A recently leaked training document from the charity Oxfam has slammed “privileged” white women - not for the usual benign reasons - but for reporting sexual assault and rape. The document claims that ‘privileged white women’ support the root causes of sexual violence for the sin of wanting justice for themselves.
It’s rich how Oxfam, who have been embroiled in scandal after scandal relating to sex trafficking and the prostitution of minors, first in Haiti and now in the Congo to provide a training manual for their many volunteers and employees on how to essentially coerce women into not speaking out against the very organization that is responsible for the violence against them.
It’s almost as if Oxfam doesn’t want the world to know what it’s really up to and it’s finding new ways to cover its tracks. Instead of addressing the storm of sexual violence, rape, and human trafficking that plagues the organization, its employees are being given a guide on how to effectively silence their victims. And they’re doing so through the rhetoric of social justice.
It’s the logical conclusion to the social justice movement, and sociologist Alison Phipps, Professor of Gender Studies at Sussex University agrees. The leaked Oxfam training manual, which tells women not to report their rapes is, ironically enough, based upon the work of the self-proclaimed feminist.
Oxfam: "You're shopping cart contains two shower ready 10 year old girls. Thanks for shopping with us, Mr. President Joe. We intend to be the Amazon of human trafficking."
This message was approved by IHLlary and Hussein Obama on official Evergreen stationery.
It’s rich how Oxfam, who have been embroiled in scandal after scandal relating to sex trafficking and the prostitution of minors, first in Haiti and now in the Congo to provide a training manual for their many volunteers and employees on how to essentially coerce women into not speaking out against the very organization that is responsible for the violence against them.
It’s almost as if Oxfam doesn’t want the world to know what it’s really up to and it’s finding new ways to cover its tracks. Instead of addressing the storm of sexual violence, rape, and human trafficking that plagues the organization, its employees are being given a guide on how to effectively silence their victims. And they’re doing so through the rhetoric of social justice.
It’s the logical conclusion to the social justice movement, and sociologist Alison Phipps, Professor of Gender Studies at Sussex University agrees. The leaked Oxfam training manual, which tells women not to report their rapes is, ironically enough, based upon the work of the self-proclaimed feminist.
https://stillgray.substack.com/p/how-oxfam-sacrifices-women-on-the