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Care About Women's Rights? Support Ethical Oil

Posted: 10/25/11 10:16 AM ET

In an article a few weeks ago, so-called "social justice organizer" Maryam Drangi is bothered by the fact that EthicalOil.org is doing something that women's rights organizations in Canada are failing to do: stand up for the rights of oppressed women in conflict oil regimes Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Last month we ran an ad educating Canadian consumers about the oppression of women in Saudi Arabia and the role played by Saudi oil exports in enabling this atrocious oppression. Women in this oil-rich kingdom aren't allowed the drive, aren't allowed to have a job without the permission of their 'master,' and their testimony in court is worth only half that of a man's. Saudi women can't leave the house into the desert heat unless they're fully covered head to toe in thick drapes of fabric. Women in Saudi Arabia can be stoned to death for the 'crime' of adultery, which means burying up to their shoulders and then having rocks thrown at them till they die from head injuries.

Being raped is one of the most dangerous things that can happen to a Saudi woman since it often leads to punishment of the victim. In 2007 a Saudi rape victim was brutally sentenced to 200 lashes and six months in jail. It's no wonder that Saudi Arabia was even recently named one of the most dangerous places in the world to be a woman by a Thomson Reuters Foundation survey.

Saudi Arabia isn't the only conflict oil regime where being woman is practically a crime. In Iran, an actress named Marzieh Vafamehr was recently sentenced to 90 lashes for the alleged crime of playing a role in a film that the Iranian regime didn't like.

How does the treatment of women in these conflict oil regimes compare to Canada? Well, it is hardly worth the comparison. The most powerful politician in Alberta is a woman: newly-minted Premier Alison Redford. The mayor of Fort McMurray is a woman named Melissa Blake and there are lots of women working in lucrative trades in Fort McMurray. In Canada, women are doctors, lawyers, leaders and entrepreneurs. The majority of university graduates in Canada are women.

Let's face it, Canada is without a doubt one of the best places in the world to be a woman. To dispute this, like Drangi does, is not only ludicrous but it is also a slap in the face to the many women who suffer very real and bloody gender based oppression and abuse in places like Saudi Arabia and Iran. As a woman, I feel fortunate to live in a place like Canada, where my rights are respected and I am free to work and live in a democratic, peaceful environment.

So where are the women's rights groups and human rights advocates speaking out against the terrible oppression of women in Saudi Arabia and Iran? And where were they when the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia tried to censor our Ad that exposed the sad plight of Saudi women? They're busy protesting ethical oil from Canada, like the organization Canadian Voices of Women for Peace.

Every barrel of conflict oil from places like Saudi Arabia and Iran goes to fund medieval, bloody regimes that oppress women and treat them like property. Care about women's rights and social justice? Then support ethical oil from places like Canada, where the highest standards of human rights and equality are upheld.

 

Follow Kathryn Marshall on Twitter: www.twitter.com/KVMarshall

In an article a few weeks ago, so-called "social justice organizer" Maryam Drangi is bothered by the fact that EthicalOil.org is doing something that women's rights organizations in Canada are failing...
In an article a few weeks ago, so-called "social justice organizer" Maryam Drangi is bothered by the fact that EthicalOil.org is doing something that women's rights organizations in Canada are failing...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrBIgp
If I'm wrong, please show me
10:23 PM on 10/27/2011
IF you actually click on the link to the Thompson Reuters Survey, the five most dangerous countries for women (cut and pasted):
1) Afghanistan
2) Democratic Republic of Congo
3) Pakistan
4) India
5) Somali
All five of these are very oil POOR nations. Woman's rights in Saudi Arabia are appalling, but oil has very little to do with the problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jake Thomas
elastic
01:11 AM on 10/26/2011
Canada is a great place to be a woman if you are white, I would hate to be a Cree First Nations woman. I highly doubt they are touting the ethics of tar sands oil.
07:56 PM on 10/25/2011
This is one of the most ridiculous arguments for oil propaganda I have EVER read. Where was Kathryn Marshall before this oil came along? Off in Saudi Arabia helping the women? No, actually.
I read her bio - lots of work on political campaigns, but very little concrete work to help disadvantaged women.

Saudi Arabia is a horrible country for women, but buying oil from Canada is not going to make their lives any better. This is such an insulting article in so many ways.
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Felix99
Born to be mild!!!!
06:46 PM on 10/25/2011
For women without power, you might add to those in Saudi Arabia and Iran, the women of the US, if the bright lights of the GOP/TBaggers have their way!!!
03:43 PM on 10/25/2011
It seems we have more than a little "propaganda" coming from the previous comments. Ms. Marshall makes some very good points Yes, where are the womens rights groups and human rights groups, when it comes to middle east oppression, oh yes ! totally silent . There are no political points to be made in condemning oppression there.
Must I make the observation , once again, that oilsands oil is no more "dirty" than California heavy crude, or Venezuela heavy oil etc. There is no "evil" oil in Canada , only apoplectic environmentalists losing a war against the timely development of Canadian resources.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Brendan DeMelle
Executive Director of DeSmogBlog
01:40 PM on 10/25/2011
Kathryn Marshall and her colleagues at the oil industry front group Ethical Oil Institute (a.k.a. McLennan Ross law firm) are serving up a massive helping of red herring in a desperate attempt to portray the dirtiest oil on the planet - Canada's filthy tar sands - as 'ethical.'

This argument is pure propaganda, with no basis in reality.

What Canadian women know - the ones who aren't paid to shill for the oil industry - is that tar sands oil is bad news for climate change, for water quality, for the boreal forests and their abundant wildlife, and for Canada's (suffering) reputation as a leader in finding solutions to our oil addiction.

Marshall's conclusion, corrected, would read:
Care about women's rights and social justice? Then work to end the tyranny of oil in our lifetime. Canada, where the highest standards of human rights and equality are upheld, should be a leader on this, rather than an obstructionist.

As DeSmogBlog contributor Emma Pullman wrote to Oprah Winfrey recently, after 'Ethical Oil' ads popped up on the Oprah network:
"There's nothing ethical about oil, no matter where it comes from. If you actually want to take on Saudi sheiks, then support a transition from fossil fuels to clean renewable energy."
http://desmogblog.com/open-letter-oprah-winfrey-ethical-oil-ads
12:37 PM on 10/25/2011
In fact, in the age of peak oil, Saudi oil will always find a buyer. Therefore the author's arguments are wrong, and I think show a cynical disregard for the facts, common to paid lobbyists.

It saddens me that a woman would use Feminist arguments to champion the rape and pillage of Mother Earth.

Nothing could be more opposite from the Feminist viewpoint.

"EthicalOil" is a known lobbying front for the Big Oil interests.
12:27 PM on 10/25/2011
Sorry. You may be genuine but I truly dont believe your concerns.

Heres what I think: You have a product which is hard to extract, hard to process, is environmentally dangerous and is costly to get to the pump.

Since you have no other attributes to effectively market the goop you have to play the ethical angle.

Unfortunately your cause is real but your oil marketing is sad.
12:25 PM on 10/25/2011
What an huge load of bull! To say that to support the environmental atrocity of the Tar Sands is somehow going to benefit women in oppressive, oil-rich nations is insensitive, horribly misinformed and an insult to those women. Its also an obvious and desperate attempt to distract the public from the real issue. There is no such thing as "ethical oil," especially when it comes to the Tar Sands.
If we took the money that would be invested in the Keystone pipeline and put it into green energy development and started moving the Nation away from dependency on oil, we could create more jobs, greater opportunities and a healthier environment for all Canadians. THAT is the ONLY ethical choice.
11:59 AM on 10/25/2011
Anything that is genuinely 'ethical' is 'ethical' in and of itself, and does not need to be 'sold' as part of an advertising or PR campaign for a product such as oil (and especially oil!). To tie 'ethics' in this way to the selling of oil is quite frankly UNETHICAL. It debases and pollutes the very notion of 'ethics'. True ethics have meaning only in the context and functioning of true conscience, not the cynical egoism of selling oil. Who honestly believes that those marketing their oil and pipelines in this way have any (genuine) concern for 'ethics' apart from its hijacked, contrived and convenient use in marketing their oil and pipelines?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Frnkndad
09:51 AM on 10/25/2011
The tar sands are environmentally the worst form of oil.

The right of a woman to breathe clean air is more valuable than the right to drive or vote.
07:02 PM on 12/22/2011
I would add the right to drink safe clean water as also being more valuable than the right to drive and vote.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Frnkndad
09:48 AM on 10/25/2011
What about the right of a woman to breath clean air?
If it's ok for a woman to be bought and paid for by the oil industry in the promotion of the laughably mislabelled 'ethical oil'. Shouldn't other forms of dehumanizing prostitution be legalized as well?