The Supreme Court heard a case this week where people are
trying to remove Massachusetts’ law providing a 35’ buffer zone around
clinics that provide abortions.
I haven’t really written about my stance on freedom of
choice and abortion rights since I laid
it all out in 2010. (There was some
great conversation in Comments after that one.)
But long story short, I am vehemently pro-choice, because
nothing offends me more than one group of people forcing their sense of values
on others. In this case, a bunch of
predominantly male, “small-government” lawmakers (and the social conservative
who elect them) presume to know what’s best for a woman’s health and life
circumstance, and have spent the last 40 years setting up hoops, roadblocks and
unnecessary and invasive medical testing, in hopes of making abortions too
inconvenient for those that seek them.
I feel abortions are a tragedy, and should be avoided by
having unfettered access to birth control, sex education and family planning
services. When those don’t work, it’s
up to the one or two people directly involved in the situation, and not
a Greek chorus of holier-than-thou types who presume to know what’s best.
In reading about the case, it bothers me that the justices
don’t seem to have a grasp of what’s really going on outside these
clinics. They seem far more interested
in upholding the First Amendment rights of nut-jobs over the right of scared
and troubled women not to be stalked, crowded, pawed at, screamed at and lied
to by said nut-jobs. Even the liberal
justices seem to be missing the point.
One of the witnesses was an elderly lady, who very calmly
and politely explained how she’s talked over 80 women out of having
abortions. It left the impression that
these conversations are civil, like the participants are enjoying light
conversation.
“Excuse me, I’m sorry to bother you but could you not
have an abortion please? They’re very
bad. Thank you.”
If only these “protesters” were sweet little old ladies
offering sage advice, with butter cookies and tea... But that’s not what’s happening.
Last night I read a link from NARAL’s Facebook page, for an
article written for Cosmo by a guy who volunteers
to escort women past the angry mobs, into Planned Parenthood
facilities. This is the guy who
should be testifying in front of the Supreme Court.
He volunteers in Pennsylvania, where they don’t have a
buffer law, but they do put up police ropes, which the protesters routinely
ignore. He documents how these people
harass anyone who walks by. (That’s how
he became involved: they harassed him and his 6-month pregnant girlfriend, who
happened to be passing by a Planned Parenthood office.) They surround these troubled, terrified
women, try to push flyers into their hands, call them names, shout horrible
untruths about what happens during and after an abortion, and essentially
function as a bullying mob.
I found a similar story by a female clinic escort, who wrote
of how she came to the aid of one young woman who
was being similarly accosted. Multiple doctors had told this woman that having another baby
would likely kill her, as well as the baby.
But these vultures didn’t know anything about that, nor would they
care.
That’s another thing: where are these do-gooders AFTER they
browbeat a woman out of ending her pregnancy?
Campaigning for food stamps, day care, after-care, or school lunch
programs? Hell no. Those are for the lousy slackers and
“takers.”
To quote the great George Carlin, with these people, “If
you’re pre-born, you’re fine, if you’re pre-school, you’re fucked!”
I’ve seen this crowd before. Remember when I went to the Super Bowl in Detroit? These clowns were standing in the street,
yelling at everyone in line.
Notice how they’re all men.
Also notice that they stayed back across the street. Obviously, they’re more eager to physically
intimidate women than a line full of football fans.
Sometimes I think that I should go out and do more in the
community, and doing something to aid Planned Parenthood is always the first
thing that comes to mind. I’ve given
serious thought to volunteering as an escort.
But boy, would that ever be a mistake.
The guy-escort’s column basically told me all I needed to
know, to determine that I’m the wrong personality type for such work. The escort needs to be extremely
non-confrontational with the protesters, because there’s nothing they would
like better than to press an assault charge on a Planned Parenthood volunteer. I don’t know that I could do that.
I’m as chill as anyone could be, and I have the protective
nature required, but I completely lack the trait needed to sit back and take
shit from people. (Going to Ratbird
games in a Steeler jersey tells me all I need to know about that.)
In a situation where emotions are running high, I never met
a fire I don’t first try to put out with gasoline. If they were to start yelling at me, or my charge, someone would
get told to fuck off. And if they were
to get close enough to jostle us, someone would get shoved back. Or cold-cocked. And off I’d go to jail.
I suppose I’ll have to settle for supporting organizations
like NARAL and Planned Parenthood financially, like I’ve been doing. (Do you know you can donate to PP via the
United Way? You can even pick the
state. I pick the ones that are cutting
funding to PP or enacting crippling legislation.)
I’d really hate to see the few states that do something
about women’s health have their efforts erased. As far as I can see, the right to free speech does not trump the
right to be left alone. In other words,
“speak all you want, just get the fuck out of my face.”
There are a number of limitations to free speech already,
like the proverbial yelling “fire” in a crowded theater, or anything limited by
libel and slander laws. Eliminating the
buffer zone on account of free speech is akin to sanctioning bullying and
harassment.
How long will it be before some parent sues for the right of
their kid to bully, mock, tease or harass another kid? That would be free speech too, wouldn’t
it? I wonder if anyone thought about
opening THAT can of worms…
Excellent argument. You are wise to stay clear of the fray and support with good words and bucks. The pen always beats the ignorant bully.
ReplyDeleteCarlin is, as usual, right. Right to life includes post natal existence like enough food, clothing adequate shelter and schools, protection from negligence and abuse.
Abortion is not a choice. Abortion is a painful, tragic expedient. Women facing that deserve comfort, understanding and care. Not a buffer zone against self righteous, cruel, ignorant bullies.
We do what we can, I guess. And this is something I can do.
DeleteYou're my kinda guy, Tony. Thanks for your thoughtful insight. I also do not have the temperament be an escort. Although, I might be able to intimidate the bastards with my red hair. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jayne. Just callin' them like I see'em.
DeleteDaughter was trained as an escort and found it impossibly difficult not to respond to the haters. That brain chip sure is working well these days.
ReplyDeleteI just know I have the Wise-ass Gene. No way I could keep my yap shut under such circumstances. I've proved it to myself time after time at football games, when I would have been much better off shutting my pie hole.
DeleteI don't know. I think you might actually be a good type to escort. I mean, if they get to hurl epithets and fall back on the free speech argument, you should be able to respond in kind and do the same. Someone who can give as good as they get is a perfect escort. The key would be to keep your hands to yourself. You would have to do that at all costs. If you think you can't, then yeah, not for you.
ReplyDeleteWhy are people who are so filled with hate usually the ones allowed to yell the loudest? Why can't anyone control them? So sad.
DeleteI would get one of those micro cameras and mount it on my hat, to record exactly what these “Good Christians” are doing and saying.
If they could keep their distance, I’d be fine. But I hear there’s a lot of crowding and jostling. Maybe I could try that old trick I invented (but never actually used) for crowded concert floors… put a thumbtack, point out, through a Band-Aid on my elbow. Someone crowds me, just a little [bink] in the ribs, to back them off.
I know, probably better in theory than in practice. I’d probably end up sticking the woman I’m escorting, by accident.