Anti-Abortion Fake Clinics Play the Victim, with Congressional Help
We must recognize the real threat that the anti-abortion movement and their fake clinics pose to our communities.
Shame and stigma around abortion are pervasive regardless of ability, but ableist beliefs and practices add layers to this intersection.
We must recognize the real threat that the anti-abortion movement and their fake clinics pose to our communities.
The truth is that even those who claim to be opposed to punishing people who have abortions are working towards a future where that punishment is increasingly common
The most basic right to control our own bodies is under attack, and we cannot expect the systems they created these harms to fix them in all of the nuanced and individualized ways we need them too.
The Pregnancy Network believes pregnant people don’t know what is best for themselves. They’re wrong, and we’re letting our community know.
Here are some questions that should be answered positively before getting involved with any reproductive justice groups and organizations.
People with disabilities make up a quarter of the U.S. population, and to exclude them from movement work is not only harmful, but ignores that we share intertwining struggles.
By removing courses on “abortion pill reversal” from state-backed nursing boards, we can stop the spread of the unscientific, unproven, and unethically-imposed theory of “abortion pill reversal”
Randolph County, North Carolina became the fourth in the state to pass a resolution declaring itself an anti-abortion “sanctuary” within county limits. Resolutions like these are toothless.
The mission of anti-abortion fake clinics is to use disinformation about abortion, religion, and reproductive health to manipulate and coerce pregnant people.
First Amendment protections apply to governmental overreach, not private companies like Google and Facebook.