One of my favs mystery writers is Sara
Paretsky, who authors the V. I. Warshawski
series of books. But it seems she also
writes some riveting non-fiction as well,
including here at Huffington Post, about
the totalitarian and authoritarian goals
of the religious Right towards womens'
reproductive health in her beloved
Chicago:
My grandmother watched her father die
when an anti-Jewish mob broke into their
small home and shot him as he lay in bed
with his wife. The mob was jubilant and
exuberant at his death; their neighborhood
priest in Vilnius, Lithuania, led the
crowd through the streets chanting a Te
Deum to show their thanks to the Lord at
the death of someone they considered a
nonbeliever.
Most members of that crowd called
themselves Christians. I think of them
when I look at the mob in Aurora that is
trying to keep the Planned Parenthood
health center there from opening.
I have been working around these
protesters and their associates for 20
years, trying to help women get through
their ranks into clinics for medical
appointments. On a recent stint at an
obstetrics-gynecology health center under
siege on the North Side of Chicago, I was
trying to escort a woman with ovarian
cancer through the horde so she could see
her doctor.
Part of the crowd surrounded us,
chanting "Christ killers!" and "Baby
killers!" Briefly, I felt the fear my
grandmother must have known.
The hypocrisy of these folks seems without
limits, yet their agenda is clear, while
misrepresented. They claim to be against
abortion under any circumstances, yet the
clear goal is no birth control or any
other reproductive rights for women.
They're not only after Roe v. Wade,
they're after Griswold v. Connecticut.
Don't remember that one? You should.
Here's what a synopsis of major Supreme
Court decisions on reproductive rights
from FindLaw says about Griswold:
Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479
(1965). In this case, the Supreme Court
held that the right to privacy, which
flows from the Bill of Rights (the first
ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution),
includes the right of married persons to
use contraceptives.
Interesting the the far Right, who claim
to value personal freedom and
responsibility, and lack of government
intrusion, feel a need to tell people that
they can't even use birth control. No
abortions, and no way to keep from getting
pregnant. This makes the old Rhythm Method
seem like scientific advancement. Oddly,
the great rush to canonize marriage as a
sacred act between one man & one woman
by the Right doesn't seem to include a
married couple's right to privacy in re:
their right to birth control.
And think about the specifics of the case,
that prior to 1965, a state told its
citizens they couldn't make their own
birth control decisions. And it wasn't
until 1972 (Eisenstadt v. Baird, 405 U.S.
438(1972), that:
. . . the Supreme Court held that a
statute that allowed giving contraceptives
to married adults but prohibited the same
conduct with respect to unmarried adults
violated the equal protection clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment. If the right of
privacy means anything, explained the
Court, it encompasses the right of all
individuals, married or single, to be free
from unwarranted governmental intrusion
into matters so fundamentally affecting a
person as the decision whether or not to
conceive a child.
Not that long ago. We seem to have barely
escaped from the dark ages. And now
zealots on the far Right want to take us
back there. Here's an article from
Prevention Magazine that makes some
important points about the Right-wing lies
about birth control:
In the past decade or so, the
"hormonal birth control equals abortion"
view has quietly grown roots in the
antiabortion underground. It's spread from
doctor to doctor, through local
newsletters, in books with titles such as
Does the Birth Control Pill Cause
Abortions? (written by Randy Alcorn, an
Oregon-based antiabortion pastor and
author), and through lobbying groups that
have encouraged lawmakers in Arkansas,
South Dakota, and most recently
Mississippi to enact "conscience clauses."
These legislative provisions protect
health care professionals--in this case,
pharmacists--who refuse to provide
services they oppose on moral, ethical, or
legal grounds. At press time, similar
legislation had been introduced in 11 more
states.
An Internet search turns up thousands
of Web sites containing articles with
titles such as "The Pill Kills Babies,"
"Are Contraception and Abortion Siamese
Twins?" and "The Dirty Little Secrets
about the Birth Control Pill." Hundreds of
physicians and pharmacists have pledged
not to provide hormonal birth control.
Among them: 450 doctors affiliated with
the Dayton, OH-based natural family
planning group One More Soul; some members
of the 2,500 doctors in the Holland,
MI-based American Association of Pro-Life
Obstetricians and Gynecologists; and a
growing number of the 1,500-member
Web-based Pharmacists for Life
International, says Brauer. Not even
anti-Pill groups know how many doctors and
druggists are involved. And while the
total is still a small percentage of the
117,500 family physicians and OB/GYNs and
173,000 pharmacists in the US, they are
making their presence felt in women's
lives and among law and policy makers on
both the state and national levels. Their
influence is far-reaching and
disproportionate to their size--a quiet
version of the public shock waves produced
by the nation's relatively small number of
antiabortion activists.
"Refusing women access to the Pill is
a very disturbing trend," says Gloria
Feldt, president of Planned Parenthood
Federation of America. "The war on choice
is not just about abortion anymore. It's
about our right to birth control."
More from the Paretsky article:
Part of the crowd surrounded us,
chanting "Christ killers!" and "Baby
killers!" Briefly, I felt the fear my
grandmother must have known.
The police were watching the
demonstrators block the clinic but doing
nothing to remove them from the entrance.
After five minutes, they came to help the
cancer patient escape her harassers and
return to her car -- weeping and
trembling. There was no way she was going
to get essential medical care that day.
After the police left, one of the
protesters said to me, "I suppose since
you think it's OK to kill a fetus you
agree that it's OK if I kill you."
This is ugly language, but no more
hate-filled than the rest of the words and
deeds of those angry people who want to
keep women from getting reproductive
health care.
Here's more about the Aurora clinic from
the Chicago Sun-Times:
A handful of patients visited the new
Planned Parenthood clinic as it opened
Tuesday in Aurora, but they were far
outnumbered by dozens of anti-abortion
demonstrators who vowed to continue their
efforts to shut the center.
Opponents in fact filed a new
challenge with Aurora's zoning board of
appeals, contending the clinic -- which
offers abortion services -- shouldn't be
open because it lacks a required
special-use permit.
. . . More than 20 patients also made
appointments Tuesday for visits to the
clinic, which offers a range of health
care that includes testing for sexually
transmitted infections and providing
contraceptives.
Read Paretsky's piece, and be afraid for
your civil rights.
|
Reptar
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 24 Oct 2007 Posts: 389
Thanks: 44
Thanked:13
Posted: 03-04-08 10:28am
That's a very scary piece. But what I
don't get is why they're SO blind as to
think that abortions won't be performed if
they're illegal. They've always been
performed. Illegal abortions only do one
thing, and that is put both the mother and
fetus at risk. Birth control only helps
prevent more abortions from being
performed, and as we've all seen, is in no
way abortion. But I really feel that
regardless of what they do, birth control
will still be available, whether it's
through black market doctors or the
internet. Just as the abortion pill is
available to those who live in countries
where it's illegal.
|
yodavater
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 10 Dec 2007 Posts: 818
Posted: 03-08-08 09:56am
Reptar
wrote:
But what I don't get is why they're SO
blind as to think that abortions won't be
performed if they're illegal.
.
I've never met any prolifer like that, so
it's hard to answer that question.
Abortions will always occur, just like
other acts of aggressive violence will
always occur (homicide, rape, etc.).
If I ever run into any of these prolifers
who behave as they are described in this
thread, I'll give them a good lecture.
|
lucy315
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 25 Oct 2007 Posts: 123 Location: New Jersey, USA
Thanks: 10
Thanked:5
Re: The Real Goal of the Anti-Choice Crowd: No Birth Control Posted: 03-08-08 17:06pm
futureshock
wrote:
After the police left, one of the
protesters said to me, "I suppose since
you think it's OK to kill a fetus you
agree that it's OK if I kill you.
This literally made me catch my breath!
What exactly do people like this want? No
sex unless it's for procreation?