[lit-ideas] Bush & women's issues

  • From: JulieReneB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 29 Apr 2004 14:01:46 EDT

U.S. Deletes, Alters Gender Issue Web Data -Report
By Deborah Zabarenko 
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Bush administration has stripped information on a 
range of women's issues from government Web sites, apparently in pursuit of a 
political agenda, researchers reported on Wednesday. 
 
"Vital information is being deleted, buried, distorted and has otherwise gone 
missing from government Web sites and publications," Linda Basch, president 
of the National Council for Research on Women, said in a telephone interview. 
"Taken cumulatively, this has an enormously negative effect on women and 
girls." 
A council report said the missing information fell into four categories: 
women's health; their economic status; objective scientific data; and 
information 
aimed at protecting women and girls and helping them advance. 
The deletions and alterations appear to hew to a political agenda, rather 
than providing the nonpartisan, unbiased data that has been the tradition of 
U.S. 
government reports, the council said. 
Its report cited a fact sheet from the Centers of Disease Control that 
focused on the advantages of using condoms to prevent sexually transmitted 
disease; 
it was revised in December 2002 to say evidence on condoms' effectiveness in 
curbing these diseases was inconclusive. 
The National Cancer Institute's Web site was changed in 2002 to say studies 
linking abortion and breast cancer were inconsistent; after an outcry from 
scientists, the institute later amended that to say abortion is not associated 
with increased breast cancer risk. 
25 PUBLICATIONS DELETED 
At the Labor Department's Women's Bureau Web site, the report said 25 key 
publications on subjects ranging from pay equity to child care to issues 
relating 
to black and Latina women and women business owners had been deleted with no 
explanation. 
Key government offices dedicated to addressing the needs of women have been 
disbanded, according to the report. These include the Office of Women's 
Initiatives and Outreach in the White House and the President's Interagency 
Council 
on Women. 
At the Pentagon the Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services was 
slated to be dismantled but was saved after an outcry. However, the report said 
this committee now focused on issues such as health care for servicewomen and 
the effects of deployment on families, but not on equity and access issues. 
In the area of scientific objectivity, the report said two advisory 
committees recommended the Food and Drug Administration  approve a 
contraceptive known 
as Plan B as a nonprescription drug but were blocked by political pressure 
from doing so. 
Regarding violence against women, the report said the U.S. attorney general, 
as of March 2004, had failed to conduct and publish a study required under the 
2000 Violence Against Women Act to investigate discrimination against 
domestic violence victims in getting insurance. 
The White House did not immediately return a call for comment. >>

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