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Feminist History

 

You may think you know what "feminist" history or philosophy is, but you haven't heard the whole story. Feminists for Life has a fresh perspective and some fascinating historical research that will make you proud to label yourself a feminist!

Did you know the early feminists - people like Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Mary Wollstonecraft - were pro-life? Mary Krane Derr started a regular column for The American Feminist called "Herstory Worth Repeating", which is now continued by Lisa Bellecci-st.romain. Enlighten yourself!

For a few quick quotes, check out Voices of Our Feminist Foremothers. (This text is also available for PDF download or purchase as an attractive poster.)

Today's pro-life feminists have different ways of explaining their views. Get to know a few through these articles originally published in FFL's quarterly newsletter The American Feminist.

The American Feminist

The American Feminist, Winter 1997-1998

Knowledge is Power: Women's Right to Know

Women's Right to Know laws give women time to reflect upon information that is material to their health and well-being," says Judith Koehler, senior legislative counsel for Americans United for Life. Koehler, who has been instrumental in helping states pass legislation to ensure women receive the information they need to make an informed decision before having an abortion, goes on to say, "We know - from evidence offered at trials, testimony of women who have had abortions, and from exposes that have been written - that women do not receive adequate counseling before having an abortion. Medical standards are usually set by the medical community. In the abortion industry, there are currently few, if any, adequately applied standards of information for women. Many women do not even see the doctor who will be performing the abortion until they are on the surgical table, let alone know physical or psychological risks of abortion."

 

"Women's Right to Know laws are necessary for a number of reasons," explains Koehler. "They empower women to make informed decisions. Women are told of alternatives to abortion and receive information regarding pre- and post-natal care." These laws educate women by offering them information on the abortion method to be used and its risks, as well as information on paternity establishment and child support. Women learn that the state has printed materials available that describe the development of a fetus and list agencies that offer alternatives to abortion. Women receive information about the psychological impact of abortion as well as an increased risk of breast cancer that has been documented among post-abortive women. This information must be offered to the woman at least 24 hours before the abortion. They do not have to accept the materials if they do not want them. Right to Know materials provide women the information they need to make real choices by letting them know of resources that are available.

 

The constitutionality of Women's Right to Know laws was upheld in Planned Parenthood v. Casey. According to Koehler, Ohio, Mississippi, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah and Michigan all have Women's Right to Know laws similar to that of Pennsylvania. Louisiana, Wisconsin, Kansas, Montana and Indiana also have comprehensive informed-consent laws. In the past two years, 15 states have introduced Women's Right to Know laws. Some states have enacted legislation, but the laws have been tied up in litigation. Other states have various levels of informed consent. For example, South Carolina requires that women be given adequate information but requires only a one-hour waiting period. Koehler is optimistic about the outlook of Women's Right to Know laws, noting that every state law that has been modeled after Casey has been upheld in federal court.

 

The Florida Women's Right to Know law is currently in state court and is being challenged on state constitutional "privacy" grounds. Although the law could likely survive a federal court challenge, the Florida Supreme Court used the state privacy provision to strike the law requiring parental consent for an abortion on a minor. Thus, the future of the Women's Right to Know law in Florida state court is uncertain.

 

Recognizing a patient's basic right to information, opposing sides of the abortion debate have come together to support these laws in some states such as Kansas and Louisiana. As a whole, however, abortion advocates are adamantly opposed to Women's Right to Know laws. They argue that women will have to make more than one trip to the abortion clinic, placing an undue burden on the woman's right to obtain an abortion. This means that women will have to take more time off work, perhaps have to stay overnight, find additional child care, etc. In Casey, the court rejected these arguments, stating, "The waiting period helps ensure that a woman's decision to abort is a well-considered one, and rationally furthers the State's legitimate interest in maternal health and in unborn life. It may delay, but does not prohibit, abortion." Also, as Koehler points out, the same organizations that oppose Women's Right to Know laws due to concerns that it may require more than one trip to the abortion clinic advocate RU-486, which requires at least three trips to the doctor.

 

Abortion advocates also argue that these laws are not effective because women will go to other states to have abortions. "This is an argument for more Right to Know laws," states Koehler. "We need to make sure every state has a Women's Right to Know laws to ensure that regardless of which state the woman chooses, she will still receive the information she needs to make an informed decision." However, most states do not have abortion-reporting requirements, so it is difficult to assess whether women are in fact going to other states for abortions.

 

According to Koehler, we need a national reporting requirement for abortion to adequately assess the impact of informed consent.

Women's Right to Know laws have already begun to make an impact in reducing the number of abortions. "A recent Michigan study showed that even though first-time abortions have decreased nationwide, repeat abortions have increased, making up almost half of all abortions performed," Koehler asserts. Statistically, women who have had an abortion are at high risk of experiencing the tragedy of abortion again. When women are educated about alternatives, they are less likely to seek a first-time abortion, thereby reducing the potential for multiple abortions in the future. Since the Pennsylvania Abortion Control Act was put into effect three years ago, the state's abortion rate has dropped among first-time clients by 18.5 percent.

"The more information women are given regarding the abortion procedure and alternatives, the more empowered they will be to make decisions that will benefit their health as well as the health of their child," Koehler said.

 

Anne Brennan
Ann Brennan is a member of FFL and recently received her J.D. from Widener University School of Law.

 

Reprinted from The American Feminist, Winter 1997-1998

 
Pro-Life, Pro-Feminism

"Feminists for Life" is not an oxymoron, it's a redundancy. The reduplicative nature of the phrase is evident in the basic tenets of feminism: That every human being deserves the opportunity to develop into the best she or he is capable of; and that each individual be respected, however minimal or great their development may be.

As a third generation anti-abortion feminist activist, I was raised to work along with my sister and brother feminists in promoting a more socially responsible world, a civilized world that repudiates injustice and violence.

Leo Tolstoy, the Russian novelist and social theoretician who profoundly inspired the developing philosophies of non-violence promoted and lived by Mahatma Gandhi and The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., stated in his diary of 1852, "It is true that slavery is an evil, but an extremely convenient evil."

Pro-abortionists unwittingly have chosen to justify an evil based on convenience rather than struggle honestly and intellectually with the philosophical, sociological, and historical aspects of this momentous life-and-death issue.

It is much more convenient to deny our individual and community responsibilities for social order and the development of a civilized (i.e. non-violent) human condition than to tackle head-on the challenges of preventing unwanted pregnancies.

Through Tolstoy, Gandhi, and King, we are better able to understand the evil inherent in any form of violence. The violence of abortion is indisputable.

The philosophies of these three feminists help us perceive that the practice of non-violence, inconvenient as it may be, can transcend political and cultural boundaries and bring forth visionary, creative solutions to the most complex of problems, including the problem of unwanted pregnancies.

As an anti-abortion feminist activist, I am an enigma to many: to the women's right activists who assume a pro-abortion position is a prerequisite for feminism; and to the right-to-lifers who equate feminism with abortion on demand. Seeing their neat, albeit specious, categories breached is disquieting, inconvenient. Labels and categories enslave the mind and dampen intellectual curiosity, but they certainly are convenient.

So many would-be feminists, women who truly seek liberation, freedom, and justice, abandon individualism while succumbing to peer group pressure. Independent research, free thinking and critical analysis succumb to the comfort and security of conformity. The male oppression they so diligently worked to eradicate is replaced, obsequiously, by oppressive dominant groups. (As a member of the Phoenix Chapter of the National Organization for Women, I've not been "officially" requested to relinquish my membership, despite national president Molly Yard's unenlightened stand against feminists making independent decisions free of dominant group oppression. Ohio NOW forced Pat Goltz to give up her NOW membership, and she went on to co-found Feminists for Life in 1972.) Intellectually responsible feminists choose not to consult a laundry list of any group's position to know what to think and what to say.

Many early feminists evolved toward their understanding of the need to work to establish equal rights for women throught their attempt to establish basic human rights. Sarah and Angelina Grimke, the first women to attempt to speak out publicly against slavery, soon learned they, as white women, were also slaves being denied even their right to free speech. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott came to the brutal understanding of their own inequality when, solely based on gender, they were prevented from speaking at a World Anti-Slavery convention in London, despite being U.S. delegates.

Feminists have always spoken out against racial injustice. Why do so many now remain silent when the iniquitous relationship between racialism and pro-abortion legislation is errantly unabashed?

It is certainly easier for the white, male-dominated state legislature and Congress to approve (i.e. encourage?) the elimination of the inconvenient fetuses of poor women (i.e. women of color) than it is to work toward a) eliminating poverty; b) increasing education standards for the poor; c) increasing employment opportunities for the poor; d) providing daycare for the working poor; e) funding serious research for improved contraception; and f) developing a long-range plan to build a society that will provide adequate food, housing, and education for all.

It is certainly easier for individual, even feminist women, to support such legislation than to insist each woman take control of the responsibility for her own reproduction and conception prevention. History has proved that we cannot depend on others to take responsibility for our conception decisions.

As feminists, we must not continue to buy into the historically male world view: the solution to sociological problems (e.g., poverty, overpopulation, individual's sexual irresponsibility) is convenient violence-- suffered predominantly by the world's poor.

Historically, feminists have valued human need above the non-feminist world view of "maximization of profits." Abortion is big business, bringing handsome profits to the usual few: white, middle-class, educated. The vociferant, well-meaning but misguided feminists who promote abortion serve as effective marketing tools for those businesses making money from the agony of the poor.

Our thesis bears repeating: "Feminists for Life" is not an oxymoron, it's a redundancy.

Dr. Maureen Jones-Ryan
Reprinted from SisterLife

 

Feminists for Life of America
733 15th Street NW, Suite 1100
Washington, DC 20005
http://www.feministsforlife.org

Office Phone: (202) 737-FFLA

E-mail Address: info@feministsforlife.org


Thanks to the Feminists for Life of America  for the information and links on this page. Please visit their site  http://www.feministsforlife.org  for more information.

 


   

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