melinda gates, and why we MUST talk about abortion
Melinda Gates, and Why We MUST Talk About Abortion
While they dont bother putting her name on the Forbes list, by virtue of marriage Melinda Gates is the richest woman in the world. She proudly considers herself an advocate for family planning and womens health. I am focused on one thing, she wrote in a recent blog post, the opportunity to make a difference in tens of millions of womens lives by giving them access to the information and resources they need to plan
their families. But, theres a catch: She doesnt want to talk about abortion, and the
Gates Foundation won't fund it. Around the world there is a deep, broad, and powerful consensus: we should provide all women the information and tools to time and space their pregnancies in a safe and healthy way that works for them, Gates writes. She goes on to express dismay that journalists wish to talk to her about what she calls the abortion debate, writing that she struggle[s] with the issue and chastising others for conflating [abortion] with the consensus on so many of the things we need to do to keep women healthy.
The stakes are high, she claims. The only way to provide tens of millions of women the contraceptives that they want is to be clear, focused, and committed. In other words, Gates holds a view of maternal health and womens empowerment so expansive and huge that a pregnant woman in desperate need of abortion wont fit.
Her thinking is, to put it mildly, flawed.
Perhaps you have heard of Hobby Lobby or encountered photographs of the all-male hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church? There is no consensus on providing all women access to contraception. Further still, the foes of abortion routinely argue that birth control is abortion. Most of all, its ludicrous to position yourself as an advocate for reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health if you are willing to ignore women endangered by an unsafe abortion or unsustainable pregnancy.
But what Id like to explore further is an underlying premise within a Gatesian view of reproductive rights and the womens movement: that a commitment to abortion rights holds progress for women back.
She is not alone. Conversations about abortion are often assumed toxic not just to feminism and the equality movement, but political progress in general. If only, the thinking goes, those who believe in abortion rights and access to family planning could keep their mouths shut at strategic times (like during elections, attempts to get a bill passed, or lets face it, pretty much any time), other progressive goals could be achieved (never mind the fact that the right opposes them, too) and we wouldnt attract the attention of those who seek to restrict reproductive rights.
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http://msmagazine.com/blog/2014/06/06/melinda-gates-and-why-we-must-talk-about-abortion/