If you’re like me, you don’t think a whole lot about birth
control. You probably don’t have much heterosexual sex, though I shouldn’t
assume, and you likely believed that we’d come to a grudging truce around a
woman’s right to control her reproductive life. In the 80s and 90s, of course,
abortion was the battleground of the culture wars; nowadays we all know that
it’s about the gays.
Which is why I have this queasy feeling that I’ve time
traveled back about 30 years. Abortion is the hot topic and I notice that
plastic jewelry and jumpsuits are back at Macy’s. No one’s talking about gay
marriage, and women are on TV explaining why having sex for pleasure doesn’t
make them sluts.
Has the far right (and by that I also mean the 2012
Republican presidential candidates) given up on the gays? Are fundamentalists
going retro? It would be nice to imagine they’ve gotten tired of us. Maybe we
can worry about other things now, like whether Martina Navratilova has had some
work done.
But don’t relax just yet.
The far right still has its sites on us. Today’s crusade
against women’s sexual autonomy is only a redecorated version of the same moral
outrage that has always given them such good political traction. There’s good
reason for LGBT people to pay close attention to what’s happening to
reproductive rights:
Consider the new breed of abortion laws, such as a Texas law
that forces women seeking an abortion to endure an internal ultrasound, a
detailed description of the fetus, audio of its heartbeat and a 24-hour waiting
period. This isn’t about any health concerns, just morality. In fact women
report that the experience is degrading, complicated, and, in essence, medical
rape. They’re being put through the wringer for making personal choices about
their bodies. Sound familiar?
Women can exempt themselves from part of the requirement by
signing a sworn affidavit that they got pregnant through rape or incest. In
other words, they didn’t mean to have sex; someone made them. If the real issue here were the sanctity of
life, I don’t see why rape should let anyone off the hook. But proponents of
these laws say they exist to "protect women." I’m ware of this word, "protect,"
when I see the harm done to LGBT people in order to "protect" the family.
A bill recently passed the Arizona House that would force
doctors to lie about the breast cancer risks associated with abortion (there
aren’t any, by the way) to scare women out of terminating their pregnancies.
This protects women from the truth, evidently. Hiding the facts has been a
frequent anti-gay tactic too. For example, the Prop 8 people successfully sued
to permanently seal the video record of the federal Prop 8 trial, a record that
beautifully demonstrates the importance of LGBT rights. In Tennessee,
legislators are trying to forbid any discussion about LGBT lives in school, as
if ignorance were a moral virtue.
Almost all of this moral hypocrisy is wrapped in the mantle
of religious freedom, as in, "Your laws about equality and respect for people
trample on our religious rights." The far right howled when Obama pushed for
contraception coverage in business run by religious institutions. If you heard
any Rush Limbaugh last month, you heard some of the story. What you might have
missed amid all the outrage about Rush’s "slut" and "prostitute" language is
how he reframed the debate so that people who are restricting women’s freedoms
were presented as the real victims – victims of religious persecution. This is
a continuing trope also used against LGBT people for ostensibly forcing our
lifestyles on God-fearing folks, in violation of their 1st Amendment rights.
It’s a clever trick.
All of this shows how
quickly issues that we thought were settled ages ago suddenly become debatable
again. History proves that progress can turn on a dime, but I don’t really
think that’s happened yet. Still, we’re far from being able to sit back and
chill, assured that anyone’s freedoms are here to stay.