Basically, Dem Rep Teresa Fedor got sick and tired of men(mostly) debating a very restrictive abortion bill. So she got up on her hind legs and told them they shouldn’t dare judge her. She’d been raped and got pregnant many years ago, while she was in the military. She had an abortion.
Ms. Fedor I salute you for speaking out like that.
I read it as a backhand whack at the male legislators, implying that they were treating all women as subhuman animals. (And then this female animal got up on her hind legs and confronted them)
John Mortimer’s barrister Horace Rumpole frequently spoke about “getting up on his hind legs” to make a point, and obviously wasn’t insulting himself at all. It was, if anything, self-deprecating. I assumed the poster was channeling Mortimer.
Getting up on your “hind legs” is an old-timey way of describing someone who is boldly/aggressively taking a stand on something. It has certainly applied to men in the past, and wasn’t considered an insult.
Did they end up passing the anti-abortion bill in question or is it still in process?
I think its important for women especially to speak out like this. The normalization of abortion by pulling back the cloak of shame and secrecy can only help more people accept it. That, and the new clinic I just read that does abortions but is oriented more like a spa is a step in the right direction.
This is very true. As long as abortion iss thought of as this dirty, shameful thing, as irredeemably “bad,” then it will be im-fucking-possible to have dialogue free of overwrought, emotional, “Won’t somebody pleeeeease think of the children?!?” type of hyperbole, and instead have the debate grounded in rational logic and scientific facts.
I know, personally, a couple of folks who thought of getting an abortion as something akin to getting a DUI – nothing more or less than a source of personal shame. When they found out I’d gotten one, you could literally *see *their mental state shift. "Huh. **Purple **had one and she’s not Satan Incarnate. Hmmm … " :dubious: … which opened their minds to the possibility of rational, logical debate.