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Friday, May 28, 2010

American Cafe-Susan B. Anthony Feminism

Guys,

 

The American Café,

 

This is what I was saying last night. Susan B. Anthony is pulling for Jane Norton here in Colorado, not because she is a better candidate than the Grassroots Candidate, Ken Buck but because she is a pro-life woman. In California the Susan B. Anthony List is pulling for the Uber-RINO, Carly Fiorina even though the Pro-Life Grassroots (Conservative) Candidate is Chuck DeVore.

 

I’m not suggesting that SBA is bad or anything like that but it is important for us to understand the political landscape we are operating in. SBA does GREAT work advocating for the Unborn but they are not conservative necessarily on the other dozens of fronts and are NOT in tune with the “Grassroots vs. Establishment Republican” battle we find ourselves in. They don’t claim to be.

 

Just wanted you to know…

 

Thanks you guys!

 

Peter and Adrienne Robberson

The American Café

719-573-2193


From: Emily Buchanan, SBA List [mailto:information@sba-list.org]
Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 11:42 AM
To: Peter Robberson
Subject: Was Susan B. Anthony Really Pro-Life?

 

Dear Peter,

Was Susan B. Anthony, the namesake of our organization, really pro-life?  See Marjorie's answer in The Washington Post below.

But first, I wanted to make sure you had an opportunity to check out some great earned media the Susan B. Anthony List has received recently, so you know what we're doing to ensure pro-life victories in November's mid-term elections.

Sarah Palin created quite the national buzz when she headlined our Susan B. Anthony List Celebration for Life Breakfast on May 14th. You can watch a video of the entire breakfast here or just watch a short 30-second clip here. National media coverage --including the Washington Post, Fox News, Politico, and CNN-- centered around a great punch line by Palin: "You don't want to mess with moms who are rising up. If you thought pit bulls were tough, you don't want to mess with mama grizzlies." Her emotional testimony of learning that baby Trig had Down Syndrome was featured by CBS News.

Our big victory in defeating 28-year incumbent Congressman Alan Mollohan of West Virginia, a once-pro-life Democrat who caved and supported ObamaCare, made headlines in the Washington Examiner, which credited our television ad for his defeat. Our role in Mollohan's defeat was also covered by The Wall Street Journal, Associated Press, Weekly Standard, Politico, Washington Times, and the National Journal, in a story aptly titled, "Gee, Maybe Pro-Life Democrats Shouldn’t Have Voted for Obamacare After All."

Our efforts to elect pro-life women to Congress this November were also recently featured on the Rush Limbaugh Show in an interview with Marjorie. And, our campaign to help Carly Fiorina win the hotly-contested California Republican primary where she will face an avid pro-abortion Republican, Tom Campbell, generated considerable local media coverage, including the San Francisco Chronicle, Fresno Bee, San Diego Union Tribune, San Jose Mercury News, and the Modesto Bee. Should Fiorina defeat Campbell in the primary, she'll go on to face EMILY List's poster child, Senator Barbara Boxer in the critical general election.

Additionally, our efforts to defeat Senator Harry Reid by endorsing Sue Lowden in the Nevada Republican primary were highlighted by CNN, the Las Vegas Review-Journal, and several local outlets.

And finally, we'll end with Marjorie's answer to the question of whether Susan B. Anthony was Pro-Life which was featured in the Washington Post.

Susan B. Anthony: Pro-life feminist

By Marjorie Dannenfelser
president, Susan B. Anthony List

Two Susan B. Anthony scholars, Ann Gordon and Lynn Sherr, think they've struck at the heart of the pro-life argument: the Susan B. Anthony List's ignorance of who its namesake actually was. Citing a lack of documentation of the suffragists' stance on abortion, the authors concluded that Anthony was, "instead," pro-women's rights - in the Hillary Clinton-era sense of the term - or, at best, that abortion was nowhere on her radar.

The argument is unfounded on many levels, but foremost, on the credibility issue.

Susan B. Anthony was passionate and logical in her arguments against abortion. The Revolution was her brainchild, co-founded with Elizabeth Cady Stanton as a weekly women's rights newspaper that acted as the official voice of the National Woman Suffrage Association and in which appeared many of her writings alongside those of her like-minded colleagues. Most logical people would agree, then, that writings signed by "A" in a paper that Anthony funded and published were a reflection of her own opinions.

In one house editorial, signed "A", she wrote: "Guilty? Yes. No matter what the motive, love of ease, or a desire to save from suffering the unborn innocent, the woman is awfully guilty who commits the deed. It will burden her conscience in life, it will burden her soul in death; but oh, thrice guilty is he who... drove her to the desperation which impelled her to the crime!" [The Revolution, 4(1):4 July 8, 1869]

Further, as one becomes familiar with Anthony's compatriots and their thoughts on the issue, it is clear and consistent that these early women leaders did not believe abortion was a good thing for women.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton lamented, "When we consider that women are treated as property, it is degrading to women that we should treat our children as property to be disposed of as we see fit." [Letter to Julia Ward Howe, October 16, 1873]

In Anthony's The Revolution, Stanton referred to abortion as "infanticide." [1(5):1, February 5, 1868]

Victoria Woodhull, the first female presidential candidate, told a newspaper of the day that "Every woman knows that if she were free, she would never bear an unwished-for child, nor think of murdering one before its birth." [Wheeling, West Virginia Evening Standard, November 17, 1875]

Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, the first female physician, recorded in her diary her thoughts about Madame Restell, an early New York abortionist. She said, "The gross perversion and destruction of motherhood by the abortionist filled me with indignation, and awakened active antagonism. That the honorable term 'female physician' should be exclusively applied to those women who carried on this shocking trade seemed to me a horror. It was an utter degradation of what might and should become a noble position for women." [1845]

All of this went on-record at a time when abortion wasn't even a hot political issue of the day. Even those doctors practicing abortion had to disguise what they advertised as a service to restore a woman's regular menstrual cycle. Abortion simply wasn't up for debate at a time when society itself was firmly against the practice.

So, while the Life cause isn't the issue that earned Susan B. Anthony her stripes in American history books, historians would be wrong to conclude that Anthony was agnostic on the issue of abortion.

Anthony understood that fighting for women included the rights of her unborn child.

Over time, "feminism" became the label adopted by activists preaching that women's rights and abortion rights were somehow one and the same. For years, too many feminists have told women facing a crisis pregnancy the only way to continue a successful life is to have an abortion.

But recently, there has been a shift back to the traditional roots of a Susan B. Anthony feminism that empowers women through their strength to give life even in the most difficult and unexpected circumstances. In recent Gallup polling, more and more women self-label themselves "pro-life" over "pro-choice." More and more pro-life women run for public office.

Many conservative commentators have hailed this "new feminism," the rising majority of women who reject the radical feminism of the 1960's and use traditionally "feminist" issues, such as abortion, to herald in a new era of women's rights. This new wave of excitement is poised to elect true pro-life women to Congress, and the Susan B. Anthony List is looking forward to November to usher in these leaders who understand that the rights of one are not built on the broken backs of another.

And, in case there's still lingering doubt about where Susan B. Anthony's convictions lie, her words to Frances Willard in 1889 speak for themselves: "Sweeter even than to have had the joy of children of my own has it been for me to help bring about a better state of things for mothers generally, so that their unborn little ones could not be willed away from them."

Marjorie Dannenfelser is president of the Susan B. Anthony List, a nationwide organization dedicated to advancing, mobilizing and representing pro-life women in the political process.

For Life,

 

Emily Buchanan

Executive Director, Susan B. Anthony List

www.sba-list.org

1800 North Kent Street, Suite 1070, Arlington, VA 22209 (703) 875-3370
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