Chipping Away at Roe...and the Definition of Rape

[Trigger warning for sexual violence, rape apologia, victim auditing.]

The House GOP's Plan to Redefine Rape:

Rape is only really rape if it involves force. So says the new House Republican majority as it now moves to change abortion law.

For years, federal laws restricting the use of government funds to pay for abortions have included exemptions for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest. (Another exemption covers pregnancies that could endanger the life of the woman.) But the "No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act," a bill with 173 mostly Republican co-sponsors that House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) has dubbed a top priority in the new Congress, contains a provision that would rewrite the rules to limit drastically the definition of rape and incest in these cases.

With this legislation, which was introduced last week by Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), Republicans propose that the rape exemption be limited to "forcible rape." This would rule out federal assistance for abortions in many rape cases, including instances of statutory rape, many of which are non-forcible. For example: If a 13-year-old girl is impregnated by a 24-year-old adult, she would no longer qualify to have Medicaid pay for an abortion. (Smith's spokesman did not respond to a call and an email requesting comment.)

Given that the bill also would forbid the use of tax benefits to pay for abortions, that 13-year-old's parents wouldn't be allowed to use money from a tax-exempt health savings account (HSA) to pay for the procedure. They also wouldn't be able to deduct the cost of the abortion or the cost of any insurance that paid for it as a medical expense.

...The bill hasn't been carefully constructed, [Laurie Levenson, a former assistant US attorney and expert on criminal law at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles] notes. The term "forcible rape" is not defined in the federal criminal code, and the bill's authors don't offer their own definition. In some states, there is no legal definition of "forcible rape," making it unclear whether any abortions would be covered by the rape exemption in those jurisdictions.
Read the whole thing here.

There are so many things wrong with this proposed legislation, I hardly know where to begin: The implicit redefinition of what constitutes rape, the ramifications of that redefinition for all survivors of sexual violence (not just the pregnant ones), the revictimization of survivors, the policing of women's bodies and choices, the auditing and ranking of survivors of rape, the auditing and ranking of various acts of rape itself, the condescending and infantilizing paternalism that Other People know what's best for a pregnant woman and survivor of rape, the virtual impossibility of being able to "prove," presumably in a court of law, that one was raped (forcibly or otherwise) in time to secure an abortion... There are so many rape culture tropes being served here, I could frankly spend the entire day documenting the innumerable manifestations of misogynistic fuckery at work here.

But instead I'm going to focus on but one truly shocking aspect of this proposed legislation which probably won't get a whole lot of attention: The proposed law effectively, if not by design, gives veto control over terminating pregnancies resulting from rape to the rapist.

At least in cases where the victim/pregnant woman is dependent on government assistance for abortion, i.e. poor women. (Which underscores the obvious classism of this legislation, too.)

These are facts: Most rapes are committed by someone known to the victim. There are men who use violence, including sexual violence, to control their partners. There are men who use reproductive coercion to control their partners. There are men who rape their partners with the explicit objective of forcibly impregnating them to control them and create a lifelong connection with them.

This law communicates to those men that as long as they drug their partners before raping them, the government will deny funding for an abortion, should a pregnancy result.

Because, you see, raping an unconscious women isn't "forcible rape."
Other types of rapes that would no longer be covered by the exemption include rapes in which the woman was drugged or given excessive amounts of alcohol, rapes of women with limited mental capacity, and many date rapes.
This legislation exists because of a pernicious straw-narrative about the legions of women who will supposedly create stories about having been raped to get the government to pay for their abortions. There is no evidence that these legions of women exist.

There is, however, evidence of the existence of men who use violence and contraceptive sabotage to try to control intimate partners: "About a third of women reporting partner violence experienced reproductive coercion, as did 15 percent of women who had never reported violence." And this legislation pretends those men don't exist, despite the fact that young women and poor women are disproportionately victimized by both reproductive coercion and rape, and disproportionately in need of federal funding to secure abortions.

It's not likely that there will be huge numbers of men who would be aware of and take advantage of such a loophole in the law (though more than 15% of women experiencing reproductive coercion isn't a small number, either), but how many do there actually have to be for this law to be total garbage?

Even in theory alone, giving potential rapists a road map on how to limit their victims' rights and access to abortion is fucked up in the extreme.

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Daily Dose of Cute

So, the other day, my Beloved calls out from upstairs: "Portly! Come up here right now!"

I run up the stairs, urged on by the urgent urgency in her tone. She points toward the sliding door to the second-story balcony -- "Do you see the Snowy Owl in our tree?"

I look. I see:



[image: Something white high in a tree]
I shake my head in confusion. While it is not utterly impossible that we might have a Snowy Owl appear in this region, it's highly unlikely that I'm going to see one in the day.

I look again. Then I realize that I'm seeing this:



[image: White Cat butt]
Which is also this:



[image: Floofy goofy white cat on stairs playing with Beloved's head]
I live with two scamps.


[image: Beloved and White Cat in tree together]

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Open Thread: Unrest in Egypt

I don't have any incisive commentary at the moment; right now, I'm just watching it all unfold. Here's some recommended reading:

The GuardianProtests in Egypt: Live Updates. This is an excellent resource.

AP—Egypt imposes night curfew after day of riots: "President Hosni Mubarak imposed a night curfew and signaled he was about to send the military out in the streets for the first time to quell an unprecedented challenge to his regime by tens of thousands of protesters who rioted on Friday. One demonstrator was killed and even a Nobel Peace laureate was placed under house arrest after joining the protests."

The GuardianEgypt cuts off internet access: "Egypt appears to have cut off almost all access to the internet from inside and outside the country from late on Thursday night, in a move that has concerned observers of the protests that have been building in strength through the week."

Al Jazeera—Fresh protests erupt in Egypt:

Before Egypt shut down internet access on Thursday night, activists were posting and exchanging messages using social networking services such as Facebook and Twitter, listing more than 30 mosques and churches where protesters were to organise on Friday.

"Egypt's Muslims and Christians will go out to fight against corruption, unemployment and oppression and absence of freedom," a page with more than 70,000 signatories said.

The Associated Press news agency reported that an elite special counterterrorism force had been deployed at strategic points around Cairo, and Egypt's interior ministry warned of "decisive measures".
The AtlanticEgyptian Activists' Action Plan: Translated.

The GuardianEgyptian government on last legs, says ElBaradei: "The Egyptian dissident Mohamed ElBaradei warned President Hosni Mubarak today that his regime is on its last legs, as tens of thousands of people prepared to take to the streets for a fourth day of anti-government protests."

David Dayen—United States appears perplexed with how to address this issue: "While President Obama said in a YouTube interview yesterday that activists should 'have mechanisms in order to express legitimate grievances,' and that Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak, while an ally, should move forward on economic and political reform, Vice President Biden said that Mubarak was not a dictator and highlighted the strategic relationship between Egypt and the US. Meanwhile, the New York Times dug into its cache of Wikileaks cables and revealed how the Obama Administration took a non-confrontational approach to Egypt during the early days of the Presidency."

Abdulrahman El-Sayed—President Obama, the Egyptian people must hear your voice: "If you meant [that you will support human rights everywhere], and and if you believe in the cause of 'political reform' in Egypt which you spoke of on Thursday, there are 80 million people who need to hear you say them loud and clear. As an American, I ask you to support these freedom fighters because not only is it in our American self-interest to promote democracy in the Middle East, but this is the only avenue our ideals will allow us. As an Egyptian, I ask you to support them because I know, firsthand, the injustice that the Mubarak regime has inflicted, and because I dream that some day my 80 million Egyptian brothers and sisters will enjoy the same dignity and freedom that my 300 million American brothers and sisters do."

Also: Waves of Unrest Spread to Yemen, Shaking a Region.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Heather Small: "Proud"

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Cable "News" Network

This morning, CNN has a story up about segregation. Well, not segregation-- actually, "segregation."

What, you ask, is CNN referring to when it talks about "segregation", once in the title of the story, and again in the text?

Well:

A Pennsylvania high school says some students are separated by race, gender and language for a few minutes each day in an effort to boost academic scores.

In other words, segregation.

Look, if administrators at this high school (or anyone else) want to defend segregation as a tool for increasing academic success, I suppose they're welcome to discuss their idea, even if they're really not entitled to do so as public school administrators.

But they don't get to pretend that this policy isn't real segregation. I know the term segregation in reference to schools brings to mind things like Brown vs. Board, Little Rock Central, and Governor Wallace. But, uh, that's because those are also things that involved actual, yes literal segregation.

Responsible news media wouldn't enable folks' claims that polished versions of the same old shit are fundamentally different from past policies that many people (including :ahem: these guys) acknowledge to have been horribly wrong.

Let's be clear here, racial (and economic) segregation is still a problem in the United States, and public schools are no exception. We are not in a post-racial, post-feminist, post-civil rights era, and no amount of scare quotes changes that fact.

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Whoops I Barfed on Your Time Magazine

The cover of the February 7. 2011 issue of Time:


The cover story, "The Role Model: What Obama Sees in Reagan," will open in a tab on your computer labeled "Obama's Reagan Bromance." Seriously.

Oh, Time. What are we going to do with you?

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Open Thread

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Hosted by the Fantasy Island board game.

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Question of the Day

What or who would you like to see hosting an open thread(s)?

There have been a couple of weeks recently where I forgot to set up the Open Thread on Sunday night for Monday morning, and Melissa has kindly filled in. She likes to challenge me to build a theme around weird stuff, which is great, because after doing this for a while I've been running out of ideas. So what would you like to see?

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Without a Trace of Irony Dept.

In an altogether too familiar story, a Harps Supermarket in Mountain View, AR received "several" complaints from customers regarding the cover of a US Weekly magazine. They therefore placed a "family shield" over the magazine, to shield young, impressionable eyes.

Here's the cover:

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So, let's recap, shall we? Harps used a "family shield" to "protect young Harps shoppers" from the sight of... a family. A family with a child.

Of course, they're not the right kind of family, and children must be protected from those.

The shields have since been removed, thanks to a lot of squeaky wheels teaspoons.

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Daily Dose of Cute


Video Description: Sophie lies in the crook of my arm, grooming herself and purring away.

This video is two years old now, but Sophie still loves to leave her perch on the monitor to come snuggle in the crook of my arm at least once a day. It makes writing difficult, but I think that's sort of the point. "Take a break, Two-Legs!"

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Important Announcement

I like Helena Bonham Carter and I like her mismatched shoes.

I rented Lady Jane on VHS from Blockbuster Video when I was 13 because I liked the picture on the cover. And it was this revelation, a movie about a girl not so much older than I was who became the Queen, and she was smart and progressive and wouldn't compromise her religious or cultural beliefs and holy shit they killed her for it.

That's a simplification of the film, and the film itself is an embellishment of a largely undocumented nine days.

But I didn't get all that when I was 13. I got that being smart and uncompromising and progressive, especially while also being a woman, was controversial and sometimes dangerous, but that it's worth doing anyway.

Which is all an aside to my main point, which is that I fell in love with Helena Bonham Carter while she was playing Lady Jane Grey, who I imagine would have thought wearing two different colored shoes was kinda cool.

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LOL UR Mendacious Arithmetic

Yesterday, the Republican controlled House passed a bill to eliminate public financing of electoral campaigns.

In light of Citizens United and President Obama's decision to turn down public funding in his 2008 campaign, this certainly strikes me as an opportune time to revisit the federal government's role in campaign spending. Unfortunately, if this bill was to become law (it won't in the immediate future), it would signal a further step towards cementing the United States' position as a corporatocracy.

That said, permit me to talk about math.

One of the prime arguments the Republicans are making about this legislation (indeed, about virtually all legislation) is that the US needs to reduce government spending to get our budget deficit under control.

So.

Yesterday, on the same day Mitch McConnell took up the flag in the Senate, saying:

"In a time of exploding deficits and record debt the last thing the American people want right now is to provide what amounts to welfare for politicians."

the Congressional Budget Office announced that it expects the federal budget deficit to reach $1.48 trillion this year. CBO estimates that the decision to extend the Bush tax cuts (which Republicans pushed for) is responsible for $390 billion of that deficit. Indeed, the interest payment on the tax cut extension will be around $50 billion per year.

Eliminating public campaign financing would save the federal government about $62 million a year.

To recap:

2011 deficit: $1,480 billion
2011 cost of the Bush tax cuts: $390 billion
2011 cost of interest on the Bush tax cuts: $50 billion
Potential savings of eliminating public financing: $0.062 billion

I call bullshit.

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DADT Update

Pentagon to outline training for post-DADT life:

Pentagon leaders will roll out a plan Friday that is expected to give the military services about three months to train their forces on the new law allowing gays to serve openly, officials said Wednesday.

The plan, they said, will outline the personnel, recruiting and other regulations that must be changed. It will describe three levels of training for the troops, their commanders and the key administrators, recruiters and other leaders who will have to help implement the changes.

Under that training schedule, full implementation of the law could begin later this summer. Once the training is complete, the president and his top military advisers must certify that lifting the ban won’t hurt troops’ ability to fight. Sixty days after certification, the law would take effect.

...According to officials, the training will be broken into three categories. One will be for administrators and other leaders who will have to be able to answer detailed questions about the new policy. The second will be for senior commanders who will have to enforce the policies and also be on the lookout for signs of unease or problems among service members. The third group will be the general training for the troops.

...The Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, however, wants officials to hurry along certification that the change won’t hurt military effectiveness.

“We think there should be certification from the president, [Defense] Secretary Robert Gates and [Joint Chiefs of Staff] Chairman Michael Mullen in this quarter,” the group said in a statement Wednesday. “We need to make ‘Don’t Ask’ repeal a reality sooner rather than later.”
Indeed so.

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Yikes

[Trigger warning for unethical sexual behavior, possible sexual assault and stalking.]

So, CNN has this big exclusive on misconduct at the FBI, and I'm not especially surprised that there is some percentage of agents who are creeps, but I am certainly intrigued by the FBI's position on what constitutes an appropriate punishment for unethical sexual behavior (which may actually be sexual assault, depending on context like some element of coercion, unclear in the article) and borderline stalking (or legal stalking, also depending on context not made explicit in the article).

I mean, how did the agency know, for example, about the supervisor who watched "pornographic movies in the office while sexually satisfying himself" during work hours unless somebody saw him (which was quite possibly the whole point) and/or he talked about it? That's sexual harassment at minimum.

Which seems it ought to warrant a more serious response than a 35-day suspension.

I'd really like it if the US government started taking sexual harassment, assault, and violence seriously, because I'm really tired of reading about sex crimes in various federal agencies (and Congress), sex crimes in the military, sex crimes in the Peace Corps, sex crimes by subcontractors, etc. etc. etc.

If anyone at the White House is interested in making rape prevention a priority, there's a lady at the State Department who might have some ideas about how to do that.

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Quote of the Day

[Trigger warning for violence and homophobia]

"When we called for hanging of gay people, we meant ... after they have gone through the legal process...I did not call for them to be killed in cold blood like he was."—Giles Muhame, editor of the Ugandan tabloid The Rolling Stone (no connection to the American publication) [TW] speaking about the murder of gay rights activist David Kato.

In late 2010, Muhame's paper published the names, addresses, and photos of "[the] top 100 homosexuals" (including Kato) under a banner that included the phrase "Hang Them."

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Blog Note

I've been feeling a little under the weather, nothing to be alarmed about, just the same old shit, so I'm taking it easy and posting may be a little lighter than usual over the next few days.

No need to feel obliged by this post to wish me well (and the usual suspects can hold the tiresome emails accusing me of attention-seeking); I just wanted to post something informational for the Shakers who tend to worry when I deviate from my routine.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Matthew Wilder: "Break My Stride"

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Open Thread

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Hosted by Deeky's Happy Days lunchbox. (With thermos!)

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Question of the Day

What's the worst back-handed compliment you've ever received?

I don't know if this is precisely the worst, but, not terribly long ago, someone said to me, "You're a really great female blogger." Oof.

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What I'm Listening To

Esperanza Spalding, "Precious"


[Lyrics available here.]

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