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The Price of Our Blood: Why Ferguson Is a Reproductive Justice Issue
RH Reality Check ^ | August 26, 2014 | Katherine Cross

Posted on 08/27/2014 3:21:05 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

The events that have unfolded in Ferguson, Missouri, in recent weeks have revealed many tragedies, among them the fact that the death of so many youth of color in this country is still debatable in its status as a vaunted “feminist issue.” But it is, and the expansive definition of reproductive justice, which reaches into the universe of conditions necessary to create and sustain life, shows us how.

As RH Reality Check Senior Legal Analyst Imani Gandy put it so well in a recent tweet:

Imani ABL @AngryBlackLady

I saw so many people on Twitter saying "I don't want to
have/raise black children in this country." That is a
reproductive justice issue.

11:35 AM - 10 Aug 2014

175 Retweets 86 favorites

The resonance of the phrase “my body, my choice” owes much to its essential simplicity. But that same simplicity leaves out a great deal. A number of writers, like Dani McClain, Hannah Giorgis, Tara Culp-Ressler, and Emma Akpan, have written about a much broader idea, whose standard has been borne mostly by women of color for the last 20 years: The death of Michael Brown, and the systematic terror it induces, is a reproductive justice issue.

Put another way, there can be no reproductive justice for all until the state-sanctioned murder of Black youth in this country is addressed.

Bodily control neither begins nor ends with reproductive health care—that was only ever one battleground, albeit an important one. When one’s choice of whether or not to have a child is coerced by a terror inflicted on you and others like you, one’s reproductive rights are also being trampled upon. The word “terror” is not hyperbole as Hannah Giorgis revealed when she wrote of her reaction to Brown’s murder:

When I heard Sunday night that 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot dead by police in Ferguson, Missouri, my heart sank. My skin pulled tight around my hands, my stomach churned itself into knots. My mind raced, visions of my brothers’ faces collaged into the painfully familiar sight of yet another innocent Black boy breathing — and bleeding — for the last time.

She shares this waking nightmare with countless other Black mothers who live in fear of their children falling to the vengeful divinity of the state. “Any force that systematically and unapologetically turns unconsenting Black wombs into graveyards,” she says, “is a reproductive justice issue.”

For one’s children to be random, unwitting blood sacrifices to the prejudice of faceless others is not freedom. To have reproductive freedom means, among many other things, that your choice to raise a family will not be revenged upon by collectivized prejudice wielding batons and handguns.

Children of Color as Crisis

A theme of the protests in Ferguson has been the fact that our much-cherished rights evaporated at just the moment when they were most needed.

Michael Brown’s right to due process was hardly in evidence. And for the protesters, much the same was true: Their First Amendment rights were stripped, as were those of many of the journalists trying to cover the historic events as they unfolded. The Fourth and Fifth Amendments fluttered away. Suddenly, even police regulations about providing names and badge numbers no longer applied. On and on, rights were butchered in the charnel house of Ferguson’s streets.

But equally glaring and shocking was the fact that Michael Brown’s mother was denied her right to a family she could raise in safety.

Far from being a “separate issue,” as some would like to imagine, what happened to Michael Brown is as much a profound indictment of our lack of reproductive justice as it is our lack of racial and economic justice.

If reproductive choice is about deciding whether or not one can have a family, or how large one wants her family to be, then structural violence imposed on a community is a constraint upon that freedom. If a woman like Marissa Alexander, for instance, cannot defend her own life and her children from an abusive parent, that too is a violation of reproductive freedom.

The issue is not only the tragic loss of a child, or an unjustly incarcerated mother. It’s the fact that for the entire Black community in our society, there is a calculus to be made about one’s children that’s not prevalent among whites. It’s the knowledge that your child might be stolen away by the very people who should be protecting him or her, and the knowledge that they will die a second death as a bloodthirsty press seeks to retroactively justify the atrocity by holding up their whole life for scrutiny and debate, as if anything revealed by such remorseless vulture-picking could ever excuse such a killing.

It is here where the question of “Whose lives are valued?” enters into the picture, for how cheap must a life be if millions of onlookers can think that stolen cigars justify a murder? Can we have reproductive justice if the children of some are considered inherently less valuable by several orders of magnitude? If the life of a child or a young man or woman is so cheap that misunderstandings, small mistakes, or false accusations justify their deaths, what can then be said about the rights they enjoyed in life and how valuable they turned out to be?

For First Nations and Native American peoples this, too, is a pressing question. The disproportionate murders of their children, particularly young women, is an appalling atrocity that has only unfolded quietly because such lives are undervalued. Writing about the death of Tina Fontaine, a 15-year-old girl whose body was found in a river, Dr. Sarah Hunt, a researcher on violence against Indigenous people, concluded her piece by saying, “Treating our deaths as unremarkable is a form of violence that needs to stop along with the murders themselves. Taking steps to end the violence now is the only route to justice.”

A similar debauching occurs with the lives of Latino/a children in this country, especially immigrants. They are treated by the rest of society as a virus infecting the state, and their deaths—whether in the United States or in the countries to which they may be deported—are treated as both seemly and unremarkable. Amid all this violence and chaos, Latina mothers are condemned as being threats themselves for bearing these children—their decision to have a family, and any decision they make about saving that family (such as making the unarguably difficult choice to send your child over the border alone), are subject to a dehumanizing scorn in the press.

The great moral crime is that the deaths of all these people are treated as the seemly garnish to an otherwise just and progressive world.

It’s why Renisha McBride was killed—her part in the white suburban slasher drama that depicts all Black people as inherently dangerous was decided for her long before she staggered up to Theodore Wafer’s front door. It’s why Islan Nettles’ murder has not been properly investigated, despite the fact that it occurred next to a police station. It’s why Trayvon Martin’s death ignited controversy rather than universal condemnation. It’s why CeCe MacDonald went to prison for defending herself against a man who wanted her to pay with her life for the crime of her very existence. It’s why far too many other men and women have been slain.

The reproductive justice perspective is a simple one: All lives must be valued as equal. There can be no reproductive justice without racial justice. This means that the families of people of color must be seen as having equal value. It means that a child’s real or perceived imperfections should never be seen as an excuse for murder. And it means that the decisions of Black, Latino/a, or Native people to have children should not be constructed as a crisis. Rather, we should see the equal and just care of these children as a shared responsibility—a challenge, yes, but no more a challenge than raising one’s own family should be.

Children of color are not a crisis.

A Militarized Public

Much has been made of the militarization of the police in this country, and that must be addressed without delay. But we are making a tremendous mistake if we believe that taking the police’s tanks and assault rifles away will make things better.

The militarization of the mind is what we must fight with vigor. Police have merely clad themselves in the armor that fits their timeless pretensions. They were always a paramilitary force in word and deed—now they simply have the means to clothe themselves like it.

But this militant mind was never limited to the police. It leads to the terrifying fantasies that George Zimmerman and Theodore Wafer acted out when they committed their murders. It has made monsters of people’s children; it has cut a swathe through people’s families. It’s the same violent reflex that has taken the lives of countless transgender women of color, people whose very right to exist is being fought for on the furthest frontier of reproductive justice politics.

The militarized mind dehumanizes and then justifies the treatment, which accrues to the inhuman.

It is easy to see a logical extension between angry Facebook users posting memes about “welfare cheats” and “anchor babies” and those who try to justify the slaughter of a young person of color. You see the broad arc here: Dehumanize, then kill, then slay their memory. The kids are cast as spongers, or invading immigrants who will rape and kill, or talentless gang-bangers—all of whom are “stealing” hardworking (white) Americans’ money while constituting an existential threat to the nation as a whole. Inevitably, someone is killed, and just as inevitably people try to justify the death.

Armies of children are reduced to caricatures.

The real question is, how is this not about reproductive justice? How could anyone think otherwise?

The answer lies in the same dehumanization that leads to this weeping list of crimes, and it infects feminism as well. Ferguson is a moment for all of us who call ourselves feminists to refuse the seductions of racism; we must refuse to fail. It’s also a moment for all of us non-Black people of color to recognize that although we cannot lay total claim to the issue of police violence visited on Black children and Black parents, we are inextricably bound up in all of this and cannot afford to be silent.

There’s a movement in there somewhere. And we would all do well to answer its call at last.


TOPICS: Government; Health/Medicine; Society; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: abortion; banglist; blacks; contraception; ferguson; guncontrol; michaelbrown; moralabsolutes; reproductivehealth; trayvon
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I don't know about you, but I really don't want to share a country with someone who thinks this way and could write this column. One side or the other is going to win this argument, and as it stands now, her side is definitely winning.
1 posted on 08/27/2014 3:21:06 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
how is this not about reproductive justice? How could anyone think otherwise?

Because it's about self-defense, you dumb leftie (not you 2Dvet!).

Wilson had the right and duty to defend himself - same as Zimmerman.

2 posted on 08/27/2014 3:30:23 AM PDT by agere_contra (Hamas has dug miles of tunnels - but no bomb-shelters.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
"The death of Michael Brown, and the systematic terror it induces, is a reproductive justice issue. "

Oh, good grief!

3 posted on 08/27/2014 3:33:13 AM PDT by FroggyTheGremlim ("Your apathy is their power." - Sarah Palin Jul 19, 2014)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I’m all for these people to have as few kids as possible.


4 posted on 08/27/2014 3:34:02 AM PDT by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Here’s what the author doesn’t get: she claims a right for a mother to raise her children in safety. Which is dependent upon the police maintaining peace and order and enforcing the laws.

There’s more than enough evidence at this point showing that the death of Mike Brown was much more complex than White cop executes unarmed black kid. Some of that evidence points to Brown charging the cop, making the cop believe that his life was in danger.

Beating up on the cops over this is a really truly bad idea. If this woman really wants a right to raise a family in safety, she needs to understand the ramifications of attacking the police, and the likely outcome that they’ll check out and she’ll have “safety” determined by the benevolence of urban gangs.


5 posted on 08/27/2014 3:42:51 AM PDT by tanknetter
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Collective psychosis.

One side lives in reality, the other lives in a constructed fantasy world.

ISIS is another iteration of this phenomenon.

6 posted on 08/27/2014 3:55:53 AM PDT by wideawake
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To: wideawake

Can you imagine what would happen in the “Street Rats” decide to join with ISIS? Never say “never”.


7 posted on 08/27/2014 4:02:30 AM PDT by DaveA37
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Black CULTURE has brought them to where they are and nothing else.... Their young men impregnate their women... Those women either abort or have them as single mothers...

Those same young men kill each other at rate that no other ethnic group experiences...

THEY will have to correct this or cease to exists as a group...


8 posted on 08/27/2014 4:02:38 AM PDT by bfh333 ("We can evade reality, but we cannot evade the consequences of evading reality.")
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Well, the scribbler of this article is right about one thing...it is a reproductive justice issue. It’s an injustice that people like Cross actually might breed and create more liberals.


9 posted on 08/27/2014 4:07:18 AM PDT by driftless2 (For long term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: bfh333
"Black CULTURE has brought them to where they are and nothing else...."

BINGO! And until that is emphasized, taught, and recognized by Americans, the Black culture, which has generated the evaporation of the black two-parent family, the skyrocketing ilegitimacy, the multi-generational welfare moms, and the continued enslavery to the Demonicrats, will also continue to spawn crime and destruction in the United States.

10 posted on 08/27/2014 4:28:30 AM PDT by Carl Vehse
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

OK I will bite. So why does the gubment pay young black women to have fatherless children?


11 posted on 08/27/2014 4:29:45 AM PDT by IC Ken
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

At one time, the author of such a piece would have been locked up in a madhouse. Today this whole country IS a madhouse.


12 posted on 08/27/2014 4:31:46 AM PDT by madprof98
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I tried to read it. I really did. But my brain simply cannot comprehend this kind of idiocy. I made the mistake of reading that article posted a couple of weeks ago from that idiotic woman who said sex for a woman was always rape, and I woefully regretted it.

I guess my brain just refuses to compute that much stupid in a short amount of time.


13 posted on 08/27/2014 4:59:07 AM PDT by Lil Flower (American by birth. Southern by the Grace of God! ROLL TIDE!!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

What a disappointing article. I thought it was going to address the systematic slaughter of unborn minorities. While only 13% of the population, blacks account for about 40% of abortions. Liberals and Democrats are blacks’ biggest enemy and they keep voting for them.


14 posted on 08/27/2014 4:59:26 AM PDT by gspurlock (http://www.backyardfence.wordpress.com)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

As an aside - I’m confused about the Politically-Correct language used:

“Youth of color” = good
Colored youth = bad
“Children of color” = good
Colored children = bad
“People of color” = good
Colored people = bad

I just don’t get it anymore...


15 posted on 08/27/2014 5:15:22 AM PDT by ItsOurTimeNow ("Scheming demons dressed in kingly guise, beating down the multitudes and scoffing at the wise.")
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Can’t we just call it a police assisted, very-late-term abortion and move on?


16 posted on 08/27/2014 5:17:55 AM PDT by dangerdoc ((this space for rent))
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To: ItsOurTimeNow
I just don’t get it anymore...

You're not supposed to. You're supposed to just shut up and jump through whatever arbitrary hoop they hold up to atone for your white privilege. Just think of it as racial dhimmitude.

17 posted on 08/27/2014 5:22:21 AM PDT by tacticalogic
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To: tacticalogic

Thank you sir, may I have another? :-)


18 posted on 08/27/2014 5:29:16 AM PDT by ItsOurTimeNow ("Scheming demons dressed in kingly guise, beating down the multitudes and scoffing at the wise.")
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To: ItsOurTimeNow
Thank you sir, may I have another? :-)

You can and will have all you can stand.

19 posted on 08/27/2014 5:34:56 AM PDT by tacticalogic
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

But 40% of abortions are performed on blacks. This is more than 400,000 babies a year!

It would take cops 50,000 years to kill this many black kids.

Maybe these people shouldn’t have kids unless they’re in stable relationships with the fathers. Then the fathers could tell the kids to do what police officers tell them so they don’t get shot, like my dad did.


20 posted on 08/27/2014 5:46:13 AM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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