Log In

Home
    - Create Journal
    - Update
    - Download

LiveJournal
    - News
    - Paid Accounts
    - Contributors

Customize
    - Customize Journal
    - Create Style
    - Edit Style

Find Users
    - Random!
    - By Region
    - By Interest
    - Search

Edit ...
    - Personal Info &
      Settings
    - Your Friends
    - Old Entries
    - Your Pictures
    - Your Password

Developer Area

Need Help?
    - Lost Password?
    - Freq. Asked
      Questions
    - Support Area



レナで撲殺 ([info]bemysty) wrote in [info]unfunnybusiness,
@ 2010-02-27 13:54:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Current mood:OMGWTF

"To Court Blacks, Foes of Abortion Make Racial Case"

tl;dr edition: Religious far right anti-abortionists focus on African-Americans as a new target group citing abortion as a tool of a decades-old conspiracy to eradicate African-Americans altogether.

aka I can barely formulate a coherent thought through my red-hot rage.

Text below the cut for the link-phobic, bold by me.

To Court Blacks, Foes of Abortion Make Racial Case
By SHAILA DEWAN
Published: February 26, 2010

ATLANTA — For years the largely white staff of Georgia Right to Life, the state’s largest anti-abortion group, tried to tackle the disproportionately high number of black women who undergo abortions. But, staff members said, they found it difficult to make inroads with black audiences.

Catherine Davis, the minority outreach coordinator for Georgia Right to Life, talked to the Morris Brown screening audience.

Loretta Ross and her organization, SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Health Collective, support abortion rights.

So in 2009, the group took money that it normally used for advertising a pregnancy hot line and hired a black woman, Catherine Davis, to be its minority outreach coordinator.

Ms. Davis traveled to black churches and colleges around the state, delivering the message that abortion is the primary tool in a decades-old conspiracy to kill off blacks.

The idea resonated, said Nancy Smith, the executive director.

“We were shocked when we spent less money and had more phone calls” to the hot line, Ms. Smith said.

This month, the group expanded its reach, making national news with 80 billboards around Atlanta that proclaim, “Black children are an endangered species,” and a Web site, www.toomanyaborted.com.

Across the country, the anti-abortion movement, long viewed as almost exclusively white and Republican, is turning its attention to African-Americans and encouraging black abortion opponents across the country to become more active.

A new documentary, written and directed by Mark Crutcher, a white abortion opponent in Denton, Tex., meticulously traces what it says are connections among slavery, Nazi-style eugenics, birth control and abortion, and is being regularly screened by black organizations.

Black abortion opponents, who sometimes refer to abortions as “womb lynchings,” have mounted a sustained attack on the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, spurred by a sting operation by young white conservatives who taped Planned Parenthood employees welcoming donations specifically for aborting black children.

“What’s giving it momentum is blacks are finally figuring out what’s going down,” said Johnny M. Hunter, a black pastor and longtime abortion opponent in Fayetteville, N.C. “The game changes when blacks get involved. And in the pro-life movement, a lot of the groups that have been ignored for years, they’re now getting galvanized.”

The factors fueling the focus on black women — an abortion rate far higher than that of other races and the ties between the effort to legalize and popularize birth control and eugenics — are, at heart, old news. But they have been given exaggerated new life by the Internet, slick repackaging, high production values and money, like the more than $20,000 that Georgia Right to Life invested in the billboards.

Data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that black women get almost 40 percent of the country’s abortions, even though blacks make up only 13 percent of the population. Nearly 40 percent of black pregnancies end in induced abortion, a rate far higher than for white or Hispanic women.

Day Gardner, now the president of the National Black Pro-Life Union in Washington, said those figures shocked her at first.

“I just really assumed that white people aborted more than anyone else, and black people would not do this because we’re culturally a religious people, we have large families,” Ms. Gardner said.

Many black anti-abortion leaders, including Ms. Davis and Alveda King, a niece of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the director of African-American outreach for Priests for Life, often recount their own abortion histories (each woman had two).

Abortion opponents say the number is so high because abortion clinics are deliberately located in black neighborhoods and prey upon black women. The evidence, they say, is everywhere: Planned Parenthood’s response to the anti-abortion ad that aired during the Super Bowl featured two black athletes, they note, and several women’s clinics offered free services — including abortions — to evacuees after Hurricane Katrina.

“The more I dug into it, the more vast I found that the network was,” Ms. Davis said. “And I realized that African-American women just did not know the truth, they did not understand the truth about the abortion industry.”

But those who support abortion rights dispute the conspiracy theory, saying it portrays black women as dupes and victims. The reason black women have so many abortions is simple, they say: too many unwanted pregnancies.

“It’s a perfect storm,” said Loretta Ross, the executive director of the SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Health Collective in Atlanta, listing a lack of access to birth control, lack of education, and even a high rate of sexual violence. “There’s an assumption that every time a girl is pregnant it’s because of voluntary activity, and it’s so not the case,” Ms. Ross said.

But, she said, the idea that abortion is intended to wipe out blacks may be finding fertile ground in a population that has experienced so much sanctioned prejudice and violence.

Black opponents of abortion are fond of saying that black people were anti-abortion and anti-birth control early on, pointing to Marcus Garvey’s conviction that blacks could overcome white supremacy through reproduction, and black militants who protested family planning clinics.

But that is only half the picture, scholars say. Black women were eager for birth control even before it was popularized by Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, and black doctors who provided illegal abortions were lauded as community heroes.

“Some male African-American leaders were so furious about what they perceived as genocidal intentions that in one case they burned down a clinic,” said Carole Joffe, the author of “Dispatches From the Abortion Wars.” “But women were very resolute, saying, ‘We want birth control.’ ”

In 2008, Lila Rose, a college student at U.C.L.A. and the founder of an anti-abortion group called Live Action, released four audio recordings of a man trying to make donations to Planned Parenthood clinics to pay for black women’s abortions. In one, the caller, played by James O’Keefe III, the provocateur recently arrested on charges that he tried to tamper with the telephones of Senator Mary L. Landrieu, Democrat of Louisiana, said, “You know, we just think, the less black kids out there, the better,” to which the Planned Parenthood employee replies, “Understandable, understandable.”

Planned Parenthood has apologized for the employees’ statements and says they do not reflect the organization’s values or policies.

The recordings led to calls by black leaders to withdraw financing of Planned Parenthood, which receives about $350 million a year in government money for education and medical services. They reinvigorated old claims that the organization was a front for racial genocide and that Sanger viewed blacks as undesirable.

Scholars acknowledge that Sanger did ally herself with eugenics, at the time a mainstream movement, but said she believed that birth control, sterilization and abortion should be voluntary and not based on race. She was also allied with black leaders like W.E.B. Du Bois and Dr. King, who praised her efforts to bring birth control to black families.

“It’s unfair to characterize those efforts as racially targeted in a negative way,” said Ellen Chesler, a historian and Sanger biographer, who is now on the board of Planned Parenthood.

Still, enough threads of truth weave through the theory to make “Maafa 21,” the documentary whose name is a Swahili word used to refer to the slavery era, persuasive to some viewers, at least at a recent screening at Morris Brown College, a historically black institution in Atlanta.

“Before we saw the movie, I was pro-choice,” said Markita Eddy, a sophomore. But were she to get pregnant now, Ms. Eddy said, “it showed me that maybe I should want to keep my child no matter what my position was, just because of the conspiracy.”



(Post a new comment)


[info]lil_miss_stfu
2010-02-27 01:12 pm UTC (link)
Ugh... Just... Ugh.

(Reply to this)


[info]brennalarose
2010-02-27 03:09 pm UTC (link)
What is this I don't even

(Reply to this)


[info]chikane
2010-02-27 03:16 pm UTC (link)
I want to go Mion on the people who came up with this utterly, utterly vile method of controlling women's bodies.

Yeah, let's add even more blame on top of what women of color already have to face. Just great.

STAB STAB STAB STAB.

(Reply to this)


[info]ruslan
2010-02-27 03:40 pm UTC (link)
ಠ_ಠ Hru?

(Reply to this)


[info]duraniedrama
2010-02-27 03:43 pm UTC (link)
Saw a billboard for that recently and wondered where the heck that had come from. How typical that it is, in fact, white people with an agenda behind it.

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]madam_marozi
2010-02-27 04:22 pm UTC (link)
I've seen the billboards, but never took a good look at them, and just assumed the child was an "endangered species" because of crime or faulty education or something.

Ugh. Now every time I drive that way I'm going to get mad.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]snarkhunter
2010-02-27 04:02 pm UTC (link)
I've been kind of watching this happen ever since the Lila Rose thing...and it's like, how do you even fight this? How do you fight a movement that has a grain of truth (non-white Americans have been subject to centuries of sanctioned abuse, including forced sterilization and medical experimentation), but that have twisted it so vilely?

Actually, as I write that, it occurs to me how to fight it.

The pro-choice movement needs to make its own documentary. And it needs to focus on the positive role CHOICE has played in the lives of women of color. It shouldn't gloss over the horror, but it should look at the successes. And that needs to be screened at campuses around the country.

(Reply to this)


[info]sgaana
2010-02-27 04:27 pm UTC (link)
I... just... there are too many words trying to get out right now, to express ALL the ways in which this is vile and predatory.

But here's just one way: yeah, because all of those white, right-leaning anti-abortion groups are SO CONCERNED with the welfare of black children once they are born. They're SO SUPPORTIVE of black communities, too; they offer such excellent help and services to single black mothers! I am sure that NONE of them or anyone associated with them have EVER theorized that black communities and "single mothers with too many children who are in welfare" are breeding-grounds for the type of crime that white, right-leaning people find particularly terrifying.

Yeah, black communities and churches. They're really your allies. They want to SAVE the lives of your unborn children!

Just forget about the life that they think those children deserve once they're born.

*rage*


(Which is not to say, mind you, that I think abortion is a desired solution for all black women. It's that I see a higher rate of abortion amongst black women as perhaps symptomatic of the way that social and economic factors have limited their choices even more drastically than for other women. But no, let's not address WHY black women may be seeking abortions, and try to deal with those factors. I notice that's not mentioned anywhere here. This is just an attempt to misdirect by saying "the only reason black women are seeking abortions is because of this white conspiracy to kill off blacks". Uh-huh. And that's not even getting INTO the idea of black women having agency of their own, and perhaps a genuine desire to make their own fucking choices about their bodies. Of course! Black women are just the DUPES of this white pro-choice conspiracy! They don't have convictions of their own. How silly of me.)

*more rage*

God, there is so much wrong in this article that if I keep going, I'll never STOP.

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]wrenlet
2010-02-27 04:52 pm UTC (link)
It's that I see a higher rate of abortion amongst black women as perhaps symptomatic of the way that social and economic factors have limited their choices even more drastically than for other women. But no, let's not address WHY black women may be seeking abortions, and try to deal with those factors.

*ding ding ding* Plus I am really really REALLY REALLY tired of these organizations targeting Planned Parenthood as if it's the sole thing they do. Clinics are located in lower-income neighborhoods because they provide needed services on a sliding scale. When I was minimum-wage-no-insurance, I hiked into downtown Houston for yearly pelvic exams, STD screenings and a BC scrip. (And had to be escorted past sign-waving protesters, naturally. There was a temptation to dump my bag of pillpacks over their heads and yell, "I'm trying not to GET pregnant, you dipshit!" but it's like spitting into the ocean with these people.)

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]issendai
2010-02-27 05:12 pm UTC (link)
Oh hell yes. Several years ago there was a case where a man who was escorting a woman into a Planned Parenthood clinic decked a protester. The protester screamed "Don't kill the baby!" at the couple as they entered the clinic. The woman... was going there for medical help after miscarrying a much-wanted baby. I think the judge let her husband off for hitting the protester, because... yeah.

Planned Parenthood: For when you plan to be a parent, as well as for when you plan not to be one.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]the__ivorytower
2010-02-27 06:11 pm UTC (link)
The protester screamed "Don't kill the baby!" at the couple as they entered the clinic. The woman... was going there for medical help after miscarrying a much-wanted baby.

*horrified look* What is this I don't even.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]everstar
2010-02-27 06:26 pm UTC (link)
Not to say that the guy was right for hauling off and punching the protester, but my first thought was, "I wonder if that protester knows how goddamn lucky he was that he only got punched."

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]jackandahat
2010-02-27 07:16 pm UTC (link)
I think he was definitely right. They were wishing harm on a woman's body - pregnancy and childbirth a Really Big Deal physically, even if someone wants it, if you assume someone doesn't but you're trying to make them go through it anyway, then as far as I'm concerned, then you're wishing them harm.

So yeah. Serves them right.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]wrenlet
2010-02-27 08:12 pm UTC (link)
Yes. And they do prenatal care as well, which can be HELLA expensive without health insurance.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]alienist
2010-02-28 04:53 am UTC (link)
...Yeah, can't blame him in the slightest. Can't say I wouldn't have done the same thing, either.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]aliaras
2010-02-28 02:23 am UTC (link)
Oh yeah. When I was younger, I was only dimly aware that Planned Parenthood offered abortions. I was going to sneak over there to get birth control and make sure everything was good/clean without my mother finding out that I was having teh sex.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]ladysphinx
2010-02-27 08:15 pm UTC (link)
Concerned with life from the moment of conception right up until the first breath. Then the kid just needs to learn to pull itself up by its little baby bootie-straps.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]amadi
2010-02-28 02:30 am UTC (link)
Well no, they don't mind giving those babies a hand... so long as they're adopted into the homes of good, white, suburban Christians who can raise them up "right."

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]reppupu
2010-02-27 04:36 pm UTC (link)
Oh Atlanta...You are my home, as crazy as you are.

Being black though, I will say that I've heard of this conspiracy theory. And yeah, now that I think about it, my nearest Planned Parenthood is in the middle of a black neighborhood. Hmmm...

While I would personally never give up a baby, I am in favor of letting women make their own choices, either for or against abortion. It's the woman's right, isn't it, to decide what to do. And though it would be so, so easy to give into the conspiracy theory, I really don't think it's that well planned. There are a lot of things, positive and negative, that are targeted at the black community, but I can't put abortion and sterilization in there. If the white man wanted to wipe out black people using that method, he's doing a poor job at it, that's for sure. If it wasn't an anti-abortion movement, I'd say they had a better conspiracy theory argument by pointing out the disproportionate number of black men in jail.

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]chikane
2010-02-27 05:00 pm UTC (link)
Thing is, the whole existance of a conspiracy to convince black women to abort is nonsensical.

It assumes women can just randomly be convinced to abort. As if abortion was something one just did on a whim. "hey, there's an abortion clinic nearby, hm, sounds good, lets abort!"

It only works if you believe the basic premise of the anti-choicers that abortion is done on a whim by selfish women. Certainly not women who need it, no, certainly not.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]issendai
2010-02-27 05:15 pm UTC (link)
Because 40% of all American women are selfish sluts.

Some days, I <3 anti-choicers. By which I mean, "I want to stab them in the nether regions with this pointy thing."

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]chikane
2010-02-28 11:45 am UTC (link)
I'd suggest a rusty, ragged spoon myself.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]snarkhunter
2010-02-28 01:36 pm UTC (link)
"Because it's dull, you twit! It'll hurt more!"

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]finchbird
2010-02-27 05:49 pm UTC (link)
There's so many things wrong with this I don't even know where to start.

(Reply to this)


[info]sunhawk
2010-02-27 06:04 pm UTC (link)
Black abortion opponents, who sometimes refer to abortions as “womb lynchings,”

WHO WHAT EH???

(Reply to this)


[info]gardnerhill
2010-02-27 06:07 pm UTC (link)
It's perfectly in line with anti-choice mindset, the one of those who want to prosecute (and/or execute) abortion providers but not the patients. See, women are all silly fluffy li'l bimbettes who don't have the brain power to make grownup decisions, it's evil money-grubbing baby-eating doctors who talk them into abortions. And women of color don't even exist as human beings -- they're Perpetuators of The Race and have no say in their reproductive status once they're pregnant, because it's their duty to stay poor and overworked and underpaid and loaded with more kids than they want.

This new tactic cunningly uses misogyny disguised as anti-racism. (Hell, it worked during the Clarence Thomas hearings - funny how Anita Hill's race never came up as a factor in how she was treated by that row of white males judging HER behavior in a sexual harrassment suit, while Thomas bemoaned the "high-tech lynching of a successful black man.")

Yoko Ono was freakin' right - "Woman is the [N-word] of the world."

(Reply to this)


[info]lady_jafaria
2010-02-27 06:27 pm UTC (link)
If a community is having a disproportionate amount of abortions (whatever a "disproportionate" amount is, I'm sure it's any for some of these assclowns), address the causes, not the abortions themselves.

Religious-right assclowns always oppose sex education that actually tells you how to prevent pregnancy. They nearly always oppose social programs that would help women take better care of their children. And they either don't seem to realize that supporting what they currently oppose is the best way to reduce the need for abortions, or are actually evil enough to want to punish women for having sex. I'm slowly being convinced it's the latter.

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]telegramsam
2010-03-01 03:37 pm UTC (link)
I'm about 100% sure it's the latter. These douchewaffles are more concerned with controlling women's autonomy than they are about "SAVING TEH POOR BEHBEHS!!!"

They really don't give a shit about other people's children, they just don't want women to be able to live their lives on their own without being dependent on men. Because, you know, women only exist in the first place to be servile excuse me, "helpmeets" to their male overlords, cos the bibble sais so. (of course it also says you shouldn't eat shellfish or wear cotton/poly blends but hey, whatever.)

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]sgaana
2010-02-27 06:35 pm UTC (link)
In one, the caller, played by James O’Keefe III, the provocateur recently arrested on charges that he tried to tamper with the telephones of Senator Mary L. Landrieu, Democrat of Louisiana, said, “You know, we just think, the less black kids out there, the better,” to which the Planned Parenthood employee replies, “Understandable, understandable.”

Planned Parenthood has apologized for the employees’ statements and says they do not reflect the organization’s values or policies.


Can I just add? Because this is bugging me...

Right. You know what first comes to my mind when I read that? (Apart from, "it's a bummer when people get caught saying stupid things, which get broadcast without context".)

What comes to mind is the idea that I bet the person who took that call had been trained just to be "polite" to potential donors, even if she was thinking "yeah, right, you sick fuck" on the inside. Take the money. The motives of the donor don't really matter, if PP can use the money to help women, that's the bottom line. (And even if the donation was restricted by the donor's wishes -- "specifically for the abortions of black children" -- it still doesn't matter, because at the end of the day, the money can help black women to have abortions if they need them or want them, but couldn't otherwise afford them.)

Maybe I'm off-base there, and PP really does have policies against taking donations from people with ideologically reprehensible viewpoints. Maybe PP doesn't want a donor to be able to parade around boasting "I gave money to help abort black children because there are too many of 'em", and I can understand PP's position, if so. But on the other hand, I would also understand it if PP had a policy of "we don't care about donors' motives so long as we can use the money in a way that is consistent with our own values/policies".

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]jackandahat
2010-02-27 07:19 pm UTC (link)
Exactly. How many people are complaining on LJ about how they have to deal with sexist/racist/homophobic bastards at work, but because of corporate policy they have to just smile and nod and not tear the idiot a new one?

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]mmanurere
2010-02-27 07:35 pm UTC (link)
It's the same game of "gotcha" that they played with ACORN. Apparently, these proud law-abiding conservatives would proudly show people the door instead of keeping them there, fishing for information and remembering faces.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]wrenlet
2010-02-27 08:09 pm UTC (link)
Well, and given how much editing and overdubbing they did on the ACORN tapes, who could trust their audio of the PP calls in the first place?

(Oh, I hate these jackasses so much. Haaaaaaaaaate. I hope O'Keefe in particular gets hammered with felony charges for his latest illegal shenanigans.)

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]hallidae
2010-02-28 01:06 am UTC (link)
.....Holy crap. I know he was a lying fuckwit, but I never realized how bad it was.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]sandglass
2010-02-27 10:41 pm UTC (link)
Agreed. "Understandable" doesn't mean "I agree" it means "I need something to say so that we can end this conversation without a lot of strife." Even if it isn't about getting money, you don't want to provoke random assholes.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]sarracenia
2010-02-28 01:03 am UTC (link)
Seriously. What were they expecting the representatives to do, shout "YOU HORRIBLE RACIST BASTARD, KEEP YOUR DIRTY DAMN MONEY"? I mean, dude, if I were taking donations from someone who said that, the last thing I'd do is discourage them on the basis that I don't even want to think of where else they might give their charity money.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]ladysphinx
2010-02-28 02:41 am UTC (link)
I'm kind of reminded of Shaw's notes on Major Barbara: how members of the Salvation Army said that not only would they accept money from the Devil himself, but they'd be only too pleased to get it out of his hands and into God's.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

ragey tl;dr
[info]spacelogic
2010-02-27 08:25 pm UTC (link)
I'm remembering -- I wish I had a link, but I'm afraid to Google -- reading that abortion tends not to reduce the number of children a woman has, but to change the age at which she has them. So I would perceive black women getting a disproportionate number of abortions as those women being more likely to get pregnant when they're too young to support a baby or lack the necessary financial security. Given that the poor have less access to good sex ed, birth control, and jobs that actually let you support a family, and given the huge incarceration rate for black men, especially young ones, means black women are more likely to be single mothers, I'd say the abortion rate's to be expected. I'd also say that the abortions that happen mean fewer black children going hungry, or ending up in foster care (which is also disproportionately black) at any given time, not an increase in numbers overall.

That's, of course, actual effects. I'm sure there are plenty of white people who figure BC and abortion will make the scary dark people go away -- my paternal grandmother's one of them. But they're not the reason black women get abortions. The racist, classist, sexist system is the reason black women get abortions, and the best solution would be to address that by reforming the justice system, increasing state support to poor families, and working on those poor schools and subsequent job/higher education opportunities. But we can't do that, can we? No, we're just going to treat this one symptom in a way that makes the big issue worse. Because it's not really about helping black people. It's about control, over women's status and secondarily over the status of... black people, because more black babies born to parents who can't really support them means fewer with the opportunities necessary to challenge societal power structures.

Which makes me think of the right-wing Christians in various parts of Africa painting homosexuality as "un-African" and "a colonialist import" as they're... trying to codify into law a religion imported from Europe by colonial powers who wanted to control the population with it, the interpretation of which they appear to have gotten from the USA. That's a bit worse, since there's at least a subset of abortion activists who are eugenicists, but it's the same tactic....

(Reply to this)(Thread)

Re: ragey tl;dr
redwarrior
2010-03-02 07:49 pm UTC (link)
THIS SO DAMN HARD.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]rosehiptea
2010-02-27 09:34 pm UTC (link)
I'm just imagining how outraged these conservatives would be under any other circumstances if someone told them there was "a decades-old conspiracy to kill off blacks." They'd ridicule the idea.

But if they can blame it on abortion, suddenly they're all for it.

(Reply to this)


[info]sandglass
2010-02-27 10:26 pm UTC (link)
Are they really trying to attract blacks by saying that they are committing genocide against their own race? Seriously?

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]amadi
2010-02-28 02:49 am UTC (link)
It's very cunning, this. It's treading a very very fine line between insulting us (black women ) and appealing to the shared experience of prejudice -- often carried out in horrifying ways -- that almost all of us understand simply from living in this society.

People who are inclined toward taking the position that the black community has been systemically, repeatedly, intentionally and perpetually victimized as an operating philosophy would be quite susceptible, I think, to buying certain of the conspiracy theory's supporting arguments if not buying the theory wholesale.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]lizzypaul
2010-02-28 01:45 am UTC (link)
(un)funny story:

My mom was a young, right-wing activist in the late 70s, early 80s. Worked to stop the ERA, anti-Roe, adored Phyllis Schlafly (I KNOW. I WISH I WAS MAKING THIS UP), the whole Ladies Against Women thing. Totally anti-choice, of course. She earnestly, whole-heartedly believed that abortion was a racist plot to destroy black people.

Then she met and befriended, like, actual black people. And she came to realize that, whatever she thought about abortion, she at least had to respect that her friends had the intellectual capacitiy to make the decision for themselves and for their own individual reasons. They weren't getting abortions because the nasty, evil white folks had tricksied them into it.

(Sorry, this is on my mind right now...mom and I were just talking about it.)

(Reply to this)(Thread)


redwarrior
2010-03-02 07:48 pm UTC (link)
Wow...so there are some racist implications behind this theory! (And I mean: racist against black people.)

(Reply to this)(Parent)


redwarrior
2010-03-02 07:47 pm UTC (link)
WTF??

I thought the best explanation would be that African-Americans are disproportionately below the poverty line compared to white people, and wouldn't have enough money to feed another mouth. Which is yet another way of keeping black people down, but still.

(Reply to this)


 
   
Privacy Policy - COPPA
Legal Disclaimer - Site Map