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Showing posts with label HYDE AMENDMENT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HYDE AMENDMENT. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Rebecca Traister | The Betrayal of Roe

 


 

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07 December 21

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Pro-choice protesters march outside the Texas State Capitol in Austin. (photo: Sergio Flores/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Rebecca Traister | The Betrayal of Roe
Rebecca Traister, New York Magazine
Traister writes: "The aftermath of the Supreme Court's oral arguments this week on the fate of Roe v. Wade - in which a phalanx of right-wing justices made plain their disdain for the law - has been a festival of finger-pointing and recrimination by those who were startled to have woken up in a world in which it looks very much like the right to legal abortion care will soon cease to exist at the federal level."

The aftermath of the Supreme Court’s oral arguments this week on the fate of Roe v. Wade — in which a phalanx of right-wing justices made plain their disdain for the law — has been a festival of finger-pointing and recrimination by those who were startled to have woken up in a world in which it looks very much like the right to legal abortion care will soon cease to exist at the federal level.

I understand the impulse to point fingers at individuals and factions, have myself often felt the gratification that comes from naming the bad guy responsible for a mess. It feels so very good, in such a very bad time, to hate Donald Trump, as well as Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders and Ruth Bader Ginsburg and also, somehow, Susan Sarandon. This was, surely, their fault, and also the fault of everyone with the shortsightedness and self-regard to have supported them or voted for them or worn a T-shirt with their faces on it.

But this impulse is itself shortsighted and self-serving, in that it allows us to evade the far more suffocating and incriminating reality: that we got to this terrifying place not just by some wrong turn made recently by one wrong person we don’t like, but by decades-long, systemic failures. The biggest and most damning of these is the failure to counter a regressive movement’s project to ensure minority rule and thus dismantle the rights and protections won by activists who labored over generations to gain them — abortion rights very much included. That failure in turn reflects a deeper one: an unwillingness to take the full humanity of women, of pregnant people, of Black and brown and poor people, seriously.

The overturn of Roe will not be about one failed electoral campaign or badly timed Supreme Court death or failure to retire — though as with any historical cataclysm, its timing and shape will have been determined by those factors, sure. But Roe — like the Voting Rights Act that was gutted in 2013, and the labor and climate and anti-corporate and gay-rights protections that have been and will continue to be rolled back — would not have been made vulnerable to these quirks of timing and personality had it ever had the kind of institutional, ideological, intellectual, and emotional muscle behind it that it deserved. Its loss will reflect years of inattention from those entrusted with its guardianship, by definition the people nearest to the top of our power structures, people who advertise themselves as invested in the rights and protections of people closer to the bottom, yet who have repeatedly failed to prioritize those people’s dignity and well-being — to even really see, much less care about, the daily, lived impact of abortion prohibition.

It wasn’t four years after Roe that the Hyde Amendment — which barred the use of government insurance programs to pay for most abortions — first passed, making the purported legal right to abortion care practically nonexistent for people who relied on federal insurance programs for their health care. Over the half-century that abortion has been officially legal on a federal level, it has become ever more inaccessible to people of color, to poor people, to immigrants, to younger people, to people in rural communities and in red states, thanks to Hyde and more than 1,300 state and local restrictions and regulations. Curtailed abortion access has made already imperiled populations ever more imperiled, all while Roe has officially stood.

Meanwhile, abortion clinics have been bombed and people shot and killed within them; providers have been brutally murdered, including at their places of worship. The Republican Party has strategized takeovers of school boards and state legislatures on campaigns built around the valuation of fetal life above female life, and still those who have screamed about all of this — who have jumped up and down and yelled that this was happening and that the Democratic Party should prioritize it and that the press should cover it because these were actual human beings — those people have been derided, including by people supposedly on the same side of the fight, as hysterics and blinkered single-issue voters.

The Democratic Party, including its presidents over the decades, has not taken seriously enough the threat to abortion rights. It’s not that these politicians didn’t officially support the correct thing: Barack Obama opposed the Hyde Amendment but also described the “tradition, in this town, historically, of not financing abortions as part of government-funded health care.” Again, this is not about Barack Obama any more than it is about Hillary Clinton (who offered one of the most powerful public explications of abortion as health care of any Democrat during her debate against Donald Trump and who is rumored to have devised the regressive “safe, legal, and rare” framework in the 1990s that cast abortion as a regrettably necessary evil, not a cornerstone of comprehensive health care) or about Bernie Sanders (who has remained a staunch opponent of Hyde or any abortion restriction throughout his career and has argued that voters could get past their differences on guns and abortion and find common economic ground, as if abortion is not itself an economic issue).

It’s about a Democratic Party that has, before and since Roe, included lots of politicians who believe in abortion rights and access but simply do not prioritize it, who have argued that their party should be more, and not less, open to those who actively oppose abortion if they are otherwise progressive on economic issues, as if those stances are compatible (they are not).

Democratic leadership chose not to fight vocally the Supreme Court nominations of Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, or Amy Coney Barrett as being an assault on legal abortion, even though the president who nominated them had directly promised anti-abortion groups “another two or perhaps three justices ” who would “automatically, in my opinion” overturn Roe. This was right out there for everyone on the broadly defined left to see, hear, and fight tooth and nail against. But again and again, those at the top of the party signaled that it was not a fight worth having and have remained quiet even as Republicans cast the ones who were fighting as deranged. During Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings, Nebraska senator Ben Sasse lectured on how there have “been screaming protesters saying, ‘Women are going to die’ at every hearing for decades.” Sasse was correct. There have been those protesters, and they have been treated as hysterics, not just by Sasse himself, but by the party that should have been letting their intensity guide them.

Make no mistake: Those protesters have been correct, for all the years and all the hearings. Yet Democrats have permitted an inaccurate, dishonest right-wing framework — the notion that abortion is some hot-button issue on which the country is sharply divided, when in fact the protection of the right to legal abortion is one of the most popular planks in a Democratic platform even in red states — to keep them from making political fights about abortion. I’m sure that the argument behind this can be backed up by some pollster or numbers guy or consultant, but the big, unspoken reason is that most politicians, the majority of whom remain white men and many of the rest wealthy white women who themselves will never know inaccessibility of health care, find abortion icky and distasteful — because they find the bodies and lives and needs of people who need abortions icky and distasteful.

This was error and dereliction, repeated over decades and amplified by the press. The lies told by a right wing, and by a press corps eager to repeat them, were easily disprovable: Everyone knew where Gorsuch and Kavanaugh and Barrett stood and what they were put on the court to do, and yet we had to watch some bizarre performance during their confirmation hearings of pretending that they cared enough about precedent to let Roe stand. Supreme Court justices appointed by presidents who won fewer votes than their opponents dared this week to entertain the argument that a functional democratic process would surely protect the abortion rights of those who wanted them, should abortion go back to the states. They just sat there, with their ill-gotten seats, pretending that democracy was an intact remedy.

The voting and reproductive and labor rights now being undone were won over generations, not by those at the top of our systems, but by the most vulnerable bodies, working in coalition through their lives on a project that would extend well beyond their deaths, over centuries. The irony is that when those rights and protections were finally codified, they were put under the protection of a party and covered by a press that simply didn’t take any of that work, those sacrifices, those stakes, seriously.

I get it. It is so much easier to not have to take the reality seriously. It’s easier because the alternative — the absorption of how successful the right wing has been and will likely continue to be at turning back the clock on basic tenets of equality — would mean daily discomfort. It would mean listening to, and perhaps getting in line behind, leaders who come from vulnerable communities and not the elite climes so insulated from the realities of a terribly unjust system. It would mean making the stories of women and pregnant people central to our understanding of this country and its ability to thrive.

I hear many asking what comes next. Will there be protests? Will there be marching? Well. Yes. I hope; in fact, in the long term, I know. People will fight against this because history has shown us that any current level of scorn for resistance moms or woke mobs or the dirtbag left simply does not matter — does not figure — in the scope of the movement for greater liberation for more people.

But will that movement produce satisfying results in many of our lifetimes? I am afraid not. Because the failure to understand or reckon with that drive for liberation — and more, the failure to understand or reckon with the drive to squelch it — has now left millions of people fucked for a very long time. The finger-pointing that we’re going to do for days and weeks and months and years is another iteration of our failures to recognize what’s actually in front of us. Because with easy demonization comes the fantasy of easy salvation: If one terrible person broke it, surely one other wonderful person can fix it. But that’s not true. There is no one politician, no one activist, no single protest or perfect approach to activism, that will offer any quick remedy here.

Instead the future is messy and sad and difficult and extremely bleak. If the Supreme Court does indeed strike down Roe, many of us will not live to see its reverse. These rights were decades in the winning, decades in the undoing, and will again be decades in the remaking.

Yet this does not mean despair or accepting defeat, which would be yet another instance of giving in to short-term comfort and ease. It’s incumbent on us to not check out, to not give up, as it will be tempting to do on most days: to not evade responsibility by shifting the blame to others, but instead to face the future with the respect owed to our forebears and a crystal clear vision of who is going to be suffering right now and in the coming years. To settle into the work ahead, knowing that the answers won’t come in the form of a superhero candidate or a single election cycle, but rather in a rethinking of who’s authoritative and who’s hysterical; of who should be at the center and who should be at the margins; in staying committed through both wins and losses because people’s lives, and not just our own grievances, are at stake. We must reimagine whose lives and experiences should guide us into a future that must, now, be different from our recent past.


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Sunday, October 3, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Charles Pierce | There Is a Landmine in the Reconciliation Negotiations

 


 

Reader Supported News
02 October 21

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Sen. Joe Manchin, D-WV, speaks to reporters outside of the Capitol in Washington, D.C., Sept. 30, 2021. (photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Charles Pierce | There Is a Landmine in the Reconciliation Negotiations
Charles Pierce, Esquire
Pierce writes: "Around about 4 o'clock Friday, the President of the United States stopped by the basement of the House of Representatives, where the hallways look like a yard sale in a fallout shelter, and tried to get everyone on the same page - or at the very least, on the same shelf of the library - regarding his infrastructure plans."

President Joe Biden visited Congress to push the two-track approach Friday, but Joe Manchin continues to butt heads with the progressives.

Around about 4 o’clock Friday, the President of the United States stopped by the basement of the House of Representatives, where the hallways look like a yard sale in a fallout shelter, and tried to get everyone on the same page—or at the very least, on the same shelf of the library—regarding his infrastructure plans, and the people in the meeting seemed clear that the president’s commitment to the Just Crazy Enough To Work gambit remains solid. “It was,” said Rep. Brendan Boyle of Pennsylvania, “a very strong defense of both bills.”

Given that, it seemed unlikely that there would be a vote on anything on Friday.

“He emphasized that this bill is not $3.5 trillion, that it is zero dollars. It is 100 percent paid for,” said Rep. Kai Kahele of Hawaii. “He said both bills have to go together and we clearly don’t have an agreement on the reconciliation bill. If I were a betting man, I’d say there would be no vote on the [bipartisan] infrastructure plan.” Kahele also expressed the general sense of disappointment, to say the very least, that Senator Kyrsten Sinema has chosen this moment to absent her obstructionist self from Washington. “We’re here,” Kahele said. “The entire Democratic House caucus is here. We’re ready to negotiate. We’re ready to talk. And that’s pretty difficult to do when one of the very, very important people in this conversation has left town.”

All in all, I’ve come to the conclusion that the ginned-up media crisis enthusiasm has been way overblown, and that the best strategy is to keep the bills twinned—the president is right about that—and work the margins hard to get both of them passed at the same time. If the Democratic leadership were to pull anything remotely like the bait-and-switch of which the progressives are concerned, I think we’d have a new Speaker of the House within a week. And the best way to allay those fears is to keep the bills together while you squabble over the price tag.

“What I took from it is that he wanted to take the entire Build Back Better package together,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin. “The room was resonantly enthusiastic for it.”

Everybody was too polite to mention the Senate, and the ultimate fate of the reconciliation package there. “I’m in the trust-but-verify category on that one,” Raskin said.

Of all the activity on Capitol Hill this past week, the most moving episode was the testimony of three members of Congress—Pramila Jayapal, Cori Bush, and Barbara Lee—about their own abortions. Their frankness about the circumstances that led to their individual choices was an undeniable sort of witness that cut through the emotional wildfire currently surrounding the issue. Lee described how she, an overachieving A-level high-school student, got pregnant, and how her mother facilitated a trip to Mexico for what Lee described as a “back-alley abortion.” She provided a vivid description of the terror that surrounded the trip.

“I was one of the lucky ones, Madam Chair. A lot of girls and women in my generation died from unsafe abortions … My personal experience shaped my beliefs to fight for people’s reproductive freedom.”

One of the little-noticed moments of the week came when Senator Joe Manchin gave an interview to the National Review in which he stated flatly that he would not vote for the reconciliation package unless the Hyde Amendment, which has banned all public funding for abortion services since 1977, remains in place. From, with apologies, National Review:

Outside of the U.S. Capitol building on Wednesday evening, Manchin briefly spoke to National Review:

National Review: Senator, you’ve been very firm on keeping the Hyde amendment on the appropriations bills. Are you concerned about that issue at all in reconciliation—

Manchin: Certainly—

NR: —with this new Medicaid program?

Manchin: Yeah, we’re not taking the Hyde amendment off. Hyde’s going to be on.

NR: In the new Medicaid program?

Manchin: It has to be. It has to be. That’s dead on arrival if that’s gone.

I later dropped this tidbit to a Democratic member of Congress who reacted as though I’d handed over a copperhead. This is indisputably a landmine in the ongoing negotiations, as the progressive caucus has made eliminating the Hyde Amendment one of the primary ancillary policy goals of the reconciliation bill.

WeeklY WWOZ Pick To Click: “Oye Isabel” (Iguanas): Yeah, I still pretty much love New Orleans.

Weekly Visit To The Pathe Archives: Here, from 1937, are some senators reacting to FDR’s attempt to pack the Supreme Court. If you can read lips, you can figure out what they’re saying, but there certainly were a lot of politicians back then who looked like Deputy Dawg. History is so cool.

Oh, come ON.

From the Anchorage Daily News:

Since the start of the month, a pack of troublesome river otters has attacked people and pets in some of the the most popular outdoor areas, and even injuring a child. A 9-year-old boy was bitten several times near a pond in East Anchorage, and taken to the emergency room for a rabies shot. “This week, another woman was bitten while rescuing her dog from a similar group of river otters at University Lake,” a popular dog-walking area, Fish and Game said in a written statement. The same day, there was another dog bitten at a different part of the same lake.

I knew anything that cute had to be plotting something dire.

According to Fish and Game, river otter attacks have happened in recent years, but are not commonplace. It’s not clear if the incidents reported this fall are all from the same group of animals. River otters are able to range over large tracts of habitat, both overland and along connected bodies of water.

Roving gangs of attack otters? The fish and game people are not playing around. They’re sending out their…ah…wet teams.

If the animals are dispatched, they will be tested for rabies, which might explain their hostile reactions to dogs and humans of late. While it’s possible for otters to carry the disease, Fish and Game said that in recent years there’s been no report of rabid otters in Southcentral Alaska. Dispatching a small number of nuisance otters would not disrupt other populations distributed across the area, according to the department.

Is it a good day for dinosaur news, CBS NewsIt’s always a good day for dinosaur news!

The two new species are related to an ancient "unusual and controversial" family of dinosaurs, according to a report by paleontologists at the University of Southampton that was published in Scientific Reports on Wednesday.

The first, Ceratosuchops inferodios, which means "horned crocodile-faced hell heron," has a head filled with low horns and bumps along its brow region, scientists found, and is believed to have had a hunting style similar to a "terrifying heron."

Tell us how you really feel, Namer of Dinosaur Person.

The second discovery, Riparovenator milnerae, which means "Milner's riverbank hunter," is similar to that of the Ceratosuchops inferodios and has a long tail and a crocodile-like snout.

This guy clearly needs a better branding team. Of course, next to horned crocodile-faced hell heron, almost any other name would look like a very pale substitute. And that’s only one reason that dinosaurs lived then to make lexicographers happy now.

Well, who knows what else is planned for this mudslide exercise in representative democracy? Be well and play nice, ya bastids. Stay above the snake-line, wear the damn masks indoors, and get the damn shots. Boosters, too. Or I’m calling in the otters. I am not playing here.


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Sunday, August 8, 2021

HUGE NEWS: The House eliminated the Hyde Amendment

Ayanna Pressley


HUGE NEWS: For the first time in 40 years, the House eliminated the racist and discriminatory Hyde Amendment from the federal budget!

Ayanna led the effort to secure this historic move toward true reproductive freedom in our country, because it’s past time we affirm abortion care as a fundamental right.

For decades, the Hyde Amendment has denied access to abortion care for folks who receive healthcare through Medicaid — a burden that falls disproportionately on people of color, immigrants, transgender and gender non-conforming people.

The Hyde Amendment’s days are numbered, and Ayanna is leading this fight for reproductive justice to ensure every person in America has access to the full range of reproductive care.

But we’re facing additional attacks on reproductive rights in several states, and now the Supreme Court is gearing up to take on a case that could threaten Roe v. Wade.

Ayanna won’t stop fighting until we guarantee every person’s right to reproductive care — and we can’t stop fighting either.

With your support and partnership, we’ll keep working to deliver justice for all of our communities.

In solidarity,

The A-Team


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