Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Disability Justice is a Reproductive Justice Issue

I can not tell you how excited I am by the response to cutting funding to Planned Parenthood. It feels like a movement for the first time in a long time, at least for me personally. I also feel so incredibly empowered by the huge amount of support for the "I Stand with Planned Parenthood" campaign, but at the same time, I'm forced to check my privilege.

With advances in genetic testing, there is a growing debate about disability and abortion. Often time the question becomes whether or not "this child will be better off not being born than suffering through life with a disability." I recently learned about some failed legislation that would have banned abortion if the woman was basing her decision on the fetus' race, sex, or ability. Limiting choice is NOT the solution. Rather the solution is to reteach what we value as a society.

The fact that the biggest campaign for Planned Parenthood uses ableist language isn't nearly as concerning as those who are not even in the conversation. My movement is more than the pro-choice/pro-life debate...I'm talking about Access to equal and affordable health care, Sovereignty to be in and make decisions for our own bodies, and Liberation for all those who have been silenced or made invisible because we don't fit nicely into "normal."

I mean, that's just how I'm feeling today...How do you feel about it?

1 comment:

  1. Thank you SO much for catching this!

    The other day I was at a service where someone precluded a hymn with the request "Stand as you are able." It was definitely an Aha! moment for me. Even for someone who tries very hard, I continually surprise myself by how much flies under my radar. Thank you for calling us out. Awareness of ability issues is definitely a huge weakness in some of the more mainstream feminist movements.

    "Inclusion means the inclusion of all, not the inclusion of all who are like me."
    John Fisher, Trinity College

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