Wednesday 27 March 2013

Marriage Equality


26 Mar 13Posted by  in Australian newsNews | Comments Off
betty1lrg
Author: Ian Horner
Publication: The Sydney Morning Herald
Publication Date: March 26, 2013
Betty DeGeneres, 82, is a gay rights campaigner and the mother of the world’s most famous lesbian, not necessarily in that order.
Ellen DeGeneres has a TV audience of at least 4 million viewers per episode in the US alone and is here in Australia to film segments for her show.
Betty is here, too, and addressed a PFLAG meeting at Westmead last Saturday. PFLAG is a worldwide support group for families struggling to accept gay children.
Betty says it was hard enough for Ellen to come out once, at age 20, to her family – let alone a second time, in her 30s, to 36 million people. That time it almost cost her everything.

And Betty is keen to get a message through to Julia Gillard.
You’re outspoken about bullying in schools. Some feel our politicians’ failure to support marriage equality is bullying. ”Yes it is! It’s all bullying. I’d love to get a message through to your Prime Minister. Maybe she should pay attention to what’s going on in the United States right now! A lot of people are gonna find out they were on the wrong side of history. Marriage equality will be OK.
”It’s like the Civil Rights movement in the US. Years ago our situation was awful. You couldn’t have marriage between two different races. Ridiculous! Today it’s such past history.
”Your leaders should pay attention to what’s really happening and get with it. All bullying is bad.
”My friend, a retired English teacher, 92, said to me: ‘Ellen was bullied.’ I thought quickly back to her school days. She didn’t come out til after high school and she wasn’t bullied at school. But my friend said when Ellen came out on her sitcom and all the advertisers pulled out and she lost her show, that was bullying. By the ones who had more power.”
A gay child comes out in their own time. The parent can be caught off-guard and ill-prepared. What’s it like for parents suddenly outed as parents of gay children? How ostracised can they be made to feel? ”That’s a very interesting question. I’ve never had a question like that. Ellen told me she was gay a long time ago, when she was 20. After that, all our family knew and it was fine with everyone. But as she became more famous she wasn’t out publicly. I was afraid I would out her. I couldn’t join PFLAG until Ellen came out because it’d be, you know, what’s Ellen’s mother doing in PFLAG?!”
Was there a moment you wished Ellen had been straight? ”No, because I loved her and when she told me she was gay I still loved her. The first thing I thought was she’d suddenly be an object of bigotry and discrimination. You just have to help end the bigotry and help educate people.”
How can a parent instil a sense of affirmation and pride in a gay child, when they’re bombarded with daily messages that say you’re not OK? ”That’s so awful. Having a good relationship with them to begin with helps tremendously. Always have faith in them, always stand behind them.”
How did Ellen come out to you? ”We were walking on the beach together at my sister’s house in Mississippi, just an hour from New Orleans. Ellen stopped and I turned round. She was crying and I said what’s wrong? She said: ‘Mum, I’m gay.’ She was crying because she didn’t know how I’d take it. I hugged her and all these thoughts immediately ran through my mind, you know, my girl-next-door daughter will suddenly be an object of bigotry. It was all I could think about. That wasn’t OK with me.
”And now kids are coming out at high school and junior high and being able to admit who they are. Not then.”
You’ve been on your daughter’s show a lot, with countless standing ovations. To the average viewer it looks like you’ve got it all together. Thousands of mums would watch and think it’s not that easy for me. What can you say to those who really struggle? ”I’d say get yourself to a PFLAG meeting. That’s Parents and Family and Friends of Lesbians and Gays. It’s the most wonderful organisation and you have it in Australia. We have it all over the United States. They have monthly meetings and parents like me who have gay kids and we love them. You know, I also have a son [Vance] who isn’t gay but he can’t help it. Parents who are struggling can get to a PFLAG meeting or log onto pflagaustralia.org.au and hear the stories of parents who are going through what you’re going through but they’re so OK with it. You have to let your children be who they are.
”When Ellen came out she wrote me a letter. I’d remarried and was living in a different city, she’d gone back to live in New Orleans right after high school. She wrote that she didn’t expect me to ever understand. Well, I think I understand. I think I got past that. The more I met all her friends, I liked them and, you know, there was just really no difference.”


talkback radio misogyny: sexual abuse

Chris Larke alerted me to this from GetUp!
Thanks Chris.

Talkback radio misogyny reached new lows late last week when 2SM radio host John Laws asked a caller whether the sexual abuse she’d suffered throughout her childhood was “her fault”. He even went so far as questioning whether she was "provocative" at the tender age of six. No child "provokes" sexual abuse. 

John Laws' comments are absolutely reprehensible and - despite a fierce eruption of anger on blogs and social media - his "apology" was far from adequate. Instead, he was back on air on Friday telling those complaining to “go to hell.” He even again suggested it was the victim’s fault “if she allowed it to happen”. 

We can't allow incidences like this to continue. In this case, John Laws was dead wrong and unbelievably insensitive. If we let him and the 2SM station managers and owners continue without addressing the serious nature of this kind of talk we're sending a message to all Australians that victim blaming and shaming is OK in this country. 

Click here to sign the petition we've put together with our friends at Destroy the Joint, calling for John Laws to apologise and for management to address the need for education. 

I’ll be honest with you: a campaign like this will typically create an initial surge of rage, but too often dies out as the media cycle moves on. 

As Clementine Ford wrote on Friday, “the news cycle works so rapidly that today's furious tweets are tomorrow's distant ephemera. It's what allows the industry to keep men who offend, men who belittle, men who bully, in their comfortable seats behind their powerful microphones.” 

We’re working with our friends over at Destroy the Joint to plan to deliver your petition in a way that 2SM management and the media can’t ignore - but change starts with you. Don’t let John Laws move into the next media cycle without feeling the consequences of last week’s vile comments. Now is our chance to come together to build a society where victim blaming is no longer tolerated. 

Sign the petition here to hold John Laws to account for his victim blaming: http://www.getup.org.au/campaigns/womens-rights/shame-on-blame/shame-on-victim-blame 

Whether it takes a week, a month or a year – we cannot allow people who blame the victims of sexual abuse and sexual assault to continue to make their revolting comments on air with no fear of consequences, or any idea about what their words mean to the millions of Australians who have suffered sexual abuse. 

With hope, 

Erin, for the GetUp team. 

P.S. People power has the opportunity to create a scandal so big for radio station 2SM that they’ll rethink ever allowing victim blaming to occur again on their airwaves. 2SM management and the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) have the power to put Laws in his place. But as of this weekend it's clear neither have the intention of doing much about this. According to ACMA they have received about eight emailed complaints, which they have referred to the radio station, 2SM. We need both 2SM and ACMA to feel the pressure and take appropriate action. Write to 2SM and submit a formal complaint to ACMA here: http://www.getup.org.au/campaigns/womens-rights/shame-on-blame/hold-2sm-accountable 

If John Laws' comments have been traumatic for you and you would like support, please call the sexual abuse survivor’s hotline on: 1800 737 732 Please Note: this is a National number, I checked it out.

Friday 22 March 2013

11th Biennial National Rural Remote Social Work Conference 25th & 26th July in Victoria.

Jo and I have had our Abstracts accepted for presentation at the:

 11th Biennial National Rural Remote Social Work Conference 25th & 26th July in Victoria.  

“Working with a social worker who displays change-resistant unprofessional behaviour”

Jo Parkinson, Social Work Department, St John of God Hospital, Bunbury, Western Australia

“As a city social worker struggling to be ‘professional’, I possessed a fragile professional identity when commencing a position in a regional community.  Facing the dissonance between trusting my professional self and recognising aspects which required change was challenging."

"I engaged in non-authoritative, authentic dialogue with three mentors.  My social work supervisor and I developed and applied a practice tool to identify, monitor and change my behaviours.  Drawing on an auto-ethnographic account of my journey through supervision, I will provide practical ideas to assist organisations, supervisors and supervisees to improve professional behaviour in a safe, supportive environment.”

“think global, act local: a good place to start ...
a case for country social work centres: starting point services”

L Pianta, Independent Social Worker Collie WA

“Services “in the country” may be ... non-existent, outreached, out-sourced, wait-listed, micro-focussed, unsuitable, inequitably created, distributed & implemented by well-intentioned coordinators, managers and grounded in policy and models of service delivery that may be metro or city-centric: having often-times been developed by project, policy, program people in cities whose context may be the urban landscape and existing funding sources. Then, these are transplanted into places and people beyond the major population areas (a one size fits all approach).

“Social workers are best-positioned to drive a “starting point service model” given the profession’s knowledge, training, values, skill-base, unique position and understanding of the complexities of: diversity, power, gender, culture > structural disadvantage > dominant discourses > social determinants of health & wellbeing > social justice > micro, mezzo & macro practice > research, policy and the political.”

... “I will provide an outline of a proposed ‘starting point service model’ for country social work centres beyond the cities and regional centres: for and with unique and diverse communities.”

More than 620,000 people with a disability living in poverty in Australia: ACOSS

ACOSS MEDIA RELEASE

Wake up call for the nation: More than 620,000 people with disability living in poverty


Poverty in Australia Report - Updated version 2013
ACOSS National Conference - 'Community: The Heart of the Economy' March 25 - 26 in Adelaide

 Key Findings of Report:
 
·       2,265,000 people or 12.8% of all people living below the internationally accepted poverty line (50% of median household income)
·       575,000 children or 17.3% were living below the poverty line
·       620,600 people with a disability or 27.4% were living below the poverty line
·       63% of people in unemployed households were below the poverty line
·       25% of people in lone parent households were below the 50% poverty line
·       37% of people in households whose main income was social security were living below the poverty line
·       14% of women were below the poverty line compared to 12% of men
·       54% of people living in households below the poverty line were female compared to 46% male
·       26% of adults living in households below the 50% poverty line came from a non-English-speaking-country
·       The level of poverty was higher (13.1%) outside capital cities than in capital cities (12.6%)
·        The proportion of people in poverty rose by approximately a third of a percentage point from 2003 to 2010 but it is difficult to compare poverty levels over the long term due to changes in the various ABS surveys.

Friday 15 March 2013

International Journal of the Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice, News, March 2013


"The International Journal of the Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice (IJCAIP) established in March, 2006, is an international and interdisciplinary peer reviewed open access journal. Our mission is to publish, disseminate and make accessible worldwide, quality information, research and knowledge about the creative arts in interdisciplinary practice."


http://www.ijcaip.com/

International Journal of the Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice, News, March 2013


Upcoming in 2013 Creative Arts in Humane Medicine a new book published by Brush Education
editor, Cheryl L. McLean
Creative Arts in Humane Medicine is a innovative  resource book for medical educators and learners about the arts in action in education, programming   contributing toward a more caring and empathic approach to medicine and practice. This is a topical collection which features leaders active in the field as well as new international innovators and provides examples and evidence showing how the creative arts can uniquely offer new ways to learn and practice while facilitating effective communication and creative opportunities to engage in mutually respectful practice and relationship centred care.
NEWS
IJCAIP EVENTS and ANNOUNCEMENTS
RELATED RESOURCES
Executive Editor, Publisher International Journal of The Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice IJCAIPhttp://www.ijcaip.com
Editor CAIP Research text Series, Upcoming "Creative Arts in Humane Medicine" Brush Education, Calgary
email:  CherylMcLean@ijcaip.com
updated website:  http://www.cherylmclean.com


Wednesday 13 March 2013

ELECTION 2013


Here are the current results for Collie-Preston, not fully counted yet. 

Close as I predicted: 20 votes in it when I last looked ... phew!



17/03/2013 ALP by 59 Votes.

How close is that?

What about the Informal Votes = 1075.

What a waste!!!

Mick & Jaimee: two strong candidates, particularly for the town of Collie + the Electorate.

Tuesday 12 March 2013

Saturday 9 March 2013

WA State Election 2013

Polling Place Collie WA



As always, I'm never complacent about exercising my democratic right as a citizen of Australia.

I love everything about this process including following the election night program on the ABC with all the political analysis that occurs, lead by Antony Green and Kerry O'Brien + politicians from of various parties.

This is likely going to be a very close call in this seat of Collie-Preston between two local candidates: both of whom will be good members I reckon.

State wide, I believe that the Liberal Party will be returned to government.

Conversations with people lead me to believe that people I considered to usually vote Labor, may well vote for the Liberal candidate.

I'm curious about the process that takes place for people.
Anecdotally it seems that some people vote along traditional party lines; others vote according to what they see is best for them and their interests; others consider the philosophical and broader picture and impact; whilst some people may not care.

Today I voted both with my head and heart.

I voted for the local Labor candidate Mick Murray and for the Greens - Giz Watson & Hsien Harper in the Legislative Council.

~ the personal is the political ... as is the professional for me as a social worker ~