What We Missed

Today is Black HIV/AIDs Awareness Day. A good article about what’s behind the HIV/AIDs epidemic in the Black community.

Some advice from Jezebel about preparing for a pelvic exam if you’re a sexual assault survivor.

Republican Congressman thinks Onion story about Planned Parenthood is true.

An article in the Yale Daily News covering my event where I talked about my experiences growing up in a Cuban immigrant family as part of their annual Sex Week events.

Only two days left til the big ol’ fundraiser for the New York Abortion Access Fund. If you’re in NYC, you should really be there. If you’re not, you can still support their super important work.

A 2010 memoir from the founder of the Komen Foundation shows that she supports partnering with Planned Parenthood for the access it gives “rural women, poor women, Native American women, many women of color who were underserved” and that not supporting those centers would be turning “our backs on these women.” Via Colorlines.

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Santorum misses the days of back-alley abortions. Don’t you?

While at the American Heartland Forum in Columbia, Missouri, an efficient Rick Santorum killed two birds with one stone, pushing the myth of death panels and longing for the golden days of illegal abortions.

“fifty years ago… sixty years ago, people who did abortions were, you know, in the shadows, were people who people who were considered really bad doctors. Now, abortion is something to that is just accepted.”

Oh, what I wouldn’t do to bring back those shadows, to push abortion back into the underbelly of crime, shame, and death! Sadly I was too young to experience that pre-Roe v. Wade time but luckily, it’s captured by a report by The Guttmacher Institute, Lessons from Before Roe: Will Past be Prologue?

I didn’t get to live through the 1950s and 1960s when, it’s estimated, there were between  200,000 and 1.2 million ilegal abortions each year. I wasn’t alive in 1930, when abortion was listed as the official cause of death for almost 2,700 women, accounting for almost one fifth of maternal deaths recorded in that year. Even by 1956, illegal abortion still accounted for 17% of all deaths attributed to pregnancy and childbirth. And remember, these were only the reported deaths, because these abortions were, thankfully, being performed “in the shadows” where they belonged.

How I long for the days of 1962, when the Harlem Hospital Center in New York City admitted almost 1,600 women  for incomplete abortions, or the days of 1968, when the UCLA Medical Center admitted 701 women who had had septic abortions.

Thank you, “pro-life” Republicans, for fighting to bring back that golden age of death, incomplete abortions, sepsis and shadows!

Abortion Mortality
The number of deaths from abortion has declined dramatically since Roe v. Wade.

Source: The Alan Guttmacher Institute, Trends in Abortion in the United States, 1973-2000, January 2003.
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Court rules Prop 8 ban on same-sex marriage is unconstitutional

Protestors holding pro-gay marriage signs

Image via LA Times

“Proposition 8 served no purpose, and had no effect, other than to lessen the status and human dignity of gays and lesbians in California,” the court said.

The ruling upheld a decision by retired Chief U.S. District Judge Vaughn R. Walker, who struck down the ballot measure in 2010 after holding an unprecedented trial on the nature of sexual orientation and the history of marriage.

In a separate decision,  the appeals court refused to invalidate Walker’s ruling on the grounds that he should have disclosed he was in a long term same-sex relationship.  Walker, a Republican appointee who is openly gay, said after his ruling  that he had been in a relationship with another man for 10 years. He has never said whether he and partner wished to marry.

This is the latest victory in the fight against Proposition 8, passed in 2008 by CA voters on a slim margin.

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UN Study shows female genital mutilation/cutting on the decline in Africa

A new United Nations report shows that almost 2,000 communities across Africa abandoned female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) last year, marking significant change across many nations and communities on the continent.

According to the report, issued jointly by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), a total of 8,000 communities have renounced the practice of female genital mutilation/cutting.

graph representing FGM rate decline

Yesterday, February 6th, was the International Day of Zero Tolerance for FGM/C on which UNFPA Executive Director Babatunde Osotimehin stated:

These encouraging findings show that social norms and cultural practices are changing, and communities are uniting to protect the rights of girls and women.

According to the UN, each year, around three million women and girls – about 8,000 each day – face the risk of mutilation or cutting. An estimated 130 to 140 million girls and women have undergone the practice, mostly in Africa and some countries in Asia and the Middle East.

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Breaking: Komen VP Karen Handel resigns over Planned Parenthood debacle

From the AP:

An executive with the Susan G. Komen for the Cure breast-cancer charity has resigned after a dispute over funding for Planned Parenthood. The resignation came in a letter obtained by The Associated Press.

Karen Handel (HAN’-duhl) announced her resignation as vice president for public policy in a letter to Komen officials Tuesday.

Handel said in her letter that she had supported cutting off funding for Planned Parenthood.

This is major news, and a definite victory for the reproductive rights and justice community. As the VP of Public Policy, Handel had the ability to negatively impact women’s health in so many other ways with her anti-choice ideology.

It’s clear that Komen realizes the severity of what they’ve done, and that the response was likely way more severe than they ever imagined. Way to stick it to them folks.

What I’ve liked about this particularly example of activism is that it is predicated on the fact that abortion can’t be isolated from the whole slate of women’s health services–breast cancer screening included.

Update: You can read Handel’s resignation letter here.

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