RH Reality Check
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Will Anti-Choice Forces Take Advantage of Bush Legacy?

Nancy Northup's picture

The election of Barack Obama heralds at long last a season of promise and opportunity: the chance to improve the lives of millions of Americans and people throughout the world by ending the Bush administration's horrific war on women and making reproductive health a priority for U.S. law and policy. Yet earlier this fall, I said that no matter who won in November, those of us on the front lines of the fight for reproductive rights and health care would have our work cut out for us.  

Clearly we have reason to rejoice the recent sound defeat of two state ballot initiatives designed as attacks on Roe v. Wade and the California initiative mandating parental notification. These outcomes send an unambiguous message to our elected officials that our government should not interfere with personal and private decisions about our health and families. There is no doubt that backers of the South Dakota abortion ban and Colorado's "personhood" amendment had their sights on the U.S. Supreme Court and overturning Roe. The stakes were high not only for women and families in these states, but for women throughout the country.  

Fortunately, the voters in South Dakota, Colorado and California have made it clear that they put the health, safety and privacy of the women in their states first, above abortion politics. Proponents of both of these measures would be wise to follow the electorate's wishes and put these issues to rest.  

But even with these victories, and even with this election, individual state legislatures remain dangerous arenas in which we struggle to preserve every woman's rights to choose whether or not she will bear children, and to have the broadest access to contraception, abortion, health information and pregnancy care. Every year, our opponents introduce more than 600 anti-choice measures in the states. Just last month in Oklahoma, the Center for Reproductive Rights filed suit immediately to block a law that would force a woman to listen to a doctor describe an ultrasound image of her fetus. And, in a bizarre Alice through the Looking Glass twist, the same law would prevent a woman from suing if her doctor intentionally withholds other information about the fetus, such as severe abnormalities. Fortunately, we won an order temporarily blocking the law while we prepare for trial.   

We know that this coming January will be equally bad or even worse as our opponents rush to take advantage of the Bush administration's dangerous judicial legacy: the current Supreme Court and President Bush's judicial appointees, which make up more than one-third of sitting federal judges and the most conservative in modern history.   

We have suffered under the yoke of an Administration that has suppressed science to the detriment of health and has done damage to constitutional and human rights values. Federal court decisions have undermined the protections established by Roe v. Wade, funding for basic reproductive health care is inadequate and maternal mortality rates among women of color remain shamefully high. At the U.N., the United States has undermined protection for reproductive rights and health, and restrictions that the U.S. places on foreign assistance hamper rather than promote progress. All this flies in the face of the United States' historical role as a world leader in championing equality and human rights and of supporting access to essential reproductive health care around the world. 

In sharp contrast to the erosion of protection for reproductive rights in U.S. law, the global trend within United Nations', regional and national jurisprudence has been towards recognition of reproductive rights as human rights. Recent decisions by the United Nations Human Rights Committee and the European Court of Human Rights have found that denying women abortions in certain circumstances violated human rights guarantees. In addition, in the last twenty years, 16 countries have liberalized their abortion laws. At a time when the world is moving towards greater recognition and protection of these rights, the United States should also be advancing and not retreating.

Our new administration must take quick and decisive action to create a policy climate guided by science and not ideology, starting with striking funding for abstinence-only sex education and the appointment federal agency directors-beginning with the FDA-who respect scientific data. President-elect Obama must appoint federal judges committed to constitutional rights and the objective review of evidence. The U.S. must once again support reproductive rights at the U.N. and in U.S. foreign assistance programs by repealing the Global Gag Rule and restoring funding to the United Nations Population Fund. And we must ensure that our nation is represented around the world by people who respect women's human rights.   

Now that a pro-choice administration is about to move into the White House, it may be tempting to think that we no longer have to "worry" about women's reproductive rights. But we must resist that temptation and instead pledge to seize this moment to make sure that this most fundamental and enduring principle is enshrined in law: At the heart of a free society is our ability to form the personal beliefs and make the intimate decisions that chart our destinies and define who we are.


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4 comments
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Among other comments, you stated that "we struggle to preserve every woman's rights". This is not true. You and others on this website (among other places that pretend to care about women) do nothing to "empower" women and preserve their rights. What you do is insult anyone with a viewpoint other than your own and call them "prejudice," "narrow-minded," "religious right," or some other similar name. What you do is take away women's rights by making young girls think that THEY are in charge of their bodies. In fact, they are not. There are certain things we can determine and others that we cannot - and shouldn't try to. We do not determine at what age start our period, develop breasts or grow another inch, when conception actually takes place, when an unborn baby will mysteriously die and result in miscarriage or when our bodies finally give up and die. You also tell them that you support women's rights, but by killing unborn girls (and boys), you are exhibiting the worst form of prejudice - you are murdering a group of people who don't even have an opinion. You are being prejudiced against the most innocent human beings in the whole WORLD. How do you see that as preserving anyone's rights? In regards to abortion, if a pregnant woman chooses not to keep that child, adoption is always an option with many people waiting.

I am a Christian and I am sure we would strongly disagree with you on most issues, based on your commentary and this website's point of view, but it is not my desire to insult the people I disagree with. Too many people throw stones, but they don't give their reasons for disagreeing. I thank you for allowing me to share an alternative viewpoint.

Sincerely,
Sonya Haskins

Submitted by Sonya Haskins on November 18, 2008 - 9:16pm.

replying to your erroneous opnions regarding abortion and women's reproductive rights.
for example; comparing having the control over reproductive health and choosing abortion to growing physically. everybody grows physically, female or male. now, if all women became pregnant around 13, without the necessity of sexual intercourse or artificial insemination, then i could possibly see comparing that to the process of physical growth.
or, how your pointing out that a zygote/blastocyst/embryo/fetus can't even have an opinion is actually counteractive to your attempt to argue that said z/b/e/f has the right to be in a woman's uterus, and that the woman doesn't have the right to decide, for whatever reason, that she doesn't want the pregnancy to continue.
or, how completely ludicrous it is to attach the word "prejudice" to aborting a z/b/e/f. oh no, have the anti-choicers figured out that pro-choicers have an underground society similar to the kkk? yeah, we often burn teeny crosses made of toothpicks on the stomachs of pregnant women. (and i apologize if my sick joke offends anyone. normally, i am not the type to make jokes refering to something like the kkk, but sometimes the absolute ridiculousness of anti-choicers brings this dark humor out of me.)
or, how your making a point of saying you're christian and therefore "we" wouldn't agree on most issues with the people who write on this site and the people who read this site to keep informed on reproductive rights. wow. how offensive. are you really that unwordly that you don't know there are many christians who don't believe in archaic beliefs regarding reproductive rights & abortion? i wouldn't be surprised if a majority of people who consider themselves christian don't believe in abortion, or don't agree with it, etc. but, you are truly being judgmental with your opinion of christians and christianity when claiming christian = anti-choice ALWAYS.

yeah, i was going to respond to the wrongness of your opinions, then i realized how pointless it would be. i mean, what is the point of trying to speak logic to a person who blatantly admits she doesn't think women have charge over their own bodies, and who somehow twists that horrible opinion into meaning that if a girl is told she does have charge over her own body, then somehow you are denying her a right. wha????

Submitted by betty brown on November 19, 2008 - 12:15am.

whilst reading a blog re: abortion rights on a feminist site, it popped into my head that i forgot to mention an amazingly horrible opinion of yours:

this argument that women who want an abortion should instead carry it full term and give it up to an infertile couple?!?!?! are you f'ing kidding me? seriously. you're joking, right? you people are always joking with that opinion, right? oh. you're not? well, then, i have something to tell you:

I AM NOT, NOR IS ANY ANOTHER WOMAN, AN INCUBATOR FOR SOME HAPLESSLY INFERTILE COUPLE.

do you not understand this?

Submitted by betty brown on November 19, 2008 - 6:28am.

Concern troll is concerned. I'm sure women's wellbeing are of tremendous concern to you. What would you advocate telling girls? That they're the property of the state, whose destiny is to be walking, talking incubators? Perhaps since women have no right to physical autonomy, we shouldn't be allowed to vote? We're just irrational, stupid women, after all. We need the menfolk to make decisions for us, just like the Bible says.

I've never called anyone 'prejudice', btw. It would be rather a strange thing to name someone, don't you think? (Hint: 'prejudice' is a noun, not an adjective. You forgot the 'd' at the end.)

Submitted by Emma on November 18, 2008 - 10:05pm.