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Prolonged Eye Contact

I SEE YOU

shl333:

Politicians who began and instigated the “War on Drugs” which effectively put thousands of people of color behind bars, I SEE YOU.

Politicians who pass voter reform laws making it harder for those of lower socio-economic class to vote, also know as people of color, I SEE YOU

Lobbyists, politicians, and political advocacy groups who seek to limit those with uteruses access to contraception, I SEE YOU

Lobbyists and politicians and political advocacy groups who seek to limit gay, lesbian, trans*, and queer rights to marriage, adoption, insurance, to visit their dying partners in hospital rooms, to quality of life, to safety, I SEE YOU

Politicians, lobbyists, and political advocacy groups who seek to limit those with uteruses rights to abortion and even make their efforts to make reproductive choices a criminal act, I SEE YOU

Media executives and corporate heads who continue to refuse to give meaningful story lines or roles to people of color, women, gay, lesbian, trans*, and queer individuals, I SEE YOU

Media executives, advertisers, and corporate heads who continue to exploit people of color, women, gay, lesbian, trans*, and queer individuals to sell products, make jokes, and ultimately invalidate their human experiences, I SEE YOU

Media executives, advertisers, and corporate heads who continue to encourage an environment of shame against those who do not fit your societal standards of beauty such as trans*, queer, fat, gender bending individuals and people of color in order to sell products to them that they don’t need, I SEE YOU

The judicial system who refuses to prosecute, reprimand, or even criticize the behavior of members of the police force when it comes to issues of police brutality, racial profiling, and violation of civil rights, I SEE YOU

The police force that continues to brutalize, profile, and murder people of color daily, I SEE YOU

Those of you walking around everyday making jokes at the expense of sexual assault victims, people of color, women, trans*, gay, lesbian, and queer individuals, I SEE YOU

Those of you clutching your bags as a black man walks by, staring at a queer couple holding hands in the mall, asking objectifying and insulting questions about the validity of trans* peoples sex and gender, shaking your head at the girl buying plan B in front of you in the grocery store, I SEE YOU

YOU ARE NOT HIDING.
YOU ARE NOT FOOLING US.
WE WILL NOT GIVE IN. WE WILL NOT GIVE UP. WE WILL NOT BACK DOWN. 

#TRUTH

Have A Baby? There Goes Your Job.

bebinn:

liberalsarecool:

Supreme Courts’s 5-4 decision yesterday to negate part of the Family Leave Act:

“I’ll be damned if the conservatives on the Supreme Court weren’t getting jealous of all the congressional and state-level battles in the war on women and decide that they needed to take up arms themselves….

First, conservatives want to make sure you get pregnant by limiting access to birth control, then force you to have the baby by limiting access to abortions, then if you get fired for taking time off to have the baby, you have no right to recourse for being fired. Great. All these things that have been litigated decades ago and established as basic rights have been inverted.” - Nicole Belle of Crooks & Liars

No birth control, no health screenings for mother or child, no job to come back to. That is the family values of the Republican Party.

You’re damned if you do, and damned if you don’t. Don’t you just love being fertile under conservative control?

I have no problem calling sexual violence a type of “gendered violence”

fuguestasis:

[Content: rape, oppressive sexual violence, etc.]

Sexual violence is gendered, absolutely. It’s (often) gendered on an individual level, and the distribution of sexual violence across the population is most definitely gendered. Not every instance of sexual assault is directly sexist: men aren’t always the perpetrators and women aren’t always the victims. But the culture surrounding sexual violence is ALWAYS affected by sexist structures: male victims are “de-masculinized” because being raped is typically associated with women and female perpetrators are rarely taken seriously or believed to be “strong” enough to have raped someone.

But I think we should remember that sexual violence is also:

  • racialized violence
  • AGE-related violence
  • anti-trans violence
  • ableist violence
  • homophobic violence
  • nativist violence
  • class-based violence
  • ETC.

by the same criteria.

Again, this operates on an individual level: sexual violence is often motivated and enabled by those systems of oppression, and people who are POC/trans/disabled/etc. are disproportionately the target of sexual assault. But also, the culture surrounding sexual violence is ALWAYS affected by those structures: even sane rape victims are called “crazy” in order to dismiss their claims, and even queer perpetrators can take advantage of the way that their lovers will be much less likely to be able to file a restraining order against them.

Misogyny is directly responsible for the system called “rape culture,” that enables rapists and treads on victims/survivors. But so is racism, and ableism, and transphobia, and capitalism, and nationalism, and and and and. When you only represent the misogynistic aspects of rape—to the exclusion of all else—you actively perpetuate those other enabling systems, and as a result you perpetuate rape culture itself.

Basically perfect.

(Source: queasyfemmeproblems, via trans-terrific)

ciscentrismsucks:

77825225672443:

ciscentrismsucks:

[Image is a Venn Diagram. The largest circle is labeled “people directly affected by misogyny”. The circle labeled “women” is completely inside this circle. There is also a circle labeled “people who are not women” which is partially inside the misogyny circle. At the bottom there is text that reads “Many trans men and non-binary people experience misogyny as well, thanks to cissexism. Don’t erase their experiences, please.” There is also a footnote attached to the “women” label; “This includes trans women, by the way. Don’t erase them either.” End description.]
Check your privilege, cis feminists.

I kind of want to throw a fourth bubble on there, intersecting with ‘people who experience misogyny’, ‘women*’, and ‘people who are not women’, with it being labeled ‘people who experience transmisogyny’, or PWETM for short.
Because it’s its own special brand of misogyny.


[Image is the same diagram as above, with a fourth circle labeled “people who experience transmisogyny” as described above.]
Boom. Done.

ciscentrismsucks:

77825225672443:

ciscentrismsucks:

[Image is a Venn Diagram. The largest circle is labeled “people directly affected by misogyny”. The circle labeled “women” is completely inside this circle. There is also a circle labeled “people who are not women” which is partially inside the misogyny circle. At the bottom there is text that reads “Many trans men and non-binary people experience misogyny as well, thanks to cissexism. Don’t erase their experiences, please.” There is also a footnote attached to the “women” label; “This includes trans women, by the way. Don’t erase them either.” End description.]

Check your privilege, cis feminists.

I kind of want to throw a fourth bubble on there, intersecting with ‘people who experience misogyny’, ‘women*’, and ‘people who are not women’, with it being labeled ‘people who experience transmisogyny’, or PWETM for short.

Because it’s its own special brand of misogyny.

[Image is the same diagram as above, with a fourth circle labeled “people who experience transmisogyny” as described above.]

Boom. Done.

How very telling. But then again, your propaganda always is.
You felt the need to illustrate an abortion post with a person who is noticeably pregnant. This ignores the reality that 78.9% of abortions happen during the embryonic stage and 88% happen within the first 12 weeks. Most abortions look something like this:

And the embryo looks something like this:

You also felt the need to compare the fundamental rights to privacy and bodily integrity to a geographic location? Property rights? People’s bodies are not “locations” to be fought over. Everything about this seeks to trivialize the right to be in control of your body and free of coercion. It’s telling that the only time you reduce bodies to a piece of property like a house is when that body is pregnant. Well, news flash: bodily integrity doesn’t dissipate with pregnancy and arguing that it does creates a special, and discriminated against, class of people. Equal Protection Clause be damned, I guess?
It’s all very misogynist as well. Where did their head go? Why must you eroticize pregnancy and their body without giving them an identity, a face, a life? Is it because their dreams, considerations, and circumstances might elicit more sympathy than an embryo and that would defeat your purpose? Or is is just that the “location’s” face isn’t important and would distract from the “life” within? Which is what you really care about.

How very telling. But then again, your propaganda always is.

You felt the need to illustrate an abortion post with a person who is noticeably pregnant. This ignores the reality that 78.9% of abortions happen during the embryonic stage and 88% happen within the first 12 weeks. Most abortions look something like this:

And the embryo looks something like this:

You also felt the need to compare the fundamental rights to privacy and bodily integrity to a geographic location? Property rights? People’s bodies are not “locations” to be fought over. Everything about this seeks to trivialize the right to be in control of your body and free of coercion. It’s telling that the only time you reduce bodies to a piece of property like a house is when that body is pregnant. Well, news flash: bodily integrity doesn’t dissipate with pregnancy and arguing that it does creates a special, and discriminated against, class of people. Equal Protection Clause be damned, I guess?

It’s all very misogynist as well. Where did their head go? Why must you eroticize pregnancy and their body without giving them an identity, a face, a life? Is it because their dreams, considerations, and circumstances might elicit more sympathy than an embryo and that would defeat your purpose? Or is is just that the “location’s” face isn’t important and would distract from the “life” within? Which is what you really care about.

(Source: closertothelost)

UGH, Urban Outfitters.

fuckyeahgenderstudies:

cardiactheatre:

*TRIGGER WARNING - TRANSPHOBIA AND CISSEXISM*

Urban Outfitters outlets have been selling this horribly offensive card. Please reblog and contact them to complain. The general Urban Outfitters email address to complain: UrbanEuropeCS@urbanout.com Company president, Richard Hayne: richard.hayne@urbanout.com

Found something else to reblog because i don’t want that horrible image on my blog.

UO fuck off.

Seriously? Seriously, this exists?!

Is there any minority that they won’t go after? This is not how you treat women. I hope feminists are all over this. I’ll be over here holding my breath, dying.

Discredited Sting Operations and Sex-Selection Abortion in the United Kingdom: An Open Letter in Support of Providers

An excerpt:

The Daily Telegraph’s interpretation of the 1967 Abortion Act is mistaken. The law does not specify that rape is one of the legal grounds for abortion, but a doctor can provide a referral for abortion if a pregnancy results from rape. Similarly, abortion on grounds of sex selection is neither legal nor illegal in itself.* Under the 1967 Abortion Act, it is the effect of the pregnancy on a woman’s health, mental health and life that must be taken into account to determine whether or not she has grounds for abortion. Doctors are not given a shopping list of specific grounds for which abortion is allowed or not allowed. Rather, the law gives doctors the responsibility to decide whether the risk of continuing the pregnancy to the woman’s health and mental health is greater than if the pregnancy were terminated. In making this judgement, doctors are directed by the law to take into account the woman’s personal circumstances. These include, for example, her age, her being unemployed or on low pay, or trying to complete her education, or being single, or having other small children to care for, or feeling strongly that she simply cannot cope with a baby (or another baby) at this particular time because of the negative impact it would have on her life, or because she has fears about the outcome and/or life chances of the child if it were born. The law further allows doctors to authorise an abortion if there is a risk to the woman’s existing children of continuing the pregnancy, or if there is a risk of serious abnormality in the fetus if the pregnancy were to go to term.

The 1967 Abortion Act gave doctors the responsibility for authorising abortions in the belief that women could not be trusted to take this decision for themselves. Yet today, it is clear that women who have babies and women who have abortions are the same women. Today, most doctors and most people recognise that women themselves do know what is best for their own lives and do take responsible decisions. Hence, most doctors are willing to provide an abortion referral for a woman if she requests it because they understand that continuing an unwanted pregnancy is not good for women or their children, and will almost always cause a woman greater distress than having an abortion.

We believe the 1967 Act is outdated because it puts the onus on doctors to be gatekeepers, rather than providing women with the right to decide what is best for their own lives. We think that abortion should be available on a woman’s request, and not be governed by criminal statute at all.

We are also opposed to gender discrimination, but sex selective abortion is not gender discrimination. Gender discrimination applies only to living people. A fetus does not have rights in the same way as a living person does, and therefore cannot be said to suffer from discrimination. Gender discrimination has its roots in economic, political, social and religious life; sex selective abortion may be one of the consequences of gender discrimination, but it is not a cause of gender discrimination.

The ‘investigation’ reported by the Daily Telegraph was carried out by unidentified persons in the context of concerted attempts by anti-abortion politicians and anti-abortion activists to discredit and frighten abortion providers by characterising them as unprofessional, greedy and wicked. Yet no evidence exists to support this proposition. Hence, they have stooped to using methods that are closer to entrapment than to any semblance of legitimate investigative journalism.

These methods are highly questionable if not downright unethical. In a video taken without the doctor’s knowledge or consent, a short segment of which was screened on ITV’s Granada Regional News on 23 February, a young doctor says to the bogus patient in front of her: “If you want a termination, you want a termination. That’s my job. That’s all. I don’t ask questions,” while the patient tries to insist on divulging her bogus reasons. This is not evidence of illegal behaviour on the doctor’s part. That this doctor has since been suspended and the police asked to investigate her and others is a travesty of justice.

We would have hoped that pro-choice politicians would stand up for abortion providers, and maybe some still will. However, initial reactions have been hasty and heavy-handed, betraying underlying anti-abortion sentiments. Andrew Lansley, the Health Secretary, who otherwise claims he wants doctors to be in charge of all our health care services, said that doctors would face the “full force” of the law if they break the 1967 Abortion Act. This is hard to swallow, especially considering that many of us hadn’t even been born the last time a doctor had to face the full force of the law in relation to illegal abortion. The Health Secretary should know better than most that the 1967 Abortion Act was formulated precisely to allow doctors to exercise their professional judgement. It is shocking that he would threaten them with prosecution for doing so on such flimsy evidence.

_______________________________________________

Emphasis mine. Pregnant people, not just cis women.

I’ll said it before, but it’s important to remember that abortion is a medical procedure. It’s not the procedure that’s the problem but society which contextualizes those perceived to be women as inferior or burdensome. Therefore the solution is never to restrict the rights and options of those who can get pregnant (by attacking abortion), but rather addressing the societal root cause. What’s happening in the UK is very similar to the PRENDA legislation in the U.S. It’s sexist at it’s core yet cloaked in feminist language (PRENDA is also incredibly racist as well).

bebinn:

keepyourboehneroutofmyuterus:

Laughing so we don’t cry. Also, NICK OFFERMAN (stick around all the way to the end just for his giggle).

[h/t to Shakesville]

[NB: More people than just cis women are affected by all this bullshit.]

Oh my god this is the best. It reminded me of this scene from Parks and Rec:

-so I was a little disappointed Nick Offerman didn’t triumphantly proclaim “Butthole!” again.

That’s okay.

Uh, anyway…watch this. S’funny.

(Source: keepyourbsoutofmyuterus)

I don’t agree with abortions unless it’s really needed, like if the pregnancy is due to rape. Other than that, you had unprotected sex, deal with the consequence.

prochoicegeneration:

I like how when Obama said he didn’t want his daughters to be ‘punished’ with a child for making a mistake all the anti’s flipped out at his wording.  And yet, they are the ones who constantly use the above rhetoric.  Stay classy, guys.

—Maria

Okay. Name one other circumstance where consent to “run the risk” is also consent to a specific outcome AND the waiving of the right to medical care to mitigate the damage of said risk. What’s that? You can’t? It’s because your entire premise is predicated on sex shaming and misogyny. Done.

(Source: theenemyarrives)

Young Women's Health Care Needs Are No Laughing Matter

[Can anyone spot the right-wing tool with some internalized misogyny issues? As always, not just cis women are affected.]

Right-wing media are now resorting to mocking female university students’ health care needs and their call that religiously affiliated colleges and universities provide access to contraceptives. But studies have found that numerous benefits (medical, social, and economic) exist in providing college-aged women — the most vulnerable demographic for unintended pregnancies — affordable access to contraception.

Law School Student Testifies About Need For Contraceptives Coverage

Sandra Fluke: “Forty Percent Of Female Students At Georgetown Law Report Struggling Financially” Due To Fact That University Insurance Does Not Cover Birth Control. In her prepared remarks at a congressional hearing, Georgetown Law Student Sandra Fluke stated:

Without insurance coverage, contraception can cost a woman over $3,000 during law school. For a lot of students who, like me, are on public interest scholarships, that’s practically an entire summer’s salary. Forty percent of female students at Georgetown Law report struggling financially as a result of this policy. One told us of how embarrassed and powerless she felt when she was standing at the pharmacy counter, learning for the first time that contraception wasn’t covered, and had to walk away because she couldn’t afford it. Women like her have no choice but to go without contraception. Just last week, a married female student told me she had to stop using contraception because she couldn’t afford it any longer. Women employed in low wage jobs without contraceptive coverage face the same choice.

[…]

These denials of contraceptive coverage impact real people. In the worst cases, women who need this medication for other medical reasons suffer dire consequences.

[…]

One student told us that she knew birth control wasn’t covered, and she assumed that’s how Georgetown’s insurance handled all of women’s sexual healthcare, so when she was raped, she didn’t go to the doctor even to be examined or tested for sexually transmitted infections because she thought insurance wasn’t going to cover something like that, something that was related to a woman’s reproductive health. As one student put it, “this policy communicates to female students that our school doesn’t understand our needs.”. [Law Students For Reproductive Justice, 2/23/12, via ABC News; 2/23/12, C-SPAN]

Conservative Media’s Response: Women Are “Sluts,” “Prostitutes” For Demanding Contraception Coverage

Rush Limbaugh: Fluke Says “She Must Be Paid To Have Sex,” So She’s A “Slut … A Prostitute.”On his radio show, Rush Limbaugh said: “What does it say about the college coed Susan [sic] Fluke who goes before a congressional committee and essentially says that she must be paid to have sex. What does that make her? It makes her a slut, right? It makes her a prostitute. She wants to be paid to have sex.” He continued: “She’s having so much sex, she can’t afford the contraception. She wants you and me and the taxpayers to pay her to have sex. What does that make us? We’re the pimps.” He added: “OK, so, she’s not a slut; she’s round-heeled. I take it back.” [Premiere Radio Networks, The Rush Limbaugh Show2/29/12]

CNS News: “Sex-Crazed Co-Eds Going Broke Buying Birth Control, Student Tells Pelosi Hearing.” In a widely cited article from CNS News headlined, “Sex-Crazed Co-Eds Going Broke Buying Birth Control, Student Tells Pelosi Hearing Touting Freebie Mandate,” Craig Bannister wrote:

$3,000 for birth control in three years? That’s a thousand dollars a year of sex — and, she wants us to pay for it.

[…]

So, she earns enough money in just one summer to pays [sic] for three full years of sex. And, yes, they are full years — since she and her co-ed classmates are having sex nearly three times a day for three years straight, apparently.

At a dollar a condom if she shops at CVS pharmacy’s website, that $3,000 would buy her 3,000 condoms — or, 1,000 a year. (By the way, why does CVS.com list the weight of its condom products in terms of pounds?)

Assuming it’s not a leap year, that’s 1,000 divided by 365 — or having sex 2.74 times a day, every day, for three straight years. And, I thought Georgetown was a Catholic university where women might be prone to shun casual, unmarried sex. At least its health insurance doesn’t cover contraception (that which you subsidize, you get more of, you know).

[…]

Besides, maybe, these female law students could cut back on some other expenses to make room for more birth control in their budgets, instead of making us pick up the tab. With classes and studying and all that sex, who’s got time for cable?

And, let’s not forget about these deadbeat boyfriends (or random hook-ups?) who are having sex 2.74 times a day. If Fluke’s going to ask the government to force anyone to foot the bill for her friends’ birth control, shouldn’t it be these guys? [CNS News, 2/27/12]

Fox News’ Trace Gallagher: “See, I Was Gonna Go To Law School, But I Thought All You Did Was Study … I Guess I Was Wrong.” Discussing Fluke’s testimony, correspondent Trace Gallagher said: “And see, I was gonna go to law school, but I thought all you did was study in law school, right? So, I guess I was wrong on that.” Host Megyn Kelly replied: “This is what we worried about. When I was in law school, this is what we worried about — getting coverage of our contraceptives.” [Fox News,America Live, 2/28/12]

Fox News’ Monica Crowley: “It’s Not A Right Under The Constitution To Have Sex.” On America Live, Fox News contributor Monica Crowley responded to Fluke’s testimony by repeatedly arguing that the debate on women’s health care issues was about “recreational sex.” She said: “Cry me a river. … Cry me a river. Now the American people are supposed to be paying for somebody to have sex. … Listen, the tuition is $63,000 total cost and you’re telling me that they can’t afford $3 for a condom?” She added, “It’s not a right under the Constitution to have sex,” and concluded: “There is an alternative to this if you can’t afford the condom or the birth control bills, which is abstinence: You just don’t have sex.” [Fox News, America Live, 2/29/12]

CNN’s Dana Loesch: “They Act Like They’re Nymphos. That’s What They Act Like.” On her radio show, CNN contributor Dana Loesch ridiculed college-aged women for wanting access to contraceptives, saying, “She’s doing it more than she’s studying in law school. Is that why our — is that why law sucks lately? Is that why we’re having such a problem in our courts?” Loesch went on to say: “They act like they’re nymphos. That’s what they act like.” She also accused young women and feminists of “supporting female genocide” and said that young women’s call for contraceptives coverage is “insulting to the original spirit and intent of the suffrage movement.” [KFTK, The Dana Show2/28/12]

Right-Wing Media Deny That Women Even “Need” Contraceptives

Big Government: “Most Women Don’t Need Birth Control.” In a post on Andrew Breitbart’s Big Government website, blogger Charles C. Johnson claimed that “most women don’t need birth control” and went on to say:

[I]f the cost of keeping her ovary was a mere $3,000 a year, why couldn’t her gay friend — assuming she actually exists — take time off of law school to save up for her birth control? Why couldn’t we mandate coverage for women who have the disorder of polycystic ovary syndrome? And if her insurance won’t cover it, why can’t she go and pick up a pack of $9 a month pills from Target? What’s more who said she had to go [to] law school at Georgetown, a Jesuit law school? If birth control were such a serious criteria in one’s life, wouldn’t you choose your law school accordingly? Fluke says that women should refuse to choose between their health and a quality education, but adult life is about making just such choices. [Big Government, 2/29/12]

Hot Air: Contraception Is Not A Medical Necessity. In a post at right-wing blog Hot Air titled, “Georgetown co-ed: Please pay for us to have sex … We’re going broke buying birth control,” Tina Korbe wrote that “women can make lifestyle choices that render [contraceptives] unnecessary,” and argued that access to contraceptives is related solely to women’s “sexual urges.” She concluded:

Ms. Fluke, I resent that you think women are incapable of controlling themselves, of sacrificing temporary pleasure for the sake of long-term success. You make us sound like animals, slaves to our instincts and able to be used, but we’re better than that. We’re persons, equal to men in dignity and love. [Hot Air, 2/28/12]

Fact: Young Women Need Contraceptives For More Than Just Pregnancy Prevention

Guttmacher Institute: Contraceptives “Help Alleviate A Range Of Immediate Health Problems Experienced By Women, And Young Women In Particular.” In its study, the Guttmacher Institute found that birth control pills, “as well as other hormonal contraceptive methods, not only reduces the risk of unintended pregnancy, but also helps alleviate a range of immediate health problems experienced by women, and young women in particular.” Guttmacher stated:

Oral contraceptive pills (OCPs) are primarily intended to prevent pregnancy. But they also offer a number of additional and immediate health benefits, particularly for women who experience menstrual-related disorders. According to the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG), OCPs help relieve or reduce the symptoms of severe menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea), which is experienced by up to 40% of all adult women and can lead to absences from work and school. The pill (as well as other hormonal contraceptives) is useful in treating excessive menstrual bleeding (menorrhagia), which can lead to anemia, and it also has the potential to reduce acne and excess hair growth (hirsutism).

Other noncontraceptive uses include prevention of menstrual-related migraines, and treatment of pelvic pain that accompanies endometriosis and of bleeding due to uterine fibroids. Additional benefits identified by ACOG are normalization of irregular periods and suppression of menstruation. For some women, predicting when they will have their period or avoiding it altogether may be a matter of convenience; for others, menstrual regulation may help prevent migraines and other painful “side effects” of menstruation. [Guttmacher Institute, November 2011]

Fact: Young Women Face Higher Rates Of Unintended Pregnancies

Former Association of Reproductive Health Professionals Chairman: “College Women Are At The Highest Risk For Unintended Pregnancy.” In an article about the burden college students face when the price of contraceptives increases, The Wall Street Journal reported:

To save money, at the University of Iowa, about three-fourths of students on Ortho Tri-Cyclen Lo — a pill that has no generic form — have switched to a less-expensive option.

Such changes concern health professionals, who fear that switching is going to lead to unintended pregnancies by women who are less likely to consistently take a daily pill. “One of the seminal concepts in contraceptive medicine is when a woman is using a method correctly and successfully, the last thing you want to do is change her from that,” says Lee Shulman, board chairman of the Association of Reproductive Health Professionals. “You don’t want to change her unless there is an absolute medical necessity to do so.”

He says even switching from one type of daily pill to another can pose new risks for side effects and discomfort, potentially leading women to stop taking it.

[…]

Health professionals say it’s particularly critical for college women to have access to cheap contraception. Two-thirds of college students reported having at least one sexual partner in the prior 12 months, according to a fall 2006 survey of more than 23,000 students by the American College Health Association. Condoms have been available free on many campuses, and are considered the best form of contraception for preventing sexually transmitted infections.

“Maybe, if more people switch from hormonal methods to condoms, we may see a positive outcome of fewer STI’s,” says Mary Hoban, a project director for the American College Health Association. “But from a contraceptive standpoint, we may see more unintended pregnancy. It’s a double-edged sword.”

About 40% of sexually active college women reported relying on pills and other prescription forms of birth control, according to the ACHA data.

“College women are at the highest risk for unintended pregnancy because they’re sexually active, they’re very fertile, and they are away from home,” says Dr. Shulman, adding that students count on their health service for a host of reasons, from counseling to testing for sexually transmitted diseases, to birth-control prescriptions. [The Wall Street Journal,7/26/07]

Health Center Administrator: “Pregnancy Rates Among 18- To 24-Year-Olds Remain Excessive.”In an article on the unintended pregnancy rate of unmarried female college students, the Internal Medicine News reported:

Data from the Spring 2007 National College Health Assessment showed that, overall, 2.6% of unmarried sexually active female students aged 18-24 years at western U.S. colleges experienced an unwanted pregnancy during the past year. The rate was 5.3% among 1,433 attendees at 2-year colleges and 1.8% in 4,732 at 4-year schools, Lisa L. Lindley, Dr.PH, reported at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association.

[…]

Dr. Lindley explained that the college study was undertaken in an effort to better understand the phenomenon of unintended pregnancy. Half of all pregnancies in the United States are unintended. Among young unmarried women this figure is far higher: 73% among 20- to 24-year-olds, and 86% in those under age 20.

Solid progress has been made in reducing the national pregnancy rate among 15- to 17-year-olds. But pregnancy rates among 18- to 24-year-olds remain excessive, she said. [Internal Medicine News Digital Network, 1/7/11]

Fact: Restricting Young Women’s Access To Contraceptives Results In A Variety Of Negative Consequences 

College Health Center Director: “We Do Know That High Fees Act As A Barrier To Obtaining [Contraceptive] Care.” A Time magazine article examining the effect of the rising costs of contraceptives on college students reported:

A 2006 survey conducted by the American College Health Association (ACHA) found that 39% of undergraduate women use oral contraceptives. Many providers are afraid that if the convenience of free or cheap birth control on campus is taken away, female students might just get turned off by prescription birth control methods altogether and use other less effective ones like condoms or Plan B, known as the morning after pill. Even switching to generic medications, most say, while better than nothing, isn’t ideal because of the side effects that sometimes come along with them. “We do know that high fees act as a barrier to obtaining care. That is classically understood in campus health services,” says Claudia Covello, director at the University of California-Berkeley’s health center. [Time8/12/07]

Study: Restricting Young Women’s Access To Contraceptives Results In A Variety Of Consequences. In a study analyzing the impact on college students when the price of contraceptives increased, researchers at the University of Michigan found:

With the passage of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Congress inadvertently and unexpectedly increased the effective price of birth control pills (“the Pill”) at college health centers more than three-fold, from $5 to $10 a month to between $30 and $50 a month. Using quasi-difference-in-difference and fixed effects methodologies and an intention-to-treat (ITT) design with two different data sets, we find that this policy change reduced use of the Pill by at least 1 to 1.8 percentage points, or 2 to 4 percent, among college women, on average.

For college women who lacked health insurance or carried large credit card balances, the decline was two to three times as large. Women who lack insurance and have sex infrequently appear to substitute toward emergency contraception; uninsured women who are frequent sex participants appear to substitute toward non-prescription forms of birth control. Additionally, we find small but significant decreases in frequency of intercourse and the number of sex partners, suggesting that some women may be substituting away from sexual behavior in general.

[…]

Overall, these results suggest that college women did reduce their use of the Pill in response to the price increase, and that the reductions were larger among lower income, more credit constrained women and women without health insurance. Additionally, we find that the alternatives employed by women differed based on their frequency of sex and their debt and insurance status. Women without insurance were more likely to increase their usage of EC [emergency contraception] and non-prescription methods of birth control, while women with moderate to high amounts of debt increased use of EC, but we notice increases in non-prescription birth control among only moderate debt women. Infrequent sex participants appear to have been more likely to switch to no method, while frequent sex participants appear to have been more likely to reduce their number of sex partners. Although we find no evidence of increases in STI infections or accidental pregnancy for most affected women, we cannot rule out that the most credit constrained women did suffer an increase in the risk of unintended pregnancy. [Population Studies Center, University of Michigan, May 2011]

Fact: Early Access To Contraceptives Can Boost Women’s Economic, Educational Potential

Study: Women’s Early Access To Contraceptives Significantly Improves Their Economic And Educational Opportunities, Narrows U.S. Gender Gap. A study by economists from the University of Michigan and the University of Virginia found that contraceptives have a significant impact on women’s educational and economic opportunities. They argued that contraceptives are at the “root cause” of the boon in female college enrollment and workplace employment from the 1970s on, because they “improved [women’s] ability to time births, altered their expectations about future childbearing, and reduced the cost of altering career investments to reflect their changed expectations.” The study also found that “younger access to the Pill conferred an 8-percent hourly wage premium by age fifty” and concluded that “the Pill can account for 10 percent of the convergence [of] the gender gap in the 1980s and 30 percent in the 1990s.” [University of Michigan, 12/13/11]

Fact: Unplanned Pregnancies Increase College Drop-Out Rate, Abortions

Study: “Unplanned Pregnancies Increase The Risk Of Dropping Out” Of College. In a 2009 report on unplanned pregnancies on community college students, the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy found:

  • Unplanned pregnancies increase the risk of dropping out or stopping out of college—61% of women who have children after enrolling in community college fail to finish their degree, which is 65% higher than the rate for those who didn’t have children.
  • Unplanned pregnancies can increase emotional and financial stress on the young men and women involved, which can impede academic performance.
  • Unplanned pregnancies can also add to the overall costs of operating community colleges themselves, through increased demand for child care and related support services. [National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, November 2009]

Study: Free Access To Contraceptives Results In Fewer Unplanned Pregnancies, Abortions. A California study demonstrated that providing access to contraceptives free of charge results in a substantial decrease in unintended pregnancies and by extension, abortions:

Two studies provide evidence that when the barrier of cost is removed, a shift toward the most effective contraceptive methods results. In 2002, California’s Kaiser Foundation Health Plan changed its policy to eliminate copayments for the most effective contraceptive methods (IUCs, injectables, and implants) so that they were 100% covered for all users. Before this change, users of these methods had to pay up to $300 for 5 years of use. The elimination of copayments, along with training for health care providers in the use of IUCs, contributed to a 137% increase in their use — and an estimated 1791 pregnancies averted among Kaiser’s patient population. [The New England Journal of Medicine5/5/11]

Fact: Unplanned Pregnancies Costs Taxpayers At Least $11 Billion A Year

Guttmacher Institute: “Unintended Pregnancy Costs U.S. Taxpayers Roughly $11 Billion Each Year” — “A Conservative Estimate.” According to the Guttmacher Institute, not only do unintended pregnancies create hardships for women and “can impede their ability to reach their full potential,” they also result in a steep price tag to the public to the tune of about $11 billion a year — “a conservative estimate.” The report added that “the true cost would actually be many times higher if other expenses, such as social supports or ongoing medical care, were considered.” Guttmacher added:

Nine in 10 women who would have become pregnant in the absence of publicly subsidized family planning would be eligible for a Medicaid-covered birth if they were to become pregnant.

Accordingly, family planning services subsidized through Medicaid, Title X and other federal and state funding streams are not only effective, they are highly cost-effective: Every dollar spent to provide these services not only helps women achieve their own childbearing goals, it also saves taxpayers almost $4 in Medicaid costs. In the absence of the publicly funded family planning services already being provided, the already steep cost of unintended pregnancy would balloon by about 60%, to $18 billion a year. [Guttmacher Institute,Summer 2011]

Limbaugh Doubles Down On Sexist Attack Against Sandra Fluke, Demands She Post Sex Tapes Online

Yesterday, as ThinkProgress noted, conservative shock jock and strident women-basher Rush Limbaugh called Sandra Fluke, the Georgetown student who House Republicans wouldn’t let testify at a contraception hearing last week, a “slut” and a prostitute. “She’s having so much sex she can’t afford the contraception,” Limbaugh said.

The remarks drew widespread condemnation, with House Democratic Leader Nancy Polosi (D-CA), demanding that “Republican leaders in the House to condemn these vicious attacks on Ms. Fluke.”

But on his radio show today, Limbaugh showed no remorse and instead reveled in the attention. Referring to Fluke, Limbaugh demanded that women post sex tapes online if they use insurance-covered birth control:

LIMBAUGH: So Miss Fluke, and the rest of you Feminazis, here’s the deal. If we are going to pay for your contraceptives, and thus pay for you to have sex. We want something for it. We want you post the videos online so we can all watch.

Listen here:

Limbaugh also said he found the outrage over his remarks “absolutely hilarious.” He again completely misrepresented Fluke’s testimony, saying, she “went before a Congressional committee and said she’s having so much sex she’s going broke buying contraceptives and wants us to buy them.” In fact, Fluke testimony was about a friend — who is gay — and needed contraception for medical reasons, but was denied coverage by Georgetown, a Catholic university.

He went on to say, “I will buy all of the women at Georgetown University as much Aspirin to put between their knees as they want” — a reference to Rick Santorum-backer Foster Friess’ home-spun idea of birth control.

_______________________________________

The pro-choice movement opposes forced ultrasounds because they override the doctor’s discretion and the doctor-patient relationship, in a manner that is not only condescending to the woman’s preferred course of action, but also often requires a greater outlay of time, sometimes an entire extra day, as well as money. Not only do they not change anyone’s mind, ultrasounds stigmatize and intimidate women who are already under stress.

The ultrasound fallacy (via iamdrtiller)

Another excerpt:

In other words, by manufacturing a concern about women’s health and safety, the anti-choice movement defused middle-of-the-road critics and passed the first round of ultrasound laws and similar restrictions with relatively little fanfare, at least compared to what we’ve seen lately. And those health and safety concerns truly involved fabrication: While each woman’s response to an unintended pregnancy and an abortion varies along a broad spectrum, there is no evidence to indicate that in any meaningful, aggregate sense, abortion actually damages women.

As a Guttmacher report puts it, “Likely because the science attesting to the physical safety of the abortion procedure is so clear” — several studies have indicated that abortion is actually safer than carrying a pregnancy to term — “abortion foes have long focused on what they allege are its negative mental health consequences. For decades, they have charged that having an abortion causes mental instability and even may lead to suicide, and despite consistent repudiations from the major professional mental health associations, they remain undeterred.” Neither the American Psychological Association (APA) nor the American Psychiatric Association recognizes so-called post-abortion traumatic stress syndrome as grounded in clinical evidence. Even Ronald Reagan’s antiabortion surgeon general was unable to produce a legitimate case, concluding, “the scientific studies do not provide conclusive data about the health effects of abortion on women.”

Abortion opponents don’t much care. The introduction to the AUL model legislation on ultrasounds, which can make its way verbatim to statehouses nationwide, is introduced with the unfounded, and highly ironic, claim that “in the abortion industry, paternalistic attitudes toward women still prevail and, as a result, women continue to be uninformed of the risks and consequences of abortion.”

Women, in this formulation, aren’t rational creatures who are making a choice for their own lives and bodies; they are fragile, emotional, subject to pressure, an idea that simultaneously seeks to draw on earlier feminist criticisms of the medical profession and on essentialist stereotypes, while denying women any agency and seeking to actually coerce them. The hoped-for takeaway is that abortion opponents aren’t seeking to criminalize women’s behavior (or put them in jail for murder, the natural and consistent conclusion of the anti-choice mentality), they’re just trying to remind them of the maternal instinct that allegedly lies in every woman’s heart.

There’s a reason many of these laws have tried to leave the door open for women — and chillingly, in the case of the Alabama bill, “fathers” and “grandparents” — to sue doctors for allegedly failing to properly inform them. Something has to reconcile the idea of saving women from abortion-greedy doctors with the fact that so many women willingly choose abortion for themselves. Surely it is because the women were lied to by the doctors, not because of their own complex set of feelings; otherwise, how could they have departed so far from a woman’s natural role and “killed” their “baby”?

Emphasis mine. Pregnant people, not just women.

(via stfuconservatives)

TW: CISSEXISM

[Catholic Girl Problem #40: Having our dignity and femininity under attack for almost 40 years under Roe v Wade. Screenshot from: mycatholicgirlproblems.tumblr.com]

Many feminists insist that abortion is necessary for women to participate freely and equally in society. Anyone who disagrees, they argue, has merely adopted patriarchal standards and accepted women’s ‘place’ in society. Yet this argument demonstrates how deeply the roots of sexism run in our culture. Its premise is a sexist one—that women are inferior to men and that in order to be equal, we have to change our biology to become like men—wombless and unpregnant at will. What other oppressed group in history has had to undergo surgery in order to be equal?” Marilyn Dickstein Kopp

Hey, cissexist prochoice “feminists.” I bet you don’t like it when antis conflate femininity and reproduction like this. It’s kind of gross right? Well, guess what? You don’t get to complain because this is precisely what you advocate for when you actively refuse to be inclusive. Which, you know, would weaken every outdated stereotype they peddle [and would meet the bare minimum for being a decent human being!]. They use gender essentialism against you and you’ve chosen to “fight” it by…fighting for the “right” to be gender essentialist and cissexist towards us. Funny how that works.

Oh and, “What other oppressed group in history has had to undergo surgery in order to be equal?” That’s cute.

Transcript for video.

LOST: SELF-RESPECT (REBLOG FOR SIGNAL BOOST)

gublerwood:

I don’t know, you guys. I’m really at a loss here. I can’t find my self-respect. It seems I have misplaced it. Here’s a photo of me with my self-respect fully intact: 

See? Look at how happy I look? I’m fully clothed and you can just see the self-respect radiating off of me. 

But somewhere in between that picture being taken and this picture being taken…. 

My self-respect seems to have vanished… And I’m getting really worried because I’m starting to think I’ve become a little bit of a slut? I looked up the symptoms of being a slut and I have them all: 

  • sudden awareness of control over one’s body 
  • sudden awareness of control over one’s sexuality 
  • sudden awareness of control over one’s sex life 
  • sudden awareness of rights over one’s mind and body 
  • consensually taking part in sexual activities with one or more partners 

And I won’t even go on with the list because there are just too many symptoms that prove that I’ve become a slut :( I really don’t know what happened. Ever since I lost my self-respect, my life has just become an abyss and I’ve just become this really terrible person with a really terrible life and I just want to find my self-respect so I can once again lead a fulfilling life. I want to be pure once more. I want to feel whole. 

Please, if you have any information of any sort on where my self-respect might have gone, feel free to call me at 1-800-INTERNALISED-MISOGYNY

Or try me on my cell 

1-800-I-LOVE-SLUT-SHAMING 

Thank you for your time. 

(Source: myratter, via fuckyeahsexeducation)

CUDDLE FUDDLE by DEDDY