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Womenâs Equality Day came and went in a blur last month, but folks are still celebrating all around Important Media, the network that hosts CleanTechnica, with a series of posts this week on womenâs rights and accomplishments. So without further ado, letâs hear what the #1 cleantech site in the world (yes, that would be CleanTechnica) has to say on the subject of womenâs rights in the context of our other favorite topic, climate change.
Rights, Rape, and the Equal Right to Science
If you want to sum up the consequences of willful ignorance on womenâs rights in two words, itâs hard to do better than U.S. Representative Todd Akin (R-Missouri) did when he used the phrase âlegitimate rape.â
Those two simple words lead into a labyrinth of twisted reasoning worthy of the Minotaurâs maze, so for now letâs just focus on one aspect, and that is the right to partake equally in the advances of modern science.
Akin brought up the concept of legitimate rape as a matter of settled science while trying to explain why he believes that conception rarely if ever follows from an act of rape.
Vanessa Heggie of the Guardian points out that âlegitimate rapeâ once did have a firm grounding in science, at least insofar as the scientists of 13th century England were capable of understanding how female reproductive organs function.
Heggie notes that even as recently as 1814, medical texts persisted in linking pleasure (in other words, consent) with conception:
âFor without an excitation of lust, or the enjoyment of pleasure in the venereal act, no conception can probably take place. So that if an absolute rape were to be perpetrated, it is not likely she would become pregnant.â
A woman gets pregnant after being raped, therefore she consented, therefore no rape occurred. Even Monty Python couldnât do justice to that argument.
Nowadays, of course, most people know better. For those that donât, itâs just a matter of wishful thinking: thinking that pregnancy is a condition that women can easily avoid by refraining from engaging in sex for pleasure.
In this formulation, there is no need for contraceptives of any kind, let alone access to routine and safe early-term abortion procedures performed by licensed medical professionals. All that is necessary is for women to not have sex for pleasure unless they really do want to get pregnant. So simple!
Thatâs what you get when you base 21st-century womenâs health policies on 13th-century science.
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Wishful Thinking about Climate Change
Would it surprise you to know that Akin applies the same thought process to climate change? Over at Grist, senior editor Lisa Hymes notes that Akinâs website provides a page on global warming that expends a lot of two-dollar words to reach a two-bit conclusion, aptly expressed by Akin on the floor of the House in 2009:
âIn Missouri, when we go from winter to spring, thatâs a good climate change. I donât want to stop that climate change, you know. So, and who in the world would want to put politicians in charge of the weather anyway? What a dumb idea.â
Unfortunately, Akin has plenty of company at the upper reaches of his own party, as demonstrated by an article titled Top 5 Craziest Things GOP Contenders Said on Climate in 2011 by Joe Romm of Climate Progress.
Whether they laugh it off as a joke or couch it in science-y (Hymesâs word) language that refers to no science at all, supporters of the denialist position are engaging in the same kind of wishful thinking behind âlegitimate rape,â and, for that matter, creation âscienceâ â" facts, schmacts.
Facts, schmacts!
Itâs one thing to ignore the science of the 21st century as a matter of personal opinion, but for policymakers charged with the well-being of a nation, the bar for professionalism should be set much higher.
Image: Lab equipment. Some rights reserved by Doubleâ"M.
Follow me on Twitter: @TinaMCasey.
Note: hereâs that link to related stories on Important Media.
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