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No Guts, No Glory (I believed being a feminist meant never saying, "I agree with Randall Terry.")
Ragged Edge Magazine ^ | Oct. 29, 2003 | Ingrid Tischer

Posted on 10/29/2003 4:23:59 PM PST by nickcarraway

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Once upon a time, I believed being a feminist meant never having to say, "I agree with Randall Terry."

Times change.

As a woman with a disability and a progressive, I have never felt so alone as I have this week following the mainstream media's portrayal of the so-called right-to-die case in Florida. During a week of e-mails from otherwise progressive women's rights organizations about the assault on abortion rights, I have heard nothing about this ongoing assault on the life of a woman who is severely disabled. Not terminal, dying, or on her deathbed. Disabled. I understand the critical difference between dying and disability. Many others do not.

For some reason, women who ordinarily approach the news with a skeptical eye - sometimes even a jaundiced eye - have accepted the opinion of the mainstream media without even wondering whether they are getting a biased story. The New York Times editorial page, slammed by conservatives as too liberal, ran an editorial on October 22 calling for Schiavo's right to be starved to death in the name of bodily integrity. I'm sitting here, waiting, waiting -- waiting for a word from NOW or any women's organization, to come join me in questioning how to define bodily integrity. I haven't heard from any nondisabled women who call themselves progressive. This isolation leaves me in a bit of an ideological pickle, a pickle that looks like Randall Terry. I don't particularly enjoy linking arms with Randall Terry but that's politics. I'll get over it. Since I can do that, I am officially asking women who generally "get it" to get over their tizzy about what-if-it-happened-to-me. Start listening to women and men with disabilities. Notice that 14 disability rights organizations signed briefs in support of Schiavo. Show some respect to the activists with disabilities who did what I shrink from: Hang out with the religious right if it meant saving the life of a woman with a disability.

I suspect most women, however enlightened, do not accept Terri Schiavo is a woman. Not really. Her medical condition too easily eclipses her humanity. I can certainly understand (and share) the deep emotions and fears this case raises. What I cannot understand is the silence. The unwillingness of nondisabled women to try to see beyond their own narrow perspective on what constitutes a "meaningful life." So much for that cornerstone of the women's movement, prizing the voice of the person with the experience. Don't ask me, a woman who's been disabled all of her life. By all means, ask a doctor.

I'm waiting to hear from long-time feminists who told male doctors that radical mastectomies weren't the answer to every lump, that hysterectomies weren't the cure for the common cold; who told male police officers that no means no, even when it isn't spelled out in a contract.

I'm waiting to find out to know why they're so quiet now, the women who kept hammering the message that women's lives are valuable even when they aren't gestating a child, pleasing a man, or wrapped in skin of a certain color. Is it because you see Schiavo less as a woman and more as a disability?

I've heard women I respect recently discuss why the women's movement has lost so much support, and is so dismissed by the women and girls who have benefited from the gains it achieved. There were theories and strategies for engaging younger women and re-establishing connections with other generations. After watching the collective failure of the women's movement to respond this week to the Schiavo case, I have a new theory. The women's movement has no guts. Literally. I haven't heard a message from any women's rights organization lately that in any way equals the instinctive twist in the gut that comes with learning about Terry Schiavo. That twist in the gut should be a call to action.

In my opinion, the women's movement doesn't know how to be revolutionary anymore. Even worse, they are ignoring the connection between stigma, silence and oppression. Where once it taught us to say "vagina," now it gets stuck on "poop." Women who understand the political importance of talking openly about menstruation start looking at the floor when incontinence comes up. Women who comfortably disclose their race, age, and sexual orientation at work hide their psychiatric medication. Women who understand all other forms of diversity roll their eyes when other women ask them to not wear perfume.

Disability rights issues could redefine the women's movement. If the women's movement avoids the Schiavo case, it will be choosing not to grapple with the issues that will be facing more and more women in the coming years. They are issues of dependence and control, the classics of the women's movement that, unfortunately, never go out of style. The issues in the Schiavo case are the headlights of the car speeding right at every older woman, every chronically ill woman, every woman with a disability in this country. You don't have to tell me it's scary as hell to be standing in the middle of that dark road. The only way to survive it is to move fast. But if we're going to move fast, we have to have a clear sense of direction and purpose. The women's movement could have a needle-sharp point; the point would prick some but it would also pierce the complacency that is the real enemy of change.

What point could cut through the current apathy about women's lives faster than hearing a woman with a disability say, "Incontinence is not all incongruous with my having a dignified, meaningful life,"? Is it possible not to respond, even if all you do is mutter, "Oh my god, I can't believe she just said that,"? I dare you to find a more daring example of self-worth than a woman telling the world she deserves what the dainty call "help with personal hygiene." Women don't have to agree on everything -- women with disabilities certainly don't. But what the women's movement would gain from embracing disability rights is a vanguard. It would have a new source of leadership.

The battles are huge. They include access to affordable healthcare, long-term community-based care and living wages for the workers (a largely female population) who provide personal assistance. We will be fighting the nursing-home industry, big pharma, HMOs, and corporations that pollute the environment. We will be up against the same old bullies like abusive families, autocratic doctors and discriminatory employers. We may not have traditional allies such as the ACLU and we may have unexpected allies in the religious right. Will that stop the women's movement? No! Because the women's movement will know that its own progress is doomed if it fails to include women with disabilities. If it sacrifices Terri Schiavo because being her ally is, regretfully, beyond their scope at this time.

Each wave of the women's movement has asked the impossible, and in so doing, galvanized huge numbers of women. Speaking the unspeakable, asking for the moon, these are what the women's movement did once upon a time. They did it because women's lives were at stake. Women's lives are still at stake. Terri Schiavo is a woman, remember? That's all that matters. If denying equal protection under the law to women with disabilities through right to die laws isn't "violence against women" just what is?

Ingrid Tischer lives in San Francisco.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections; US: California; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: civilrights; courts; disabled; feminism; feministsuck; florida; prolife; randallterry; terrisciavo
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To: dandelion
The Terri Schiavo case is about disability, and the rights of disabled people to live, regardless of elitist attempts to re-write the definition of "life".

Yes, this is another attempt to change the definition of human life. Three decades ago the Supreme Court removed the unborn from the human race and abortion is now just a choice to be made with no consideration of a human life being lost.

Now the courts are attempting to remove the disabled who cannot speak for themselves. If you don't have the ability to communicate you no longer have rights and the court can decide if your life is worth living.

21 posted on 10/29/2003 6:40:20 PM PST by eggman (Social Insecurity - Who will provide for the government when the government provides for all of us?)
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To: Rodney King
and...he is an opportunist, family abanding, greedy, SOB who exploits peoples feelings to pad his own pocket.
22 posted on 10/29/2003 6:48:40 PM PST by bethelgrad (for God, country, and the Corps OOH RAH!)
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To: bethelgrad
sorry, should be "abandoning"
23 posted on 10/29/2003 6:50:39 PM PST by bethelgrad (for God, country, and the Corps OOH RAH!)
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To: thoughtomator
yep
24 posted on 10/29/2003 6:54:39 PM PST by Brian Allen ( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
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To: nickcarraway
It seems like the writer has had a moment of clarity in her life, and realizes what she has stood for in favor of "women's rights" all these years. Now she is starting to learn the truth. It's going to take some time, especially surrounded by idiots as she no doubt is in San Francisco, for her to see what it has meant. Good for her for admitting her past folly in public.
25 posted on 10/29/2003 7:22:25 PM PST by TenthAmendmentChampion (Free! Read my historical romance novels online at http://Writing.Com/authors/vdavisson)
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To: nickcarraway
>> join me in questioning how to define bodily integrity.

Bodily integrity is when you totally neglect the body of a handicapped woman who has a urinary tract infection. That way you never tamper with the integrity of her body. You do this by taking away her antibiotics.

Michael Schiavo pioneered this technique.

26 posted on 10/29/2003 7:32:32 PM PST by T'wit
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To: nickcarraway
>> Terri Schiavo is a woman, remember? That's all that matters.

Right, right, keep killing MEN with disabilities.

27 posted on 10/29/2003 7:37:56 PM PST by T'wit
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To: TenthAmendmentChampion
It seems like the writer has had a moment of clarity in her life, and realizes what she has stood for in favor of "women's rights" all these years.

She has learned nothing. Fundamentally this article is a plea to her fellow team members not to abandon a member of the team that has fallen down.

It is hard to read this article without coming away with the distinct sense that if that were a disabled man lying there, or God forbid a child, she wouldn't give two hoots to Hell what happened. Only women matter to her; it seeps from every pore in the article.

She sees women as being a "team." It's up to women to stick together and make sure that men and children don't get any resources. It's all for one and one for all. Women united, to kill the babies and stick it to the men. Yeah, hooray, just listen to her roar.

She's what's been wrong for the last 30 years: collective selfishness wrapped in victimology. She makes me puke.


28 posted on 10/29/2003 9:34:31 PM PST by Nick Danger (For your convenience, we recommend courteous, efficient self-service.)
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To: bethelgrad
I remember seeing Randall Terry on Donahue way back. I found him to a distasteful, toady zealot. Why do people resort to asking the advice of the insane? Randall Terry, Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson,etc.
29 posted on 10/29/2003 9:38:48 PM PST by cyborg (Kyk nou, die ding wat jy soek issie hierie sienj)
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To: Nick Danger
Well said. I agree with your summary entirely.

Qwinn
30 posted on 10/29/2003 9:46:36 PM PST by Qwinn
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