I just finished reading 99 Nights with the 99 Percent, by journalist Chris Faraone. For his book, subtitled Dispatches from the First Three Months of the Occupy Revolution, Faraone spend 99 nights (including days) in various cities across the country with Occupy protesters to examine who these individuals are, what they believe in, and what their daily grind consists of. Faraone's narrative made me think about birth control. If you think that sounds like a wild leap, it's not. Bear with me.
If the Occupy movement has accomplished anything over the last seven months it has been to change the narrative about how we talk about economic inequality in this country. You can now go anywhere in America and conversations about the "one percent" and the "99 percent" are commonplace. While some conservatives have fallen into the old narrative of labeling this rhetoric "class warfare," there is no doubt that economic inequality exists in this country and that many Americans outside the Occupy Movement became sympathetic to these protests because of the acknowledgement that they too are part of the 99 percent being affected by this inequality.
American citizens now have a better vocabulary for describing the economic system that unfairly benefits those in the one percent, while they struggle to pay their mortgages or send their children to college. Many of these citizens have been empowered to speak up and make change in their own communities because being a part of something larger than themselves, a part of the 99 percent, is a powerful thing.
So back to birth control. Women make up 51 percent of the U.S. population, and within this population there is another 99 percent. More than 99 percent of American women who have ever been sexually active have used birth control. 99 percent. Furthermore, some women who use birth control aren't even sexually active but need it to treat a variety of medical issues from extremely painful periods, to ovarian cysts to acne. All of these women have to worry about paying for that birth control -- about whether their employers will include birth control coverage in their insurance, about whether their local pharmacies will sell them the birth control they desire, about the ridiculous archaic sexism that suggests that this huge number of women are somehow lacking in morality simply because they choose to be in control of their own health, sexuality and reproductive destinies. Women who are struggling financially are disproportionately affected by both attacks on birth control and continuing economic inequality.
Just as the vast majority of Americans want a just economic system, want banks held accountable for predatory lending and other immoral (and sometimes illegal) practices, and want the government held accountable for enabling these practices, the vast majority of women, and the men who care about them believe access to birth control is a right. The idea that women, 51 percent of the population, should have equitable health insurance coverage and the power to decide their own reproductive destinies is as much a no-brainer as the idea that in a democratic nation the rich should not be getting richer by neglecting and taking advantage of the poor.
So let's occupy birth control. Women who use birth control and the men who support them need to speak up and speak out about this issue. Women, who have the unquestionable right to decide their own destinies, are the 99 percent. Imagine if we used Chris Faraone's idea (I'm assuming he'll forgive me for stealing it) and spent 99 Nights with the 99 percent of women all across America who use birth control. We would surely meet women of all walks of life, ages, races, professions and belief systems who are making a difference in their communities and families.
Let's tell our stories, let's put a human face on this issue and let's take away the power of those who seek to shame us for doing something that the majority of our fellow citizens do. The Coalition to Protect Women's Health Care with Sandra Fluke have created a space where women can "have their say" by uploading YouTube videos about why they use birth control.
I'm having my say by writing this piece. My name is Sarah Jackson, I am part of the 99 percent, and I use birth control. Tonight is Sunday and my night includes prepping for the three courses that I teach every week, grading student papers, walking my dog Nellie, watching The Walking Dead, baking a raspberry peach cobbler, and having my weekly Sunday night conversation with my mother, the woman who taught me that I deserve the same rights to healthcare, education, pay, and respect as men. Among other things, access to birth control has allowed me to pursue education, travel the world and serve my community by actively working with youth and in educational equality initiatives. It has allowed me to decide when to start a family so that if and when I do, I am both willing and ready to do so. I hope this piece gets 99 comments from 99 women (and how about 99 more from male allies!) who, like me, believe in a country, and in politicians, who understand that access to birth control is not a political issue, it is a social justice issue, it is a right, and it is not up for debate.
Follow Sarah J. Jackson on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sjjphd
Birth control is one of the top reasons that women can be equal - if there was no birth control, unprotected sex even in marriage, would result in children - meaning that women (for the most part) are destined to stay at home caring for multiple children rather than being out in the world contributing to the world. Also, no birth control means that a woman could conceivably be pregnant every year until she reaches menopause. Does this sound like a life to you? Because it doesn't to me.
Birth control is here to stay - that genie is out of the bottle.....
Why wouldn't a company want to pay for health insurance that includes birth control???
If not for logic (98% of women use/need birth control) how about for financial reasons - non-pregnant women are way less expensive than pregnant women...
Wonderful piece Sarah. Thank you so much for posting. :)
Let us say that the annual cost to get birth control to every woman in Denver is $X. Now lets do the following:
1 - Put up a cordon around Denver allowing nobody in or out.
Change to the cost of birth control? $0.00
2 - Transform every male in the city into a woman.
Change to the cost of birth control? It went DOWN by $X and is now $0.00.
Conclusion: Men may not buy birth control. They may not consume birth control pills. But they have something to do with the need for it. Remove men, and you remove the need for birth control.
What if you change everyone in the city to a man? Hrrm, again the birth control bill drops to nothing. So women also have something to do with it.
Only fair we split the cost and an insurance pool is an effective way to do this.