“If there is a god then he must be a man because no woman could fuck up this bad.” — George Carlin, Jammin’ in New York
ON Sunday, people across the globe commemorated International Women’s Day. It carried the theme: “I am Generation Equality: Realizing Women’s Rights.” The theme is in line with the United Nation’s campaign “Generation Equality,” which marks the 25th anniversary of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action which the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995.
Here in the Philippines, we “celebrate” the whole month of March as National Women’s Month. This is anchored on 1988 Proclamations 224 and 227, and the Republic Act 6949 series of 1990.
The first proclamation declares that the first week of March, each year, as Women’s Week which culminates on March 8 as Women’s Rights and International Peace Day. The second proclamation provides for the observance of the entire month of March as “women’s role in history month.” While the congressional act declares March 8 of every year as National Women’s Day.
Notice that in the proclamations, commemorating women in the country has always been attached to other days also for commemoration — International Peace Day and History Month, respectively.
It took the government two years to give Filipino women a day solely for them.
The Philippine Commission on Women said that this year their theme is “We make change work for women.” This theme will be carried this year up to 2022. In its official website, the commission explains that the theme highlights the empowerment of women as contributors to development. The commission also points out that such development is based on the commitment of “malasakit at pagbabago.”
If that sounds familiar to you, it is because it is Digong Dada’s campaign slogan way back in 2016. I will not belabor how paradoxical the theme is. I know you are feeling the irony of it all — the misogynist character of this administration and its supposed respect to Filipino women. We have Senator Leila Delima and Vice President Ma. Leonor Gerona-Robredo to remind us how this administration deals with empowered women.
Fortunately, the United Nations is not hypocritical in admitting that not a single country has achieved gender equality. There are a gazillion challenges that have yet to be changed.
“Women and girls continue to be undervalued; they work more and earn less and have fewer choices, and experience multiple forms of violence at home and in public spaces,” the UN Women website avers.
The UN organization adds that whatever the women achieved to improve their fates, there has been a “significant threat of rollback,” across the world.
Here, we still think that women get raped because of how they dress. A police station even published such assertion on its Facebook page. Although we have the anti-bastos act enacted, it doesn’t have teeth, to say the least, and opaque, at best.
Until we realize the simple truth that women hold half of the world, we will always be thinking that women are second class citizens of the world. We have not progressed as a species because we keep on depriving our female counterparts of their rightful place in development. Pfft.