Archive | December, 2011

Sherights Spotlight: Nancy Schwartzman

13 Dec Nancy3 Photo250dpi

Nancy Schwartzman is a courageous filmmaker, speaker and activist fighting to empower women and end sexual violence.  Named one of the “10 Filmmakers to Watch in 2011″ by Independent Magazine, Nancy’s work explores the intersection of sexuality, new media, and the complexities of modern relationships. She is an inspiration to me as a women’s rights activist, and I’m thrilled Nancy agreed to do a Q&A with sherights.

Read on to learn more about her!

Q: What was your inspiration to create The Line Campaign?

I made “The Line” as a film based off of my own experiences with sexual assault—both the trauma of the experience and the difficulty in getting any kind of justice. Now, the campaign that has built itself around the movie is designed to bring the movie to college campuses and start critical dialogues on consent, sex, sexual and dating violence, and rape that is relevant to their lives—something that empowers young activists to think creatively about how to prevent sexual assault and violence in their communities.

I’m thrilled that my work with The Line Campaign, which involves hundreds of screenings and thousands of conversations with young people about their boundaries, has led to new ways to prevent violence. With a fantastic team, we developed the Circle of 6 app that won the White House Challenge. This App will be ready for download in early February and links you and 6 friends into a circle dedicated to preventing violence before it happens.

Q: As part of The Line Campaign, you ask young people to define their lines of consent. What have been some of your favorite responses?

One of my personal favorite responses was, “I am a sexual being, not a sexual object”—I think that this epitomizes the idea of consensual, positive sexuality while still combating all of the negative and damaging ways that female sexuality is portrayed in the media.

And for fun, someone wrote: “My line is between Burger King and McDonald’s where you’ll be having it your way and I’ll be loving it…”

Q: We’re seeing a lot of victim blaming in the media recently, from coverage of DSK to the NYPD rape cops and beyond. Unfortunately, this trend isn’t limited to the media, but has also permeated healthcare, justice and educational systems. How do we, as individuals, fight back against systemic, institutional victim blaming?

First, we need to not victim blame ourselves, and call out victim blaming when we see it. We need to fight and voice our discontent with rape prevention tactics that place the blame on the victim rather than the perpetrator or the system. It is necessary to educate and criticize media that blames victims, that creates a culture where rape is something that happens to a certain person and not because of a certain kind of person.

Q: If you had to give one piece of advice to sexual assault survivors, what would it be?

Believe in your own truth and trust your gut. You deserve to be heard and believed, and seek help and friends that believe in you.

Q: Who are your feminist role models?

My incredible team of bloggers and interns! They are young, sharp, and industrious dedicated to expanding definitions of feminism, and challenging the status quo at every turn.

To learn more about Nancy, go here. Follow her on Twitter @thelinecampaign and @fancynancynyc.

Letting Women Die?

5 Dec no-more-coat-hangers

If you’re anything like me, you might be wondering if somehow you’ve been transported back in time, to when family planning was inaccessible and abortion was illegal. Incredulously, it is 2011 – not 1950 – and here we are, fighting for reproductive rights as if we never even had them. If Congress has its way, that’s exactly what 2012 will bring: a complete reversal of these rights. From the proposed 2012 budget that cuts funding for family planning services to a bill that outright denies women lifesaving abortions, we are in the midst of the biggest uphill battle in recent history.

H.R. 358, the “Protect Life Act” (or as I like to call it, the “Let Women Die Act”), which allows hospitals to deny women abortion care even if it means they will die without it, passed in the House this October. This reverses decades of precedent. Under current law, all patients are protected by the Emergency Medical Treatment & Labor Act, which requires hospitals to provide treatment to any patient in an emergency, regardless of ability to pay. This new bill creates an exception for pregnant women. If that isn’t discriminating against a specific class of people, I don’t know what is.

The bill also sets out to ban all insurance coverage for abortion by denying federal subsidies to plans that cover abortion, even though private funds must already be segregated to cover any abortion care. This will ultimately result in a ban on abortion coverage for individuals and small businesses accessing coverage through the health care exchanges, and threatens all private insurance coverage of abortion.

It doesn’t end there, either. H.R. 358 vastly expands conscience clause protections so that anyone involved in the provision of abortion services – from receptionists who make appointments to insurance company employees that process claims – can refuse to provide services on any grounds. So much for being able to make private medical decisions with your doctor; any anti-choice cog in the health care wheel can obstruct you from obtaining an abortion.

Every single Republican voted in favor of H.R. 358, as did 11 Democrats. While the bill is not likely to pass in the Senate, it serves as a stark reminder that to many elected officials, women’s health is nothing more than a political bargaining chip. This bill is not about funding or protecting life. It is about cutting abortion access so that only a small, privileged percent of Americans can afford it. These politicians are willing to do whatever it takes to keep abortion out of reach, even if it means women must forfeit their lives. Call me crazy, but I don’t see how letting women die is in any way, shape, or form “pro-life.”

Keeping true to form, the House leadership’s draft Fiscal Year 2012 Labor, Health and Human Services appropriation bill also takes a stab at abortion and family planning, in complete defiance of the thousands who protested across the country and descended on the Capitol to save family planning funding in the 2011 budget. The proposed budget rehashes a lot of what the House has already tried to accomplish through extreme bills and budget cuts. According to RH Reality Check, the new budget would prohibit federal funding for Planned Parenthood through programs such as Medicaid, which provides low-income women with preventative health care; eliminate funding for the Title X Family Planning Program, which provides access to family planning that helps millions of low-income women avoid unintended pregnancies; ban insurance coverage of abortion in the new health exchanges under the Affordable Care Act; eliminate new benefits in the Affordable Care Act that cover women’s preventative services like mammograms, cancer screenings, and birth control; and cut the Teen Pregnancy Prevention Initiative by $65 million, stipulating that $20 million of that money must be used to provide abstinence-only education, which was proven ineffective in a Congressionally mandated nine-year study in 2007.

Once again, the House leadership defies common logic. If you want to reduce the rate of abortion, decimating access to family planning and culling resources for abstinence-only education is not going to help achieve that goal. Conservatives are finally showing their cards: it’s not just about abortion. It’s about fundamentally controlling women’s lives, from the bedroom to the doctor’s office. What else could explain the attacks on birth control (which 99% of women use at some point in their lives), comprehensive sex education, and even general preventative health care?

It is a sad and revolting time when ideological agendas trump medicine and basic human decency. If our current Congress’s record doesn’t provide a compelling example of why it’s important to vote for pro-choice and pro-women candidates, I don’t know what does. With the 2012 Presidential election on the horizon, it’s absolutely critical that we shout our demands:

We demand access to comprehensive health care, including preventive services, family planning, and abortion. We demand the best available medical care, especially if our lives are at stake. We demand that our concerns be heeded by the politicians elected to serve us. And we demand that women’s lives be at least as valued as much as the life of a fetus.

This article originally appeared in NOW-NYC’s Winter 2011 newsletter.

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