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CousinIT

(10,763 posts)
4. Denial of women's reproductive rights in the US is also a legacy of slavery
Mon Nov 13, 2017, 08:48 AM
Nov 2017
https://www.thenation.com/article/reproductive-rights-and-long-hand-slave-breeding/

. . .

We don’t commonly recognize that American slaveholders supported closing the trans-Atlantic slave trade; that they did so to protect the domestic market, boosting their own nascent breeding operation. Women were the primary focus: their bodies, their “stock,” their reproductive capacity, their issue. Planters advertised for them in the same way as they did for breeding cows or mares, in farm magazines and catalogs. They shared tips with one another on how to get maximum value out of their breeders. They sold or lent enslaved men as studs and were known to lock teenage boys and girls together to mate in a kind of bullpen.They propagated new slaves themselves, and allowed their sons to, and had their physicians exploit female anatomy while working to suppress African midwives’ practice in areas of fertility, contraception and abortion.Reproduction and its control became the planters’ prerogative and profit source. Women could try to escape, ingest toxins or jump out a window—abortion by suicide, except it was hardly a sure thing.

This business was not hidden at the time, as Pamela details expansively. And, indeed, there it was, this open secret, embedded in a line from Uncle Tom’s Cabin that my eyes fell upon while we were preparing to arrange books on her new shelves: “’If we could get a breed of gals that didn’t care, now, for their young uns…would be ’bout the greatest mod’rn improvement I knows on,” says one slave hunter to another after Eliza makes her dramatic escape, carrying her child over the ice flows.

. . .

Constitutionally, the fundamental civil freedom is enshrined in the Thirteenth Amendment. The amendment’s language is unadorned, so it was left to the political system to sort out what the abolition of slavery meant in all particulars. In a series of successive legal cases, the courts ruled that in prohibiting slavery the amendment also prohibits what the judiciary called its “badges and incidents,” and recognized Congress’s power “to pass all laws necessary and proper for abolishing all [of those] in the United States.”

Bridgewater argues that because slavery depended on the slaveholder’s right to control the bodies and reproductive capacities of enslaved women, coerced reproduction was as basic to the institution as forced labor. At the very least it qualifies among those badges and incidents, certainly as much as the inability to make contracts. Therefore, sexual and reproductive freedom is not simply a matter of privacy; it is fundamental to our and the law’s understanding of human autonomy and liberty. And so constraints on that freedom are not simply unconstitutional; they effectively reinstitute slavery.

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I thought of this too, especially how guys got away with it: yurbud Nov 2017 #1
Yeah, and about that wife, that brings up another point. Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #2
no way. Were any ever prosecuted? yurbud Nov 2017 #32
I'm still hunting this info down. Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #39
Technically it ain't pedophilia zipplewrath Nov 2017 #3
a Pervert by any other Name,,,,,,,,, Cryptoad Nov 2017 #10
Yup! Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #19
Well, that's a distinction without a difference to me. Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #18
When someone tells us an apple is rotten LanternWaste Nov 2017 #35
I understand zipplewrath Nov 2017 #38
Why? Would either make the apple more or less tasty and delicious? LanternWaste Dec 2017 #45
Denial of women's reproductive rights in the US is also a legacy of slavery CousinIT Nov 2017 #4
Excellent point & reference. k&r, nt appal_jack Nov 2017 #5
Yep. (nt) ehrnst Nov 2017 #6
Once one human being can treat another as property... Girard442 Nov 2017 #8
Yep. It boggles my mind the way some right wingers raccoon Nov 2017 #34
So raping slaves was a money making operation and not only accepted but encouraged. nt Irish_Dem Nov 2017 #17
Thanks for the link. These are the connections that have to made Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #21
Thank you clayclai Nov 2017 #36
Is it any wonder.... Aviation Pro Nov 2017 #7
Then DownriverDem Nov 2017 #13
if the man is the primary breadwinner, she may feel she has to just take it. yurbud Nov 2017 #33
No wonder at all. Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #22
Texas was a Confederate state cannabis_flower Nov 2017 #9
16 years old in Minnesota n/t progree Nov 2017 #11
And include "The age of consent is gender neutral and... Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #24
Right you are. argyl Nov 2017 #27
I corrected this already clayclai Nov 2017 #37
It is a legacy of the south. I remember hearing stories about Jerry lee Lewis marrying SummerSnow Nov 2017 #12
Gawd, I forgot about Presley and Lewis and the Color Purple. Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #23
Slavery is an abomination and the source of a lot of evil in the U.S. yardwork Nov 2017 #14
Hear! Hear! yardwork. Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #25
how do these heaven05 Nov 2017 #15
Yes, I was going to respond the lowest level of consciousness Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #26
Women throughout history have been viewed as property. Irish_Dem Nov 2017 #16
I think you might like this article in reference to #MeToo because Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #28
Omg it feels like she channeled my soul. Fabulous, thank you. Irish_Dem Nov 2017 #30
Thank you for this and the link. GoneOffShore Nov 2017 #20
You're very welcome. I'm just glad all of this ickiness Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #29
I agree. It all needs to come out. The patriarchal rule over women has to end. nt Irish_Dem Nov 2017 #31
Wow. I come to AA forum to read when I want to learn. fleabiscuit Nov 2017 #40
me too steve2470 Nov 2017 #41
Thank you so much! Kind of Blue Nov 2017 #42
yep. K&R JHan Dec 2017 #43
Thanks for the kick, JHan. Kind of Blue Dec 2017 #44
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