focus on the family

GRITtv: Sarah Posner: Civil Rights For Fetuses at CPAC

At last week's Conservative Political Action Conference, the tea party ruled. "Saving freedom" was the theme of the conference, and the tea party mojo -- screeds against imagined socialist policies and the supposed tyranny of liberalism -- effortlessly overran old school small government conservatism to solidify the tea party's position as the movement's reigning force. ... But there is one piece of the old conservative coalition that is still trying to find its way in the tea party upheaval: the anti-abortion movement ... The tea party movement claims to want complete freedom from government intervention. To hitch their wagon to the tea party express, anti-abortion activists are claiming that it?s fetuses, not women, who deserve that freedom. Listen to Sarah Posner's full comment.

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Democracy Now!: Fri., Feb. 5, 2010

With the Super Bowl just two days away, CBS is coming under criticism for accepting an anti-abortion ad paid for by Focus on the Family. We get reaction from Cecile Richards of Planned Parenthood and sportswriter Dave Zirin, author of "A People’s History of Sports in the United States," who says the New Orleans Saints’ Super Bowl appearance — at least for the moment — is boosting spirits in New Orleans on a level unseen since Hurricane Katrina andexplains how the Super Bowl spectacle continues to be used to promote US militarization. Harvard law professor Lawrence Lessig argues that “Congress is the core of the problem with American democracy today.” Yemeni journalist Nasser Arabyee says US involvement undermines sound response to Yemen-based militants. "Democracy Now!" is a daily independent newshour.

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GRITtv: Feminism, the Super Bowl and the Media

CBS has changed its longstanding policy of not allowing issue ads during the Super Bowl to accept an anti-choice advertisement from Focus on the Family, and women's groups are furious at the double standard: CBS still rejected an ad from a gay dating service. Jehmu Greene and the Women's Media Center are calling for CBS to pull the ad, and other groups have joined the protest. Meanwhile, Nona Willis Aronowitz has a new book, Girldrive: Criss-Crossing America, Redefining Feminism, which aims to find out what kind of feminism women around the country support, and Shelby Knox came from a southern conservative background to become an activist for sex education. We ask them what feminism means now and whether we should be focused on women in the media or other issues.

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GRITtv: The F Word: Another Super Bowl, Another Scandal

It's Super Bowl season, another year, another scandal. This year's outburst over CBS's $3 million Focus on the Family ad has revived the mythology around another Super Bowl ad, that one involving domestic violence. As a player in that story, I've come to anticipate game season: the domestic violence Super Bowl so-called "hoax" is one right-wing media-manufactured vampire that just won't die. Let me lay out the facts one more time. Shortly before the start of the Super Bowl on NBC in 1993, viewers saw a public service announcement that warned: "Domestic violence is a crime." The 30 second moment (worth roughly $500,000 to advertisers) was the result of many weeks of work by FAIR, the media watch group where I co-directed the Women's Desk, and a coalition of anti-violence groups in negotiations with executives at NBC and NBC Sports. License-holders to the biggest-revenue producing broadcast of the year, the networks, at the time, were required to air a free PSA every year. They'd never aired one on domestic violence. Workers at women's shelters, and some journalists, had long reported that Super Bowl Sunday is one of the year's worst days for violence against women in the home. FAIR hoped that the broadcast of an anti-violence PSA on Super Sunday, in front of the biggest TV audience of the year, would sound a wake-up call for the media, and it did. Helpful stories about a generally undercovered topic flooded the airwaves and hit the press for days before the game. But a handful of reporters and editors decided to "debunk" the story. The "debunkers," led by Ken Ringle of the Washington Post, (1/31/93), claimed that FAIR had slanted the facts and claimed that "national studies" linked Super Bowl Sunday to increased assaults. Similar stories ran almost simultaneously on the AP, the Boston Globe and the Wall Street Journal. Let me say it one more time. That wasn't FAIR's claim. In fact, FAIR made the point repeatedly that domestic violence is understudied and under-reported. Critics charged that the coalition was forced to "acknowledge" that its evidence was largely "anecdotal." But "anecdotal" was our word: I used it in countless interviews calling out for more reporting. In the Washington Post, Ringle painted a picture of a feminist mob strong-arming the networks with myth and false statistics. And that claim was quickly picked up by and amplified by professional anti-feminists Christina Hoff Sommers, the Independent Women's Forum and on and on.... But it was Ringle who distorted the facts. Washington Post readers to this day probably don't know that of the four experts cited by Ringle, only one agreed with the article's thesis. Ringle quoted psychotherapist Michael Lindsey to defend his point that the Super Bowl PSA campaign was misguided: "You know I hate this," Ringle quoted Lindsey saying. But Lindsey told FAIR that he was referring to Ringle's line of questioning, not the anti-battering campaign. "He was really hostile," Lindsey added. On the same day as Ringle's "debunking" story, Lindsey was quoted in the New York Times, saying, "The PSA will save lives." The F Word is a regular commentary by Laura Flanders, the host of GRITtv which broadcasts weekdays on satellite TV (Dish Network Ch. 9415 Free Speech TV) on cable, and online at GRITtv.org and TheNation.com. Follow GRITtv or GRITlaura on Twitter.com.

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GRITtv: Feb. 4, 2010

CBS has changed its longstanding policy of not allowing issue ads during the Super Bowl to accept an anti-choice advertisement from Focus on the Family, and women's groups are furious at the double standard: CBS still rejected an ad from a gay dating service. Jehmu Greene and the Women's Media Center are calling for CBS to pull the ad, and other groups have joined the protest. Meanwhile, Nona Willis Aronowitz has a new book, Girldrive: Criss-Crossing America, Redefining Feminism, aiming to find out what kind of feminism women around the country, and Shelby Knox came from a southern conservative background to become an activist for sex education. We ask them what feminism means now and whether we should be focused on women in the media or other issues. "Would President Obama speak at a prayer breakfast organized by the KKK? Would Jim Wallis and other 'progressive' Christians attend?" That's what Frank Schaeffer wants to know, asking why Obama can't seem to break with the tradition of the White House National Prayer Breakfast. Bill Withers is responsible for so many songs you know and love. ?Ain?t No Sunshine,? ?Lean On Me,? ?Lovely Day,? ?Grandma?s Hands,? and ?Just the Two of Us" are just some of his familiar recordings. Filmmakers Damani Baker and Alex Vlack created an intimate portrait of Withers years after fame transformed him from a working-class guy with a family to a star. In Still Bill, they talk to Withers and his friends and family, and they joined us in studio to tell the story behind the film. It's drones, crones, Toyota, the Super Bowl, and one-line summaries of the ten (yes, ten!) Best Picture nominees for this year's Oscars in Kate Clinton's latest commentary. South Florida's Raging Grannies have a little message for CBS over its Super Bowl ad policy. Tim Tebow isn't the only male pro athlete with an opinion on women's reproductive choices, it seems. Former Minnesota Vikings football player Sean James and former Olympic Gold Medalist Al Joyner (brother of Olympic track star Jackie Joyner-Kersee) speak up for women's choices in this video from our friends at RH Reality Check. New media and new technology are going to save the world, or at least the media, right? Well, our friends at Yo! TV headed down to the Girls in Tech Conference to talk to some of the women who are shaping tech now.

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