6:59 am By Maegan La Mala · children|Family|GLBT|Health|Immigration|Justice|Latin America|Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice|sex|sexuality|Women · 3 Comments
9 Aug 2010
We are proud and honored to participate in the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health‘s first annual Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice. Everyday this week, we will feature a post relating to Latinas and reproductive justice and invite you to discuss with us and with each other what reproductive justice looks like for nuestra comunidad.
All of our posts and the posts of others will be linked to the Latina Institute’s blog, Nuestra Vida, Nuestra Voice> (Our Life, Our Voice). We invite our readers to visit that site as well to further the conversation.
11:39 am By Maegan La Mala · children|Health|Immigration|Politics|Women · Comments Off
21 Nov 2008
You can’t have it both ways. You cannot in one breath say that abortions are the cause of illegal immigration and criticize a woman’s decision to have a child outside of marriage especially if both decisions are based in “American uteruses”. You can’t pick and choose your female reproductive organs.
Latina Congresswoman Linda Sanchez is receiving criticism for her decision to have a child for the simple reason that she is not legally married.
Twenty years ago, it simply wouldn’t have been possible — pregnant, single and a member of Congress? Oh, the scandal! But Hester Prynne has morphed into Juno MacGuff . . . and “unwed mother” has been recast as “single mom.”
Who do we have to thank for that? Thousands, from Madonna to Dan Quayle. In 1992, Quayle waged moral warfare on the sitcom character “Murphy Brown” — famous, rich, single and pregnant. . . . And, of course, Bristol Palin.
10:27 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Justice|Women · 7 Comments
25 Sep 2008A friend sent me the news that a Louisiana state Representative (John LaBruzzo) wants to “pay poor women $1000 to have their tubes tide” while at the same time give “tax incentives for college-educated, higher-income people to have more children.”
Of course, Mr. LaBruzzo has emphasized that his little idea has nothing to do with race, and it is actually the moral alternative to paying women to have abortions:
LaBruzzo said he opposes abortion and paying people to have abortions. He described a sterilization program as providing poor people with better opportunities to avoid welfare, because they would have fewer children to feed and clothe.
Because, you know, god forbid any politician demand that the minimum wage be increased or fund scholarship programs so that women can go to college and enter into the upper-income strata. I mean, why couldn’t he have said, I will pay any woman who enters into a college degree driven program a thousand dollars? Why is that not considered a viable ‘solution’ to the ‘problem’ of poor people having kids?
I think that if he did something like that, he (along with the rest of the ‘capitalism rawks’ cronies) would have to admit that it’s not the individual that has a problem and it’s not the reproductive capabilities of poor/women of color that is the problem–it’s the system. It’d be admitting that sometimes, the system sucks so desperatly that whole swaths of people need more than just a bootstrap, but actual *help* to succeed in it.
La Macha has spoken.
12:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Chile|Health|Religion|Women · Comments Off
25 Apr 2008
When a Constitutional Court of Chile blocked a government-sponsored program that distributed emergency contraceptives to women as young as 14 free of charge, thousands of people protested in the capital of Santiago.
Now, hundreds are planning to renounce their membership in the Roman Catholic Church on April 29, since the court’s decision is linked to the Vatican’s position that the morning after pill is akin to at best birth control, at worst, abortion.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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