Pro Chioce Black America

 I trust no Bush but my own
I have been away from the site for a while , for that i'm very sorry. I noticed that i left out a very vital part of the feminst sphere. Our right to chose. I am very pro choice. Does that mean that I think people should use abortion like birth control absolutly not. I beleive that by outlawing abortion you send the message that women are for making babies and the potential child is always more important than the woman. To ban abortion would sends the same message as denying a woman lifesaving chemo therapy becuase she is pregnuant even if she chooses to undergo it. While I collect information links and write a few little essays. I will leave with a poem that somes up the pro choice movement.

With the passing of the global gag rule the current US administration has declreaed war on women and our health. The so-called "Mexico City Policy" is a violation of the principle of free speech, and presents a clear danger to women's health. Its requirement that any facility that provides abortion services be prohibited from receiving U.S. aid amounts to blackmail of clinics that are desperately short of resources. Many of these clinics must choose between providing a full range of reproductive choices to their clients and having the funds needed to operate. This policy is nothing more than an attempt to impose extreme anti-choice ideology on citizens of other countries, and I will continue to oppose it at every opportunity AS SHOULD YOU. Write to your congressman and you local and national legislators.

A poem by Marge Piercy

Right To Life

A woman is not a pear tree
thrusting her fruit in mindless fecundity
into the world. Even pear trees bear
heavily in one year and rest and grow the next.
An orchid gone wild drops few warm rotting
fruit in the grass but the trees stretch
high and wiry gifting the birds forty
feet up among inch long thorns
broken atavistically from the smooth wood.

A woman is not a basket you place
your buns in to keep them warm. Not a brood
hen you can slip duck eggs under.
Not the purse holding the coins of your
descendants till you spend them in wars.
Not a bank where your genes gather interest
and interesting mutations in the tainted
rain, any more than you are.

You plant corn and you harvest
it to eat or sell. You put the lamb
in the pasture to fatten and haul it in to
butcher for chops. You slice the mountain
in two for a road and gouge the high plains
for coal and the waters run muddy for
miles and years. Fish die but you do not
call them yours unless you wished to eat them.

Now you legislate mineral rights in a woman.
You lay claim to her pastures for grazing,
fields for growing babies like iceberg
lettuce. You value children so dearly
that none ever go hungry, none weep
with no one to tend them when mothers
work, none lack fresh fruit,
none chew lead or cough to death and your
orphanages are empty. Every noon the best
restaurants serve poor children steaks.
At this moment at nine o'clock a partera
is performing a table top abortion on an
unwed mother in Texas who can't get
Medicaid any longer. In five days she will die
of tetanus and her little daughter will cry
and be taken away. Next door a husband
and wife are sticking pins in the son
they did not want. They will explain
for hours how wicked he is,
how he wants discipline.

We are all born of woman, in the rose
of the womb we suckled our mother's blood
and every baby born has a right to love
like a seedling to sun. Every baby born
unloved, unwanted, is a bill that will come
due in twenty years with interest, an anger
that must find a target, a pain that will
beget pain. A decade downstream a child
screams, a woman falls, a synagogue is torched,
a firing squad is summoned, a button
is pushed and the world burns.


I will choose what enters me, what becomes
of my flesh. Without choice, no politics,
no ethics lives. I am not your cornfield,
not your uranium mine, not your calf
for fattening, not your cow for milking.
You may not use me as your factory.
Priests and legislators do not hold shares
in my womb or my mind.
This is my body. If I give it to you
I want it back. My life
is a non-negotiable demand.

From The Moon Is Always Female by Marge Piercy Copyright (c) 1980 by Marge Piercy. Reprinted by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, a Division of Random House, Inc.

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