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Violence Against Women Act to be Voted on THIS WEEK [futureswithoutviolence.org]

 

By Kiersten Stewart, Futures Without Violence, March 15, 2021

The reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act is scheduled for a vote this week in the House of Representatives. We need your help! Members of Congress need to hear from you that you want them to support VAWA.

  • Increase prevention;
  • Invest in communities of color
  • End impunity for violence against Native women by non-Native perpetrators on tribal lands;
  • Improve access to housing for victims and survivors;
  • Protect victims of dating violence from firearm homicide;
  • Help survivors gain and maintain economic independence;
  • Improve the healthcare system’s response to domestic violence and sexual assault, dating violence, and stalking.

VAWA has historically been supported in a bipartisan manner, but only two Republicans are currently co-sponsors of the bill. That’s why we need your help. We need to secure as many votes as possible to make sure it passes.

Check if your representative is sponsoring this bill here. If your Representative is not a sponsor, please ask them to vote for VAWA. You can find your representative here. Tell them why it is important to you.

You can also tweet your rep, and find their twitter handle here. You can use this sample tweet:

“I’m with @JacksonLeeTX18 & @RepBrianFitz. Pass the bipartisan #VAWA4ALL because all survivors deserve justice! @RepHandle, please co-sponsor and vote for H.R.1620 #VAWA21”

It is more important than ever that we reauthorize VAWA. Now is not the time to turn back.

In solidarity,

Kiersten Stewart

Director of Public Policy and Advocacy

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Comments (2)

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I wonder whether misogyny and male violence in general could be integrally linked with the same unfortunate and constraining social aspect that still (albeit perhaps more subtly than in the past) idealizes/defines the ‘real man’?: He'd be one who will fight and win, is stiff-upper-lip physically and emotionally strong, financially successful and supportive, assertively solves problems himself and exemplifies sexual confidence/prowess.

After all, I recall that, shortly after Donald Trump was sworn-in as president, a 2016 survey of American women—conducted not long after his abundant misogyny was exposed to the world—revealed that a majority of respondents nonetheless found attractive his alpha-male great financial success and confidence.     

I also wonder whether the above may help explain why the book Childhood Disrupted was only able to include one man among its six interviewed adult subjects, there presumably being such a small pool of ACE-traumatized men willing to come forward for the book? Could it be evidence of a continuing subtle societal take-it-like-a-man mindset? (Note: I tried contacting the book's author on this matter, twice, but received no reply.)

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