Posted on 10/31/2012 8:44:23 AM PDT by IbJensen
Washington, D.C., October 30, 2012 (LifeSiteNews) Pro-contraception activist Sandra Fluke, on a speaking tour for Barack Obamas re-election campaign, continues to parrot the Obama administrations party line that children are one of the biggest roadblocks to womens success.
Equality, Fluke said in an October 15 interview with the Cornell Daily Sun, means the ability to control your reproduction so that that a career is a realistic goal and something that can be achieved and not derailed by a baby.
Fluke, the Georgetown law school student who stepped into the limelight earlier this year after she was blocked from testifying at a hearing on religious freedom and the Obama administrations HHS mandate, also said she does not believe she is entitled to contraception.
Instead, she said, I think the case is much more about what kind of society do we want to live in.
If we think about what contraception means for people, its not only about having access to the health care that you need, and the human rights aspects of having access to health care, but its also about what being able to control your own reproduction does for women specifically, but for men as well.
Fluke has been an ardent supporter of the Obama administrations plan to force all employers, including many religious employers, to pay for their employees birth control. She was widely ridiculed in the conservative press after testifying at a Democrat press conference that contraception costs thousands of dollars and poses a financial burden to law students such as herself. She later admitted that she didnt realize that contraceptives were available for $9 a month at Target, including the Target down the street from Georgetown.
The idea of babies as barriers to achievement is not a new one for the Obama team. Obama himself famously said during his 2008 campaign that if his daughters, then 9 and 6, made a mistake, he wouldnt want them punished with a baby.
Other administration officials have argued in court that contraception is vital to improving the health of women so that women who choose to do so can be part of the workforce on an equal playing field with men.
But according to conservative commentator George Will, the educated, career-oriented women Obamas campaign is targeting with his War on Women rhetoric are the ones most offended by it. Will said on ABCs This Week with George Stephanopoulos that the Obama campaigns fixation on abortion and contraceptive access has provoked a backlash from educated women because it implies they only care about personal, sexual issues, not critical national issues like the struggling economy and complicated foreign relations.
There has been a big change its not a particular state, said Will. Its the change in Romneys gain among women, and that I think represents a huge recoil by professional women with college degrees against the condensation of the Obama campaign which says, essentially, dont you trouble your pretty little heads about these mens issues and all the rest. Worry about contraception, which has been a constitutional right for 47 years.
Its a distraction, Will added, the entire war on women trope, and I think professional educated women find it offensive.
This slut doesn’t seem to realize her 15 minutes are up...
"Someone stop me before I screw again!"
"Save me Trojan Condoms!"
"My Kingdom for a condom!"
If she was worth hitting she would have a line of pimps wanting to add her to their stable of (ahem) ladies.
She goes down more often than a WWI U-boat.
This slut doesn’t seem to realize her 15 minutes are up...
How proud her parents must be. Didn’t Georgetown used to be a Catholic University?
Georgetown law student! This is why you should quit electing lawyers. Can’t even figure out how to have sex without the government being involved. And down the line after all this yappin she’ll turn out to be a lesbian.
Sandra has intellectual arguments without a moral foundation, hence, baseless.
There is an acquaintance that I frequently email, at least used to, that a few months back said to me, “You can’t legislate a woman’s vagina!”, to which I simply replied, “It’s murder”.
He was obviously spoon fed his position on abortion at an intellectual level, but, when I hit him with the moral implications, he was stone cold quiet.
Intellect, reason, without a moral foundation is akin to a ship without a rudder, floundering.
Intellectuals, if I’m not simply listening and accepting their superior reason, find me worthless....a useless eater.
Ingratiating myself to them is an empty path.
The grace of God ensures my separation from their darkness.
I am very grateful to the only wise God for this.
“Has she apologized to her mom for being a barrier?”
Awesome ans subtle point.
Sandra is of the typical, “Not for me, but for thee” elitism.
“Sandra must be constantly clubbed over the head by cavemen and dragged back to the cave for some abuse!”
I resent the insinuation that my kind would have anything to do with her.
That says it all - maybe it should be made into a bumper sticker.
It is. I've had it on my cars for at least 10 years.
Here’s my big beef with the women’s activists who have adopted “choice” as the key word in their political mantra.
The problem with their choice is the choices that are not any big priority for them.
Chosing to not engage in sexual intercourse when you are not married is not a priorty.
Chosing to not engage in sexual intercourse with a partner with whom there is no mutual committment to marriage is not a priority.
Chosing to use contraceptive means if engaging in sexual intercourse with a partner with whom there is no mutual committment to marriage is not a priority.
Chosing to raise a child conceived out of wedlock is not a priority.
Having an abortion escapes the need to make all the other choices that could have been made, and is the priority.
The “woman’s ‘right’ to chose” is reduced to a ‘right’ to one choice - abortion.
The fact is that a woman has “the right” to make all the other choices that would preclude getting an abortion, but the womens’ movement thinks so little of those choices as responsible choices they are not that movements’ priority.
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