Showing posts with label Planned Parenthood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Planned Parenthood. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Not funny: Planned Parenthood host fundraiser... at comedy club!

After all, what's funnier than tearing a baby apart limb from limb in the place where they are supposed to be most safe? How did this fundraiser start off? - 'But really folks, I love unborn babies... with barbecue sauce!' BA DA BING! From The Detroit Free Press: Dueling protests play out at comedy show benefit for Planned Parenthood
After a long afternoon of heated protests between abortion-rights supporters and opponents, a comedienne entertained a packed house in Pontiac on Saturday night on topics of politics and women's health.

Lizz Winstead, co-creator of "The Daily Show," performed for about 375 people at the Eagle Theater, talking mostly about politics, including sex scandals in Congress.

Her shows are benefits for Planned Parenthood affiliates. An estimate of how much was raised was not available.

...Winstead said she chose to support Planned Parenthood because she has used its services. She said she got pregnant when she was a teenager and had an abortion. She said she hoped that by sharing her story, other women would be comfortable sharing theirs.
People that do horrendous things, like Ms Winstead, come to terms with it often times by trying to convince themselves they have dome nothing wrong.  Who of note was there to laugh away baby butchery? Why our own US Rep. Gary Peters (D) who thought making funny on a mountain of dead babies was so awesome was later quoted as saying 'it was better than Cats!' He thought so much of it that he promised a live abortion at his next fundraiser, complete with the abortion doc in a clown suit. It's a shame the GOP aborted his district though. And this was the last part of the freep piece:
After the show, someone hit a poster held by a abortion-rights opponent that had a picture of a dead fetus on it. That led to a verbal argument in which police intervened.
What's a little assault amongst pro-aborts anyway?

UPDATE: At the beginning of The Lord of The Rings, when the hordes of orcs were rampaging through the countryside, 'there were those who resisted.' In that spirit, a pic of some of the protesters:
Killing babies is definitely not funny.

UPDATE #2: Three Louisiana abortion clinics cited for failure to report child rape
Three of Louisiana’s seven abortion clinics have been cited by the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals for failure to report suspected child rape.

The LDHH complaints against Causeway Medical Clinic, Delta Clinic of Baton Rouge, and Gentilly Medical Clinic for Women (now shut down) were revealed in court documents filed June 15 by LDHH, the Louisiana Attorney General, the Louisiana Department of Justice, and Alliance Defense Fund to dismiss a 3rd* lawsuit waged by 5 Louisiana abortion mills challenging  Act 490, a law passed in June 2010 to enhance abortion clinic health and safety regulations with a “zero tolerance policy” for certain infractions.

Two of those clinics were among those reprimanded by LDHH for failing to report suspected child rape to authorities, as mandated by law.
Time to have another fundraiser in a comedy club!

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Video: Do women need Planned Parenthood?

Short answer: NO! The meme that low-income women on Medicaid won't be able to get treatment if taxpayer money isn't pilfered to fund the abortion mill is pure nonsense. PP sets up shop near minority neighborhoods that are already typically served by county and local health clinics. There is plenty of access to care. As it is, Planned Parenthood makes its money on abortions, not care for women and they use the 2% of their services in performing tests as an excuse to siphon taxpayer money from you and me. It is not needed:
Planned Parenthood encourages women to wait and have an abortion at a certain point in the pregnancy so that they can turn around and sell fetus bodyparts for a profit. They cover up statutory rape of little girls by adult men (more at this link) so they can have repeat victim customers. They target minorities in line with their founder Margaret Sanger's eugenics push to rid the world of black people.  And they lie to women about their unborn babies to coax an abortion which is their #1 source of profit (Video: Yet another Planned Parenthood clinic caught lying to women to coerce abortions). And with all that in tow, the ruling class sees fit to bestow this evil organization with hundreds of millions of our hard-earned tax dollars, with Obama leading the charge. Which is typical since Obama defended outright infanticide as an Illinois Senator not once but four times.

As for the canard that PP does anything other than kill babies: Video: Planned Parenthood CEO’s False Mammogram Claim Exposed. I have said many times of this organization that even though 98% of their business is dismembering babies, there is the other 2% that use for propaganda purposes only in claiming that they offer cheap healthcare to poor women. They do this in the same way that Hamas and Hezbollah provide education to the poor even though 98% of what they do is kill Jews. Via BreitbartTV, one of their memes just folded like a cheap KMart picnic table: Mammosham: Planned Parenthood CEO’s False Mammogram Claim Exposed
A Live Action actor calls 30 Planned Parenthood clinics in 27 different states, inquiring about mammograms at Planned Parenthood. Every Planned Parenthood, without exception, tells her she will have to go elsewhere for a mammogram, and many clinics admit that no Planned Parenthood clinics provide this breast cancer screening procedure. "We don’t provide those services whatsoever,” admits a staffer at Planned Parenthood of Arizona. Planned Parenthood’s Comprehensive Health Center clinic in Overland Park, KS explains to the caller, “We actually don’t have a, um, mammogram machine, at our clinics.”
Shocker, no? The video:

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

More, please: Wisconsin Defunds Planned Parenthood

Via memeorandum, more leeches being removed from the unwilling host: Wisconsin Cuts Funds to Planned Parenthood
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker signed a budget Sunday that cuts education and health clinics -- including Planned Parenthood clinics -- to plug a $3 billion shortfall without raising taxes, AP reported.

The two-year, $66 billion budget passed in the state legislature without a single Democratic vote.
More on that from Hot Air, The Daily Caller and Weasel Zippers. Also, from the New York Times: Several States Forbid Abortion After 20 Weeks
Dozens of new restrictions passed by states this year have chipped away at the right to abortion by requiring women to view ultrasounds, imposing waiting periods or cutting funds for clinics. But a new kind of law has gone beyond such restrictions, striking at the foundation of the abortion rules set out by the Supreme Court over the last four decades.
Because, you know, actually seeing your baby before having him or her killed is a bad thing or something. Good grief, these people are sick in the head.
These laws, passed in six states in little more than a year, ban abortions at the 20th week after conception, based on the theory that the fetus can feel pain at that point — a notion disputed by mainstream medical organizations in the United States and Britain. Opponents of abortion say they expect that discussion of fetal pain — even in the face of scientific criticism — will alter public perception of abortion, and they have made support for the new laws a litmus test for Republicans seeking the presidency.
As opposed to the liberal litmus test of abortion on demand for any reason or no reason throughout all 9 months of pregnancy. Thanks, but I'll stick with Republicans on this one. Related: Lila Rose interviewed on Huckabee 
Plus this post that makes for a good read with the annotations: Planned Parenthood must close some shops. Griping ensues.

UPDATE: My wish in the headline came true already: Texas to defund Planned Parenthood
The Texas Legislature approved a bill Monday that would both compel the state to push the Obama administration to convert Texas's Medicaid program into a block grant and defund abortion providers like Planned Parenthood.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Back Up Your Birth Control Day blogging

I'm blogging this as part of the Day of Action around the Back Up Your Birth Control Campaign.

I’ve had various moments in my life where I could have used e.c. (emergency contraception), but a few are more crystal-clear than others. There was a time in early 2006 when I thought it was on the market without a prescription and it turns out it wasn’t, which was not a fun little while. Then later that year, with a man who was kindof a mirror image of the first one, I also needed it again, because I’d again had unprotected sex.

I thought that I was past that, that I had moved on to a more responsible, early-thirties, sexually active person, so the last time I needed e.c. was really the most wrenching for me, something I think about a lot as I contemplate possibly being (hetero)sexually active again (which is a story for another time, but suffice it to say, whether that’s in November or earlier, I don’t want to make the same mistake). At the time, I was on and then off birth control. I was using the NuvaRing, and when I had the money ($50, with insurance), I would buy it, but otherwise, I would just use condoms.

But then I started seeing someone where we weren’t using condoms, and while I was using the ring, it was fine. There was a while where I wasn’t, though, and I was pretty sure, in my head, that I was ready for that. I told him I wasn’t using anything and we couldn’t have intercourse and yet that’s precisely what we wound up doing and for the longest time I felt so stupid about that. I still do, to a large degree, and am so grateful that I was able to get e.c. Now, I was waiting for a check at the time, as I often am, and waiting out the time between when that payment arrived, and when I could get the pills, was excruciating. It was also a very lonely time because I couldn’t turn to the person involved, and I felt like if I told my friends about it they would just tell me I was stupid for having done that in the first place.

I didn’t quite realize that, well, life happens. That a lot of women, smart, strong, powerful, amazing women, some of them my friends, find themselves in similar situations. I wish my friends had had e.c. handy, or handier, than they did. I don’t say that because I think abortion is morally wrong; I am completely pro-choice. I say that because even from my limited perspective, that was not a choice they wanted to make. I’m not going to speak for anyone else but seeing up close how challenging an unwanted pregnancy was for at least one friend, I wish all of us who either suspect or are sure we’ve had unprotected sex that might lead to pregnancy could easily assuage those worries.

Yet even as I’m participating in the blog carnival, I can tell you that after that incident, though it changed how I thought about my own sexuality, changed how I thought about who I wanted to sleep with, changed how I looked at my own sense of agency and responsibility (and made me 100% convinced that I, as a woman, owe it to myself to never, ever rely on anyone else to possess that responsibility for me), it did not mean that I walked around, or am walking around now, with e.c. on me. I guess I figure that if I do need it, I will go down the block to the drugstore and get it. Maybe there is a teensy tiny part of me that thinks that if I have it handy I’ll be more sloppy with my birth control, if and when I do need it, because of that safety net. But this year I am all about working on myself and not “fixing” old errors, but learning from them. That made a huge impression on me because it showed me that I am not always as responsible as I'd like to be, whether regarding my sexual choices or my financial ones, and that as someone who does, in fact, want to be a parent one day, that is not the kind of behavior I want to model, and not the kind of person I want to be. (Please note: I am not saying there is a "kind of person" who doesn't use birth control or forgets to use it, but that in this specific incident, I actively went against my own self-interest and that certainly made me question why I'd be willing to do that.)

That was a turning point for me because I realized some of the falsities I was telling myself about myself and my own responsibility and autonomy when it comes to this issue. I thought that I had everything so neatly under control and to realize that I didn’t, that I was willing to risk something so huge, for something so momentary, threw me in a major way. It made me realize that I need to pick who I share my body with a lot more carefully, and that I can only do that with people who I can also share everything else with—my mind, my fears, my mistakes. I couldn’t do that in that situation, and yes, I am getting to what this has to do with emergency contraception, and that was what really did a number on me.

So, in conclusion, I fully support more awareness around emergency contraception. I think so many of us are too hard on ourselves too much of the time, to the point that we are self-defeating. Having e.c. on hand just in case, for you, or for a friend, is not a sign that you are planning to have unprotected sex, and even if you are, or think you might wind up in a circumstance where you might, it is worth the peace of mind.

And if we are talking about emergency contraception as a health care issue, I can tell you that those days I was waiting to get that direct deposit were some of the most stressful of my life. There is no way they were anything approaching “healthy” and I am naturally prone to worrying so that certainly exacerbated it. If you are going to use e.c., while it is effective for up to 120 hours (5 days), it’s best taken as soon as possible.

According to Planned Parenthood:

Emergency contraception can be started up to 120 hours — five days — after unprotected intercourse. The sooner it is started, the better it works.

Emergency contraception is also known as the morning-after pill, emergency birth control, backup birth control, and by the brand names Plan B One-Step, ella, and Next Choice. Plan B One-Step and Next Choice reduce the risk of pregnancy by 89 percent when started within 72 hours after unprotected intercourse. They continue to reduce the risk of pregnancy up to 120 hours after unprotected intercourse, but they are less effective as time passes.


For more information about emergency contraception and the morning-after pill, visit:

womenshealth.gov

Planned Parenthood

Monday, February 21, 2011

I Stand with Planned Parenthood Blog Carnival Friday, February 25th

I'm participating in the I Stand with Planned Parenthood Blog Carnival on Friday, how about you? For more information on Planned Parenthood, visit their website and sign this petition. You can donate here.



I'll be writing something new for Friday, about my own encounters with Planned Parenthood, pregnancy scares and Plan B, as well as about the wanted and unwanted pregnancies of people I've been close with, but for now, a blast from the past.

Five years ago I wrote a Village Voice column called "I'm Pro-Choice and I Fuck," which read in part:

One needn't look far to confirm Page's argument that sexual freedom and reproductive rights are intimately entwined. In the eyes of the pro-life movement women are designed for making babies, and men's pesky sex drives are something to be suffered or used to procreate. According to culturejamforlife.com, "Abortion enables the woman to become a reusable sex object without any idea of fidelity, and it gets the father out of having to pay for child support." Someone recently posted to a Pro-Life America website, "There is no such thing as an accidental pregnancy. Pregnancy is the outcome of sex and is the sole purpose of sex. Sex is not a game and is not for pleasure only. If it were . . . then pregnancy would not be an outcome." Even the group Feminists for Life (feministsforlife .com) points to women as the kinder, gentler, less horny gender: "No one can deny that women have always had a higher biological investment in sexual union; abortion seeks to undo that tie. Is the ideal a world wherein sex can be (and often will be) commitment-free?" While Page's title is deliberately provocative, wading into the minds of those who consider women baby-making vessels is more disturbing. To hear them tell it, we're off having careless sex 24-7, then blithely aborting. Anyone who's sweated out a pregnancy test knows nothing could be farther from the truth. Says Page, "There's a pro-life war against Americans' sex lives and the pro-choice movement is a relief agency. We're the levee that keeps this wave of fundamentalism from washing over the American public."