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ACLU: Reflections on a Decade of Reproductive Freedom

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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-21-10 10:09 PM
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ACLU: Reflections on a Decade of Reproductive Freedom

Reflections on a Decade of Reproductive Freedom

This week, we mark the 37th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court decision that significantly expanded the ability of women across the country to decide whether and when to become a parent. We also stand at the beginning of a new decade and at a moment that calls for reflection.

That said, it is hard to characterize the last decade for reproductive freedom. As I look back on the past 10 years, I see some real progress and glimmers of hope, but I also see disheartening setbacks and tragic losses.

Below is a brief account of some of the significant moments in reproductive freedom in the decade.

Progress and Hope

1. President Obama lifts the “Global Gag Rule” and the long-standing ban on abortion coverage for low-income women in the District of Columbia.

In one of his first days in office, President Obama rescinded the “Global Gag Rule,” a federal policy that cut off crucial federal funding for family planning services overseas to any foreign nongovernmental organization that used its own money to advocate for safe and legal abortion care, to perform legal abortions in their own countries, or to counsel and refer women for abortions. Without this prohibition, the U.S. can restore its place as a global leader in support of women’s health and lives.

In 2009, Congress passed and President Obama signed into law a provision that lifted the long-standing ban that prohibited the District of Columbia from using its own tax dollars to cover abortions for low-income women who live in the district. This is an important first step toward ensuring access for all women. Other federal bans on abortion coverage remain and need to be lifted, including severe restrictions on coverage for low-income women on Medicaid, Native Americans, federal employees and their dependents, Peace Corps volunteers, federal prisoners, military personnel and their dependents, and disabled women who rely on Medicare.

2. Federal funding of ineffective abstinence-only-until-marriage programming ends.
After years of advocacy by the reproductive rights community, in 2009, the federal government defunded abstinence-only-until-marriage programming. Starting in 1996, our federal government poured more than $1.3 billion into abstinence-only programs that censor vital health care information, provide inaccurate information, promote gender stereotypes, discriminate against lesbian and gay students, and in some cases impermissibly use taxpayer dollars to advance one religious perspective. Research increasingly shows that these programs are ineffective and that young people need quality sexuality education to help them make healthy decisions.

The federal budget for the 2010 fiscal year not only defunds abstinence-only programming but directs significant resources into medically accurate, evidence-based teen pregnancy prevention programs. These changes represent a significant change in the nation’s sexuality education policy, signaling a new commitment to improving young people’s lives.

<...>

Setbacks and Losses

7. Dr. George Tiller, a trusted and compassionate abortion provider, is murdered in Kansas.

After what appeared to be a period of decreased violence against abortion providers and clinic staff, on May 31, 2009, Dr. George Tiller was gunned down in the vestibule of his church. Dr. Tiller was a true beacon of liberty. For decades, he provided compassionate care for women who came from all over the country to seek abortions at his clinic when they had few, if any other, options. Throughout his abortion practice, he faced relentless threats and harassment at his home, his place of worship, and at his clinic, including surviving a shooting in 1993. We continue to mourn Dr. Tiller’s loss and honor his years of service.

8. Congress puts politics above women’s health care needs in health care reform.
As the decade ended, we watched Congress take on the important task of addressing an urgent need within the country for improved access to health care. Unfortunately, along with the promise of health care reform came an attack on access to abortion. Both the House of Representatives and the Senate passed health care reform measures that would severely undermine women’s access to abortion care. Women stand to lose if the abortion provisions in either bill are included in final health care reform. As of this writing, debate and negotiations over health care reform continue. Tell lawmakers that abortion is part of basic health care for women and should be covered under health care reform.

9. The U.S. Supreme Court upholds a federal abortion procedure ban.
On April 18, 2007, the U.S. Supreme Court dealt a devastating blow to women’s health and reproductive rights. In a 5-4 decision that puts politics before women’s health, the Court upheld the first-ever federal ban on abortion methods – called by its sponsors the “Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003.” In upholding the ban, the Court undermined a core principle of Roe v. Wade – that women’s health must remain paramount.

In an impassioned dissent, Justice Ginsburg attacked the majority for placing women’s health in danger and for undermining women’s struggle for equality. She wrote, women’s “ability to realize their full potential . . . is intimately connected to ‘their ability to control their reproductive lives.’”

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Tansy_Gold Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-21-10 10:23 PM
Response to Original message
1. This is the same ACLU that argues that corporations have a right to
"free speech" in the form of unlimited campaign contributions.

Even "free speech" is not an absolute. Does the ACLU believe that truth in lending and truth in advertising laws should be struck down? You can bet your ass that as soon as the corporations are in overt control, they will do away with that sort of thing. "Truth" is far less important than "free."

Libel, slander, no biggie. Say what you like -- it's freedom of speech! Wanta make snuff films? Freedom of expression! Wanta buy a senator? A congressman? A president? Go ahead! Spending money is a form of speech and we wouldn't want to restrict that first amendment right!

ACLU, go fuck yourselves. Any good you've done, any civil rights and human rights issues you've argued for have just gone down the drain, because when you elevated corporations to the level of "personhood," you lowered real people to nothing more than entities existing on paper.

Sorry, ACLU, but those women whose lives were won by Roe v Wade were and are real Human Beings. They have feelings and fears, hopes and dreams, bodies and minds. Corporations, while they may be artifial extensions of aggregates of human beings are not in and of themselves human. They cannot bleed. They cannot weep. They cannot love. To equate a business entity with a living, breathing human being is the worst kind of hypocrisy. It mocks everything else you may have stood for.

Eat shit and die, ACLU.




Tansy Gold

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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-21-10 10:49 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. So you disagree with them on this issue, and they are profoundly wrong, but
what does that have to do with the OP?

Are you advocating that the ACLU is no longer a valid organization?

Seriously, Feingold voted for John Roberts. Some people screw up or have screwed up views on certain issues, but the ACLU's position on corporate personhood has nothing to do with the OP.



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Tansy_Gold Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-21-10 11:38 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. It's not just that they are "profoundly" wrong
It's that their profound wrongness on this one issue overturns all the other issues they've defended, including the right to choose to have an abortion.

Feingold voted to approve Roberts' nomination, and that is an error, a grievous error. When there were so many of us on the outside who knew it would be a disaster, Feingold should have known, too. (As should the others, but since you brought up Feingold. . . ). But Feingold could not foresee what cases would come before the court, or how they would be argued. Agreed, better that Roberts be filibustered and the court be short one justice, but Feingold did not have the power to see into the future.

This brief by the ACLU, however, while it does not exactly "see" into the future, it knows exactly what kind of future it envisions. And that is a future ruled by unfeeling legal non-human entities whose sole purpose is profit, regardless.

That's why I consider their stance on this issue to be unforgivable. And I'm usually a pretty forgiving person.



Tansy Gold
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-22-10 12:17 AM
Response to Reply #3
4. It's disheartening. It's like the SCOTUS decided to
tip the campaign finance scale in favor of greedy corporations, that is in favor of Republicans.

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