"Voices from across the political spectrum condemned the Missouri candidate for Senate, Todd Akin, for his recent offensive and scientifically inaccurate reasoning to deny rape survivors access to abortion."
Todd Akin remains in the race for the Missouri Senate. (photo: Jeff Roberson/AP)
More Than Lies About Rape
02 September 12
oices from across the political spectrum condemned the Missouri Senate candidate for Senate, Todd Akin, for his recent offensive and scientifically inaccurate reasoning to deny rape survivors' access to abortion. Akin said women's bodies “shut down" and prevent them from becoming pregnant from “legitimate rape" - a term loaded with skepticism and derision toward survivors of sexual violence.
It is reassuring to see Akin's remarks thoroughly rejected. This groundswell of disapproval, however, stands in stark contrast to a broader casual acceptance of falsehoods in matters of reproductive health care.
Many of those now calling for Akin to abandon his Senate bid have promoted outright lies in the service of an anti-abortion agenda. These falsehoods have permeated policies at the state and federal levels, to the detriment of women's health across the U.S.
Arguments based on spurious medical information have been used to block access to emergency contraception, including after rape. Opponents of reproductive rights have argued that emergency contraception, as defined by the National Institutes of Health, constitutes a medical abortion - though it acts to prevent pregnancy in the first place. Yet arguments like these helped fuel a campaign that kept emergency contraception from being offered over the counter to American women until 2006. Against the Food and Drug Administration's recommendation, the Obama administration has maintained the ban for girls under 17.
In addition, many state governments have mandated clinic personnel to lie to women seeking abortions. Five states, according to the Guttmacher Institute, require that women be told that abortion is linked to an increased risk of breast cancer - discredited by multiple scientific studies. Five states also require abortion providers to inaccurately portray the effect of abortion on future fertility.
These lies, which can frighten women and keep them from making informed decisions about their pregnancies, are supplemented by half truths. Eight states that require giving women seeking abortion information on the psychological consequences mandate disclosure of only negative information.
Meanwhile, anti-abortion advocates have stifled efforts to ensure that women and girls are not misled by false information. So-called crisis pregnancy centers, which typically represent anti-abortion interests, now receive millions of dollars in federal funds, though they deceive women who come to them seeking help. Twenty out of 23 federally funded crisis pregnancy centers contacted during Rep. Henry Waxman's 2006 study, provided false and misleading information about the health effects of abortion.
In an effort to counter this misinformation, Baltimore passed a law requiring these centers to post signs saying that they did not provide or make referral for abortion or birth control services. Similar laws have been passed in Austin, New York City, San Francisco and Montgomery County, Md.
Such laws protect women's rights to access accurate information and to make fully informed decisions consistent with their right to privacy, bodily integrity and life.
So far, though, the courts have given anti-abortion groups a free pass, blocking the New York, Montgomery County and Baltimore laws. In June, two out of three judges on a panel of the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against Baltimore, saying that free speech protections prevented the city from compelling the centers to disclose the limited nature of their services.
The dissenting judge wrote that the trial court's decision was “indefensible," arguing that the court had not given the city adequate opportunity to show that the law targeted only commercial speech, which the government has more power to regulate than political speech. Fortunately, the full appeals court has decided to rehear the case this December.
What is at stake in each of these situations is a basic question: Do women deserve accurate medical information?
If the question were posed in relation to heart disease, there would be no question. It should be the same with abortion. There is no place for propagating falsehoods when the facts are plain. The outrage over Akin's comments is warranted - all the more so when views like his become public policy.
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Quite apart from actively obstructing women's rights, here we have a party which proclaims its opposition to all government and state-sponsored activity that interferes with individual or corporate rights... actually advocating the authorities forcing probes up rape victims’ vaginas…
Rape to be followed by state-ordered rape.
Some get imprisoned for the crime, others are to be paid - by government - to perpetrate it all over again! At the behest of… government-haters.
Some people need to be interned in institutions for the criminally insane. Or go to Afghanistan and join the Taliban.
Indeed, if we were to isolate religion, we would have to do away with Sat. and Sundays off (these are sabbath days), rename most US cities (LA, San Francisco etc., angels and saints. but here's a suggestion: Sodom and Gomorrah, not at all religious and it seems to fit), and do away with a lot of laws that are based on the 10 Commandments. Well, some of the remaining laws based on the 10 Commandments. We have already done away with adultery, honoring parents, having false gods, lying, swearing.
Not really much left but theft and murder, except the oil companies and politicians (dems and reps alike) have legalized theft like never before, and what with wars being legalized murder.
You're right, we're much better off without religious values. They don't work anyway. Look at pot and alcohol. And who says the drunken orgy that has become the American way of life is bad ?
And to think that the US is the most religious of the industrialized countries by far but it leads the industrialized world in incarcerations, teen age pregnancies, gun deaths, obesity, abortions, divorces, and lord knows what else. It strongly suggests that religion is a prerequisite for anti religious behavior and that we'd be much better off without religion.
All this approach could ever produce is cannon fodder and what the Nazis called sub-men, for the new Herrenvolk to look down on... A suicidal recipe.
I read a message today from someone well-off and deeply conservative, saying that the vast gulf between rich and poor is crazy and quite unacceptable. But it's still GOP policy. Mad, mad, mad.
I am a highly intelligent and creative man. At age 76, my time to make a difference is limited.
jwb110's comment is popular and no one much has understood my point, but...
Social engineering? Why insult engineers? Engineers aren't mindless. If a military engineer designs a trap, it's not one that both friend and foe will fall into.
A workforce? For what work? Cannon fodder and goons to protect the handful of trillionaire gods & demigods and crush the starving masses Al-Assad style?
A "long vision"? But you attribute vision to blind fools on an acid-trip dream of their 1000-year Reich.
Hard as it is for people to realize, GOP/TP policy - if one may use such a word for it - is simply SUICIDAL. Of course, many believe that everything that’s said with a straight face by nice respectable-loo king men in suits makes sense. Yet - if we take the trouble to analyze the serial threats we now face, so vast they're almost as inconceivable as divine mysteries, we'll see this could be even worse than 1933. Only a great defeat could restore the thinking heads of GOP to the leadership of their hijacked party.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcissism_of_small_differences
http://www.electoral-vote. com/evp2012/Pres/Maps/Aug31.html
According to electoral-vote. com the repugs are now poised to win the Senate - EVEN IF AKIN LOSES. Right now, he could still win.
Electoral-vote.com calls 3 races "ties". Two of them are in Arizona and Virginia.
By any measurement, right now, it would appear the repugs will have a roughly 52 seat majority after this election. They ALSO won't lose the House. EVEN akin is still in the ballgame.
PLEASE VOTE!
Maybe if women, including celebrities, who had abortions and believe it was the right thing to do would come forward and speak up in support of their decision, this might put the trauma argument to rest.
These include destroying the social safety net (and indeed downsizing and/or privatizing all government services), crushing organized labor, the resumption of slavery via for-profit prisons, suppressing scientific knowledge, increasingly censoring public information and -- let us not forget – radically expanding the capitalist empire.
What unites all these tyrannies?
It is the imposition on the United States of zero-tolerance Christian theocracy, which formally began in 1954 when the Pledge of Allegiance was modified to include the phrase "under God" -- the cap "G" identifying this god we are required to salute as very specifically the vengefully sadistic genocidal God of the Bible.
Why is this happening?
Because the capitalists figured out long ago that theocracy -- whether Christian, Islamic or Jewish -- is the cheapest way to control the workforce. Under theocracy, bosses rule by divine right: a work order is the Word of God. Meanwhile sexual frustration sublimates into frantic productivity and frenzies of trinket materialism. It's the ultimate in capitalist governance: absolute power and unlimited profit for the Ruling Class, total subjugation for all the rest of us.
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