Blog post “Governor Walker repeals equal pay, bans abortion coverage, mandates abstinence,” essentially screams containment of women and
adolescents through state legislation in Wisconsin. Apparently 50 bills were
passed on April 5th, some of them made getting an abortion harder to
obtain for women. While it seems like the doctor speaking privately with the patient to make sure she is not being coerced into the abortion is really just a way for the doctor to have a chance to coerce the women out of the abortion. Another bill passed was what the blog implies: sex education teachers
don’t have to address contraception in lectures and are instead expected to
emphasize that abstinence is the ONLY way to prevent sexually transmitted
diseases and pregnancy.
I
honestly believed a year ago, that for the most part, we, as a country, had
moved past such nonsensical topics such as debating women’s rights (minus the abortion
issue), and sex education in public schools. I thought it was an understanding that a women has the right
to decide what happens to her own body without outside influence in the form of
laws and legislation mandating otherwise, and that more knowledge gives people
the power to make better informed decisions. However, I guess that’s not the case.
Lately,
I’ve begun noticing that there are certain groups of people in this country who
want to contain women. They do not want to present women with opportunities to
have other options when they get pregnant or even to prevent a pregnancy. Apparently, despite how far our
society has come we still have politicians and people who feel that women aren’t
competent enough to be the primary decision makers for themselves. Or maybe it’s the fear that women will
finally become fully equal to men. Maybe there’s even a greater fear that women
could even surpass men. Maybe there's a fear that women would be the ones in charge of this country if they had
the option to completely control their ability to have children when and where
they so choose, and thus allow them to also advance further in the workplace. In
the past a woman was expected to quit work, settle down, get married, and have
a family if she got pregnant, essentially ending her work career, which also
gave grounds for gender discrimination in the work place, such as unequal pay
between genders for the same work.
Obviously
women can’t be eliminated though. The human race would be unable to reproduce
especially since cloning humans isn’t anywhere close to being perfected. So the only solution to having control
of something, or in this case someone, is to contain it. And what better way to contain a group
of people than to make it either illegal, make it incredibly difficult to
obtain abortions, or even worse, contain the younger generations so they don’t
even get to learn about sex and all the different forms of contraception that
help make sex safer.
If
anything this ignorance is going to result in negative consequences for our
society. I would predict a rise in
teen pregnancies both from lack of access to abortions and overall ignorance to
the dangers of unprotected sex (and after they’ve been at an all time low since 1946!), and sexually transmitted diseases. Not giving future generations all the information we
possibly can will lead them to be easily misinformed from other more unreliable
sources, such as their peers who also won’t know the whole truth, to the
Internet (because for all the good the Internet provides there is a lot of
information that is also incorrect as well, or at least unreal expectations
that porn provides).
Essentially, while these bills aren't the most outrageous legislation to have been passed in this country, I would like to stress that this is how widespread containment can begin. Without fighting back for individual rights, we'll become slaves to own government, which is the very government that prides itself for supposedly being governed by the people.
Essentially, while these bills aren't the most outrageous legislation to have been passed in this country, I would like to stress that this is how widespread containment can begin. Without fighting back for individual rights, we'll become slaves to own government, which is the very government that prides itself for supposedly being governed by the people.
So
my questions are:
1)
Do you feel that some members of society trying to push against affordable
contraception for women and other affordable preventive services, such as those
provided by Planned Parenthood, are trying to contain women for an ulterior
motive (such as wanting women to be more oriented to housewives), or religious
based motives, or even simply they personally don’t want to pay the tax-dollars
that go into such programs?
2)
While it is completely constitutional for states to make laws for their own
school systems, do you feel any potential containment presented to any group of
people will do more harm than good to society in the long run? Or can
containment be a good thing for society? Is some level of containment good for
some societies?
--Kasey Ostarello--
I do absolutely agree with you that making abortion harder to obtain is bullshit, although I disagree that it is a play to contain women. The whole abortion argument is so religion based that it seems any argument about it will never be won. Because of this, there will probably be a perpetually shifting balance of where this nation stands on the topic.
ReplyDeleteYeah I agree with Jon. Not necessarily containing womanhood or anything, but I get where you're coming from. It IS containing the abortion and contraceptive methods to some degree, making them more expensive or attached to a stigma is society's way of mindlessly containing something in itself.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you completely. Abortions are harder to obtain certainly because of the religion argument, but its much more than that. Making abortion illegal will hold women back in their careers even if they are able to be both a mother and a member of the work force. This will contain women whether or not it is realized by the legislation.
ReplyDelete