Abortion Wars, Health Care Wars, Volleyball Battles
Carole Joffe on the stigmatization of abortion. Also, anti-choicers attack Bob Casey for supporting health and life, and should pregnant high school athletes be allowed to play?
Carole Joffe on the stigmatization of abortion. Also, anti-choicers attack Bob Casey for supporting health and life, and should pregnant high school athletes be allowed to play?
Subscribe to RealityCast:
RealityCast iTunes subscription
RealityCast RSS feed
Links in this episode:
Operation Rescue unleashes on Bob Casey
Scott Lively blames gays for serial killing, genocide
Dispatches From The Abortion Wars
On this episode of Reality Cast, Carole Joffe will be
talking about how the stigma against abortion creates real problems for women
and for providers. Also, Operation
Rescue shows how anti-life they really are, and looking at the question of
whether or not pregnant teenagers should be allowed to play sports.
The National Women’s Law Center has definitely picked up on
the fact that right wing anti-choicers sure do love to speak in code, and so
they put together a video translating some of Bart Stupak’s comments to explain
what he really means.
- stupak
*
The fight is far from over. Pick up the phone and call your representative and tell them
to do whatever they can to keep abortion restrictions out of the final bill.
*********
I usually have nothing but sympathy for people that
Operation Rescue decides to make targets.
Operation Rescue and other confrontational anti-choice organizations
enjoy hostility for its own sake, and mainly use abortion as an excuse to act
belligerent on whoever their leaders tell them is an acceptable target. But I have mixed feelings about this
video where Operation Rescue decided to unleash on Senator Bob Casey, a
Pennsylvania Democrat who is anti-abortion but pro-health care.
- abortion
1 *
Of course, what this guy is yelling is complete
nonsense. Like most anti-choice
fanatics, the confrontation and the glow of being a mean person under the guise
of self-righteousness is the only thing that matters. Facts are irrelevant.
I have no idea what he’s even trying to refer to, since the U.S. hasn’t
funded abortion services overseas in god only knows how long. Of course, we are talking about
Operation Rescue; they probably think condoms are abortion. I’m sure they’re convinced Casey isn’t
nearly enough of a sex-phobic misogynist.
The press release Randall Terry sent out with this video was heavy with
language intended to make people who are grossed out by sex freak out; he
suggested that Casey is "seducing" audiences with boilerplate politician
speeches.
I really don’t like seeing anyone ambushed by a bunch of
dishonest kooks, even though Bob Casey is a maddening anti-choice
politician. And yet, I hoped that
this confrontation was education for Casey and his supporters. See, I think a lot of anti-abortion
folks with otherwise liberal leanings are under the mistaken impression that
the anti-choice movement is composed of sincere people who are truly concerned
about life. But you can just hear
their screeching to see the flaws in that hope.
- abortion
2 *
Who the hell knows what they’re screeching about? Terry’s press release obscures it,
probably because he’s scared to give his followers too much information, or
maybe because he just made all this up.
But whatever it is, the reason that Operation Rescue has made Casey a
target is that they don’t like that he supports measures that will save human
lives, especially health care reform. Though from their screeching, it also
appears they are opposed to any health care spending overseas that would save
lives. For people who claim they’re
"pro-life", they sure are hellbent on making sure that the maximum number of
people in this world die from lack of basic health care. Though of course, they have a special
love of attacking basic health care to save women’s lives—nothing gets them
more riled up than the possibility that our government might spend money that
results in fewer women dying around the world due to preventable reproductive
health problems and unsafe childbirth.
Luckily, despite the screeching opposition to doing anything
that might improve the lives of women and children here and abroad, there seems
to be more political momentum in that direction. As I’m sure you know, Hillary Clinton gave a wonderful
speech about the importance of these issues worldwide at the International
Conference on Population and Development.
- abortion
3 *
Now, of course, the reality of this is undeniable to all
thinking people, that contraception, abortion, and general health care
anti-choicers object to are life-saving.
Life is preserved if women are able to control when they give birth.
Life is preserved if women and girls are educated and can make more money to
lift them out of poverty.
Duh. So let’s hope folks
like Bob Casey realize that when anti-choicers object to measures to improve
women’s lives and health, they are against life. No matter what they call themselves.
***********
insert interview
***********
This next bit is based on an interesting story in light of
the discussion about how abortion is stigmatized, because, as Carole said, that
stigma is rooted in hostility to sex.
How do I know? Because if
you don’t get an abortion in some cases, that’s just as stigmatized.
- volleyball
1 *
If we leave out the issues of misogyny and hostility towards
human sexuality, then it seems the answer is straightforward: Is it
dangerous? The notion that
pregnant women are withering flowers is something that’s lost a lot of ground
in recent years. I can’t see that
it’s more dangerous for a pregnant woman to play volleyball than any woman. Volleyball carries the high risk of
breaking a leg or an arm, after all, and so if you think a miscarriage is
somehow a greater risk than that, it’s because you’re othering the pregnant
woman or insinuating that the fetus matters more than the health of all teenage
girls.
In this case, I’d say that the school’s official policy of
requiring a doctor’s note is enough of a hurdle to cross. Pregnancy should be no more or no less
an issue than any other medical condition. The girl in question achieved that standard.
- volleyball
2 *
At this point, unless you’re trying to stigmatize the young
woman for having a sexuality or having a female body, that should be the end of
it, right? Especially since in
this conservative part of the country, she probably would have gotten even more
abuse if she was known to have an abortion, leaving her with no choices at
all. But of course, this was not
the end of the story, and the fact that this is about sexual shaming becomes
way more obvious.
- volleyball
3 *
The comments at ABC really reinforce the fact that pregnancy
is, whether you have the baby or not, basically an opportunity for the public
and authorities to shame women for both being female and being sexual. Third comment in, someone in all caps
says, "THERE ARE TEENS IN HIGH SCHOOL THAT DO NOT HAVE SEX. You live with the
consequences of your actions." I would like to point out that no young man who
gets a young woman pregnant is eligible for this level of faux concern over his
health that translates into open shaming and exclusion. And it’s always funny
to me how people who say things like this ignore the fact that humanity has
invented effective contraception, and if people like them didn’t go out of
their way to keep kids from getting to it, this wouldn’t be a problem.
Another commenter said, "Seriously, what are the parents
thinking or are they thinking at all? Grow up little girl…" What do they mean by "grow up"? Does growing up for a woman mean having
to choose between being sexual and getting to be part of a larger
community? Does growing up mean
that you have to give in to the idea that being a mother means the end of
having any parts of your life that are for yourself?
And one final comment from the religious peanut gallery:
"Entitled brats like this chick aggravate the bejeebers out of me. She brings
up God and faith as an excuse for not getting an abortion (was she on break
from being a "good Christian" when she was having pre-marital sex?
How very convenient)" And to bring
it all around, the point was never about "life", but about sex. And abortion is offensive to the right
because it gives women an opportunity to keep their private lives private, away
from the prying eyes of judgmental prigs.
*************
And now for the Wisdom of Wingnuts, worse than you thought
edition. Last week, I reported on
how anti-gay activist Scott Lively was being cagily supportive of Uganda’s
proposal to punish homosexuality with severe prison sentences and maybe even the
death sentence. Now more video of
the presentation he did at the Ugandan conference that kicked all this off has
come out. This is him talking
about gay men:
- lively
*
The fact that he brings up the Rwandan genocide in Uganda,
which border Rwanda, shows how, far from being the innocents they pretend they
are, the anti-gay activists are in fact deliberately engaging the most
unimaginable slanders in order to drum up hate against gay people.