Anti-choicers are modern day witch hunters

Aside

Anti-choicers are modern day witch hunters:

As I noted last night, I have a blog post up at Slate about Susan G. Komen—who purports to be a women’s health charity—abandoning their alliance with Planned Parenthood, even though 17% of Planned Parenthood’s services are cancer screening and prevention. They claim that it’s because Planned Parenthood is under investigation, but it seems that excuse was ginned up because it was easy cover for caving into anti-choice nuts. The investigation has been launched as a nuisance investigation by an anti-choice congressman, and is not compelled by any sincere concern that Planned Parenthood is violating the law with its funds. It’s completely obvious that they’re caving into anti-choice activists, and specifically, as I noted at Slate, into the ridiculous idea that you can separate “good girl” health care from “bad girl” health care, the latter being everything from cervical cancer prevention and treatment to abortion. And yes, before we forget, it’s all lumped together with the anti-choice movement now. That’s how they made the HPV vaccine an issue in the Republican primary, because it’s widely believed that preventing cervical cancer gives girls “license” to be sluts.

In other words, a supposedly anti-cancer charity just threw their lot in with people who believe that cancer shouldn’t be prevented if it’s linked to sexually transmitted diseases. Objectively pro-cancer, at least for women they deem slutty, i.e. about 95% of us.

[T]he war on reproductive health care is basically a witchhunt, and the religious fundamentalists behind it are the modern day version of medieval paranoids of old who believed that women who didn’t conform to their exacting standards were consorting with Satan.

Anyone who thinks breast cancer can be neatly cordoned off from this growing circle of hate for all things women’s health care is fooling themselves. That’s not how witch hunts work. The fear here is not about fetuses or babies per se, but a deep-set fear of female sexuality. Already anti-choicers have scooped breast cancer under the umbrella “abortion”, claiming that abortion causes breast cancer. (It doesn’t.) Komen would rather side with people who see breast cancer as god’s judgment on you for having an abortion rather than side with people support comprehensive health care for women. That tells you all you need to know about their organization. I’m all for picking up your sneakers and taking up running as a hobby, but recommend now you do it for you, and not for the ever-elusive cure for cancer.

[pandagon/Amanda Marcotte/2 feb 2012]

Breasts Yes, Vaginas No? Race for the Cure Group’s Bizarre Capitulation to Right-Wingers (And How to Hit Them Where it Hurts)

How the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation put their corporation-friendly image before women’s actual health concerns.

AlterNet/Amanda Marcotte/1 Feb 2012

It’s probably the fastest-spreading story in Internet history about the relationship between two non-profits. Late Tuesday afternoon, Planned Parenthood and Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure announced that Komen would be withdrawing grants given to Planned Parenthood for breast cancer screenings. Despite Komen’s lame attempts to claim otherwise, it was widely understood that this was about Komen aligning itself with the anti-choice movement, despite the anti-choice movement’s long history of opposing not just safe and legal abortion, but also access to contraception and even the prevention of cervical cancer through the use of the HPV vaccine.
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Riddick, Fast Six, Dodge, Rectal Exams, and Stupid Canadian Law [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh [or not], and pass them on to you…

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Second Photo of Vin Diesel on the Riddick Set:

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Following the first photo of Vin Diesel on the set of Riddick comes this new shot posted by the actor on Sunday.

[comingsoon.net//29 jan 2012]

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Walken reads, Duchovny on X-Files, Don’t Eat That, and we’re not property [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh [or not], and pass them on to you…

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Where the Wild Things Are (as read by Christopher Walken):
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David Duchovny: ‘The X-Files made me a better actor’:
YoungAtHeart868David Duchovny has credited starring in The X-Files with helping him become a better actor.

Duchovny, who played Special Agent Mulder on the sci-fi series, commented that he learned a great deal during his nine years on The X-Files.

He explained: “Every day I had to go to work and every day for 14 hours year after year after year. I don’t know if I would’ve made it to this point if I would’ve just gone from movie to movie to movie like a three-month stint here and a three-month stint there.

“It was very good for me and my particular sense of myself or my craft to have to go in every day and do it.”

[digitalspy.ca/18 jan 2012]

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Why Do Men’s Magazines Sound Like Rapists?

Why does the language of young men’s magazines sound creepily like the language of rapists?

AlterNet/Anna Clark/4 jan 2011

“You do not want to be caught red-handed…go and smash her on a park bench. That used to be my trick.” (– from a lads’, or young men’s, mag)

“You know girls in general are all right. But some of them are bitches….The bitches are the type that…need to have it stuffed to them hard and heavy.” (– from convicted rapist)

Do these descriptions sound too close for comfort?
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New Low for Right-Wing Anti-Choicers — Exploiting the Holocaust to Push Anti-Abortion Propaganda

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New Low for Right-Wing Anti-Choicers — Exploiting the Holocaust to Push Anti-Abortion Propaganda:

“Saying it’s OK to choose is the same thing as saying it’s OK for Hitler to choose,” says a fresh-faced young man. He’s talking about choosing an abortion in “180,” a 33-minute movie comparing legalized abortion to the Holocaust that has so far gotten over 1.5 million hits on YouTube, thanks in part to heavy distribution by fertilized-eggs-as-people promulgators Personhood USA.

That’s precisely the conclusion Ray Comfort, a mustachioed evangelical pastor and sometime Kirk Cameron collaborator, wants from his eight young interview subjects. And with the help of footage of murdered Jews and fully developed fetuses, it’s what he wants his viewers to conclude, as well. The New Zealand-born Comfort, who says his mother is Jewish, is by no means alone in making the equivalence: Mike Huckabee, who supported Personhood USA’s failed efforts in Mississippi, has often compared the Holocaust and abortion, saying of Nazi extermination, “educated scientists, sophisticated and cultured people looked the other way because they thought it didn’t touch them.” The day before Phil Bryant was elected governor of Mississippi — at the same time the state’s voters rejected the Personhood amendment — he evoked the Jews of Nazi Germany “being marched into the oven,” because of “the people who were in charge of the government at that time” as an argument to vote for it.

But Anti-Defamation League director and Holocaust survivor Abraham Foxman has called Comfort’s film “quite frankly, one of the most offensive and outrageous abuses of the memory of the Holocaust we have seen in years.” His statement didn’t take an explicit stand on abortion or elaborate on what made the film so unacceptable, but he did say that in addition to making a “moral equivalency between the Holocaust and abortion,” the movie “also brings Jews and Jewish history into the discussion and then calls on its viewers to repent and accept Jesus as their savior.”

Obviously, for anyone who supports reproductive rights for women, the comparison is wildly offensive beyond any specter of attempted conversion or co-opting of Jewish tragedy. It requires an unquestioning equivalence between living people systematically murdered for their ethnic, religious or sexual identity and an embryo or fetus dependent on a woman’s body for survival. It also raises the question of who the alleged exterminators are. Those making the comparison would like people to cast the government or politicians in that role — but only because it sounds bad to point out who’s really making the choice, a woman. And for pro-choicers, reproductive rights are a part of a larger idea of bodily autonomy, which happens to be one of the many things denied to Nazi targets, some of whom were subjected to forced sterilization and abortions or horrific medical experiments.

[Salon Irin Carmon November 17, 2011]

It’s never been about the children, “Obedient Wives”, and my own last name, dammit! [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh, and pass them on to you…

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Anti-Choicers Still Just Want to Control Women’s Sex Lives:

Opposition to abortion today is about the same thing it has always been about: not the humanity and personhood of fetuses, but the humanity and personhood of women.
Historically, abortion—as well as all forms of contraception—was typically seen as an evil not out of concern for the unborn, but rather out of the belief that allowing women to separate sex from child-bearing would lead to a complete collapse of womanly morality, allowing women to have sex willy-nilly for no other reason but pleasure. In other words, contraception and abortion would allow women the same sexual freedom enjoyed by men. There also was a widely accepted view that any woman who wished to avoid motherhood was inherently some kind of deviant; shunning the “natural” role of mother was viewed as a serious gender transgression. And of course, no attempt to maintain gender roles has ever been merely about preserving tradition for the sake of it, but rather about upholding the patriarchy. Social and economic equality are virtually impossible for women whose lives are circumscribed by compulsory motherhood.

When we respond to anti-choicers with our own counter-arguments about the life of the fetus, we have already allowed them to win a large part of the victory simply by allowing them to take the woman and her autonomy out of the equation. For too long, we’ve been willing to fight this battle on the opposition’s turf. As feminists, it’s our responsibility to bring women back into the discussion. We need to reclaim this argument, to focus on the fact that equality is unimaginable in a society where women cannot choose how and when and if to bear children.

I am firmly convinced that at its core, the anti-choice movement has never actually stopped being about the enforcement of traditional gender roles.

[RH Reality Check Angi Becker Stevens November 6, 2011]

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Raising Blind, Zombies at the hospital, and Obama steps up [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh, and pass them on to you…

FX To Gamble With Vin Diesel-Produced Series:

A future series with FX may be in the cards for Vin Diesel.

According to Deadline.com, the “Fast Five” star’s production company, One Race Films, is producing the pilot episode for “Raising Blind,” which has been acquired by the cable network.

The potential series is set in the world of underground gambling.

The pilot for “Raising Blind” reportedly will be written by Ben Younger and Jay Longino, based on a story by Josh Marchette, Longino and Younger.

“Rounders” director John Dahl will helm the project.

Younger wrote and directed the 2000 crime thriller “Boiler Room,” which starred Diesel, Giovanni Ribisi, Nia Long and Scott Caan.

[criticschoice.com Tim Lammers October 13th, 2011]

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Weird Al, Women of WW2, and 6000 year old lovers [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh, and pass them on to you…

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Weird Al Yankovic – Party In The CIA (Alpocalypse)

Hat tip~ Frank, you silly bastard :)

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“Christian submission”: Yes, it really is that bad

Are Michele Bachmann’s Views About ‘Christian Submission’ Even More Extreme Than She’s Letting On?

AlterNet Frank Schaeffer August 15, 2011

Michele Bachmann told a barefaced lie the other day. She was asked in the Republican candidates’ debate with the other Republican contenders, “As president, would you be submissive to your husband?”

Bachmann answered: “Marcus and I will be married for 33 years this September 10th. I’m in love with him. I’m so proud of him. And both he and I — what submission means to us, if that’s what your question is, it means respect. I respect my husband. He’s a wonderful, godly man, and a great father. And he respects me as his wife.”

She either lied, has changed her mind, or she says one thing to a national audiance and another to her hard-right evangelical followers.

Here’s what she said in answer to the same question in 2006: “The Lord says be submissive. Wives, you are to be submissive to your husbands.”
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