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PhDBiologistMom's avatar

I still listen to NPR in the car, and it drives me nuts when they do a story about abortion access and talk about the number of “people” crossing state lines to get abortions. Guess what? Every single one of those “people” is a woman. And it’s not just the NPR hosts using the terminology, it’s many of the individuals they interview (doctors, advocates, what have you) as well. All captured.

Or the bit I heard yesterday about an outbreak of whooping cough, which poses a particular risk to “infants and pregnant people.”

Sigh.

Kara Dansky's avatar

From "The Reckoning:"

But, but, but…what about abortion? I know. I get it. I have been in favor of abortion rights since I wrote a letter to Tip O’Neill in eighth grade, asking him to scrap the Hyde Amendment (which prohibits the expenditure of Medicaid funds on abortion). I did abortion clinic defense in college, where I locked arms with women (and some men) who were protecting access to clinics from anti-abortion demonstrators. In law school, I volunteered at the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League (which now champions the rights of men with woman identities over women themselves). My support for abortion has never wavered and it never will. But please understand that the Democrats cannot be counted on to protect abortion rights. President Barack Obama is on record in 2009 saying that protecting abortion rights was not a legislative priority for his administration. The Democrats in Congress had fifty years to codify Roe v. Wade into law and they didn’t do it.

What’s more, abortion rights supporters on the left (including some women) are handing Republicans the talking point that “abortion is not a women’s rights issue.” Feminists have always maintained that abortion is a women’s rights issue. Yet, in 2022, anti-abortion Republican Senator Josh Hawley sparred with University of California at Berkeley law professor Khiara M. Bridges over whether it is. During a hearing on a proposal to codify Roe into law, Bridges had referred to “people with a capacity for pregnancy.” Hawley asked, “Would that be women?” Her response was that “many cis women have the capacity for pregnancy. Many cis women do not have the capacity for pregnancy. There are also trans men who are capable of pregnancy as well as nonbinary people who are capable of pregnancy.” This presented the perfect opportunity for Hawley to retort, “So this isn’t really a women’s rights issue?” She had no answer other than to accuse him of “transphobia.”

...

In fighting for abortion rights, feminists often chant slogans like “no uterus, no opinion.” The point we are making is that men, who will never face the choice of whether to terminate a pregnancy, should have no say in the abortion debate. Seth Dillon is an anti-abortion conservative and a comedian, and the chief executive of the satire magazine The Babylon Bee. In 2022, after the decision overturning Roe was leaked, he posted, “You can’t say ‘no uterus, no opinion’ anymore. You gave that up when you said trans women are women.” He wasn’t wrong. The category of people who are colloquially referred to as “trans women” are men. Not a single “trans woman” (man) has a uterus. If, as many on the left like to insist, “trans women are women,” then every single one of them should have the right to an opinion about abortion, notwithstanding the absence of a uterus. Because of women who regularly claim that “trans women are women,” the left has given Republicans the talking point “You can’t say ‘no uterus, no opinion’ anymore.” The left literally handed the right these arguments to make in their advocacy against abortion. At the end of the day, we cannot protect women’s right to abortion if we cannot name women as a sex class. The right knows this, and they will not stop using the left’s nonsensical arguments against us. The left, in other words, is helping the right further erode abortion rights.

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