More on the contraception brouhaha

Feb 15, 2012 09:38

Fascinating backgrounder on the politics around birth control going back to the FDR administration. What's most fascinating to me is that the recent Komen misstep and now the war around the birth control provisions in the ACA seem to be a signal that supporters of reproductive rights are starting to push back against the conservatives in effective ( Read more... )

sex, politics

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daveon February 15 2012, 18:26:02 UTC
This does feel like a 'reverse' wedge issue and looking at the speed at which the poll numbers have started to shift, especially with women and independents, it's working.

Jon Stewart really nailed it on Monday night where he showed a panel on contraception that Sean Hanity put together which was basically middle-aged white guys. As he said, 'nice and representative of the core market and users for female reproductive rights...'

It's a daft issue that just will keep hitting them.

Interestingly, the complete cave on the payroll tax looks like the GOP are now getting nervous about their position. I suspect a lot of the congress are now looking at their seats, the total shower that is the presidential bid and a resurgent Obama and looking at the bigger picture.

We just need the Tea Party to refuse to go along and they should be ready to break in half.

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randy_byers February 15 2012, 18:35:44 UTC
I still haven't read any reporting on how the Tea Party was convinced to go along with the extension of the payroll taxcut (*and* unemployment benefits). Maybe they can smell the wind shifting too, or have they been mollified by the war on contraception?

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daveon February 15 2012, 21:18:31 UTC
To be fair I haven't yet heard if they have agreed to go along :)

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randy_byers February 15 2012, 21:30:05 UTC
Sounds like negotiations are ongoing, but everybody seems to think it will get done. We'll see.

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randy_byers February 15 2012, 19:34:56 UTC
It really is mind-blowing that they stepped into this buzz-saw with their eyes wide open. Well, people have been throwing around the term "epistemic closure" for the past few years. There are none so blind ...

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wrdnrd February 16 2012, 03:06:13 UTC
Twitter summed it up best: "I like that birth control is a political issue this year because it means the year is 1964 and the Beatles are about to get huge." (EricDSnider)

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randy_byers February 16 2012, 03:33:55 UTC
Ha! The fact that Griswold v. Connecticut happened within my lifetime doesn't compute in certain ways. I guess it's like how the Berlin Wall seemed like it had always been there, even though it was built after I was born.

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randy_byers February 16 2012, 15:56:29 UTC
How so? It takes us from a time when birth control was illegal up to the threshold of an era when we'll have universal insurance coverage for contraceptives. I'm not sure I see the backward movement there. Or are you talking about abortion rights? In which case I'd agree.

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