That abominable old Jew Gloria Steinem has been waiting ever since abortion was legalized for it to be de-legalized so she could make a big show of women’s insanity. She’s finally gotten her wish, but she’s pushing 90, and can’t exactly get out in the streets like she did in the 1960s.
Thankfully for her, her ideology of killing babies so you can have sex with an unlimited number of strange men, ostensibly with zero consequences, has spread far and wide.
AP:
At 88, GloriaSteinem has long been the nation’s most visible feminist and advocate for women’s rights. But at 22, she was a frightened American in London getting an illegal abortion of a pregnancy so unwanted, she actually tried to throw herself down the stairs to end it.
Her response to the Supreme Court’s decision overruling Roe v. Wade is succinct: “Obviously,” she wrote in an email message, “without the right of women and men to make decisions about our own bodies, there is no democracy.”
I am tired of trying to figure out what this word “democracy” means. Ultimately, I think Ezra Pound was right all those years ago.
There’s nothing really to add to that.
Steinem’s blunt remark cuts to the heart of the despair some opponents are feeling about Friday’s historic rollback of the 1973 case legalizing abortion. If a right so central to the overall fight for women’s equality can be revoked, they ask, what does it mean for the progress women have made in public life in the intervening 50 years?
“One of the things that I keep hearing from women is, ‘My daughter’s going to have fewer rights than I did. And how can that be?’” says Debbie Walsh, of the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. “If this goes, what else can go? It makes everything feel precarious.”
Reproductive freedom was not the only demand of second-wave feminism, as the women’s movement of the ’60s and ’70s is known, but it was surely one of the most galvanizing issues, along with workplace equality.
The women who fought for those rights recall an astonishing decade of progress from about 1963 to 1973 including the right to equal pay, the right to use birth control, and Title IX in 1972 which bans discrimination in education. Capping it off was Roe v. Wade a year later, granting a constitutional right to abortion.
Many of the women who identified as feminists at the time had an illegal abortion or knew someone who did. Steinem, in fact, credits a “speak-out” meeting she attended on abortion in her 30s as the moment she pivoted from journalism to activism — and finally felt enabled to speak about her own secret abortion.
“Abortion is so tied to the women’s movement in this country,” says Carole Joffe, a sociologist at the University of California, San Francisco medical school who studies and teaches the history of abortion. “Along with improved birth control, what legal abortion meant was that women who were heterosexually active could still take part in public life. It enabled the huge change we’ve seen in women’s status over the last 50 years.” Joffe says many women, like her, now feel that the right to contraception could be at risk — something she calls “unthinkable.”
Wow, I wonder if she’s also a Russian Jew. That would be a huge coincidence!
Here’s the thing: feminism is a failed experiment. It has served zero purpose, other than to allow women to go around harassing everyone in public, having sex with hundreds of men to serve their own narcissism, and has ultimately destabilized the very foundations of human civilization.
They are not wrong when they say that restricting abortion is a way to walk back women’s rights. Of course it is exactly that. Evangelical pro-lifers might be too cucked-out to admit that, but it’s true. In that way, Jew feminists understand all of this a lot better than goy Christian life activists.
We literally want women barefoot, pregnant and in the kitchen, because if they are allowed anywhere else, they will begin gnawing away at the foundations of civilization like rats gnawing away at the foundations of a house. If they truly want to live as grimed-out whores, they can go be literal whores in a red light district where the police tacitly refuse to police them. They can’t take the whore lifestyle into polite society.
The jig is up!
This woman mailed her period blood to the Supreme Court to protest the overturning of #RoeVWade pic.twitter.com/Km9z3YnDt6
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) June 26, 2022