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Reproductive Justice: Coming Out of the Abortion Closet

The Democratic Party stopped patronizing women into feeling like abortion is something they should apologize for.

The Democratic Party stopped patronizing women into feeling like abortion is something they should apologize for.

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In this clip from the full Acronym TV episode The Catholic War On Women, Katie Klabusich and Kelly Carlin join host Dennis Trainor, Jr. to discuss the war on female reproductive rights.

Abortion, out of the closetIn 2008, the Democratic Party dropped its language dropped its old abortion language (“safe, legal and rare”), which had asked that women not have abortions unless they absolutely must, and changed the official platform. 

In other words, it stopped patronizing women into feeling like abortion is something they should apologize for. Instead, the Democratic Party position now reads:

“The Democratic Party strongly and unequivocally supports Roe v. Wade and a woman’s right to choose a safe and legal abortion, regardless of ability to pay, and we oppose any and all efforts to weaken or undermine that right.”



The group Stop Patriarchy takes this a few steps further, declaring that women should have access to abortion on demand and without apology:

“We recognize that women are full human beings who must have the right – through unrestricted and unstigmatized access to birth control and abortion – to decide for themselves when and whether they will have children. We reject the view that a woman’s highest purpose and fundamental “duty” is to bear children, even those she does not want or cannot care for.

Over 80% of abortion clinics have experienced violence, threats, or harassment; eight doctors and staff have been murdered. Today, 97% of rural counties have no abortion provider. One in four poor women who seeks an abortion cannot afford it and is forced to have a child she does not want. Five states have only one abortion clinic left.”

In the following clip, two women come out of the “Abortion closet” and discuss what the world would look like if women were not forced to apologize for abortions.

“I’m outing myself here,” says Carlin. “I’m outing myself in my (forthcoming) book. I had two abortions when I was a teenager. I was a reckless crazy girl… I was really privileged (and) I was lucky. I had parents who had money. I had access to access to a clinic, it was private and it was the way it has been done for rich people forever.”

Below, Katie Klabusich relates her harrowing experience as a target of a “Wanted Poster” campaign from the Pro-Life Action League.

“They decided for Lent this year to put together an Internet meme asking people to pray for (three people): me, (and also) an abortion doctor, and a pro-choice journalist. They put the three of us, with our names, cities, where we work, etc., (and published) it in the blog post and told people to ‘pray’ for us.” This was a major concern because, as Katie says,” the anti-choice movement has used wanted posters to kill people. It has lead to assassinations.”

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