[[link removed]]
MORE THAN A MAGAZINE, A MOVEMENT
Today at Ms. | September 4, 2024
With Today at Ms. —a daily newsletter from the team here at Ms. magazine—our top stories are delivered straight to your inbox every afternoon, so you’ll be informed and ready to fight back.
Promise Keepers Revival? The Ms. Q&A With Jackson Katz on the Trump-Era Resurgence of the Largest Organized Men’s Movement [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]]
Guests attend The Awakening, a gathering of 25,000 Promise Keepers, on June 10, 2006, in Razorback Stadium in Fayettville, Ark. (Charles Ommanney / Getty Images)
By Carrie N. Baker | In the 1990s, Promise Keepers were an evangelical group of Christian men who pledged to keep their promises to their wives and children in exchange for female submission and service. Relatively apolitical at the time, Promise Keepers even pledged to work toward “racial reconciliation.”
Filling football stadiums, evangelical men and boys felt safe to cry and hug, while reaffirming each other’s masculinity and entitlement to male dominance. By the end of the 1990s, Promise Keepers had faded from the headlines, but now thirty years later they are staging a revival.
Ms. sat down with Jackson Katz to get his take on the Promise Keepers revival. “Elements on the Trumpist right understand very well that right-wing, white evangelical men are an incredibly important constituency within the larger MAGA coalition. … The ‘crisis in masculinity’ has now become a crisis in democracy.”
(Click here to read more) [[link removed]]
Project 2025 Would Fuel the Assault on Election Officials [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]]
A Fulton County Elections worker stretches his arms as voters cast ballots in Georgia’s primary election at a polling location on May 21, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Among the races on the ballot in Fulton County is Scott McAfee, the Fulton County Superior Court Judge overseeing former president Donald Trump’s election interference criminal trial. (Photo by Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images)
By Eric Petry and Daniel I. Weiner | Since 2020, election officials across the country have been thrust into the middle of election deniers’ campaign to undermine faith in American democracy. Scapegoated for outcomes that some politicians and voters don’t like, election officials have faced increasingly violent rhetoric and attempts to criminalize their work that are fueled by disinformation and conspiracy theories.
Fortunately, these dedicated public servants have largely withstood the attacks, and the election denial movement faltered at the ballot box in the midterms, as voters across the country rejected many of the candidates touting its baseless conspiracy theories.
But election officials now face a new set of threats from Project 2025, a conservative policy agenda that not only proposes to withhold critical federal support for their work but also threatens to weaponize the Justice Department and other federal agencies to further politicize election administration and revive unfounded attacks on election officials.
(Click here to read more) [[link removed]]
Feminist Philanthropy Can Do More to Save Democracy—Here’s How. [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]]
Vice President Kamala Harris introduces President Joe Biden during a campaign rally on May 29, 2024, in Philadelphia, (Andrew Harnik / Getty Images)
By Alfonsina Peñaloza | In the push for stronger democracies and gender justice, there is a missing element: a full-throated feminist philanthropy movement.
Feminist philanthropy abides by three distinct tenets: respecting local contexts and knowledge; providing long-term, flexible funding to women’s rights organizations working on systemic change; and supporting women’s leadership at all levels.
(This essay is part of a Women & Democracy package focused on who’s funding the women and LGBTQ people on the frontlines of democracy. We’re manifesting a new era for philanthropy—one that centers feminism. The need is real: Funding for women and girls amounts to less than 2 percent of all philanthropic giving; for women of color, it’s less than 1 percent. Explore the “Feminist Philanthropy Is Essential to Democracy” [[link removed]] collection.)
(Click here to read more) [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]] Tune in for a new episode of Ms. magazine's podcast, On the Issues with Michele Goodwin on
Apple Podcasts [[link removed]] + Spotify [[link removed]] .
In this episode, we’re joined by two co-hosts of the Webby Award-winning #SistersInLaw podcast to discuss where our nation stands as we approach the 2024 elections—from the ongoing trials faced by former president Donald Trump, to Nikki Haley, to the Supreme Court’s recent opinions and so much more.
We hope you'll listen, subscribe, rate and review today!
[link removed] [[link removed]]
READ THE REST [[link removed]] | GET THE MAGAZINE [[link removed]] | SUPPORT MS. [[link removed]]
[[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]] [link removed] [[link removed]]
Enjoy this newsletter? Forward to a friend!
Was this email forwarded to you by a friend? Subscribe [[link removed]] .
Ms. Magazine
1600 Wilson Boulevard
Suite 801
Arlington, VA 22209
United States
Manage your email subscriptions here [[link removed]]
If you believe you received this message in error or wish to no longer receive email from us, please
unsubscribe: [link removed] .