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Sandra Fluke lends her talents to global campaign against following women

It’s been a while since we’ve heard from Sandra Fluke, so it’s worth reviewing just how she became a household name — and a state senate candidate, and a featured speaker at the Democratic National Convention, and a nominee for Time Magazine Person of the Year — in the first place. You might say it was her testimony before a Democratic congressional panel on contraception coverage and women’s health, at which she claimed that contraception could cost a law school student more than $3,000.

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After a poorly worded insult from Rush Limbaugh made Fluke a national celebrity, she went on to campaign for every liberal cause that crossed her path. Her latest cause: following and street harassment.

Of course — of course — that survey was of women and transgender women, and the cause is more specifically street harassment of women by men. Oddly, the campaign against following is a joint effort of non-profit Hollaback! and the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations’ Worker Institute, “advancing worker rights and collective representation.” OK then.

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The Daily Star in Bangladesh notes that “the media can help change perceptions of gender-based violence, and end the culture of acceptance of such violence and the social stigma attached to the victims.” But the first line of defense is the woman herself.

Here’s a hilarious video for those who still don’t get the gender-based violence that is street harassment.

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https://twitter.com/davidmbeasley/status/609069019648421888

For more on Fluke’s contribution to the fight against street harassment, follow her on Twitter — just not too closely.

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