2.08.2011

u.s. war on women continues and escalates: planned parenthood under attack

The US war on American women has escalated lately (as opposed to the US war on Afghan and Iraqi women, men and children, which continues at the same torrid pace). Please read below for important information about the US government's attack on Planned Parenthood, and how you can help.

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Two weeks ago we saw the redundant law-enforcement expression "forcible rape" used to strengthen the Hyde Amendment, which already appears to be iron-clad.

When public outrage forced the woman-haters to retreat from that, they proposed a bill that would allow hospitals to let a woman die rather than perform a medically necessary abortion or even transfer the woman to a facility that would perform one.

Another Republican initiative would redefine the language of the criminal codes of the state of Georgia, with the express purpose of making it more difficult for rape victims to report the crime. From AMERICAblog, quoting the Democrats:
Georgia state Rep. Bobby Franklin . . . has introduced a bill to change the state's criminal codes so that in "criminal law and criminal procedure" (read: in court), victims of rape, stalking, and family violence could only be referred to as "accusers" until the defendant has been convicted.

Burglary victims are still victims. Assault victims are still victims. Fraud victims are still victims. But if you have the misfortune to suffer a rape, or if you are beaten by a domestic partner, or if you are stalked, Rep. Franklin doesn't think you've been victimized. He says you're an accuser until the courts have determined otherwise.

To diminish a victim's ordeal by branding him/her an accuser essentially questions whether the crime committed against the victim is a crime at all. Robbery, assault, and fraud are all real crimes with real victims, the Republican asserts with this bill.

This must reflect the belief that women falsely accusing men of rape is such a major issue that it requires action on a state-wide level. In reality, rape and sexual assault remain horribly under-reported, especially where the victim knows her assailant.

In Texas - a state with no money and virtually no public services - Governor Rick Perry wants to require sonograms for all abortions, and require the patient to listen to the fetal heartbeat. (This local article about the bill says it would require women to listen to "their baby's heartbeat".) Perry fast-tracked this bill by calling it "emergency legislation".

Ohio is considering a bill that would ban abortions if a fetal heartbeat can be detected, which, because of new technology, can occur as early six weeks after conception.

There's a whole bunch more like this. I won't list them all. And we must always remember that laws mandating obstacles to abortion will always disproportionately affect low-income women, as women with the economic means can travel for services. They shouldn't have to, but they can. For working-class and poor women, no such option exists.

While those bits of legislative violence against women happen on a state level, a wider war on women is waged by the US Congress. Right now it focuses on Planned Parenthood, one of the very best - and most necessary - organizations in the US.

An attack on Planned Parenthood is an attack on all low-income women and their children, on teenagers seeking health information, on battered women who need confidential help, on people with no health insurance trying to raise healthy children. An attack on Planned Parenthood is an attack on affordable health care, pregnancy prevention and safer-sex education.

For almost a century, Planned Parenthood has been filling the gap left by the irresponsible, negligent US government. Now, armed with the results of an anti-choice sting operation that managed to catch one irresponsible staff member, Congress is gunning for Planned Parenthood.

Gail Collins of The New York Times sums up the situation in this excellent column.
As if we didn’t have enough wars, the House of Representatives has declared one against Planned Parenthood.

Maybe it's all part of a grand theme. Last month, they voted to repeal the health care law. This month, they're going after an organization that provides millions of women with both family-planning services and basic health medical care, like pap smears and screening for diabetes, breast cancer, cervical cancer and sexually transmitted diseases.

Our legislative slogan for 2011: Let Them Use Leeches.

“What is more fiscally responsible than denying any and all funding to Planned Parenthood of America?” demanded Representative Mike Pence of Indiana, the chief sponsor of a bill to bar the government from directing any money to any organization that provides abortion services.

Planned Parenthood doesn’t use government money to provide abortions; Congress already prohibits that, except in cases of rape, incest or to save the life of the mother. (Another anti-abortion bill that’s coming up for hearing originally proposed changing the wording to “forcible rape,” presumably under the theory that there was a problem with volunteer rape victims. On that matter at least, cooler heads prevailed.)

Planned Parenthood does pay for its own abortion services, though, and that’s what makes them a target. Pence has 154 co-sponsors for his bill. He was helped this week by an anti-abortion group called Live Action, which conducted a sting operation at 12 Planned Parenthood clinics in six states, in an effort to connect the clinic staff to child prostitution.

“Planned Parenthood aids and abets the sexual abuse and prostitution of minors,” announced Lila Rose, the beautiful anti-abortion activist who led the project. The right wing is currently chock-full of stunning women who want to end their gender’s right to control their own bodies. Homely middle-aged men are just going to have to find another sex to push around.

Live Action hired an actor who posed as a pimp and told Planned Parenthood counselors that he might have contracted a sexually transmitted disease from “one of the girls I manage.” He followed up with questions about how to obtain contraceptives and abortions, while indicating that some of his “girls” were under age and illegally in the country.

One counselor, shockingly, gave the “pimp” advice on how to game the system and was summarily fired when the video came out. But the others seem to have answered his questions accurately and flatly. Planned Parenthood says that after the man left, all the counselors — including the one who was fired — reported the conversation to their supervisors, who called the authorities. (One Arizona police department, the organization said, refused to file a report.)

Still, there is no way to look good while providing useful information to a self-proclaimed child molester, even if the cops get called. That, presumably, is why Live Action chose the scenario.

“We have a zero tolerance of nonreporting anything that would endanger a minor,” said Cecile Richards, the president of Planned Parenthood. “We do the same thing public hospitals do and public clinics do.”

But here’s the most notable thing about this whole debate: The people trying to put Planned Parenthood out of business do not seem concerned about what would happen to the 1.85 million low-income women who get family-planning help and medical care at the clinics each year. It just doesn’t come up. There’s not even a vague contingency plan.

“I haven’t seen that they want to propose an alternative,” said Richards.

There are tens of millions Americans who oppose abortion because of deeply held moral principles. But they’re attached to a political movement that sometimes seems to have come unmoored from any concern for life after birth.

There is no comparable organization to Planned Parenthood, providing the same kind of services on a national basis. If there were, most of the women eligible for Medicaid-financed family-planning assistance wouldn’t have to go without it. In Texas, which has one of the highest teenage birthrates in the country, only about 20 percent of low-income women get that kind of help. Yet Planned Parenthood is under attack, and the State Legislature has diverted some of its funding to crisis pregnancy centers, which provide no medical care and tend to be staffed by volunteers dedicated to dissuading women from having abortions.

In Washington, the new Republican majority that promised to do great things about jobs, jobs, jobs is preparing for hearings on a bill to make it economically impossible for insurance companies to offer policies that cover abortions. And in Texas, Gov. Rick Perry, faced with an epic budget crisis that’s left the state’s schools and health care services in crisis, has brought out emergency legislation — requiring mandatory sonograms for women considering abortion.

You can sign a letter of support for Planned Parenthood, donate to their foundation, or learn more about what they do.

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