Claudette Konola
 
About two years ago Sarah Palin tried to convince the world that she was a feminist.  Mama Grizzly gave a speech to an anti-abortion group, sprinkling the term “feminism” liberally throughout. At the time the Washington Post opined that Palin was simply using the words of the women’s movement to attract more women to the conservative movement. She was selling “anti-women policies shrouded in pro-women rhetoric.” Having lived on the fringes of the women’s movement, my opinion was simpler: Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire.

Fast forward to 2012, and we are looking at a different world. The Palin new feminists are losing ground and old feminism is seeing a new awakening. Women all over Colorado are planning a march on the capital in Denver on April 28. Robyn Parker, a woman I met because we are both on the board of Western Colorado Congress of Mesa County, has been busy organizing local women to attend that march.  This march isn’t just happening in Colorado, there are similar marches being planned all over the nation for the same date.

The old feminism is experiencing resurgence because the grizzly feminists were taken seriously by Republican legislators. They started passing laws that trampled on a woman’s right to manage her own reproductive health. Some extreme legislators even passed laws that would legalize the rape of a woman by requiring transvaginal ultrasound prior to any abortion, and without the consent of the woman. 

Transvaginal ultrasound involves sticking a wand into a woman’s vagina. It is an unnecessary, and expensive medical procedure for a pregnancy that is about to be aborted. The only possible reason for a law mandating this procedure is to humiliate and punish a woman who didn’t keep her panties up, even in the case of rape or incest. Medical professionals have begun questioning the use of ultrasound on pregnant women because of its possible association with the increase of autism in our society. Republican legislators are not doctors, but they have been dishing out prescriptions for procedures that would harm both the woman and the fetus.

Those laws were just the straw that broke the camel’s back.  Previously  legislators were insistening that Planned Parenthood, which delivers reproductive health to both men and women, be cut out of funding by both governments and the pink ribbon folks. The backlash to that move was so swift that we could see pink ribbons hitting the recycle bin all over America.

Have the Republicans learned anything? Nope! They doubled down and started talking about eliminating birth control. A bunch of out of touch Catholic Bishops linked up with some extremist Republican presidential wannabes claiming that giving women access to birth control, through their health insurance, was a violation of their religious freedom. The religious freedom of women be damned.

And now the poor misunderstood GOP is facing an 18 point gender gap for the fall election, with women supporting Democrats over Republicans. The supreme irony is that yesterday John McCain recommended that Mitt Romney select Palin as his running mate. Mama grizzly wasn’t a feminist two years ago, and she isn’t one now. Putting the resurging women’s movement back into the bottle, and corking it with a Palin is not going happen. Women are mad as hell about the laws that are taking away their freedom, and no half-time governor from Alaska is going to change that, even if she is a pretty sex object.

Homework

Washington Post Story About Palin & Feminism

Gallop Poll Reveals Gender Gap

McCain Tells CBS that Romney Should Pick Palin
 
 
Newsweek’s March 29, 2010 issue has an article about the 46 women who sued that organization in 1970 because they were prohibited from writing stories because of their sex. They could do the investigative reporting, but the stories they dug up were handed over to men to write.

The article goes on to discuss the gains women have or haven’t made in the ensuing decades. At the time they instigated their lawsuit, with a young Eleanor Holmes Norton as their attorney, women earned $0.58 for every $1.00 that men earned. By 2009, when President Obama signed the Lilly Ledbetter Act, which supports equal pay for equal work—a concept originally passed in 1963 during Kennedy’s administration, the women’s pay had increased to $0.77 for every $1.00 that men earned.

I remember a campaign sponsored by the National Federation of Business and Professional Women about the time that I was President of the Downtown Denver Business and Professional Women’s Club. We called it the red purse campaign, and I still have a campaign style button with a picture of a red purse dating from 1988. The purpose of the campaign was to draw national attention to wage disparity.

It seems the wage disparity is still with us, although some ground has been gained. Until women earn the same as men, however, we can’t say that we are there yet. Other rights that women fought for are eroding also. Colorado was the first state in the nation to legalize abortion for women who had been raped, in the case of incest, or if the life of the mother was at stake. I see that there will be a ballot issue this fall asking Coloradans to make abortion illegal. When considering that vote, which was soundly defeated the last time it appeared on the ballot, I’ll be thinking about trends. It wasn’t too long ago that using contraception was illegal for married women. And the Equal Rights Amendment was never ratified by the states.

We aren’t there yet, but I want to see women continue to make progress, not go back to the conditions that were prevalent when I was a young woman starting a career—over forty years ago.

Homework

http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_14769112?source=pophome

http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_14769112?source=pophome

http://www.bpwfoundation.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=5172

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cecile-richards/international-womens-day_b_489752.html

http://hosted2.ap.org/COGRA/a1210881e1db47d69e4869ba913e6100/Article_2010-03-27-US-Abortion-Amendment-Colorado/id-pf83bf47ef2f94cd6b606b7db6fa49933

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abortion_in_the_United_States

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griswold_v._Connecticut