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Robert Walker

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Haley's Comment

Posted: 04/05/2012 4:41 pm

Like a comet streaking across the heavens, Governor Nikki Haley's comment on The View about women not caring about contraception is drawing a lot of attention. And rightly so.

Poll after poll suggests that women do care about contraception. Case in point: Mitt Romney's plan to shut down the family planning clinics run by Planned Parenthood has cost him dearly. His support among women has dropped precipitously in the past few months as voters learn more about his views on family planning.

When Haley and other Republican leaders opine about the lack of voter interest in contraception, it's more wishful thinking than political insight. They recognize that the positions taken by the GOP presidential aspirants on family planning may help them in the primaries, but it will undoubtedly hurt them in the general election. As a result, they want to change the subject in the worst way.

Unfortunately for them, comments like those made by Governor Haley do nothing to shift voter attention to the issues they want to talk about, like deficits and the economy. To the contrary, they reinforce the idea that Republicans are tone-deaf on women's issues.

Haley's comment, in particular, appears to suggest that Republican leaders, even women like her, don't care about a women's access to contraception. Before making her claim, maybe she should have checked in with another Republican leader, Senator Olympia Snowe, who earlier this week said that the political attacks on contraception were "retro."

What's even more "retro," however, is the unspoken half of Haley's comment. By suggesting that women don't really care about contraception, she's suggesting that men could care even less. So much less that it's not even worth discussing.

Polls, of course, suggest to the contrary. While men may feel less strongly than women do, they also care about contraception. Most men recognize that they also benefit when women are able to determine the number and timing of their pregnancies. Some men may want to keep women "barefoot and pregnant," but it's a pretty small minority. This is, after all, the 21st century.

As governor of South Carolina, Nikki Haley ought to appreciate the critical need for family planning services. Nearly half of all pregnancies in the United States are unintended. According to the Guttmacher Institute, South Carolina's rate of unintended pregnancy is significantly higher than the national average. In 2006, 52,000 South Carolina residents had an unintended pregnancy, a rate of 58 per 1,000 women aged 15 to 44. Guttmacher report that births resulting from these unintended pregnancies cost the state and federal governments $254 million in 2006.

And South Carolina's teenage pregnancy rate, while it's been declining in recent years, is still about 25 percent higher than the national average according to the Centers for Disease Control.

A poll released earlier this year indicated that 95 percent of South Carolinians believe that teenage pregnancy is an important issue, with 85 percent supporting school-based sexuality education. Maybe, Governor Haley should go on a listening tour in South Carolina before declaring that women don't care about contraception.

Many regard Governor Haley as a rising political star in the political firmament. She's frequently mentioned as a possible vice presidential selection. Given Romney's "gender gap," adding a woman to the ticket might be a smart move, but, maybe he should find a woman who understands how women -- and men -- genuinely feel about contraception.

Governor Haley's comment, like the famed Halley's comet, will soon fade from public view, but the issue of contraception will not fade anytime soon. The war on contraception is real. State cutbacks, like those in Texas, are forcing family-planning clinics to close their doors, and if GOP leaders succeed in their efforts to eliminate Title X, the federal program that provides low-income women with improved access to family planning, more shutdowns will inevitably occur.

That's why it's so critically important that women -- and men -- pledge to speak out in support of reproductive health and rights. Don't let the Governor Haleys of the world speak for you.

 
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Like a comet streaking across the heavens, Governor Nikki Haley's comment on The View about women not caring about contraception is drawing a lot of attention. And rightly so. Poll after poll ...
Like a comet streaking across the heavens, Governor Nikki Haley's comment on The View about women not caring about contraception is drawing a lot of attention. And rightly so. Poll after poll ...
 
 
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06:38 PM on 04/09/2012
There are a lot of young women who agree with Nikki Haley.

For another example, check out the essay (written by a young woman) at the link below:

An excerpt:

"...Many liberal women, meanwhile, have eagerly embraced the role of victim, advancing the idea that women are casualties of a “war on women.” Women are now, as various cultural liberals have put it, “facing sexual McCarthyism” from “conservative cavemen” who want to return to the “Dark Ages.”.

But women are not a monolith. And there is a growing group of passionate young women who are transforming what it means to be a woman. Allow me to introduce them to you. We are women who reject both the anti-male feminism of the 1960s and the “girls gone wild” mentality that’s pervasive today...."

Full essay:

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0412/74739.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mike Armstrong
11:50 AM on 04/06/2012
Actually, Haley and the wealthy women she speaks to frequently are not at all concerned about contraception. It just is not an issue for folks with plenty of money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Mccarthy
YEAH- LIBERAL LEFTY
11:14 AM on 04/06/2012
when your out of touch..........your out of touch..............
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realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
10:56 AM on 04/06/2012
WOMEN YOUNG AND OLD. You need to get out and vote in November. You need to send a message to the GOP and vote them out on a local and federal level. Your rights to your own bodies depends on it. The GOP will do anything to get re elected and gain control. Then the real subjugation of woman can happen.

VOTE OUT THE GOP IN NOVEMBER. DO NOT LET BOREDOM DISTRACT YOU. SEND THE GOP A MESSAGE THAT THIS IS THE 21st CENTURY AND YOUR NOT GOING TO GO BACKWARDS. YOUR RIGHTS ARE IN YOUR HANDS. DO IT THE MITT WAY. FIRE THEM AND SEND THEM TO THE UNEMPLOYMENT LINE.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Mccarthy
YEAH- LIBERAL LEFTY
11:15 AM on 04/06/2012
I LOVE YOUR ANSWER !!!!!!!! 100 % RIGHT ON !!!! F/F !!!!
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realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
12:12 PM on 04/06/2012
BACK AT YA
10:47 AM on 04/06/2012
I am a woman from South Carolina and I can tell you how Nikki Haley got elected. In two words, Sarah Palin. The people in my state had Never heard of Nikki Haley till Sarah Palin and the tea party said to vote for her. Alot of the people of South Carolina are not known for thinking for themselves. If their preacher or party leader says vote for someone they do. If you watched the movie "game change" you know how smart Ms. Palin was or is. I told my son she was even more self-centered than I thought.So of course women like her and Nikki Haley think birth control is not important to women. Stupid doesn't even explain it. I will never understand women who won't even stand up for their own sex.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Mccarthy
YEAH- LIBERAL LEFTY
11:16 AM on 04/06/2012
AWESOME !!!! F/F !!!
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spud3
Forward into oblivion
10:31 AM on 04/06/2012
This is how the politicians spend our tax dollars. When this generous program
was invented in the '60s, the Great Society architects forgot to craft an end
date... and now we are hopelessly overrun with people who vote only for those
who will continue to keep them on the dole....No wonder our country is broke!
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KingCashio
A wise man once said, "What's going on?"
12:40 PM on 04/06/2012
Couldn't possibly be the couple trillion the Pentagon announced they "misplaced" in 2001... Nah, it's all these poor folks plugging up our otherwise responsible country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wikwox
So there I was, playing the piano....
10:21 AM on 04/06/2012
Romney helped himself in the primary and hurt himself in a general election on many more issues than womens health and contraception, watch him flip flop like mad when he finally puts Santoum and the rest away. Mitt's been dragged far to the right by the primary, Haley's comments don't help and just keep the wounds fresh. Haley herself is not going on to some larger role in politics no matter how much she'd like to give that impression.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
laurieanichols
je pense donc, je suis
09:47 AM on 04/06/2012
Being a woman, contraception was on the forefront of my mind because having a child and raising one, let alone two or three, is extremely expensive in this country.To hear Nikki Haley say that women don't care about contraception just underscores how misguided her analytical and reasoning skills are, contraception has as much to do with economics and employment as anything else. Pregnancy doesn't help in the workplace, you need to worry about daycare and other concerns that fall to women. The underlying implication that GOP male lawmakers care even less really pushes women's buttons because that crystallizes further imbalance of responsibility in the home and with dealing with child rearing. The GOP's message to women is that you are on your own and, oh by the way your reproductive rights aren't your own, just the responsibility of caring for how many kids you have, good luck.
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demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
09:08 AM on 04/06/2012
Haley has risen at least two rungs higher on the ladder than her level of competence would suggest.
She is in way over her head, and in any other career, she would be done.
In republican politics, if you can smile and wave at the minions at the same time, your career has legs.
In southern republican politics, she can go even further.
Too bad, really, because she's inept.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Mccarthy
YEAH- LIBERAL LEFTY
11:18 AM on 04/06/2012
after Mark Sanford, the bar was pretty low......she slipped under with Sister Sarah's help !!
JEP57
To the right of Genghis Khan
11:38 PM on 04/05/2012
Is it really that difficult for couples to purchase their own birth control if there wasn't a new "right" to free, government mandated birth control provided by insurance companies along with other subsidies for family planning. Isn't there a man in the eqaution? If a woman is too poor to purchase female contraceptives, maybe the guy could make a trip to the local pharmacy for some condoms for the price of a pack of Chesterfields or a trip to Mcdonalds. Problem solved. If the woman needs contraceptive medicine for medical reasons, then I'm sure her insurance would cover it anyway or she could go to a free clinic.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kenneth Knapp III
07:12 AM on 04/06/2012
Get it through your head. Providing contraception costs our society less than unintended pregnancies.
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gloriaswanson43
Ask and you will get more info.
07:48 AM on 04/06/2012
Is money all you are worried about? See Kenneth's comment.
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davegstein
10:51 PM on 04/05/2012
These right-wingers,baggers and various sycophant wannabees,are drunk on their own Kool-Aide.
GOOD.Imagine if they remained semi-sane? They would still be just as dangerous,but would be under-the-radar.Instead they chose the in-your-face blatantly obtrusive method.Good.Now they are fully exposed.....
And like the raw flesh they are,they will now feel the sting of salt and vinegar upon their wounds....
06:09 PM on 04/05/2012
"According to the Guttmacher Institute, South Carolina's rate of unintended pregnancy is significantly higher than the national average.

Well, maybe governor Haley is going by what she thinks SC's women/girls think of contraception. If the unplanned birth rate is that high because of indifference, sounds like she needs to roll up her sleeves and get to work educating the females of her state about contraception, like right now!

$240x52,000=$12,480,000. So, I estimate a years' worth of birth control pills ~ at the high end ~ is about $240/year/woman. That means that if the state of SC had just bought those women a years' worth of birth control they would have saved $241,520,000!

I know that's simplistic, but think if the state subsidized an agency like Planned Parenthood or had a fund for the state dept. of health so that they could give out birth control pills, they could probably save millions of dollars a year helping to prevent unwanted pregnancies. Teaching sex ed in public schools wouldn't hurt, either, as that's proven to raise the age kids first have sex and increase their likelihood of using prophylactics, even the first time.

Ignorance is expensive.
10:17 PM on 04/05/2012
Just part of the GOP plan to turn us into a Third World Country.
08:13 AM on 04/06/2012
Marind, a few years ago I would've thought you sounded like a whacked out conspiracy theorist. Now, it seems it is actually true.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davegstein
10:53 PM on 04/05/2012
Especially,planned,purposeful,and intended ignorance.