women
serve in Congress, making up 16.7% of members.
[2]PDF
However, voter prejudice is no longer thought to be a barrier to women's candidacies. Studies show that women are not disproportionately likely to lose their races (Darcy, Welch and Clark 1994; Burrell 1994; Seltzer, Newman and Leighton 1997).² For example, Darcy and Schramm (1977) found that gender had little or no effect on the performance of men and women candidates in general election races for the U.S. House of Representatives in the early 1970's once incumbency status was taken into account.
[3]
It should be noted that the above quoted is a lie. My socratic question was very direct and resulted in no direct answer at all.
Sweden has the second highest percentage of female parliamentarians in the national parliament. 45.3 percent of the elected candidates were women in the 2002 election.
*Translated
The allocation of seats following the 2010 election has now been determined, both as regards proportionality between the eight political parties and as regards the members who are to occupy them. Of the 349 elected members of the Riksdag, 192 are men (55 per cent) and 157 are women (45 per cent).
It is my opponent who is misrepresenting facts. The percentages I gave exclude the number of politicians who choose not to run as there can be no valid voter interpretation upon a candidate who is not on the ballot.
Despite the media narrative that it’s an “anti-incumbent” year, I predicted on Tuesday that more than 90% of incumbents would be reelected in the House. According to Politico.com, 390 incumbent House members ran for reelection this year and 51 were defeated. Thus, 86.9% of House incumbents won reelection. Looks like I was off by 3%.
Why Women Shouldn't Vote
October 23, 2006 in Current Events by Nota Chance | 84 comments
You know, I've always been rather leery of a woman voting. I mean, they're such emotionally driven creatures that most of them don't have a logical bone in their body.
Don't get me wrong – the way that women were created is just right. I'm just saying that there is a reason that they were created as helpers to men.
I agree that women in general focus less on the important issues and more on surface value. But you can't prevent all women from voting just because many (most?) are lacking in the critical thinking department.
SC #1 - Would Palin's success be possible in the centuries without the technological means for instantaneous communications?
SC #2 - How does Sarah Palin's status as a female and politician, with regards to the last two years, qualify as a disadvantage in the realm of politics?
SC #3 - Is it possible that a voter attention to the party line was more of a factor in the 2010 elections then any consideration based upon gender?
Socratic Question #4 - Who was the highest ranking female, regarding political status, in American history?
Socratic Question #5 - How did Bill Clinton's Lewinsky scandal effect Hilary Clinton's political career?
Originally posted by ProtoplasmicTraveler
In Sweden no men or women are elected to ‘parliament’. The voters vote on parties not candidates.
7 of those political parties have bylaws that state 50% of all appointees must be women. The parties are appointing that number of women to fill the seats based on that 50/50 by rule.
This is despite the existence of the 50/50 program: a campaign which aims to meet the Southern African Development Community Protocol on Gender and Development, which commits countries to work towards the goal of having 50 percent women in political and decision-making positions by 2015.
With assistance from the 50/50 campaign a significant number of female politicians were successful in the country's 2009 presidential elections. Of the 237 female candidates who ran, 38 were elected to office, resulting in a total of 43 female MPs nationwide, according to Maulidi.
[1]
The country made history in 2008, when 56 percent of the politicians it sent to Parliament were women, far surpassing a national quota set at 30 percent. Two years before that, women were elected to a third of all mayoral-level posts. Women lead a third of Rwanda's ministries. They protect public assets – the head of the tax authority and the auditor general are women. Every police office in Rwanda has a "gender desk" to take reports of violence against women, as does the national Army.
[2]
Despite the media narrative that it’s an “anti-incumbent” year, I predicted on Tuesday that more than 90% of incumbents would be reelected in the House. According to Politico.com, 390 incumbent House members ran for reelection this year and 51 were defeated. Thus, 86.9% of House incumbents won reelection. Looks like I was off by 3%.
My opponents own source does not agree with him!
He ignores the fact that both men and women often do not think women are as pragmatic and sensible when it comes to all important security questions like the War on Terror.
My opponent neglects that many men resent the fact that they can not earn a sufficient enough income to keep their wives at home, and would prefer their children have a woman’s parental supervision before and after school. That men fear female politicians because they fear the independence of women, that make domestic partnerships much more of a partnership than a dictatorship as they were in centuries and decades past. Those men feel these new transgendered roles tend to lead to a lot more give and take and failed expectations creating a higher divorce rate.
Would her success as a disgraced governor resigning office over “Trooper Gate” as a defeated female politician who cost her running mate the election by buying too many dresses, who holds no political office and is basically the equivalent of a Soccer Mom Budweiser Girl at fringe political rallies be possible? No, Budweiser and Soccer aren’t that old!
Answer to Socratic Question #3
Not in my opinion since, most primaries feature at least one female candidate, if more Females had gotten through the process by not loosing out to men, then even if it was, more females would have been elected to office.
Answer to Socratic Question #4
Nancy Pelosi who has since had a loss of status, and it should be considered that loss of status can be directly attributed to her leadership of the Democratic Party. I contend this is largely based on her many well documented cosmetic surgeries taking her away from her crucial duties!
Socratic Question #5 - How did Bill Clinton's Lewinsky scandal effect Hilary Clinton's political career?
Not good, it led many democratic primary voters to conclude if she was no longer good enough for Bill, she was no longer good enough for them!
SC #1: As a former punk rock musician please list your own views as how women are treated in the punk rock world.
SC #2: Please list whether you have ever contemplated the size of Dolly Parton’s chest.
SC #3: Please list a male politician if one who, you have contemplated the size of their chest.
SC #4: Is Lifetime Network your first choice for news, opinions and sports?
SC #5: The Hollywood Gossip Rag (Proto) hears you are dating some new special someone, please list if you hold open doors for her when entering or leaving a building.
The event, organized by the United Nations International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women (UN-INSTRAW), analyzed the achievements and the challenges in increasing women’s political participation in local and municipal governments in the light of the results of the project “Strengthening Governance with a Gender Perspective and the Political Participation of Women at the Local Level in Latin America,” implemented by the Institute and financed by the Spanish Agency for International Cooperation to Development (AECID). [2]
MemoryShock is clearly the victor here. It took several reads to fully appreciate the cohesiveness of his argument, but in his second post he brilliantly unites the seemingly contradictory claims that advantage can be derived from gender and that other factors can trump gender, by using his opponent's widened definition of politics. This also made it possible for Sarah Palin to become a major peice of evidence for his own argument.
ProtoplasmicTraveler took far too much for granted. It wasn't until the third post that he really came alive with excellent statistics and a solid treatment of actual effects of gender roles in society and politics, but MemoryShock was able to counter almost all of it. PT also did a lot of damage to his own side with some fairly offensive generalizations intended to construct a straw man of the opposing side and a slew of overly hostile statements and attempted dirty tricks, especially when it came to Socratic Questions.
Both sides initially were doing a very poor job with Socratic Questions, but as the debate progressed MemoryShock began to get contradictions and extremely flagrant evasions out of ProtoplasmicTraveler, and that cost PT.
Did Protoplasmic Traveler really say that Sarah Palin is not a politician, and is significantly disadvantaged by her inability to play in the NBA???
I knew PT was in trouble as soon as I saw this quote:
My fellow members, the very fact that this question exists, and is being asked is proof positive that gender discrimination takes place and men and women are held to dual behavioral standards in politics.