COMMENTS: 56
Framing the "A" word
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Finding the "right way" to talk about abortion, reproductive rights and women's rights has been the point of contention not just between the conservatives and the progressives, but within each side as well. How do we talk about these issues in a way that not just demonstrates our point of view, but that connects with the people that we want to hear our ideas?
This cuts right to the chase of a lot of the problems with messaging and spin in general: it's ego-centric, and doesn't generally play well with others. All around, we see organizers and spin doctors asking themselves, "How can I say what I mean?" With many on the left, the blinders go up from there, and we put a lot of time and energy into figuring out how best to promote this singular, solitary notion of an issue.
When the disconnect between ideas, emotions and frames gets lost, the message carried within those frames often falls flat. The real question is more along the lines of "How will people best understand and relate to what's important?" We progressives pride ourselves on being "of the people;" it's time we start start speaking it. It's time to take a step back and remember the larger ecology to which we belong, and to remember that no issue exists in a vaccuum.
Abortion can be one of the more difficult subjects to approach, and there's certainly no lack of frames out there. How successful have progressives been at framing or reframing in the last 30 years? Depends on who you ask, of course, but the recent SCOTUS nominations have certainly rekindled that discussion.
"Pro-life" is probably the worst possible frame for us to even think about in our daily discourse. Letting conservatives have this for the last few decades has dealt a major blow to the reproductive rights movement. By default in this frame, the opposite -- the opposers of conservatives -- are anti-life. I don't know a single women's rights advocate that's anti-life, and in fact, that describes the Bush administration to a T.
"Pro-choice," however, is also fraught with problems. As George Lakoff (referring to Deborah Tannen) has pointed out, the word "choice" has indications along the lines of consumerism, as if the decision to have an abortion is as simple as deciding whether or not to buy new pillows. It carries no weight of the woman's life, lifestyle, or livelihood.
On a larger level, talking about abortion as An Important Issue ghettoizes it and removes the larger contexts: abortion is about women having control over their own bodies, which is a part of an ongoing rights struggle for women's equality, which is a part of the larger movement of fairness, prosperity and justice for all people.
This isn't to say the implications of having something like Roe v. Wade overturned are not important to exemplify, and to talk about the individual dangers to women -- especially poor women and women of color -- should our access to proper reproductive care (which, in my world, includes access to an abortion) be restricted. We need to be adding the values to those examples, and not just waving coat-hangers and cold facts at blind eyes. We need to keep connecting the single issue of abortion to the larger ecosystem of progressive values and ideas.
Easier said than done, of course. How do you frame abortion and women's rights when speaking with your friends and family? How do they react? Leave your stories in the comments; tell us what works, what doesn't, and where you think we need to go to keep protecting the reproductive freedom of women.
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Posted by: jasonchouinard on Jan 23, 2006 5:28 AM
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» interesting analysis
Posted by: BKLN
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Posted by: mac01 on Jan 23, 2006 5:40 AM
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» RE: The "A" word
Posted by: Deanna Zandt
» RE: The "A" word
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» semantics
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» RE: semantics
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» RE: semantics
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Posted by: Wildman on Jan 23, 2006 5:43 AM
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This works with 2nd amendment fans and Libertarians and real conservatives.
We don’t need government intruding into the most personal and difficult questions that families are struggling through.
Putting Terry Schivo’s fate in the courts, the congress, and on TV did not help the folks who push the “right to life” frame.
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Posted by: lpericol on Jan 23, 2006 7:44 AM
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» RE: My proposal for framing the issue
Posted by: Deanna Zandt
» abortion is not a form of birth control
Posted by: BKLN
» RE: abortion is not a form of birth control
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» RE: My proposal for framing the issue
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» RE: My proposal for framing the issue
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» "buying in" to the frame
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» RE: My proposal for framing the issue
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Posted by: mviscid on Jan 23, 2006 9:08 AM
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I think our recent reality TV culture has helped obscure the importance of keeping personal matters private. I'm all for the "I had an abortion" shirt girls, they're obviously comfortable with that expression. But for me, I don't necessarily want the world to know how relieved and freeing my abortion was (the result of a FAILURE of legal, doctor-prescribed hormonal birth control I took religiously. These failures DO happen, by the way.) I just want my rights and the privacy to exercise those rights in a manner that I need.
Everyone has a different take on emotional stuff. I don't know that it's possible to frame such a personal issue in a general way, other than "it's my business, not yours."
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» great comment
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» RE: I think privacy does it
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» fetal "rights"
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» incubator
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» Nothing is Private in "The Kingdom"
Posted by: GreenLibbie
» "Another Example of Intrusive Government" is a viable frame
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» RE: mick3
Posted by: porgygirl
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Posted by: tanstaafl28 on Jan 23, 2006 12:30 PM
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If the right is so hot to prevent abortions, they should put their money where their mouth is and support an end to the promotion of reproductive ignorance, and deception, in our public schools. After all, is not comprehensive sex education one more way we can hopefully prevent unwanted pregnancies, and therefore abortions?
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» abstinence and privacy
Posted by: BKLN
» Not to them... respectfully, you just don't "get it"
Posted by: GreenLibbie
» RE: Not to them... respectfully, you just don't "get it"
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Posted by: chanceny on Jan 23, 2006 1:39 PM
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Posted by: StuartH on Jan 23, 2006 7:54 PM
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bloody and hair hacked-at looking so they were more
humiliated as they were hauled to the town square in
a trumbrel while a mob spat at them.
They were seen from directly above as the flames
swirled about them.
We should not forget that partly what was going on here
was a war between the religious right of the time, which
used such terrorizing tactics to create state power and
the monarchy which pandered to their interests.
This was a war on the old matriarchy, the Celtic women
of the wells who knew such arts as herbal healing.
When you look at the red and blue states today, one of
the things that is happening there is that smart women
have shifted out of small towns where education is not
valued very highly, and sought a culture in the larger
cities where education is a basic value.
Pro-Choice means just that. Women who want to be
recognized as having intelligence and capability tend
to want personal empowerment and abortion rights
are central to that, even if it is only a reserved right.
Liberals have a tendency to want to hide in some kind
of academic rhetoric that denies the power issues for
women rather than stand up and fight for what is
really on the line here.
We don't need reframing, we need leaders who will
stand up for principle and who understand them
well enough to explain them persuasively to those
who prefer to promote ignorance.
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» important reminder and solid comment
Posted by: BKLN
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Posted by: surfreality on Jan 24, 2006 8:46 AM
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Posted by: linden on Jan 24, 2006 1:17 PM
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When I drive the back roads of Minnesota or Ohio or Missouri, what do I see? Billboard after billboard touting the anti-choice line. Who's getting the message out in the heartland?
What I'd like to see are billboards, advertising campaigns, and movement building around this issue featuring the stories of women who had abortions back when abortion was illegal, stories from health care professionals who remember those days, and the stories of families whose daughters have died as a result of parental notification laws. The public has forgotten why legal abortion was a step forward for women in the first place, and the pro-choice movement has let them forget in its focus on legislative processes.
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Posted by: Kneel on Jan 25, 2006 7:51 PM
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Pro-Freedom.
Pro-Liberty.
I'd go with the last one.
This is actually a basic issue of liberty, and it should be tied into to all those other issues of liberty: sharing your body how you want, with whom you want; choosing what chemicals you want to put in your body, or not put your body (the liberty, say, to not breathe mercury vapors); the liberty to live as something other than a semi-slave... etc.
Because I think this issue is deeply connected to these others. I don't see how someone can work on gay rights but not civil rights but not drug rights but not reproductive rights. It's all closely connected. But somehow anyone who speaks out against anti-gay discrimination is always assumed to be gay, and anyone passionate about ending prohibition is assumed to be a stoner who just wants to smoke up without hassles (as someone accused me in one of the forums recently), and so on. We were once moving in the direction of seeing food and housing as a basic right as well. (Even Nixon made some noises along those lines, out of necessity, although that was the point where the tide began to recede.)
These things shouldn't be separate. I think we'd find the synergy and solidarity of working on them together would make us all stronger - those dedicated to any one of these issues could commit to putting some resources into the others as well.
Otherwise we're back to Ben Franklin's "We must hang together, or we shall hang separately." And I think lately we've been doing a lot of hanging separately.
So, my vote is Pro-Liberty.
Sounds nicer, too.
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Posted by: porgygirl on Feb 1, 2006 12:24 PM
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For me what's missing in the public debate over abortion is the issue of criminalization. The "pro-life" movement is pro-criminalization. And the criminalization of abortion would create all manner of hellishness--from the human nightmares of botched illegal abortions and invaded privacy and forced childbirth, to the logistical problems of even more overloaded courts, prisons, and foster care programs (since a lot of the "criminals" would be single mothers).
Calling pro-life pro-criminalization would really shine a light on the patriarchal, repressive, and retributive undercurrents of that movement.
The pro-choice movement is not pro-abortion, but anti-criminalization. We believe that a woman or girl must be able to make her own reproductive decisions. Many of us would like to see the incidence of abortions reduced--not through punishment and fear, but through improved education, access to health care and family planning, affordable day care, parental leave, domestic violence prevention, addiction treatment, etc., etc., etc.
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» RE: Pro/Anti Criminalization?
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Posted by: foodnotoil on Feb 4, 2006 11:30 AM
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This is a HUGE distraction... While we squabble over these "moral" debates, earth is warming and the collapse of civilization is about to ensue. Pick a doomsday scenario and we're most likely already 2/3 of the way there; global wars, global climate change, peak oil, toxification of the environment to such an extent it's about to cause a massive global-scale abortion of the future of humanity, nuclear meltdowns, star wars, creating black holes, mini-suns, what-have-you.
We need to be ending every single conversation we encounter with ...how are we going to feed ourselves when oil starts running low? Every single second we choose to focus on a secondary issue without taking on the BIG ISSUES, is a lost opportunity. Sorry conservatives, but nature is impervious to our morality of pro-life-isms...
Meanwhile, while the squabbling is taking place, 246 million child slaves are living their lives as cogs in the global economy; not even including the huge number of sweatshop slaves making 6-15 cents an hour pumping out 1500 garments per day getting yelled and screemed at in dark diseased infested rooms. Every single second we don't raise these issues with every sonversation we have to make sure EVERYONE knows what we're financially supporting is a lost opportunity.
We throw these lost opportunities around like a psychopath on a rampage, gutting-eviscerating massive sections of earth's future inhabitants. Just reading this, and not letting that part of your mind click in order to become dedicated, is most likely the equivalent of 9,000 years of babies being aborted, and children being massacred, evisceration and guts flying everywhere. This is the reality! Look at our disregard! Why do we continue to live out our lives not in disgust, but in passive placency drenched in disregard? Humanity deserves better!
To sum up, either take on all these issues at the same time with full force, or shut up because your distracting people from some of the most dire problems humanity is facing and even worse problems to come, like global climate change and peak oil...
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Posted by: Mimi on Feb 7, 2006 7:44 AM
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She therefore considers the prospects for living in the specific, real circumstances, not the abstract. Will the child thrive and FLOURISH? Will she be able to give the child the CARE that all human children require? What are the FUTURE PROSPECTS FOR LIVING for this child?
When she cannot, when the prospects for living, caring and flourishing are not enough, then she is in a tragic situation. She has to make a very difficult and painful choice, not a happy one.
What's the frame, then?
She is CARE-AWARE.
She is PRO-FLOURISHING.
She is concerned about the PROSPECTS FOR LIVING.
Under Bush and the Right, the pragmatic realities of any family caring for a child, including an adoptive one,have become so overwhelming that even young married couples desiring to have children cannot afford to. Education is out of reach. "Care" is anathema to their doctrine of independence. The prospects for living for us ALL on the planet are grim, indeed, as has already been posted.
The Left needs a moral center that is the equivalent of what pro-life has been for the right, a values constant that makes them seem morally unassailable. 'PROSPECTS FOR LIVING' might work because it would appeal to the pragmatist and the intellectual alike, but mostly because if we do not begin to orient ourselves toward the Prospects for Living for us all, there won't be any.
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» RE: Prospects for Living
Posted by: foodnotoil
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