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Mitch Daniels Defunds Planned Parenthood of Indiana, and Why You Should Care

This is a guest post by Lauren Bruce, life-long Indiana resident, founder of and former resident blogger at Feministe.

Last week, Jill reported that the state of Indiana might cut funding to Planned Parenthood as well as enacting some of the most restrictive abortion laws in the country. Yesterday that bill was signed into law, cutting two-thirds of funding to Planned Parenthood of Indiana as well as requiring doctors to tell women that life begins at fertilization and that a fetus can feel pain at or before 20 weeks of pregnancy.

So, this is a repeat of every other backwards pro-life law in the country, right?

No.

First, PPIN and the ACLU are challenging the constitutionality of the law on grounds that:

forcing doctors to give [inaccurate] information [to patients]… violates First Amendment free-speech protections. The lawsuit also contends that the new law’s defunding provision, by taking effect immediately, would void contracts and grants already in effect, violating the U.S. Constitution’s contract clause. The suit also says that the law imposes an unconstitutional condition on Planned Parenthood by requiring it to choose between performing abortions and receiving non-abortion-related funding, and says that the measure runs afoul of federal Medicaid law.

which could draw the blueprint for future challenges in other areas. It’s worth mentioning that PPIN is being targeted for providing a constitutionally-protected procedure that is already prevented from federal subsidies thanks to the Hyde amendment. PP is targeted for providing abortion services at all despite having separate funding streams for abortion-related and non-abortion-related services.

Also problematic, from an earlier version of the same article,

The Family and Social Services Administration also has expressed concerns that it could cause Indiana to run afoul of Medicaid policy and lose all $4 million the agency gets in family planning dollars. The bill technically cuts off funds to any entity that performs abortions. However, it exempts hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers, so Planned Parenthood is effectively the only target.

PPIN and ACLU were denied a restraining order meaning the law will take effect immediately while the judge reviews the constitutionality of this law. PPIN is reviewing its current funds to see how long they can cover existing services without state or federal revenue. From personal experience, I can tell you that waiting lists are so long for some non-PP community health clinics that people who need more urgent care, such as prenatal care or STI treatment and screenings will be forced to wait weeks or months to receive services or pay in full for private treatment.

Conservative groups in other states, meanwhile, are eyeballing the proceedings to see whether this attempt to bring down the Planned Parenthood baddie is successful. A similar bill is in working its way through the Kansas legislature with the support of Sam Brownback.

Former GOP Budget Director and current Indiana governor Mitch Daniels gestures while speaking at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's "Outlook 2003: State of American Business" conference, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2003 in Washington.  (AP Photo/Ian Wagreich, U.S. Chamber of Commerce)The second reason you should be paying attention: Say hello to Mitch Daniels.

There is a lot of speculation about Daniels running in the GOP presidential primaries in 2012. He’s a shoo-in, a relatively well-liked and successful governor who favors old-school conservative methods like privatization of public services and libertarian “live and let live” approaches to social issues. Daniels is seen as a move away from “populist evangelicalism” of the current GOP. He is even on record calling for a “truce” on social issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage in order to get fiscal issues, “the people’s work,” he says, through government.

That family planning is a fiscal issue on micro- and macro-levels is apparently a non-issue for Daniels, because he and other Indiana state officials are on record saying that birth control is easily accessible to everyone! Because as Sue Swayze, Daniels supporter and legislative director of Indiana Right to Life, says, “You can buy some types of contraceptive devices at Walmart.”

The numbers don’t lie. Fiscal conservatives should know, about half of all births in Indiana are funded by Medicaid today and PPIN estimates this will “cost the state $68 million in Medicaid expenses for unintended pregnancies by reducing birth control access.”

In short, this flip-flop in Mitch Daniels’ politics is a healthy indicator that he is shoring up the base for his presidential run.

So what can you do?

1. Contact Mitch Daniels and reiterate the importance of family planning services in responsible fiscal policy. If you’re in Indiana, contact your state representative and express your dissatisfaction with this bill.

2. Donate to Planned Parenthood of Indiana or to Planned Parenthood of America, who is helping PPIN with the legal proceedings. Per Mary in comments, “Annoyed/furious/concerned parties might also consider donating to the ACLU of Indiana, which is handling all the legal work with a staff of two overworked attorneys and a paralegal.” If you feel spicy, do it under Mitch Daniels’ name.

3. Spread the word, about the law and Daniels too. Let people know you donated today and why. Retweet, reblog, tumbl, post to your Facebook wall, whatever. Remember this guy’s face and his willingness to sacrifice healthcare for uninsured and low-income women for the sake of politics. He could be your next president.

Lady Problems

I believe that men should be appreciated for who they are and what they do, not for what they look like. So I totally understand a Brooklyn hipster newspaper’s decision to photoshop all the men out of photos of the Situation Room:

Hillary in the Sit Room

(For those of you who haven’t been paying attention to Brooklyn-based Yiddish-language newspapers, one of them photoshopped the women out of a photo of the Situation Room because “The readership of the Tzeitung believes that women should be appreciated for who they are and what they do, not for what they look like, and the Jewish laws of modesty are an expression of respect for women, not the opposite,” said Publisher Albert Friedman. We should definitely start respecting men in the same way: By removing their images from the public sphere, even where it means completely changing the facts of any given event. Now, back to your regularly scheduled news articles about the wonderful President Michelle Obama).

Telling a dude about an impending abortion

I know a lot of folks around these parts aren’t big Dan Savage fans, but I personally am, and I think his general take on sexual ethics is pretty spot-on (even while I quibble with a lot of the details). But his column this week has me a little… hmmm. Basically, woman and man have unprotected sex, and while woman doesn’t actually get pregnant, if she had gotten pregnant she would have had an abortion. And she wants to know if Dan thinks she would have been under an obligation to tell the dude. Dan says:

A woman who is pregnant and has decided to have an abortion should tell the guy who knocked her up about the pregnancy and her decision to abort… unless she sincerely believes—or even legitimately suspects—that the guy is gonna bully, badger, and/or do violence to her in an attempt to prevent her from choosing abortion.

Guys need to know when they’ve dodged a bullet, CL. Being made aware that he came this close to 18 years’ worth of child support payments can lead a guy to be more cautious with his spunk—and, in some cases, more likely to support choice.

Take the guy you fucked: He needs to know that not all birth control methods are foolproof and not every woman who claims to be on birth control is telling the truth and/or being diligent about taking those pills every day. Hearing that almost-a-daddy bullet whiz past his head may convince him to put on that condom the next time he’s fucking a woman he isn’t serious about, even if she is (or claims to be) on birth control.

And… um… gee. This bit is going to get me scratched off NARAL’s Christmas card list, which will be a real bummer (last year’s card was great: “The Crusades, the Inquisition, clerical sex-abuse scandals—all of this could have been prevented. Happy holidays from your friends at NARAL”), but I gotta be me. A guy—a good, decent, nonabusive guy—should be told about an impending abortion so he can, if he feels the abortion is a mistake, make a case for keeping the baby. It’s still the woman’s choice in the end—there should be absolutely no question about that—but the fetus, if not the uterus, is his, too. It’s only fair that the same guy who would be on the hook for child support payments if you decide to go through with the pregnancy be heard out before you follow through on your decision to end it.

So I actually kind of agree with the first paragraph, in a general sense (not at all in a legal one). As a general rule, if you get pregnant, is it a good idea to tell the person who was involved in your pregnancy? Sure. Are general rules typically pretty crappy when you apply them to the breadth of human experience? You betcha.

Yes, it’s great for dudes to know that they dodged a bullet. It’s also good for dudes to know that women they care about (or at least women they know exist) have abortions — abortion isn’t often talked about in first-person narratives, which is part of why it’s so easy to politically demonize it. I’m personally of the mind that a dude who got you pregnant should also be there to support you — whether that’s holding your hand through child birth and supporting his child, or sitting with you in the abortion clinic waiting room.

But then. Not all dudes are good dudes. In fact, a lot of dudes are actively bad dudes; a lot more dudes are somewhere in between good and bad. And while Dan says that you don’t have to tell a dude if you think he’ll bully or badger you out of an abortion, he also says that you should tell the dude so that the dude can make the argument for you going through nine months of pregnancy and giving birth to a child that will ultimately be your responsibility for the rest of your life. The line between “making the argument” and “badgering” or “bullying” can be quite a fine one when we’re talking about a potential child.

Also, abortion is incredibly stigmatized. My friends who have had abortions — and I think this is true for most women who have abortions — tend not to speak publicly about it. If the dude in question isn’t your serious partner — and if he is your serious partner, you’re probably going to tell him that you’re undergoing surgery unless he’s abusive or your relationship is otherwise unhealthy — there are real reasons not to take on the stigma of abortion just so that he can make a case you aren’t going to accept anyway. You tell that dude and he tells his friends? Especially in smaller communities, that can really harm your reputation. It can impact your job and your relationships. It’s fucked that that’s the case — that one of the most common surgical procedures in the United States is so stigmatized — but that’s reality. I only write about abortion and I’ve gotten death threats and enraged emails sent to my employers trying to get me fired. Is it really up to a woman to take on the possibility of back-channel reputation or career destruction just so a dude can know that his sperm swam into an egg?

Don’t get me totally wrong: I am sympathetic to Dan’s position, and I think that under good circumstances, you should tell the man who got you pregnant. But the thing about circumstances is that “good” is a sliding scale, and there are a lot of factors to consider beyond just “is the person being told abusive?”

Preventing Cruelty on the Farm

So this thread is predictably out of control — which let’s be honest, I knew was going to happen, because it happens anytime we talk about food and/or post pictures of cute animals — but some interesting and important arguments about how we eat have been raised in the comments. I’ve written about this before, again to much push-back, but I’ll reiterate that I am definitely not of the “you must go vegan in order to be a good progressive who values animal rights and the environment.” Many people are of that school and that is great! I am personally of the school that says human beings are omnivores and eating meat is not morally wrong; however, human beings also have developed enough cognitive functions to enable us to engage the moral issues that come along with eating animals, and because we have that ability we also have the burden of treating animals with respect, even if we do breed and kill them for food. That means not torturing them; it means consuming meat with the knowledge that the food on your plate came from a living being and deserves a degree of reverence; it means doing what you can, in your particular situation, to lessen the suffering of animals. For some people, that means going vegan. For the more economically privileged, it might mean refusing to buy factory-farmed meat. A lot of vegans will tell you that it is entirely possible to go vegan on almost any income, at least in countries like the United States. I would say that (a) that’s just flatly untrue given all the problems folks have accessing decent, healthy food in general; but (b) yeah, a lot of people — even most people — could definitely get by consuming less meat and fewer animal products. Totally, that is true. I definitely could, even though I’m not a huge meat-eater and mostly eat carbs, vegetables and fish.

But I’m not sure veganism should be the ultimate goal (although consuming less factory-farmed animal products is a pretty laudable one, as is focusing on a more vegetable-based diet). The New York Times has a pertinent article on this today, featuring opinions from a variety of writers, from livestock rancher Nicolette Hahn Niman to some jerkoff from the Cato foundation (his unpredictable position: “let market forces decide!”). Niman’s arguments are the ones that make the most sense to me:

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Lawyer Music Nerd Stuff

Bob Dylan is apparently quite the influence on lawyers:

U.S. District Judge Robert S. Lasnik — Your Honor, not Bobby — has been known to invoke the voice of the vagabond poet in rulings from the federal bench in Seattle. He has recited lines from “Chimes of Freedom” in a case weighing the legality of indefinite detention and “The Times They Are A-Changin’,” the battle cry of the civil rights movement, in a landmark ruling that excluding contraceptives from an employer’s prescription drug plan constitutes sex discrimination.

Lasnik isn’t alone in weaving Dylan’s protest-era pathos into contemporary legal discourse.

No musician’s lyrics are more often cited than Dylan’s in court opinions and briefs, say legal experts who have chronicled the artist’s influence on today’s legal community. From U.S. Supreme Court rulings to law school courses, Dylan’s words are used to convey messages about the law and courts gone astray.

His signature protest songs, “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “The Times They Are a-Changin’,” gave voice and vocabulary to the antiwar and civil rights marches. His most powerful ballads, “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll” and “Hurricane,” have become models for legal storytelling and using music to make a point.

Dylan’s music and values have imprinted themselves on the justice system because his songs were the score playing during the formative years of the judges and lawyers now populating the nation’s courthouses, colleges and blue-chip law firms, says Michael Perlin, a New York Law School professor who has used Dylan lyrics as titles for at least 50 published law journal articles.

Perlin and others lured to the law by the moral siren songs of the 1960s credit Dylan with roles in passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, federal sentencing guidelines that purport to ensure more equitable prison terms and due process reforms prohibiting racial profiling.

“Everyone wants to believe that the music they listen to says something about who they are,” says Alex Long, a University of Texas law professor who has researched the penetration of political songwriting into the legal system.

“Being a judge is a pretty cloistered existence, having to crank out these opinions in isolation. Dylan was popular at the time they were coming of age and trying to figure out who they were,” says Long, a 41-year-old exposed to Dylan’s musings as a child at the foot of his parents’ record player. “The chance to throw in a line from your favorite artist is tempting, a chance to let your freak flag fly.”

Awesome.

Thanks, Dad, for the link.

links for 5-11-2011

First time!

via INCITE!

The Revolution Starts At Home: Confronting Intimate Violence Within Activist Communities , is a new and necessary anthology that needs to be read by everyone in activist communities. So often we see ourselves as above perpetuating the same oppressive and violent actions within our own communities and intimate relationships. This book delves into the ways in which revolution must be micro and macro:

Based on the popular zine that had reviewers and fans alike demanding more, The Revolution Starts at Home finally breaks the dangerous silence surrounding the “open secret” of intimate violence—by and toward caretakers, in romantic partnerships, and in friendships—within social justice movements. This watershed collection compiles stories and strategies from survivors and their allies, documenting a decade of community accountability work and delving into the nitty-gritty of creating safety from abuse without relying on the prison industrial complex. Fearless, tough-minded, and ultimately loving, The Revolution Starts at Home offers potentially life-saving alternatives for ensuring survivor safety while building a road toward a revolution where no one is left behind.

And it’s on tour! Check out the dates in select North American cities
here.

Colonial heteropatriarchy comes out in defense of reprehensible billboards targeting the reproductive rights of black women in america yet again, in The Chicago Tribune. Author Dennis Byrne’s ugly, condescending racist sexism gets taken down at Abortion Gang.

An in depth, challenging and inconclusive piece about the politics of representation and recognition in drag for Asian American queers, that’s also been taken on by Hyphen, The New Gay, and Yellow Peril , which have all given incisive and on point critiques which I absolutely agree with. But as someone who simultaneously loves and is frustrated by performance, I appreciate the ways in which this particular author navigates the ways in which parody is an inconclusive and fine line, that, in failing or succeeding individuals and/or communities, can offer an important investigation of the ways in which power is distributed and communicated through and between colonial and colonized audiences and performers.

As a queer woman of colour, who is also a vegan reconnecting to her animal rights activists roots, and who absolutely ADORES burlesque, this article was a must read for me this week.

Everyone as sick of hipsters appropriating indigenous headdresses as I am? Thought so.

Meanwhile, over in the State of Prop 8, The Governator and Maria Shriver are getting divorced, and Shark-Fu’s response is priceless.

I suspected the product integrity of Prop 8 when celebrity couples kept getting divorced after the measure passed…but lots of those folks lived elsewhere and for all I knew the power of Prop 8 diminished with physical distance from it’s state of origin.

This young woman (David Suzuki’s daughter!) should CLEARLY be replacing the UN. Although there are privileged children all over the world, and children living in poverty in north america, what she says is still powerful, beautiful and so necessary.
The girl who silenced the world for 5 minutes

Finally, Lois Lane is awesome (As is Kate Beaton. If you didn’t already know her, you’re welcome).

But what about when boys call me “foxy”?

Red Fox
Do not call me sly.

Ay yi yi:

Animal ethicists are calling for a new vocabulary about animals, shunning words such as “pets,” “wildlife,” and “vermin” as derogatory and even suggesting “animal” is a “term of abuse.”

Common language on fauna betrays an “anthropocentric bias” and impedes an understanding of our interaction with the non-human species sharing the planet, argue the editors of the first academic journal dedicated to animal ethics in their debut issue.

Instead of “pet,” the Journal of Animal Ethics suggests “companion animal.” Rather than “wildlife,” they are to be called “free-living.” “Differentiated beings” or “non-human animals” is preferred to simply “animals.”

Words such as “vermin,” “beasts” and “critters” are stricken completely, along with similes such as “sly as a fox,” “drunk as a skunk,” “eat like a pig,” “slippery as an eel,” “breeding like rabbits” and “stubborn as a mule.”

“We will not be able to think clearly unless we discipline ourselves to use more impartial nouns and adjectives in our exploration of animals and our moral relations with them,” the editors write.

Sorry, this probably makes me insensitive to the feelings of non-human animals — good thing they don’t read blogs! — but “differentiated beings”? GTFO. Or get a new hobby or something, I dunno, anything other than insisting that the word “pet” betrays an anthropocentric bias (ANTHROPOCENTRIC, also, just saying). And as long as we’re Outraged about really ridiculous things like the word “critter,” maybe we should be upset about the fact that there’s a photo of a fox on the front page of this blog — if any mollusks are reading, they are really freaked out right now. Let’s Ask A Spider about it.

Also, if “animal” is a “term of abuse” (um), why is “companion animal” ok? If I call a puppy my “companion bitch,” am I in the clear as long as it’s a girl-puppy? SO MANY QUESTIONS.

(Usual caveats: Language is important and I love animals as much as the next cat lady. But who exactly is being offended here, and how is shifting language going to help anything in this particular situation? Also eels really are slippery, foxes are pretty sly for the most part, drunk as a skunk just rhymes, and you’ll pry the word “critter” out of my cold dead jaws.)

(Also, I had a friend once whose dad used to say was “built like a brick shithouse.” Not the nicest way to describe her, but as a simile, not insulting to the shithouse.)

Not Another Odd Future Think Piece: Rap, the Internet and Female Agency

This is a guest post by B Michael Payne. B Michael Payne writes about a variety of things. He has a weekly thing at Fuse.tv, a website, and he’s probably tumblogging here, right now. You can email him at b dot michael dot payne at gmail dot com.

*Sexual assault and violence trigger warning.*

There are a lot of people who refuse to buy (rent, lease, or even attend an open house for) the hype on internet rap (defined broadly as any rap that mentions Facebook in its songs). For the most part, I’d agree with this stance. But right now, it’s not a good one.

For one, if you’re the type of person who’s ‘on the internet,’ then internet rap is going to/already has bubbled into your life. For two, you’d miss some interesting (and even good) rap. For three, you’d also miss what appears to be an eruption of social intersections that are probably even more interesting than the music itself.

Why, after all, are there so many Odd Future think pieces?

Before getting into that, it’s worth looking at how Brandon Soderberg has been patiently chronicling some of the more salient intersections among rap, r&b, rape, misogyny, and homophobia series of columns on Spin. His piece on Rainbow Noise’s “Imma Homo” picks up the perhaps most important idea on why the song is powerful (it’s because it’s good). Soderberg’s hypothesis that r&b is veering toward the ‘too rape-y’ whereas rap is owning up to its own terribleness seems to hold water, until a conversation with Racialicious‘s Latoya Peterson starts to pick apart the idea by asking wither the interests of women in rap’s ostensibly ‘better’ songs.

That that hasn’t been the question hanging over the entire discussion is, of course, the discussions biggest flaw from the start. You know, “that’s a pretty bad way to start a conversation,” in the words of Kanye.
In the above piece, Peterson calls songs underlain by rape culture ones in which “the artists are removing agency from the woman and putting their desires at the forefront.” That’s, of course, a formula for a variety of oppressions. What’s striking about it is that it’s also a laconic way of describing the entire aesthetic and ethic of Odd Future’s, like, whole deal.

The inherent importance of removing the woman’s agency is also — perhaps interestingly? — why people either really like or dislike a lot of Odd Future’s songs.

[As a note, Odd Future (né Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All, hereafter OF) are (I’m now, like, internet-contractually bound to say) a close-knit, eleven-person hip-hop collective based out of Los Angeles, California. They feature a lost member (recently located) who calls himself Earl Sweatshirt and is precocious and now seventeen years old; a gay woman, Syd tha Kid, who produces a good number of their songs but rarely graces any of them, vocally; and a charismatic leader, Tyler, The Creator, who’s recently turned twenty, is 6’2″, and boasts a deep, raspy voice that seems like it was almost divinely intended to be good at rapping. They’re very popular ‘on the internet,’ and with a pair of breathless profiles in the New York Times, they’re going to be popular in whatever ‘not the internet’ represents, very soon.]

When people mention OF, what they usually mean is Tyler, The Creator and/or Earl Sweatshirt. The two of them’s songs seem to have generated the majority of their press. Their raps tend to focus (being somewhat general, here) on the most extreme rape and kidnap fantasies that’ve made the group an instantaneously incandescent hot topic on the internet. Not that there isn’t violence and homophobia elsewhere on OF’s thirteen (fourteen? fifteen?) internet-only releases, but that really is par for the course when it comes, not just to rap music, but pop music (and classical music and opera and… well, all of culture, unfortunately).

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Look at that slut.

Can you believe that a junior Congresswoman, someone hoping to be taken seriously, would pose nearly topless on the cover of a fitness magazine — in business attire, with her blouse open exposing her entire stomach and most of her breasts (no nipples, but close)?

No, you can’t believe it, because I made it up. And also it wouldn’t happen. If you’re a 29-year-old hottie-with-a-body congressman (emphasis on the “man”), though? Sure:

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