Intersectionality Goes Only So Far
So far, opinon against the US Supreme Court's Dobbs decision overturning Roe v Wade has been fairly predictable, centering on how Dobbs will impact poor women of color in states that limit their ability to get an abortion, since it will cost them money to travel to a state with more liberal policies. This, of course, inadvertently reveals the original purpose of Planned Parenthood, which was eugenic, aimed at increasing the rate of abortion among non-whites.
The assumption, or at least the hope, of the anti-Dobbs faction is that non-whites will recognize that reducing access to abortion in even this limited way is against their interests, when African-Americans in particular have come to understand that by limiting their birthrate through state-encouraged abortion, the ruling class also limits their numbers at the ballot box.
Another difficulty is that as a practical matter, the general population covered by the designation LGBTQ+ is much less affected by access to abortion, since pregnancies result exclusively from the male-female reproductive act, leaving aside IVF or artificial insemination, although even these in fact are intended to induce a pregnancy that is by implication desired. Thus even if drag queens, say, demonstrate against Dobbs, they're one step removed from the actual issue at hand.
And this leaves aside the subtext of a drag queen performance, which carries with it a certain cluster of feelings about women that include resentment and hatred, with an exaggerated male-oriented portrayal of female vanity and histrionics. I did a web search on "drag queen abortion" just for the heck of it, expecting to find nothing, but instead I found a sequence of images. The least disturbing is the one at the top of this post. Others, like those on the right, are more gruesome. They're anything but a sympathetic portrayal of a woman's right to choose. On the other hand, they're probably much closer to the actual intent of the whole drag queen performance, illustrating a fundamental distrust of women, particularly involving what's portrayed here as a deep suspicion of motherhood.The elites fetishize drag queens at their peril. I've already noted here that Speaker Pelosi, vain, flamboyant, and histrionic, is just one step removed from a drag queen herself, and that's not good for women. I'm not at all sure if having drag queens in an anti-Dobbs parade would be a good idea.
But there's another issue. I've not been a Rod Dreher fan here, since I don't think his adoption of Orthodoxy or even before that Roman Catholicism was ever authentic, but he does get one thing right in this recent piece:
There is an obvious Luciferian connection between the twin sacred rites of abortion and sex change. Both assert human will over life and the generative order. Both refuse the givenness of Creation. Both insist that the autonomous choosing individual has ultimate power over life and death, male and female. Both rites are necessary to upholding the Sexual Revolution, which is the event that gives meaning to the lives of the American ruling class.
We are now seeing how much that ruling class hates those it rules.
A reader writes that he doesn’t expect mass violence over Dobbs — not an abortion-related repeat of the George Floyd riots. Those riots were carried out by black people and white antifa. The kind of demographic most upset over the fall of Roe — educated middle class women — will never risk their professional status to commit acts of criminal violence, he predicts.
There are other practical problems with protesting Dobbs. My wife notes that the biggest riots so far have been in places like California, which will always have permissive laws on abortion. Thus for women in such states, some other form of civil disobedience will be needed to make their point. The most obvious would be to get preganant, travel to a state with restrictive abortion laws like North Dakota, get a back alley abortion there, and die from it. After all, isn't that the equivalent of a sit-in?The cartoon at left represents a return to a major pre-Roe argument for legalized abortion, that if it's not legal, it won't be safe, and women will be forced to use coat hangers to peform the procedure on themselves. Well, I was in college and graduate school pre-Roe, and friends and classmates from time to time found the need to find someone who'd do it. Being middle class or better, none needed a coat hanger, and none died, although their children of course always did.
The coat hanger argument was never sincere, it was always a way to hold someone else hostage, when the prosperous educated classes would always have an alternative, legal or not. Everyone drank underage back then, after all, and many smoked pot. The issue simply doesn't affect the educated classes no matter what law is passed in what state, but the other side of the coin is that the argument from the educated classes that the non-white poor need it is also racist: the assumption is that the non-white poor are too stupid and too promiscuous by nature to conduct their sexual activities prudently. This goes back to Margaret Sanger's eugenic purpose behind Planned Parenthood.
There's another problem with the intersectionality fallacy behind protesting Dobbs: it arises from the current movement for synthetic sexual identity. If men can have periods and get pregnant, men also can need abortions. I note that woke companies like Disney have announced they'll fund travel for women employees to get abortions in states that will permit it. But what if I'm a man who works for Disney in, say, Florida? Won't Disney say since I'm a man and can get pregnant, they'll pay for me to go to California for an abortion?
You might well answer sure, just show Disney your doctor's note or your pregnancy test. But not so fast -- the HIPAA Privacy Rule makes all medical records fully confidential. It's illegal for an employer to ask for any medical record, especially one that involves an abortion. I would have a cause of action against Disney if they refused to pay for my trip to California for an abortion on the basis that I'm a man and can't prove I'm pregnant.
This will work its way through, but it's going to take some time. But then it took time to override Roe.