2011.05.16: May 16, 2011: Lori Ziganto writes: That great lefty favorite, the Peace Corps, just had a 50th birthday! You can tell, because it's demanding presents.
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2011.05.16: May 16, 2011: Lori Ziganto writes: That great lefty favorite, the Peace Corps, just had a 50th birthday! You can tell, because it's demanding presents.
Lori Ziganto writes: That great lefty favorite, the Peace Corps, just had a 50th birthday! You can tell, because it's demanding presents.
Hey, what's a little rape, with the added insult of victim blaming, as long as we keep our sweet, sweet funding? You know what I am skittish about, Democrats? Funding an organization wherein women are raped, assaulted and even murdered; 1000 women have been sexually assaulted while in the Peace Corps in the past decade alone. And 23 Peace Corps volunteers have been murdered since its creation. This isn't new, either. Peace Corps volunteer Deborah Gardner lost her life in Tonga in 1976. The world is a dangerous place sometimes. And sending women to places that are known dangers without adequate, or even mediocre for cripes sake, support is beyond irresponsible. Especially if the organization itself is complicit in the violence perpetrated against the women who volunteer for them. And, in fact, exacerbates the harm to the women by not only attempting to hide the crimes, but by blaming the victims. Taxpayer money should in no way be used to support violence against women, nor the revolting covering up of the same.
Lori Ziganto writes: That great lefty favorite, the Peace Corps, just had a 50th birthday! You can tell, because it's demanding presents.
The Peace Corps at 50: What's a Little Rape, Murder, and Brutalization of Women Between Friends?
posted at 5:15 pm on May 16, 2011
by Lori Ziganto
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Deborah Gardner, Peace Corps volunteer, brutally murdered in Tonga
That great lefty favorite, the Peace Corps, just had a 50th birthday! You can tell, because it's demanding presents. The Lefties who totally love conscience-salving stints in third world countries rejoiced and then swiftly returned to their soy lattes and organic arugula. Senator Harry Reid issued a breathless, sycophantic statement in which he, being Harry Reid, couldn't resist making things up, pouting and petulantly trying to cling to funding.
"However, I'm deeply discouraged that Republicans have proposed slashing significant funding for a program that trains workers for a 21st century global economy, builds good will around the world and promotes public service. Instead of reducing the effectiveness of a highly cost-effective program, we should cut government spending in a smart, responsible way that targets waste and excess while keeping our economy growing."
Of course, he had nothing to say in response to charges that perhaps the Peace Corps isn't so peaceful. At least not for the women who were raped and then blamed for being raped - during their stints in the corps. No ado was made about the House hearing on Wednesday investigating the same either, nor the legislation proposed by Congressman Poe (R-TX) that would require some Peace Corps oversight. In fact, the New York Times reported that Democrats wished to, as always, sweep such things under the rug in fear that their precious funding might be lost:
But whether such a bill would pass Congress is unclear. Representative Niki Tsongas, Democrat of Massachusetts, is co-sponsoring Mr. Poe's bill, but other Democrats are skittish about it. They worry that the legislation, and Wednesday's hearing, might be used to undermine the Peace Corps - the legacy of a Democratic president - and cut its funding.
Hey, what's a little rape, with the added insult of victim blaming, as long as we keep our sweet, sweet funding? You know what I am skittish about, Democrats? Funding an organization wherein women are raped, assaulted and even murdered; 1000 women have been sexually assaulted while in the Peace Corps in the past decade alone. And 23 Peace Corps volunteers have been murdered since its creation. This isn't new, either. Peace Corps volunteer Deborah Gardner lost her life in Tonga in 1976.
Deborah Gardner (pictured above) was murdered by fellow Peace Corps worker Dennis Priven, who turned himself in. After stabbing her 22 times to death. The Peace Corps reaction? Try to cover it up:
"Even after everyone knew it was Dennis, already that effort by the Peace Corps to put the blame somewhere else. And to make things go away," says Weiss. "That impulse has seized the Peace Corps within moments of Deb's death."
As revolting as that is, they went one further. The Peace Corps hired, and paid for, the best defense attorney available in Tonga. Priven was found not guilty and the Peace Corps quietly shuffled him back to the United States. Where he lived freely, for decades. Working for the government. No, really:
Weiss says Priven has led a small, anonymous life since then. He's divorced, and he recently retired after working for decades for the U.S. government.
"Twelve years after Deb's death, he was working for Social Security," says Weiss. "And ultimately was their top computer guy in the Brooklyn office.
Kate Puzey was 24 years old when she was brutally murdered, her throat slit, while working for the Peace Corps in 2009. Her concerns about a fellow employee were ignored, and then the subject of an attempted cover-up after her death.
Jessica Smochek was gang-raped in Bangladesh in 2004. This is how the Peace Corps gave her aid afterward; not only medical malpractice, but they blamed her. For being gang-raped (emphasis mine):
Peace Corps medical officer refused to give her a proper physical examination. Instead, the medic confiscated the former English teacher's cellphone so that she could not alert her fellow volunteers and instructed her to tell anyone who asked about her sudden departure from the program that she was returning to the U.S. to get her wisdom teeth out. When Smochek arrived in Washington, D.C., a Peace Corps official asked her to write down everything she had done to provoke the attack.
"Shortly after I left, the country director - who never attempted to contact me after I was raped - called a meeting of several women in my former volunteer group and told them, without my permission, what had happened to me," she said. "Then, he told them that rape was a woman's fault and that I had caused what happened to me by being out alone after 5:00 PM.As for the other women in the group, who had been very vocal about being constantly stalked and afraid, he threatened them with administrative separation."
Jessica was one of the courageous women who testified before Congress on Wednesday. You know, that same Congress that contains members more concerned with loss of funding than the actual women, and the violent crimes committed against them, themselves.
Commentary Magazine asks "where are the feminists?" While the hypocrisy is, as always, staggering, that's not a question I'd bother asking. Who cares where they are? It's clear that "feminists", and Democrats, are not For The Women and they have never been. From their embracing of Obamacare, which harms women, to their frantic scurrying to cover up the exploitation of young girls by Planned Parenthood, it is painfully apparent that the end justifies the means to them. Agendas and liberal programs mean all; actual women mean nothing. And, as always, feminist groups do not speak for women, nor should we expect nor want them to. Ever.
The question that should be asked is why the Peace Corps is receiving $400 million in taxpayer funds a year.
Politics Daily points out the original reasoning for the creation of the Peace Corps:
In a 1986 interview, Peace Corps founding director Sargent Shriver, who was hospitalized Monday, described his organization's raison d'κtre this way:
When [Gen. Augusto] Pinochet came into power a lot of Peace Corps volunteers were in Chile and they started protesting Pinochet and writing letters to newspapers. I was criticized in Washington for the actions of these volunteers. My response was that we should rejoice that we are the only country in the world that had the vision to send abroad people who are not under government control. Instead, they are independent free-standing human beings. I maintain that they are the greatest advertisement for the American system of government that there is in the world, they are worth a thousand Coca-Cola signs. There is no better advertisement for what this country stands for than an individual Peace Corps volunteer walking down the street unarmed, wearing the same clothes that the people do, eating the same food, living the same life, and being there as an independent free-standing person who believes in democracy and who is compassionate to his fellow man.
Maybe and I'm not even convinced of this that was all fine and dandy 40 years ago. Today, not so much. The world isn't all unicorns and fairy dust. Moreover, this goodwill ambassadorship stuff doesn't work, right? Doesn't the world's view of Americans change based on whether there is a Republican or a Democrat in the White House? I mean, that's what we are told, over and over. The world hated us merely because, Bush. For years. And now they totally heart us again because, The One, right?
The world is a dangerous place sometimes. And sending women to places that are known dangers without adequate, or even mediocre for cripes sake, support is beyond irresponsible. Especially if the organization itself is complicit in the violence perpetrated against the women who volunteer for them. And, in fact, exacerbates the harm to the women by not only attempting to hide the crimes, but by blaming the victims. Taxpayer money should in no way be used to support violence against women, nor the revolting covering up of the same.
Links to Related Topics (Tags):
Headlines: May, 2011; Sexual Assault and Harassment; Speaking Out; Criticism
When this story was posted in June 2011, this was on the front page of PCOL:
Peace Corps Online The Independent News Forum serving Returned Peace Corps Volunteers
| Peace Corps: The Next Fifty Years As we move into the Peace Corps' second fifty years, what single improvement would most benefit the mission of the Peace Corps? Read our op-ed about the creation of a private charitable non-profit corporation, independent of the US government, whose focus would be to provide support and funding for third goal activities. Returned Volunteers need President Obama to support the enabling legislation, already written and vetted, to create the Peace Corps Foundation. RPCVs will do the rest. |
| How Volunteers Remember Sarge As the Peace Corps' Founding Director Sargent Shriver laid the foundations for the most lasting accomplishment of the Kennedy presidency. Shriver spoke to returned volunteers at the Peace Vigil at Lincoln Memorial in September, 2001 for the Peace Corps 40th. "The challenge I believe is simple - simple to express but difficult to fulfill. That challenge is expressed in these words: PCV's - stay as you are. Be servants of peace. Work at home as you have worked abroad. Humbly, persistently, intelligently. Weep with those who are sorrowful, Care for those who are sick. Serve your wives, serve your husbands, serve your families, serve your neighbors, serve your cities, serve the poor, join others who also serve," said Shriver. "Serve, Serve, Serve. That's the answer, that's the objective, that's the challenge." |
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Story Source: Hot Air Green Room
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; SA; Speaking Out; Criticism
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