Often, I get emails asking what I believe and what i stand for. In creating this page, I wanted to promote these goals of the pro-choice movement ( Source ):
Abortion
While it's critical to promote policies that help prevent unintended pregnancies and make abortion less necessary, NARAL Pro-Choice America also fights to protect the right to safe, legal abortion.
In 1973, the Supreme Court guaranteed American women the right to choose abortion in its landmark decision Roe v. Wade. In Roe, the Court issued a compromise between the state's ability to restrict abortion and a woman's right to choose.
Since that time, the anti-choice movement has worked furiously to dismantle it – with the ultimate goal of overturning the decision altogether. Anti-choice activists are working hard in state legislatures, the courts, and Congress to take away our rights.
Access to Abortion
Making abortion access more difficult and dangerous is a key tactic of the anti-choice movement. Even with Roe v. Wade's protections still in place, 87 percent of U.S. counties have no abortion provider. Yet anti-choice lawmakers continue to impose a broad range of restrictions on women and their doctors, making abortion difficult, and in some cases nearly impossible, to obtain.
Abortion Bans
The anti-choice movement's ultimate goal is to outlaw abortion in all circumstances. While some states still have laws on the books that would ban abortion throughout pregnancy, Roe v. Wade's protections prevent these bans' enforcement. However, state legislatures across the country continue to consider enacting new total bans in order to challenge Roe in the courts. In addition, in the majority of state legislatures and Congress, anti-choice lawmakers have passed unconstitutional laws that would ban safe and medically appropriate abortion as early as the 12th week of pregnancy.
RU 486 (Non-Surgical/Medical Abortion)
In 2000, the FDA approved RU 486 (also called mifepristone, non-surgical abortion, or medical abortion), giving American women the option to end an unintended pregnancy without surgery. Although millions of women have safely used RU 486 worldwide since 1981, anti-choice lawmakers and groups fought FDA approval every step of the way; having failed, they are now doing everything they can to make it difficult – or even impossible – to obtain. (RU 486 should not be confused with emergency contraception, also known as the "morning-after" pill, which is a basic form of birth control that prevents pregnancy and does not cause abortion.)
Birth Control
Improving access to birth control is at the forefront of our efforts to prevent unintended pregnancy and reduce the need for abortion. For the 98 percent of American women who use some form of contraception during their lives, birth control is basic, essential health care. More than 40 million women of reproductive age are sexually active and want to prevent unintended pregnancy. [Guttmacher Institute, Facts in Brief: Contraceptive Use (Feb. 2005)]
Unfortunately, 40 years after the Supreme Court struck down a ban on birth control, the far right still tries to block women’s access to contraception. Below are just a few examples of the obstacles to improving women’s access to birth control.
Emergency Contraception
Emergency contraception, also known as the "morning-after" pill, is simply a concentrated dose of ordinary birth-control pills. If taken within 72 hours of sex, it is highly effective in preventing pregnancy. In fact, it can reduce a woman's chance of becoming pregnant by 89 percent. It is especially critical for victims of sexual assault or for women whose primary method of birth control fails.
Family-Planning Services
A good family-planning program will ensure that women have access to contraception and that they can raise healthy, happy families when they choose to do so. However, the Bush administration is doing everything possible to block women from getting those basic preventive services.
Access to Prescription Birth Control at Pharmacy Counters
In theory, the concept is simple: a woman walks into a pharmacy with her prescription and walks out with her medicine. However, renegade pharmacists across the country are refusing to fill legal, valid prescriptions for birth control and state legislators are proposing bills that would permit this discrimination against women.
Insurance Coverage for Prescription Birth Control
While most insurers generally cover prescription drugs, not all insurers cover all prescription contraceptives. As a result, women pay roughly 68 percent more in out-of-pocket medical expenses than men, mostly due to their reproductive-health needs. Insurance plans that cover prescription drugs should cover prescription birth control equally. It's that simple.
Sex Education
The United States has unacceptably high rates of teen pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), and HIV/AIDS infections. To address this challenge, NARAL Pro-Choice America supports honest, age-appropriate, and medically accurate sex education that promotes abstinence and provides young people with the information they need to protect themselves.
Unfortunately, anti-choice lawmakers and groups have a strategy that would only make our teen-pregnancy epidemic worse: spending your hard-earned tax dollars on unproven, ideological "abstinence-only" programs that actually censor life-saving information.
Research shows that honest, medically accurate sex education works. "Abstinence-only" programs aren’t proven effective, and some studies even show that young people who go through these programs are less likely to use contraception and protect themselves when they become sexually active. Making matters worse, many of these "abstinence-only" programs include blatantly false and inaccurate information. Young people deserve better than this – and so do taxpayers.
There is also overwhelming public support for honest sex education: 99 percent of Americans believe it is appropriate for young people to have information about STDs, and 94 percent of Americans think it is appropriate to teach young people about birth control.
Women of Color
Approximately 30 percent of all women in the United States are women of color. Although they face many of the same health issues as white women, systemic obstacles disproportionately and adversely affect their access to quality reproductive-health care.
Factors that contribute to this problem include: insufficient research on minority women's health, language barriers, the lack of cultural-competency training, and the shortage and inequitable distribution of minority and women health-care professionals.
* Women of color experience shockingly high maternal-mortality rates.
* The devastating rates of STDs and HIV are particularly acute for women of color, whose rates of infection are dramatically higher than those of white women.
* The reproductive health of women of color – a disproportionate number of whom are low-income – is threatened by limited access to basic reproductive-health care, including family-planning services and abortion care.
* Researchers have identified extremely troubling disparities in access to pain management during labor and delivery for women with limited English proficiency.
As a result of these inequities and structural challenges, the reproductive-health needs of many women of color are going unmet in the United States. We must overcome these obstacles to guarantee every woman the right to make personal decisions regarding the full range of reproductive-health choices.
Important Links
Find Emergency Contraceptives in Texas
NARAL
Bush v. Choice Blog
NAF
Pro-Choice Public Education Project
Women Share Their Stories of Abortion
Pro-Choice Site For Young Moms
National Network of Abortion Funds
A Pro-Choice, Mama Independent Business (5% of proceeds go to planned parenthood)
Wall Of Protest : Visit this link to add your thoughts about the recent federal abortion ban.
The NAF Hotline is available to answer any questions you may have about abortion, unintended pregnancy, or related issues. The Hotline is free, completely anonymous, and offers services to everyone, regardless of their individual situation.
Call toll-free 1-800-772-9100
Weekdays: 8:00 A.M.-9:00 P.M. Eastern time
Saturdays: 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
Save The World - One Click At A Time!
On each of these websites, you can click a button to support the cause -- each click creates funding, and costs you nothing! Bookmark these sites, and click once a day!
Click here to post this on your page or 'blog
Looking to support your fellow pro-choice musicians? Here is a listing.
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Amos, Tori
Anti Flag
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Crow, Sheryl
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DiFranco, Ani
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Etheridge, Melissa
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Griffith, Nanci
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Le Tigre
Loeb, Lisa
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Maines, Natalie
McLachlan, Sarah
Merchant, Natalie
Moby
Morissette, Alanis
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Pink
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Reagon, Toshi
Reddy, Helen
Rollins, Henry
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Williams, Lucinda
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If you are pro-choice band and would like a link here, I am more then willing to support your music. Just message me and let me know. :)
Looking to support your fellow pro-choice actors and actresses? Here is a listing.
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Carter, Linda
Cho, Margaret
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Judd, Ashley
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Sarandon, Susan
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These are all great pro-choice reads. Each book will have a link to a website where you can find the book for purchase :) This section is ALWAYS under construction. If you have a book you would like to recommend please message me!
Behind Every Choice is a Story
Our Bodies, Ourselves: A New Edition for a New Era
Changing Bodies, Changing Lives: A Book for Teens on Sex and Relationships (3rd Edition)
Ourselves, Growing Older
Everything You Never Wanted Your Kids to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid They'd Ask)
The Underground Guide to Teenage Sexuality: An Essential Handbook for Today's Teens and Parents M
Encyclopedia of Birth control
The Contraception Sourcebook
Taking Charge of Your Fertility: The Definitive Guide to Natural Birth Control, Pregnancy Achievement, and Reproductive Health
Sexually Transmitted Diseases: A Physician Tells You What You Need to Know
Color Atlas and Synopsis of Sexually Transmitted Diseases
What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About HPV and Abnormal Pap Smears
Managing Herpes: How to Live and Love with a Chronic STD
Living Well with HIV and AIDS
The AmFAR Aids Handbook: The Complete Guide to Understanding HIV and AIDS
The Story of Jane: The Legendary Underground Feminist Abortion Service
Back Rooms: Voices From the Illegal Abortion Era
Beyond Choice: Reproductive Freedom in the 21st Century
How the Pro-Choice Movement Saved America
War On Choice
Celebration! A Century of Women Making Their Own Responsible Choices
The Adoption Resource Book
The Essential Adoption Handbook
Adopting After Infertility
What To Expect When You're Expecting (3rd Edition)
Your Pregnancy Week-By-Week
The Mayo Clinic Guide to a Healthy Pregnancy
Rock-A-By Baby: Feminism, Self-Help, and Postpartum Depression
The Harvard Medical School Guide to Men's Health: Lessons from the Harvard Men's Health Studies
The Male Body: An Owner's Manual
What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About: Premenopause, Balance Your Hormones and Your Life from Thirty to Fifty
A Woman's Guide to Menopause and Perimenopause
The New Harvard Guide to Women's Health
Sacred Work: Planned Parenthood and Its Clergy Alliances
A Tradition of Choice: Planned Parenthood at 75
(Special thanks to VOX: USF for this book list.
This section is filled with messages from members on why they choose choice! If you would like to add your thoughts, please message me! Your thoughts will remain anonymous, unless you'd like me to give them a source, which I would llove to do!
Keep in mind I change nothing from their statements. This is straight from their mouths. (Well, hands, because they typed them, but you know what I mean.)
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i choose choice because everyone, male and female, should be able to decide what's best for them, for their body, for their life. if we eliminate abortion, that will open doors to eliminating other freedoms.
I choose choice because, whether an ovary or testicle, toenail or hair follicle, the govt has no say over what anyone does with their body at anytime, anywhere, for any reason!!
I'm not a woman - blunitedstates.com
I don't force my religious views on people - blunitedstates.com
I was raped when I was 15 by a man that was 48. I got pregnant and had an abortion. What pro-life people don't understand is that had I gone through with the pregnancy, I probably would've killed myself - the last thing I needed was a constant reminder of my victimization ("Save" one life, destroy another basically.). They will never understand what it's like to be a little girl and get pregnant.
I am pro-choice because being victimized I felt like I lost all the control I had in the world. Choosing to live, and terminating this pregnancy was liberating because I felt like I was in control over my body and my destiny.
If abortion saves women's lives, pride, sense of security, anything, I am all for it! I am a Pro-choice woman and proud!
I know that was sloppy and I didn't articulate myself well, but that's it.
"I had an abortion when I was 21. Most people say that an abortion is a very traumatizing experience, and that women will find it nearly impossible to get over it and forgive themselves. This is not always true. I have never regretted it, and believe me, I am not a heartless, ruthless person. I am caring and generous. But I knew that if I'd had that child, he/she would've been miserable, and wouldn't have had a good life. I think about it sometimes, and I've never changed my mind. This was all for the best"