RogueBelle |
Cass: 27, Leo, ENFJ, Slytherin, Targaryen, Virginian, pagan Fandoms: ASoIaF, Doctor Who, Rome, Harry Potter, Disney, Star Wars, Indiana Jones, The West Wing, The Hunger Games, Once Upon a Time, Discworld, Kushiel's Legacy Other Interests: writing, reading (historical fiction, romance, fantasy, sci-fi), steampunk, politics, Shakespeare, history |
Laci Green (at her Tumblr or her Youtube channel) discussing the myth of the hymen. Click here to watch the whole video. (x)
The more you know, ladies and gentlemen and fancy genderbeings, the more you know.
when i found this out i was like
mind. fucking. blown.
It’s also not located three inches inside your vagina, which is something I would like to sit down and explain to literally every romance novel author ever.
(via radiofedora)
A federal judge rules that the FDA be required to follow medical experts’ advice and make emergency contraception available to women of all ages and without a prescription. This is a great victory for putting sound science over politics.
For anyone who says, “I don’t support how women get abortions for fun / because they were too lazy to use a condom.”
This also goes for the “Well, I don’t understand why anyone would wait longer than x weeks” nonsense.
(Source: fuckyeahsexualhealth, via hairlikethat)
Oklahoma already prevents women fromusing their insurance plans to help cover abortion services, but Republicans aren’t stopping there. One state lawmaker wants to continue stripping insurance coverage for reproductive health services, advancing a measure that would allow employers to refuse to cover birth control for any reason — based solely on the fact that one of his constituents believes it “poisons women’s bodies.”
Under State Sen. Clark Jolley (R)’s measure, “no employer shall be required to provide or pay for any benefit or service related to abortion or contraception through the provision of health insurance to his or her employees.” According to the Tulsa World, Jolley’s inspiration for his bill came from one of his male constituents who is morally opposed to birth control, and wanted to find a small group insurance plan for himself and his family that didn’t include coverage for those services:
Jolley said the measure is the result of a request from a constituent, Dr. Dominic Pedulla, an Oklahoma City cardiologist who describes himself as a natural family planning medical consultant and women’s health researcher. […]
Women are worse off with contraception because it suppresses and disables who they are, Pedulla said.
“Part of their identity is the potential to be a mother,” Pedulla said. “They are being asked to suppress and radically contradict part of their own identity, and if that wasn’t bad enough, they are being asked to poison their bodies.”
The bill has already cleared a Senate Health committee and now makes it way to Oklahoma’s full Senate. It is unlikely that either Jolley and Pedulla themselves rely on insurance coverage for hormonal contraceptive services — but if the measure becomes law, the two men could limit the health insurance options for the nearly two million women who live in Oklahoma.
Of course, contraception does not actually poison women. The FDA approved the first oral birth control pill in 1960, and that type of contraception is so safe that the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends making it available without a prescription, as it is in most other countries around the world. Furthermore, considering that over 99 percent of women of reproductive age have used some form of birth control, the Oklahoma women who rely on insurance coverage for their contraception would likely disagree with Pedulla’s assertion that it “suppresses and radically contradicts part of their own identity.”
In reality, access to affordable birth control is a critical economic issue for women. When women have control over their reproductive choices, it allows them to achieve economic goalslike completing their education, becoming financially independent, or keeping a job. But birth control can carry high out-of-pocket costs, and over half of young women say they haven’t used their contraceptive method as directed because of cost prohibitions. Nonetheless, Republican lawmakers have repeatedly pushed measures to allow employers to drop coverage for birth control.
IT’S REALLY NOT HARD TO FIND OUT HOW BIRTH CONTROL WORKS. IT’S NOT AN “IDENTITY SUPPRESSOR” IT’S A WAY TO CONTROL OUR OWN DAMN LIVES. GODDAMN.
If my “natural identity” is a pain-addled wretch who bleeds for ten to fourteen days at a time, dissolves into sobbing hysterics without provocation, and can’t get through a day of work without doubling over in agony, then fuck, I want to re-draw lots. Because that’s who I am without birth control.
Also, entirely setting aside the women who don’t want to be mothers and don’t need a pill to “suppress” that for them, this fuck acts like no woman on birth control eventually wants or has already fucking had children.
I am so sick of men who can’t even be bothered to understand how contraceptives work or are used by women trying to tell me what to do with my sexual organs.
(Source: chiefmauskateer)
Click on the link and tell the department of Health and Human Services why access to birth control with no co-pay is important to you.
(via exploringpaganism)
“Onto my final point… fetal pain. This is another big bad. But the pro-life points made in films like “silent scream” are completely false. No fetus before 28 weeks gestation can actually feel pain. The myelin sheath isn’t developed around the nerves in the spinal cord until 28 weeks, far after the most liberal general cutoff date, and not developed around nerves in the cerebral cortex until after birth.” via choosechoice
^ THIS.
(via prochoicegeneration)
Screaming at people on a sidewalk does not make you a counselor, it makes you an asshole.
Praying for people and letting know know undoubtedly that you disapprove of their actions because of your own beliefs (and wish to thrust those beliefs upon them) doesn’t make you a counselor, it makes you an asshole.
I don’t think clinic protestors really understand just what their presence does for people and how negatively impacting it really is.
I call them “harassholes.” Because they harass people and are assholes.
For a split second, I thought “sidewalk counselor” meant groups of child therapists roaming the streets offering help to underprivileged kids. I was like, “Wow, that’s a fantastic idea, and better access to mental healthcare is so important to underserved areas.” LOLNO, by “sidewalk counselor” they mean the pro-lifers who stand outside of clinics and scream “MURDERER!!!!” at the woman who pass them. Helping children who have already been born is not really a priority for them.
I call them bullies.
Oh, it’s cool, I’m not “a person who punches misogynist asshole harassers in the face”, I’m a “nasal lobe re-arranger”.
(Source: aubadetohim)
January 30, 2013
MEMORANDUM FOR THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES
SUBJECT: Coordination of Policies and Programs to Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women and Girls Globally
Promoting gender equality and advancing the status of all women and girls around the world remains one of the greatest unmet challenges of our time, and one that is vital to achieving our overall foreign policy objectives. Ensuring that women and girls, including those most marginalized, are able to participate fully in public life, are free from violence, and have equal access to education, economic opportunity, and health care increases broader economic prosperity, as well as political stability and security.
During my Administration, the United States has made promoting gender equality and advancing the status of women and girls a central element of our foreign policy, including by leading through example at home. Executive Order 13506 of March 11, 2009, established the White House Council on Women and Girls to coordinate Federal policy on issues, both domestic and international, that particularly impact the lives of women and girls. This commitment to promoting gender equality is also reflected in the National Security Strategy of the United States, the Presidential Policy Directive on Global Development, and the 2010 U.S. Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review.
To elevate and integrate this strategic focus on the promotion of gender equality and the advancement of women and girls around the world, executive departments and agencies (agencies) have issued policy and operational guidance. For example, in March 2012, the Secretary of State issued Policy Guidance on Promoting Gender Equality to Achieve our National Security and Foreign Policy Objectives, and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator released Gender Equality and Female Empowerment Policy. The Millennium Challenge Corporation issued Gender Integration Guidelines in March 2011 to ensure its existing gender policy is fully realized. My Administration has also developed a National Action Plan on Women, Peace, and Security, created pursuant to Executive Order 13595 of December 19, 2011, to strengthen conflict resolution and peace processes through the inclusion of women, and a Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-based Violence Globally, implemented pursuant to Executive Order 13623 of August 10, 2012, to combat gender-based violence around the world. Improving interagency coordination and information sharing, and strengthening agency capacity and accountability will help ensure the effective implementation of these and other Government efforts to promote gender equality and advance the status of women and girls globally.
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, and in order to further strengthen the capacity of the Federal Government to ensure that U.S. diplomacy and foreign assistance promote gender equality and advance the status of women and girls worldwide, I hereby direct the following:
Section 1. Strengthening Capacity and Coordination to Promote Gender Equality and Advance the Status of Women and Girls Internationally. (a) Enhancing U.S. global leadership on gender equality requires dedicated resources, personnel with appropriate expertise in advancing the status of women and girls worldwide, and commitment from senior leadership, as exemplified by the critical and historic role played by the Office of Global Women’s Issues at the Department of State. To assure maximum coordination of efforts to promote gender equality and advance the status of women and girls, the Secretary of State (Secretary) shall designate a coordinator (Coordinator), who will normally also be appointed by the President as an Ambassador at Large (Ambassador at Large) subject to the advice and consent of the Senate. The Ambassador at Large, who shall report directly to the Secretary of State, shall lead the Office of Global Women’s Issues at the Department of State and provide advice and assistance on issues related to promoting gender equality and advancing the status of women and girls internationally.
(b) The Ambassador at Large shall, to the extent the Secretary may direct and consistent with applicable law, provide guidance and coordination with respect to global policies and programs for women and girls, and shall lead efforts to promote an international focus on gender equality more broadly, including through diplomatic initiatives with other countries and partnerships and enhanced coordination with international and nongovernmental organizations and the private sector. To this end, the Ambassador at Large shall also, to the extent the Secretary may direct, assist in:
(i) implementing existing and developing new policies, strategies, and action plans for the promotion of gender equality and advancement of the status of women and girls internationally, and coordinating such actions with USAID and other agencies carrying out related international activities, as appropriate; and
(ii) coordinating such initiatives with other countries and international organizations, as well as with nongovernmental organizations.
(c) Recognizing the vital link between diplomacy and development, and the importance of gender equality as both a goal in itself and as a vital means to achieving the broader aims of U.S. development assistance, the Senior Coordinator for Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment at USAID shall provide guidance to the USAID Administrator in identifying, developing, and advancing key priorities for U.S. development assistance, coordinating, as appropriate, with other agencies.
(d) The Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (or designee), in close collaboration with the Chair of the White House Council on Women and Girls (or designee) and the Ambassador at Large (or designee), shall chair an interagency working group to develop and coordinate Government-wide implementation of policies to promote gender equality and advance the status of women and girls internationally. The Working Group shall consist of senior representatives from the Departments of State, the Treasury, Defense, Justice, Agriculture, Commerce, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Homeland Security; the Intelligence Community, as determined by the Director of National Intelligence; the United States Agency for International Development; the Millennium Challenge Corporation; the Peace Corps; the U.S. Mission to the United Nations; the Office of the United States Trade Representative; the Office of Management and Budget; the Office of the Vice President; the National Economic Council; and such other agencies and offices as the President may designate.
Sec. 2. General Provisions.
(a) Nothing in this memorandum shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:
(i) the authority granted by law or Executive Order to an executive department, agency, or the head thereof; or
(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.
(b) This memorandum shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.
(c) Upon designation as such by the Secretary, the Coordinator shall exercise the functions of the Ambassador at Large set forth in this memorandum.
(d) This memorandum is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.
(e) The Secretary of State is hereby authorized and directed to publish this memorandum in the Federal Register.
BARACK OBAMA
Every day someones ask me “Why are feminists so angry?” Jessica Valenti pretty much says it all here…TY JV
(Source: youtube.com)
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