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Silencing of Women on Women’s Health Continues
"We finally have the agenda in its full bloom in Congress.”
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi has scheduled a hearing for tomorrow on women's health to hear from the woman who was not allowed to testify at Chairman Darrell Issa's all-male hearing last week. But Democrats say Republicans won't let them televise the hearing, adding fuel to what many see as a Republican "war on women."
The Hill reports:
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) announced the event, her party's latest effort to capitalize on the controversy surrounding last week's hearing. Images of its all-male witness panel spread quickly online, helping Democrats frame the issue on their terms.
The only witness at Pelosi's hearing will be Sandra Fluke, the Georgetown University law student who wasn't allowed to testify last week. [...]
Pelosi and other Democrats slammed Chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) last week for convening an all-male panel to discuss a mandate that affects women's access to healthcare. Issa said his hearing was not about the contraception policy itself, but rather about religious freedom and whether the mandate encroaches on religious employers.
Politico reports that Pelosi aides say Republicans are preventing them from broadcasting the hearing:
Pelosi aides say the House recording studio has denied a request to broadcast the event, “apparently” at the behest of the Republican-controlled Committee on House Administration.
Pelosi spokesman Drew Hammill pointed to a July 2008 decision in which the committee lifted restrictions on use of the studio.
“If Chairman [Dan] Lungren has reversed this policy, he has done so in secret and not consulted with CHA Democrats,” Hammill said in an email. “This leaves us only to think that the House Republican leadership is acting out yet again to silence women on the topic of women’s health.”
Commenting on last week's hearing, RH Reality Check's Jodi Jacobsen writes that the hearing:
...featured constant and strident chiding by the Committee Chair, Congressman Darrell Issa (R-CA), of his Democratic Party counterparts that the hearing was "not about women's health, contraception, or health reform," while allowing all the anti-contraception, anti-health reform witnesses to speak about nothing but denying women health care, contraception, and health reform.
And Jessica Valenti notes in The Nation that the all-male panel is a familiar site:
When a picture of Congressman Darrell Issa’s all-male panel on birth control (the make-up of which prompted several Democratic women to walk out of the hearing) hit the Internet and mainstream media—I couldn’t help but be reminded of a similar picture of George W. Bush signing the “partial birth” abortion ban, surrounded by a group of smiling clapping men. All men. (Santorum was one of them.)
* * *
Others see a "war on contraception" -- a war that hasn't just begun but that is now on full display in our political sphere.
Sady Doyle writes in In These Times:
But after a year of coordinated assaults on Planned Parenthood, “personhood” initiatives that stood to make oral contraceptives illegal, and other bizarre attacks on protected sex, we hardly need a reason to talk. The war has been declared; the battle lines are drawn; “not getting pregnant” is the new abortion.
But in the midst of all this a few questions stood out. Namely: How is it that in a country where 99 percent of women have used birth control we are fighting over whether people should be able to get birth control? How did a position this extreme and alienated from the will of the people enter mainstream political conversation?
“People are talking about ‘Oh, the war on contraception has begun.’ It hasn’t begun,” author Christina Page told me. “What’s begun is that we finally have the agenda in its full bloom in Congress.”
In her book How The Pro-Choice Movement Saved America, Page argues that right-wing attacks on abortion are cover for a far more radical agenda. The real target of organized anti-choicers, she says, is not abortion. Abortion is just the divisive, emotional topic used to mobilize grassroots support. The real target of the organized anti-choice movement–as opposed to individuals who are anti-abortion–has always been birth control. Page told me she’s been recommending since 2008 that reporters ask all GOP candidates about their position on contraception.
* * *
In Virginia, a bill pro-choice advocates have described as state-sanctioned rape appears to be losing suppor, the Guardian reports:
The governor of Virginia has reined in his previously unconditional support for a bill which would force women seeking abortions in the state to undergo an internal ultrasound.
Governor Robert McDonnell, an anti-abortion Republican who is seen by some in his party as a possible candidate for vice-president, had previously said he would sign the bill if it were passed by Virginia's general assembly.
But after mounting pressure from campaigners, Democratic delegates and ordinary Virginians who strongly oppose the measure, McDonnell will now say only that he will review the bill if it appears on his desk.
This week, Virginia has come under increasing national scrutiny for moves to pass the legislation, the first of two of the most controversial anti-abortion bills in recent history proposed by state Republicans. It would force women undergoing first trimester abortions – when the majority of abortions are performed – to submit to a vaginally invasive procedure, offer them images of the foetus and have the resulting image lie on their medical file for seven years.
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Show AllTo really hurt them, take away their pocketbooks.
Look at Us
by John Trudell
"At times they were kind, they were polite in their sophistication, smiling but never too loudly acting in a civilized manner an illusion of gentleness always fighting to get their way. While the people see, the people know, the people wait, the people say the closing of your doors will never shut us out, the closing of your doors can only shut you in. We know the predator, we see them feed on us, we are aware to starve the beast is our destiny. At times they were kind, they were polite, but never honest."
[ Hamlet's advice to Ophelia. ] 7 - 6 - 5 - 4 -
Trylon
Originally performed in classical Athens in 411 BC, it is a comic account of one woman's extraordinary mission to end The Peloponnesian War. Lysistrata persuades the women of Greece to withhold sexual privileges from their husbands and lovers as a means of forcing the men to negotiate peace — a strategy, however, that inflames the battle between the sexes. The play is notable for being an early exposé of sexual relations in a male-dominated society.
Some locations have what is called =Alternate side of the street parking=. Using the Mississippi to divide the continent, women could take turns denying sex to men West and East. Money saved on Kleenex et al could be used for gasoline.
Trylon
>>No one is trying to stop women from getting birth control but just because you want it doesn't mean that I should pay for it when it goes against my religion. It's that simple
So you would also be opposed to food stamp programs and welfare programs if the person receiving the said used it to buy Pork food products? Would you consider this "against your religion"?
Now there are people opposed to Violence and war and the Murder of people overseas by a countries Military forces. Are you also suggesting that the taxpayers should not have to pay for that as it a "freedom of religion" issue?
Are you calling for an end to Police forces and the military unless they funded by private monies?
As to Canada, we are not trying to get away from "state run health care at breakneck speed". Where did you come up with that bit of Wisdom? It is not run by the State.
You are quite right. Virtually everything a Government can spend its money on can be seen as a violation of some persons religion. One can not just pick and choose when such rules will apply AS these A**holes in Government are suggesting they do.
I am reminded of a Politician in one of your States who tried to pass a bill that stated that any person receiving tax payer dollars should be forced to take a drug test. An Amendment was added that stated this should apply to Politicians too as they received tax payer dollars.
The guy PULLED the bill and said it had to be revisited.
For much more on this topic -- particularly on why the survival of patriarchy demands the suppression of female sexuality -- see "Dancer Resurrected: a Story of Love, Art, Sex and Revolution" on my blog, Outside Agitator's Notebook (lorenbliss.typepad.com). Part 2 of "Dancer" is especially relevant, as it notes also the direct-line connection between patriarchy, capitalism and fascism -- theocratic fascism the ultimate fulfilment of the patriarchal impulse.
Meanwhile thanks to Sioux Rose for the relevant quote from Ms. Eisler, which -- terrifyingly -- tells us of the savagery of what should properly be termed the patriarchal counter-revolution, the goal of which is the imposition of global theocracy, a Taliban Planet whether Jewish, Christian or Islamic, the long-term objective a god-policed slave-world safe for capitalism and its One Percent.
Eisler's work, Barbara Mor's book The Great Cosmic Mother and the many volumes by the late Marija Gimbutas are all essential reading if we are to fully understand this vital matter and the magnitude of what is at stake, no pun intended.
Not glitches, Sioux, just malicious censorship -- a preview (maybe a test run) of how the Ruling Class intends to control the U.S. Internet while maintaining -- what is it the spooks call it? -- "plausible deniability."
The technique is very simple: the government asks the Internet servers to include an allegedly "subservive" URL in the spam list, and -- presto bingo -- any email that mentions the targeted URL is slain by electronic embargo. That's why, for example, I can no longer send notices of new blog posts to the people on the Outside Agitator's Notebook e-mail list.
Century Link promised me a week ago they'd have the problem fixed in "48 hours," but it's not fixed yet, and given the givens I am beginning to doubt it will EVER be fixed. Comcast used to pull the same shit on me -- did it I think four times total (which was the main reason I switched to Century Link, the only other broadband provider available where I live) -- but at least when I raised hell with Comcast, they'd eventually lift the embargo. Now with Century Link all I get is silence: the electronic equivalent of an uplifted middle finger.
Given Watergate Felon John Ehrlichman's reluctant admission Washington state is the favorite Ruling Class rat lab for testing new techniques of oppression, I have no doubt what we experience here is but a harbinger of things to come. (Yes it's been done to many others here too, especially Occupiers.)
Come 3 March, when NDAA goes into effect and turns the military into a de facto Gestapo, who knows what will happen? The only guarantee is that things will get much, much worse -- and given the military's array of Borg-type alien weaponry, resistance may indeed be futile.
RT's coverage is nothing short of breathtaking. Their reporters take on stories Ruling Class Media (including MSNBC) doesn't dare touch, and RT's news analysis is the best I've ever seen on TV: it's made for people who still have minds, not for those who have become part of the Moron Nation hive. No advertisements either.
Be adivsed though RT stands for Russian Television, so you don't want to be watching it while Homeland Security is visiting your home. (The broadcasts are all in English, mostly put together by RT in Washington D.C., then transmitted by satellite to Moscow, then back to U.S. cable providers.) On Comcast it's Channel 81; for other options, Google rtamerica tv. Best TV news coverage I've seen in the U.S. since the Ed Murrow era.
For people my age, this will no doubt bring back memories of late nights spent listening to the forbidden shortwave radio broadcasts by Radio Moscow: drop the antenna wire out the dorm window, turn on the big Hallicrafters receiver, go to the 21 Meter band, wait for the four opening notes of the Internationale that signaled the beginning of the broadcast. But RT is infinitely better: no need for sneaking around at midnight, no propaganda, just (real) reporting.
Spend a week switching from RT to MSNBC and back and you'll see what I mean. MSNBC, though far better than CNN of FOX, still pulls its punches. RT? Never! One example -- apropos this thread -- note how Alyona (RT's answer to Rachel Maddow) has coined a new term for the War against Women: "Vajihad."