In defense of the sanctimonious women's studies set || First feminist blog on the internet

When There’s No Plan B

Anti-choice politics of limiting birth control cause more abortions than they prevent. This should be obvious, and one woman demonstrates it here.

General idea is this: Busy married couple with two kids find some private time, and they have sex. In the heat of the moment, woman forgets to insert her diaphragm. Woman does not want to be pregnant, as she already has two kids and is on medications that cause severe birth defects. The next day she calls various doctors trying to get emergency contraception, and is routinely denied. Woman gets pregnant.

Had she been able to get Plan B over the counter, chances are that she would never have gotten pregnant, and would never have had an abortion. But actually preventing abortions is secondary to the anti-choice right, which is more interested in stripping away women’s human rights than protecting babies.

After making the decision with my husband, I was plunged into an even murkier world — that of finding an abortion provider. If information on Plan B was hard to come by, and practitioners were evasive on emergency contraception, trying to get information on how to abort a pregnancy in 2006 is an even more Byzantine experience.

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Pro-Choice T-Shirt Day

is April 25th. Wear yours.

Actually, April 25th is technically pro-life t-shirt day. And I don’t imagine that too many people up in my neck of the woods will be walking around wearing their “Abortion: The Leading Cause of Death in America” shirts (but that’s just because they aren’t a “strong and determined voice for the babies”).

However, I will be wearing my favorite reproductive freedom fighter dress. We might as well make a pro-choice showing, right? If you need one, check out AuH2o designs.

Because It’s All About The Babies…Right?

Republican members of the Missouri House shoot down a bill to re-fund contraception at county health clinics.

Why?

“If you hand out contraception to single women, we’re saying promiscuity is OK as a state, and I am not in support of that,” [Rep. Susan]Phillips, R-Kansas City, said in an interview.

I don’t want to hear anyone saying that they’re not just trying to punish women for having sex. This is contraception, not abortion.

What Can We Do?

You asked, Molly answered.

The fact that we have to post this deeply saddens me. Every woman should have access to basic medical care from her local doctor. But as it stands, not every woman does. And the right to reproductive healthcare is eroding more and more quickly.

I don’t necessarily endorse this post, and I would urge anyone considering using these methods to seek out safe, legal care from a trained professional. If abortion is illegal or highly limited where you live, seek it out in another state. Communities of women have come together to provide housing and transportation for women crossing state lines — the Haven Coalition in New York does this, and local clinics can let you know about similar programs in other states. Other programs exist to fund procedures for low-income women. As of now, there are still options. They aren’t always great options, and they’re especially challenging if you’re poor. But they aren’t universally insurmountable.

I don’t want to be unnecessarily alarmist, but things are starting to get bad. And so what Molly has posted could be potentially helpful to a lot of women, which is why I link to it. I can’t vouch for the accuracy of the post, or the safety of the procedures described therein. But I trust other feminist, pro-choice women. We will create communities, and we will help eachother, even if our government finds it acceptable to infringe on our most basic human rights to decide what does and doesn’t grow in our bodies. We did it before Roe, and we’ll do it after.

The Good, The Bad, The Ugly and The Interesting: A Massive Round-Up

There’s a lot going on in the news right now, and I wish I had the time to give each of these their own post. But alas, the internet at my house isn’t working, which means I have to do this all while I’m at school. And while I’m at school, I need to be sort of studying, and so blogging has to take a back seat to book-learnin’. Hence, about 20 items that are each interesting and important enough to merit individual mention. I know it’s long, but I hope you’ll read them all.

The Good

I *heart* Chen Guangcheng. This man is what bravery looks like: He’s a blind civil rights activist living under house arrest for challenging China’s one-child policy.

Nature has already taken away Chen’s sight. Now the government is trying to remove his voice as well as his liberty and legal rights. Chen’s landline has been cut. Mobile phone signals are blocked. Lawyers who try to visit have been beaten up. The state media are forbidden from investigating the case.

Chen is not allowed to speak because the authorities are embarrassed by what he has to say. Last September, he was abducted off the streets of Beijing by family planning officials and police from Shandong. He said they wanted to stop him launching legal action on behalf of the victims of forced abortions and sterilisations in his municipal district of Linyi. According to civil rights campaigners who worked with Chen, more than 7,000 people among Linyi city’s 4 million people were forced to undergo sterilisation operations in the first six months of last year. Women who already had two children were reportedly made to have abortions if they became pregnant again. If they went into hiding, their relatives were punished with detentions, fines and study sessions. Their lawyers allege that some people were beaten to death because they attempted to resist the operations.

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More on Conley and Spousal Consent

The Conley article on “men’s right to choose” was sent out on the NYU Law Students for Choice listerve yesterday, and elicited some really good responses and questions. There were two in particular that I found so interesting (and challenging) that I wanted to post them here and see what you all think. I’ll use first names so that everyone can tell who wrote what, and respond accordingly:

From Adam:

I am not at all arguing with a woman’s right to choose. She has it, the man does not. The decision of whether or not to have a child completely rests with the woman. What I am talking about is a corollary of this, that this right to choose whether she has the child has the effect of deciding whether or not the man becomes a father and all the legal responsibilities that go along with it, even if he does not want to be.

Some will argue that if he doesn’t want to become a father then don’t have sex or use a condom. But, that is no different than an argument an pro-life person may use against a woman who wants an abortion. The woman doesn’t have to have sex or sex with a man who doesn’t have a condom. She could also simply take the pill combined with a diaphragm. Thus, I think that argument has no weight.

This argument also isn’t about wanting to be a father or not. Its whether or not it is the right time. Just as a woman can be screwed over by having a child while she is young and in school, so can a man.

The issue simply is whether it is fair to let the woman decide for a man whether or not he takes on these responsibilities. A pregnancy can happen even with precautions. A condom does fail, woman for some reason or another can claim to be on the pill but not be. Thus, I will again emphasize the answer isn’t simply they should have taken precautions. This sometimes leads me to say not fair, if the man doesn’t want the child should be able to legally rid of responsibility if woman insists on having child he doesn’t want.

But, then I look at the other side. Any man then only needs to say I don’t want that child and he is always absolved of child responsibilities. Thus, if the reason she won’t have an abortion is religious beliefs he also has, the abortion would only be on her conscience, so she won’t get it and he knows this, but he is relieved of all responsibility. Simply, an unmarried man, or a man who decide for divorce after making his wife pregnant, would always be able to avoid liability. And that also doesn’t seem fair.

I am just wondering if there is a middle ground that creates a truly fair outcome or if there will always be such a conflict.

From Ben:

I think it should be true that in the petri dish world [referring to a previous comment which said something to the effect of, “A pregnant woman should have the right to abort a pregnancy if she wants to; if the man wants that zygote or fertilized egg, he can put it in a petri dish and develop it”], the woman is required to pay child support. But is that likely what Conley’s mythical ex-girlfriend would have wanted? She probably didn’t want to carry the fetus to term but ALSO, among other things, wasn’t ready to support it financially. I think my question is, should the possibility of abortion allow either parent to opt out of total responsibility for the child at a point after conception? Or, once you have conception, are you (at least) financially responsible for the resulting child until it is 18?

I could see a situation where parents could opt-out of pregnancy after conception, in that either parent could say “I would abort if it were solely up to me, but since it’s not, I choose not to support this child,” and then the other partner has a much harder choice to make. In practice, this could operate exceedingly unfairly, undermining a child support system that needs more help, not more hurt.

And to support this, you’d have to see abortion rights as more than just a right to privacy over the body, but a right to not be financially responsible to a child when you’re completely unprepared for whatever reason. Although this is not the legal right and likely never will be, it may, as a practical matter, be more in tune with the motivations of many who have abortions, or support freedom of choice…

Here’s what I think is interesting: We talk about abortion rights in terms of the right to privacy and the right to one’s own body. That is, in essence, what reproductive rights are about. But while some women have abortions as a response to pregnancy itself, many terminate pregnancies because they cannot support a child after it is born. Obviously, I don’t agree with the notion that fathers should be allowed to simply “opt out” of financial obligations to their children. But let’s say we go with the petri dish model, and the zygote is removed from the woman’s body and somehow can magically grow into a human baby. What do we do if neither parent wants responsibility for this petri dish? What if they don’t just want to forgo responsibility, but they want it not to exist? Does anyone have the right to remove the zygote or fertilized egg from the petri dish, therefore terminating its “life”?

Anyway, I think both Ben and Adam raise really interesting points that I’d love to hear responses to. It’s good to remind ourselves that this issue isn’t simple. I’d also like to ask that everyone treat Ben and Adam’s comments with respect; they’re pro-choice, and they’re bringing up some tough questions that challenge conventional pro-choice ideas in a pro-choice public forum. Plus they’re letting me post their thoughts here. So challenge away, but if you’re rude, your comments will either be edited or deleted.