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Reports

Obama’s Stuck Playing the Same Lame Game

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Posted on Jan 29, 2009

By Ellen Goodman

    It must be the world’s longest-running game of ideological pingpong. In 1984, Ronald Reagan aimed an overhand smash at international organizations, pledging that America would no longer give family planning money to any group that even counseled or referred women for abortions. Ping.

    In 1993, Bill Clinton revoked this global gag rule two days after he took office. Pong.

    In 2001, George W. Bush signed the gag order back in place as his first order of business. Ping.

    Then, in 2009, Barack Obama rescinded the order again. Pong, anyone?

    Obama’s act was greeted with the familiar cheers and jeers of old rhetorical enemies, but I heard a different voice. In the quiet statement that accompanied his move, the new man in the White House described abortion as “a political wedge issue, the subject of a back-and-forth debate that has served only to divide us. I have no desire to continue this stale and fruitless debate.”

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    The president pledged to do more than lower the volume. “In the coming weeks, my administration will initiate a fresh conversation on family planning, working to find areas of common ground to best meet the needs of women and families at home and around the world.”

    Well, I’ve been around too long to be optimistic about beating this pingpong table into common ground. One of the last things Bush did on his way out the door was to sign a regulation letting any institution refuse to provide services such as emergency contraception. On Inauguration Day, CatholicVote.org aired a video on BET that perverted Obama’s life story into an ad against abortion. And the very next day, right-to-life marchers bore posters depicting the new, pro-choice president as “Adolf Obama.”

    But I shared a modicum of hope for a “fresh conversation.” Pro-choice arguments won on Election Day from South Dakota to Colorado to Washington, D.C. But what also won was the promise of pragmatism over ideology.

    It’s not news that Americans want to reduce the number of abortions. This may not be as exciting as the pings and pongs of a political confrontation, but it signals agreement in favor of sex education that’s accurate and contraception that’s affordable and available.

    Many pro-choice supporters too are eager to move from a defensive crouch protecting rights to an open stance in favor of both prevention and a wider support system for families. As Frances Kissling, a longtime philosopher for the pro-choice community puts it, “We can use these years to re-establish a reproductive health movement that is clearly recognized for also helping women who want to have babies. ” It’s here that the pro-choice groups can find common cause with the progressive wing of the pro-life movement, including that majority of Catholics who voted for Obama.

    But before the first week was out, there was another loud and disruptive pong.

    Searching through the economic stimulus plan for a villain, the balky Republican leadership jumped on a provision to allow states to expand family planning under Medicaid. Minority Leader John Boehner was everywhere, fuming in high cable-talk-show dudgeon over the very idea of spending “hundreds of millions on contraceptives. How does that stimulate the economy?”

    I’m not sure if family planning expansion would stimulate the economy any more or less than the rest of $87 billion for Medicaid in the plan. I’m not sure if it would jump-start the recovery more or less than, say, arts funding. But I am sure why it was targeted. The right wing was back at the game.

    The disheartening thing is how swiftly Obama caved. This is the president who promised to “reach out to those on all sides of this issue to achieve the goal of reducing unintended pregnancies.” One shot from the right and he told Congress to drop family planning from the package.

    Women’s health was reframed as pork and dumped as if it were no more fundamental to family life than the proposal to refurbish the National Mall. All this in an elusive quest for bipartisan support. As Kissling sighed, “This tired and stale debate got a tired and stale reaction. Is it the old story, that women are expendable?”

    These are hard times. When jobs go, so does health insurance and with it coverage for contraception. In a tough economy, people face hard decisions about childbearing and child rearing. Unplanned pregnancies rise and with them, yes, abortions.

    So, what happened to that fresh conversation? Where did that common ground go? Score this one for the ideologues.

    Ellen Goodman’s e-mail address is ellengoodman(at)globe.com.

    © 2009, Washington Post Writers Group


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By cyrena, January 31 at 11:32 pm #

By dihey, January 29 at 1:43 pm #

Cleanup should begin at home. Mr. Obama, send Congress a bill that will end “don’t ask. don’t tell”.

~~~

He’s already started this dihey…

President Obama to Reverse ‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’ military policy

http://www.thehopeforamerica.com/play.php?id=173

And, it’s President Obama to you.

You really should pay more attention to what’s been going on since Jan 20th dihey. While you guys have been bitching and moaning as usual, the President has been working to give you everything your heart desires.

Try to keep up. The new Navy Secretary also happens to be openly gay. President Obama appointed him.

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By KDelphi, January 31 at 9:31 pm #

It was stupid. The smoking cessation ,too.

If the uS EVER plans on a universal heatlh care system,(which I dont think it does) birth control and non-smoking would help enormously with the cost!

The smoking cessation industry is getting ridiculous! It costs about $50 for as couple days worth of patches, and, the Rx drugs are even worse!

If a rep/senator votes against SCGHIP and, birth control funding, in one day—-he is a hypocrit beyond repair.

As someone said on this post—this is not a “fight between moral equals”—or maybe they didnt exactly say that. But its not. Boner has no right to be heard at all. DeMint, LIeberman—-they dont listen to citizens.

Yes, convict Bush et al, for gawd’s sake. We should not even have to push for it.

They wouldnt hesitate if you got caught , say, not paying taxes.

Daschle is the latest. (on Common Dreams) The “health” “insurance” industry gave him $220,000. (Plus he owes taxes)http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/01/31-2

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By tdbach, January 30 at 10:22 am #

Well said, C.P.T.L. I’m not sure I agree entirely, but you make a compelling case.

Will it take a final assault, an unmittigated show of force to rid ourselves of a pillaging brand of goernment-crippling Republican party? Or can we succeed by a thousand small cuts?

One thing is certain, we can’t get rid of them by cutting them and then nursing them back to health.

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By C.P.T.L., January 29 at 10:37 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

One does not find common ground with a S.O.B., with a liar, with a sneak, with an unrepentant detractor who takes a mile for every inch given, with those who have not the slightest interest in cooperation - the G.O.P. The stuff of common ground does not exist; there is nothing from which to find or create any.

The answer is to win: to impeach, to prosecute, to investigate, to protest, to engage the press, to manouver and out manouver, to render irrelevant, to demote, to fire, to harry and harass, to end.

This is not a fight between two equal political opinions such that from civil engagement a harmonious working accord might emerge, nor is it a fight to attain that mechanism: it is a fight as yet unfinished between what has proven itself to be false and what might prove to be true - between power that has obscured realism with ideology for the purpose of being ineffective, to deliberately mis-govern in the service of corporate interests vs realistic government that serves citizens - or, rather, the possibility of it.

What we are witnessing when Boehner smugly lies to the American people with a falsity such as, “hundreds of millions on contraceptives. How does that stimulate the economy?”, is the product of no impeachment of president Bush or Vice president Cheney, no national airing of their crime and malfeasance and deliberate misgovernment - and the attendant truth that the G.O.P. as a block supported it with lies.

You cannot change what you will not confront. Obama’s win did not finish the work dodged by Democrats. Bush and Cheney and the G.O.P’s present state of ignomy is a suppression, the loss of elections, not an end - not an equal value to their having faced a true end, destitution as delivered by publicity’s harshest light; known it, tasted it, wandered in the wilderness and changed internally because of it - they have not changed and neither have we as a nation.

If we had, Boehner wouldn’t have had the guts to say such a thing even if he had the sense to not say it.

It’s said that the G.O.P. has nothing left and is grasping at straws, but that is not true, they have everything they ever wanted or needed except traction - their national media liar machinery is in place and they are waiting until there is something to dig into, some kind of scandal. Then we will see the same old behavior - kicking up a grand dust storm and keeping it going - not one thing new.

Because creating obscurity IS their fight - it has nothing to do with what goals they would have us believe they are about.

Some fights don’t allow the nice option to drop fists, shake hands and move on - and forcing the imaginary option to exist will not make it so. Such behavior is evasion.

The question is, before it is too late, will Obama identify the effects of his party’s cowardice, confront it and see that to finish the fight is to create the only sound foundation for fulfilling his mandate?

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By Mitchell P., January 29 at 7:44 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Pro-choicers and progressive pro-lifers can hopefully agree on the need for funding and programs for family planning, educations and contraceptives.  That will reduce abortions.  That is everyone’s common goal, regardless of whether they feel it should be legal or not.

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By dihey, January 29 at 6:43 pm #

Cleanup should begin at home. Mr. Obama, send Congress a bill that will end “don’t ask. don’t tell”. And while you are engaged in cleaning at home point out that states must have a “compelling interest” to refuse giving civil marriage licenses to homosexual couples.
And why is it that we advise on abortion in countries whose governments apparently refuse to take the responsibility to do that?

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