EXCITING FORUM MAY 10th ON PERSPECTIVES & STRATEGIES FOR IMPLEMENTATION OF THE EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT

Tickets on sale now for forum on the ERA with well-known feminist leaders and activists

PERSPECTIVES & STRATEGIES FOR IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ERA

Feminists in Struggle is honored to have three amazing guest speakers who have been in the forefront of the fight to register the already ratified Equal Rights Amendment into the Constitution. This is a strategic discussion not to be missed!

This will be a remote event on Zoom. A link will be sent to everyone who registers. REGISTER

WENDY MURPHY is an adjunct professor of Sexual Violence and Law Reform at New England Law | Boston where she also co-directs the Women’s and Children’s Advocacy Project (WCAP) under the Center for Law and Social Responsibility. WCAP runs the Judicial Language Project, and the Hate Crimes Against Women project, WCAP also files amicus briefs and engages in public interest litigation to advance the rights of women and children. On January 7, 2020, WCAP filed a first-in-the-nation federal lawsuit to validate the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) in Massachusetts federal court.

Wendy was a Visiting Scholar at Harvard Law School from 2002-03 and served as the Mary Joe Frug Assistant Professor of Law at New England Law | Boston from 2001-2002. She is a former child abuse and sex crimes prosecutor and founded the first organization in the nation to provide pro bono legal services to victims of violence involved in the criminal justice system. Wendy is an impact litigator who practices in state and federal courts and specializes in advancing the constitutional and civil rights of women and children.

Wendy has authored numerous scholarly articles including a landmark piece explaining the legal relationship between sexual assault on campus and Title IX. Wendy filed many impact litigation cases involving Title IX and campus sexual assault resulting in groundbreaking victories and leading to widespread awareness and reforms, including the well-known April 2011, Dear Colleague Letter. Her most recent law review article is a feminist critical reexamination of the history of women’s struggle for equality and is entitled, “Unequal Protection of the Laws for Women is Constitutional Terrorism, So How Come Nobody Knows about It?

She has also appeared on television as a legal analyst for many years and has worked for NBC, CBS, CNN, and Fox News and has provided legal analysis for print and television media. She is the author of two books, “And Justice For Some,” published by Penguin/Sentinel in 2007 and “Oh No He Didn’t, Brilliant Women and the Men Who Took Credit for Their Work,” published by Cynren Press in 2024..

KAMALA LOPEZ, is a founder and President of Equal Means Equal, filmaker, activist & President of Heroica Films,.Kamala Lopez, launched the movement and documentary film Equal Means Equal, to educate Americans about the importance of equal rights under federal law for women and complete the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

JEAN SWEENEY graduated from the College of the Holy Cross as part of the third class of women and is a New York attorney who spent 15 years on Wall Street as counsel to the money managers. In 2001 she joined the litigation practice of Maloof and Browne LLC as a managing attorney. For the last 12 years she has had the privilege of following her passion of getting women to be honored and respected as equal citizens. She was one of the activists working to get the last 3 States to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment and has worked for the last 5 years on getting our Constitution published with the ERA by leading the National ERA Publication Task Force. She is also an award- winning photographer, Kripalu-trained yoga teacher, writer, speaker, and founder of Rethinking Eve LLC, a business focused on uplifting women.

This is a woman-only event and is interactive, with plenty of time for questions and discussion from participants.

 

TALE OF TWO WITCH-HUNTS

By Ann Menasche

(This piece is the opinion of the author and does not necessarily represent the opinions of Feminists in Struggle)

Feminists are quite familiar with the witch-hunt against so-called “TERFS”, women who assert that sex exists, and is immutable, and the female half of humanity (including lesbians, as women who love women), are deserving of rights based on our sex.  Such recognition that women are a discrete group of people with our own rights and needs (including our right to privacy and safety and to organize apart from males) and indeed, that we are members of the oppressed sex still living under millennia of male supremacy, used to be a no-brainer for progressives and anyone who considered themselves part of the Left.  Then historical amnesia set in and a new catechism, that “transwomen are women”, trickled down from the powers-that-be making a fortune off the bodies of gay, gender non-conforming and/or traumatized children and young people in the “sex change” industry.  Before long, they succeeded in labelling anyone who disagreed as “transphobic” – not ordinary “bigots,” mind you, (with whom you might still be able to have a civil discussion) but the equivalent of “Nazis.”

I have experienced the trauma of the witch-hunt personally – fired from my civil rights job of 20 years, excluded from my local chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace, told that neither my name nor face were welcome in Jill Stein’s Green Party Presidential Campaign, and more recently prevented from renewing my membership in a professional network of homeless lawyers.  All because I have spoken out publicly about women’s sex-based rights. There are many other women who have had their livelihoods and community work similarly jeopardized and even their physical safety threatened, courageous women like Amy Hamm in Canada, a nurse, found to have committed professional misconduct for her outside feminist activities and then fired; also, Kathleen Stock in the U.K., Thistle Pettersen in Wisconsin and Christy Hammer in Maine, to name just a few.

Like all witch-hunts, this one creates an atmosphere of fear and intimidation, dissuading others from speaking out. Some have even felt compelled to denounce the “witches” in order not to be accused of engaging in witchcraft themselves.  Like the scapegoating of old, including the Red Scare of the 1940’s and 50’s targeting anyone suspected of communism or communist sympathies, the ostracism meted against these women is often all-encompassing.  It means that you are blacklisted, no-platformed, removed from the community.

It doesn’t matter if the issue never came up in your job or professional work; your “thought crimes” expressed on social media, in your private life or in outside political activities is enough to hang you.  Your very presence, (the magic power of the “evil eye,” no doubt), makes others “unsafe.”

Since it was only feminists affected, for a long time, no one paid much attention to this witch-hunt.  (That may be changing in the UK with a significant feminist fight-back culminating in the UK Supreme Court decision agreeing that woman means woman under law, and that single sex spaces and programs for women and girls must be protected.)

But now a far bigger more dramatic witch-hunt is brewing in the U.S. and Europe, targeting both men and women, especially non-citizens legally in the country, but citizens as well, using a strikingly similar playbook as that used against feminists. In the U.S. this witch-hunt is being orchestrated by the federal government, first by the Biden administration, and now with far greater intensity, under Trump.

The “witches” this time are pro-Palestinian activists on campuses, labelled “antisemitic” haters for their opposition to Israeli genocide in Gaza, whose political opinions and very presence supposedly make Jewish students “unsafe.”  Never mind that many Jews agree with and have participated in the protests and that even in Israel, a growing number of Jews are demanding, in the streets  of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, an end to the slaughter. In Columbia University, numerous students have been expelled, suspended or stripped of their degrees for exercise of First Amendment rights to speak and peacefully protest against Israel and U.S. foreign policy.  Professors too have been arrested and targeted for peacefully registering their dissent.

For legal permanent resident Mahmoud Khalil, this witch-hunt has meant detention by immigration agents and attempts to deport him, though he has never been charged with any crime. Nor has any evidence been produced that he was antisemitic or even pro-Hamas.  In witch-hunts, evidence is besides the point.

None of this is ever about anyone’s safety, but about silencing speech and preventing critical thought.

Freedom of speech and assembly is for everyone or for no one.  Suppression of speech and thought, whether through government-led repression or by groups claiming to be “progressive” while targeting others’ jobs and livelihoods and ostracizing them from the community for their “wrong” opinions, makes all of us less safe.  We never know who will be the next “witch.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

.