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Reproductive Justice and Gender

Women Are Not 'Pork'

By Ruth Rosen, Religion Dispatches. Posted January 30, 2009.


Dems struck a family planning provision from the stimulus bill. What happens to the economy when a woman has a child without the means to support it?
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Responding to President Obama’s request, House Democrats cut a provision from the stimulus package that would expand contraceptive family planning for Medicaid patients -- usually poor women and girls.

Why did this happen?

For years, reproductive justice activists have argued that the religious right’s real agenda is not just to eliminate abortion, but to end the historic rupture between sex and reproduction that took place in the 20th century.

I understand why that rupture is unsettling. Ironically, I was on my way to lecture about Margaret Sanger in my history course at UC Berkeley when I heard the news. Sanger was vilified for wanting to give women the choice of when or whether to bear children. In short, she challenged all of human history by proposing an historic rupture between sexuality and the goal of reproduction. But if reproduction ceased to be the goal, sexuality might become yoked to pleasure.

That is the legacy the religious right has fought against, and it’s that agenda that cut funding for family planning.

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) said, “How you can spend hundreds of millions of dollars on contraceptives? How does that stimulate the economy?”

Well, here’s the answer. Consider the teenage girl who’s sexually active. What happens to the economy when she bears a child without the means to support it? Conversely, what happens when she finishes her education, enters the labor force, earns a salary, and pays taxes? Do we want an unemployed poor woman to have more children than she can already feed, or do we want her to have access to contraception, get her life back on track, and hopefully find work instead of raising another child she cannot afford at this time?

The Congressional Budget Office also reported that by the third year of implementation, the measure would actually save $200 million over five years by preventing unwanted pregnancies and avoiding the Medicaid cost of delivering and then caring for these babies. The same CBO report found the House version of the stimulus would have a “noticeable impact on economic growth and employment in the next few years, with much of the mandatory spending for Medicaid and other programs likely to occur in the next 19 to 20 months.” During the first three years, the CBO report said, the cost and savings are negligible.

This decision was an unnecessary political capitulation to Republicans. According to the AP and the Austin American-Statesman, the president was “courting Republican critics of the legislation” who had argued that contraception is not about stimulus or growth. Unfortunately, too many people have uncritically accepted that argument. But many others have noted that the package is filled with provisions for health care, which certainly includes family planning. Many other provisions, moreover, are also not growth-oriented, and yet it was poor women’s bodies that Democrats bartered for the approval and votes from Republicans that they don’t need and will seldom get.


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See more stories tagged with: gender, economy, family planning, reproductive justice, stimulus

Ruth Rosen, a journalist and historian, is professor emerita of history at the University of California, Davis and a visiting professor of public policy and history at UC Berkeley. For 11 years, she wrote op-ed columns for the Los Angeles Times, and from 2000-2004 she worked full-time as a political columnist and editorial page writer at the San Francisco Chronicle.

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Very Disappointing
Posted by: badkitty68 on Jan 31, 2009 7:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To say the least. I keep wondering what it will take for dems to wake up and acknowledge the painfully obvious: The repugs aren't going to work with the democrats for the good of the country no matter how much the dems cave on crucial legislation. They need to grow a set, pass the bills they need to, and leave the repugs to whine and pout in their own mess. From an economic standpoint, there's probably no better social investment than the comprehensive provision of family planning and contraceptive services.
When looking overseas at effective national policies on family planning, the Netherlands immediately stands out. They have among the lowest teen and unwanted pregnancy rates, and the lowest rates of abortion in the western hemisphere as a result of their family planning and health education policies.

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SCREW THE REPUBLICANS
Posted by: bryangalt on Feb 1, 2009 2:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Frankly, the Republicans are not deserving of any respect or any degree of compromise from Obama. I am sick and tired of their constant bitching and dehumanizing views of the poor huddled masses that make up the American citizenry.

What he has signaled to them is that he is willing to be their bitch if they show any signs of displeasure with any of his proposals or plans.

Yes, Obama is book smart, but he seems to lack some of those ever so important street smarts. Plus, his insistence on not speaking, writing, or acting in any way that may seem controversial to the right wing jackasses is infuriorating. The issues that Obama needs to address are in crisis mode, and the retarded Republicans are acting like their feet aren't going to get wet when the water reaches their part of the sinking ship!

Well, Screw them. It they don't want to help, then let them sit it out on the sidelines. The next election should weed out some more of their ilk, and that would be a good thing at this point.

Obama needs to put his balls on and get these changes made: stop the multi-billion dollar war on drugs, stop the multi-trillion dollar war on terror, cut the defense budget 25%, invest the trillions in freed up capital from the first three items to build solar for every house, electric transport for every driveway and get our people health care, housing and education that they can afford to pay for.

And, none of this requires a lame ass tax cut for some rich fat cat Republican who doesn't deserve to call himself an American in this time of crisis.

Bryan Galt's Blog

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Oh, c'mon!! Poor people are NOT stupid!!
Posted by: rickiey on Feb 1, 2009 7:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To be honest, I wanted that money included in the stimulus bill. I think it would be good for low income families.

Consider the teenage girl who’s sexually active. What happens to the economy when she bears a child without the means to support it?

Seriously? You are saying that there is ONE person who's circumstance is such that they wil use contreception if it is free, and not use it if they have to pay for it?

Having BEEN that poor, and spent that much time in those areas, I can tell you, your presumption is false, and frankly, just a little insulting.

Generally, people who are poor, have a pretty damn good idea of the whole "unprotected sex creates pregnancy which creates even lower standard of living". They'll find the money for the contreception.

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