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  • REPORT SEXUAL ASSAULT

September 7, 2017 by NOW National

Trump Administration Protects the Privileged, Shuns Survivors

Statement of NOW President Toni Van Pelt:

Sexual assault survivors are not safe on Betsy Devos’s watch.

Her announcement today that the Department of Education would begin rolling back protections for campus sexual assault survivors signals once again that this administration is committed only to protecting the privileged.

We’ve seen this in the administration’s treatment of communities of color, and the LGBTQIA+ community. And today, the Trump administration is choosing to protect people who act like Donald Trump. That’s tragic–both for women and LGBTQIA+ individuals who are targeted, and for men who are taught this is what masculinity looks like.

Because of this ugly choice, students are now at risk of losing tools that provided a path to justice–like easy access to Title IX coordinators, and an Office of Civil Rights that listened. But they’re losing far more than that. They’re losing a culture that was finally beginning to support survivors, and take them seriously when they gave voice to their trauma. Without this culture, they won’t speak up. Survivors–particularly women, and particularly members of other already marginalized communities–will go back to enduring the violence in silence.

Where there is silence, there is shame. Survivors have endured far too much of that already. They need to know their schools–and their government–have their backs. The National Organization for Women will continue working fiercely to make that a reality–and to end the cycle of silence and violence once and for all.

Contact
M.E. Ficarra, press@now.org, 951-547-1241

August 12, 2017 by NOW National

Charlottesville White Supremacists Are On the Wrong Side of History

Statement of NOW President Toni Van Pelt

The white supremacists who launched a brutal protest against the city of Charlottesville, Virginia’s plan to remove a statue of Confederate general Robert E. Lee must be held to account for their violence and hate speech, says Toni Van Pelt, president of the National Organization for Women (NOW).

“Robert E. Lee was on the wrong side of history and so are the Charlottesville racists,” says Toni Van Pelt. “The majority of Virginia voters—like the majority of voters across the U.S., voted for the presidential candidate who defended inclusion over intolerance, healing over division and fairness over bigotry. NOW stands with our courageous sisters and brothers in Charlottesville, who are standing strong against hate and violence.”

NOW has always been committed to eradicating racism. In NOW’s original Statement of Purpose, the group’s founders wrote, “We realize that women’s problems are linked to many broader questions of social justice; their solution will require concerted action by many groups. Therefore, convinced that human rights for all are indivisible, we expect to give active support to the common cause of equal rights for all those who suffer discrimination and deprivation.”

Today’s violent march follows an evening “Unite the Right” rally at the University of Virginia where hate-filled rhetoric from Ku Klux Klan members and other alt-right activists was directed at African Americans, immigrants, and Jewish people.

Charlotte Gibson, president of Charlottesville NOW, said, “The white nationalists, neo-Nazis, armed militias and alt-right extremists who came to Charlottesville and tried to hijack democracy today will not succeed. Their rhetoric is never acceptable in a civilized society, and their embrace of violence must never be tolerated.”

“Donald Trump’s personal reliance on the language of confrontation, combat and intolerance has alarmed us all in recent days,” says Toni Van Pelt. “Trump may be sending signals and cues to those who would harm peaceful protesters, but the people of Charlottesville are standing up to Trump-inspired bullying and inspiring us all.”

Contact
M.E. Ficarra, press@now.org, 951-547-1241

August 10, 2017 by NOW National

Google Puts Corporate Interests Over Women’s Safety

Statement of NOW President Toni Van Pelt

Google has once again turned heads this week, because of its sexist and misogynistic treatment of employees. But let’s not forget that Google’s mistreatment of women extends far beyond its Mountain View, Calif. headquarters. Their lobbyists are working hard to protect laws that encourage online sex trafficking–and the exploitation of girls and women.

Backpage.com is a key player in online sex trafficking–providing a hub where traffickers can advertise children for sex. That’s despicable. Yet third-party facilitators of sex trafficking like Backpage.com remain protected under the law, specifically Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA).

Backpage.com has been dodging legal challenges to their illicit conduct, and Google has swooped to their defense. Areport by Consumer Watchdog indicates that Google has contributed millions of dollars to the defense of Backpage. All of this legal work hinges on the protection of Section 230 of the CDA–which supports Google’s corporate interests. Now Google is sending their lobbyists to Capitol Hill, to persuade lawmakers to stay away from this precious piece of the law.

Shame on Google: it’s clear they’ve chosen again and again to put corporate priorities before the safety of girls and women. Their endorsement of Section 230 of the CDA says that they are more than happy to condone child sex trafficking if it furthers their goals. If they’re not resisting injustice, they’re committing it.

Well, NOW’s grassroots activists are ready to resist. Congress needs to amend this dangerous law that allows online sexual exploitation to go unchecked. So we’ll be marching into our representatives’ offices with a simple demand: don’t listen to Google. Change Section 230 of the CDA to make sure that it protects women–not corporations.

Contact

M.E. Ficarra, press@now.org, 951-547-1241

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