2014年3月5日星期三

In South Dakota, The Wolf Has Lost Its Clothes

 

Next week, the South Dakota legislature is expected to pass HB 1162, a bill that stereotypes Asian immigrants and restricts access to abortion. Supporters of the measure are using racially inflammatory language, invoking nativism and warning of the supposed danger created by the presence of Asians in the state. The bans purport to criminalize doctors who perform "sex-selective abortions," which supporters claim are being sought out by Asian-American women.Stace Nelson, one of the Representatives that voted in favor of the bill, stated,paper balls "Let me tell you, our population in South Dakota is a lot more diverse than it ever was. There are cultures that look at a sex-selection abortion as being culturally okay. And I will suggest to you that we are embracing individuals from some of those cultures in this country, or in this state." 

This rhetoric is infuriating, but it is not new. The only thing new is how blatantly xenophobic the language in South Dakota is. These bans have typically been wolves in sheeps' clothing, thinly veiled in the language of equality. In South Dakota the wolf has lost its clothes.Since 2011, abortion bans parading as women's rights bills and exploiting racial stereotypes have been on the rise. Lawmakers have proposed this in Congress many times and, in 2013, it was the second most proposed abortion ban at the state level. Given the onslaught of various types of attacks on abortion in recent years, this is striking. The ACLU, representing the National Asian Pacific American Women's Forum and the NAACP of Maricopa County, is currently challenging Arizona's version of this ban in court. 

The hypocrisy of this bill is clear. Supporters claim Asian immigrants do not value women and girls, when their legislative records show plainly how little they care for the well-being of women. Instead of supporting measures that promote equal pay or ending violence against women, they are interfering in our most personal, private decisions. If they truly cared about gender inequity, their legislative agendas would look dramatically different.Son preference, and sex-selection that can result from it, are deeply disturbing.Custom Gaming HeadsetHowever, there is no conclusive evidence that sex-selection is happening in the United States and, in fact, 2012 National Asian-American Survey data shows that Asian-Americans do not prefer to have boys over girls.honeycomb balls

没有评论:

发表评论