Tuesday 23 July 2013

Mr Cameron, you've been misunderstanding...

Dear David Cameron,


I’m writing to you to ask you to support the No More Page 3 campaign.


I know you’ve not been a fan in the past. I know that you’ve dismissed us, told us to ‘turn the page’, and brushed off Caroline Lucas when she tried to engage you in debate, but, after listening to your interviews on Woman’s Hour and The Jeremy Vine show this week, I realised this has all been down to a terrible misunderstanding. During your conversation with Jane Garvey you said that you couldn’t support a ban on Page 3, and that it was not the place for government regulation. Good news. We agree!


You see, our campaign is not about banning Page 3 at all! Don’t feel too bad about it, you’re definitely not the only one who has made that mistake (our twitter feed is often riddled with people deploring us for our attack on the free press, and our apparent disregard for free speech). Our campaign does not ask for a ban. It does not ask for censorship. It certainly does not ask for government intervention or regulation. Instead, we try to explain the Editor of The Sun (currently David Dinsmore) why Page 3 is not a particularly responsible thing to feature in a mainstream publication, and reminding him that he has an editorial responsibility, and perhaps he could use that to some level of professionalism, and that we’re not living in an episode of On The Buses anymore. We do not look for a ban, we look to change attitudes.


The reason we do not ask for a ban is because a ban does not solve the problem of the damaging sexist attitudes that led to Page 3 even existing in the first place. A ban does not mean that the big players in mainstream media have suddenly woken up and thought ‘you know what, this is 2013, and not a Benny Hill sketch, and many of the people I love and care about are women, and maybe I should start treating them as people rather than tits and arse’. A ban would not change these attitudes. They would simply make them less visible, further encouraging misinformed misogynists to declare ‘I don’t even know what these feminists are on about - they have jobs, trousers and the vote, why can’t they just accept we’re all equal now and go make me a sandwich?!’. If there’s going to be sexist nonsense and outdated attitudes going on, I want them out there where I can see them - I want them on the twitter feeds, I want them in the bumbling rubbish spewed out by MPs and I want them dripping down the right-hand side of the Mail Online. Because if they’re out there where we can see them, then we can point at them, we can laugh at them, and, more importantly, we can fight them. And that’s what we’re doing with Page 3. We are, on a daily basis, pointing at this anachronistic example of sexism, and more and more people are joining us in saying ‘oh yeah, that’s not really right, is it.’ We’d really like you to be one of those people.


We do not ask for a ban because we would rather challenge The Sun’s sexism until their editorial team sees that it has no place in today’s society, until they can be persuaded that this is not right, and until they make the voluntary decision to remove the breasts of young women from the pages of their newspaper. I’m sure that this is something you can empathise with, having told Jeremy Vine that we ‘need companies to act responsibly’. We simply ask for The Sun to act responsibly. Or, at least, to stop acting like a bad 1970s sitcom.


So there you have it, David. We’re not asking that you impose a ban. We’re not asking that you put in place legislation. We’re simply asking that you make a stand alongside many of your colleagues, and thousands of women and men, to say ‘ Page 3 is not a decent or respectful way to treat women in our society’.  Now, I can’t think of one good reason why you wouldn’t sign. Can you?


Yours,
No More Page 3



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