Sandra Fluke's
Speech Made Republicans Crazy. Which Is Just What the Democrats Want.
By Amanda Marcotte
For a short period yesterday
evening, a moment of panicked confusion broke out among those of us obsessively
watching and tweeting the Democratic National Convention, when Sandra Fluke did
not go on stage as scheduled. It turns out that we needn't have worried;
convention organizers made an apparently last minute decision to move Fluke's speech
to later in the night, giving her a prime-time audience. It's a move that
indicates Democrats have finally stopped freaking out at the first sign of
reactionary histrionics, and instead have embraced the strategy of taking
the fight to conservatives.
After decades of playing along
with conservatives who dress up their hostility to female sexuality as nothing
more than an interest in "life," Democrats have finally realized that
baiting the anti-choice right into showing its misogynist, sex-phobic side may
just be a winning strategy.
Apparently, all it takes to set
off the desired response is a reasonably attractive 31-year-old law student who
is willing to speak about contraception in public. Twitter absolutely exploded
last night with conservatives returning to the claim that being a mild-mannered
thirtysomething who is engaged to be married makes a woman a pervert and
radical feminist beyond all imagining. The Moderate Voice and Salon collected some of the more creative
right wing reactions on Twitter, and here are some of our
"favorites":
Sandra Fluke Speech Text: Read
The Democratic National Convention Remarks
Posted: 09/05/2012
10:01 pm Updated: 09/05/2012 11:54 pm
Sandra Fluke delivered her speech
to the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday night.
Below, the Georgetown University
law student's remarks as prepared for delivery.
Some of you may
remember that earlier this year, Republicans shut me out of a hearing on
contraception. In fact, on that panel, they didn't hear from a single woman,
even though they were debating an issue that affects nearly every woman.
Because it happened in Congress, people noticed. But it happens all the time.
Many women are shut out and silenced. So while I'm honored to be standing at
this podium, it easily could have been any one of you. I'm here because I spoke
out, and this November, each of us must do the same.
During this
campaign, we've heard about the two profoundly different futures that could
await women—and how one of those futures looks like an offensive, obsolete
relic of our past. Warnings of that future are not distractions. They're not
imagined. That future could be real.
In that America,
your new president could be a man who stands by when a public figure tries to
silence a private citizen with hateful slurs. Who won't stand up to the slurs,
or to any of the extreme, bigoted voices in his own party. It would be an
America in which you have a new vice president who co-sponsored a bill that would
allow pregnant women to die preventable deaths in our emergency rooms. An
America in which states humiliate women by forcing us to endure invasive
ultrasounds we don't want and our doctors say we don't need. An America in
which access to birth control is controlled by people who will never use it; in
which politicians redefine rape so survivors are victimized all over again; in
which someone decides which domestic violence victims deserve help, and which
don't. We know what this America would look like. In a few short months, it's
the America we could be. But it's not the America we should be. It's not who we
are.
We've also seen
another future we could choose. First of all, we'd have the right to choose.
It's an America in which no one can charge us more than men for the exact same
health insurance; in which no one can deny us affordable access to the cancer
screenings that could save our lives; in which we decide when to start our
families. An America in which our president, when he hears a young woman has
been verbally attacked, thinks of his daughters—not his delegates or donors—and
stands with all women. And strangers come together, reach out and lift her up.
And then, instead of trying to silence her, you invite me here—and give me a
microphone—to amplify our voice. That's the difference.
Over the last six
months, I've seen what these two futures look like. And six months from now,
we'll all be living in one, or the other. But only one. A country where our
president either has our back or turns his back; a country that honors our
foremothers by moving us forward, or one that forces our generation to re-fight
the battles they already won; a country where we mean it when we talk about
personal freedom, or one where that freedom doesn't apply to our bodies and our
voices.
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