Komen Foundation’s Continued Funding of Planned Parenthood Discussion-Worthy

Susan G. Komen Logo
After an outcry from scores of angry women (my technology-challenged mother being one of them … she actually made me walk her through the steps of how to sign an online petition because she felt so strongly about it), the Susan G. Komen For the Cure foundation has done a 180 on its plan to sever ties with Planned Parenthood, and all is right with the world, right?

Not so fast …

Approximately $600,000 of the foundation’s money has been used each year to pray for breast cancer screening.  You don’t need me to tell you that screening leads to early detection, which leads to early treatment, which leads to a ridiculously high percentage of successful cures (if breast cancer is caught early enough, we are in fact talking cure, not remission).

What kind of highly public foundation makes a big thing about being “for the cure” (puts it into its very name, in fact) and then intentionally pulls money from the very demographic of women that need it most considering that they’re the least likely to get regular medical attention?

That’s got to be among the most asinine things I’ve ever heard.

And, yeah, it’s the A-word.

From The Atlantic:

Komen, the marketing juggernaut that brought the world the ubiquitous pink-ribbon campaign, says it cut off Planned Parenthood because of a newly adopted foundation rule prohibiting it from …

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Lawmakers in Wisconsin and Tennessee Try to Pull Funds from Planned Parenthood

photo of planned parenthood graph pictures photos pics

Lawmakers in Tennessee and Wisconsin recently advanced legislation to end state funding of Planned Parenthood, simply because some of their clinics offer abortions. In Wisconsin, the million dollar cuts would affect 9 clinics, and around 12,000 low-income rural women, and in Tennessee, funding cuts will impact three clinics and about 9,000 patients.

In Wisconsin, changes were also made to their BadgerCare Plus program, a family planning program covered by Medicaid. Currently, BadgerCare covers around 60,000 people in Wisconsin, but the committee’s latest vote would drop men from the program’s care. According to a spokesperson for Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin:

“What they’re trying to do makes our family planning program so dramatically different from what it was that the federal government could say, ‘This isn’t what we agreed on,’ and the program ends.”

Considering Wisconsin’s Senator Glenn Grothman’s views …

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Mother Sues Over Anti-Planned Parenthood Billboard

A few months back I discussed how anti-Planned Parenthood groups were specifically targeting African Americans in a move that had many people crying “racism.” The argument of the anti-PP group was that Planned Parenthood was essentially conducting a genocide of African-American children by placing most of their clinics in lower-income neighborhoods which were mainly populated by minorities.

Their billboards, which typically employ slogans like “The most dangerous place for an African American is in the womb,” can be seen on the image above. What makes that particular billboard unique, however, is that the mother of the toddler pictured above had no idea that she was signing her daughter up to be the literal poster child for an anti-PP campaign. The mother is now suing Life Always because they feel as though they were tricked by the organization into believing it was a modelling shoot for a “family album-style presentation.”

Wonderful, isn’t it?



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Planned Parenthood as a Political Pawn: Not Progress!

Photo of Planned Parenthood Rally in Washington

Planned Parenthood is once again being used as a political pawn, and I for one am pretty annoyed about it. The group’s merits far outweigh the ugly birthmark some feel abortion services to be, and I do not get why anyone—anyone—would stomp all over the great good done by Planned Parenthood in terms of everything from cancer screenings to birth control … and that’s probably why I will never be a politician.

It is not my intent to bash Republicans here, by the way. I have a lot of close friends and family members that see the world from the right, and I fully respect their opinions. If they say, “I hate Barack Obama” and are able to explain this logically instead of spouting off racist rhetoric, I’m good with that.

I do at times, however, find myself biting my tongue because I want so badly to ask them how they feel about being identified by an increasingly ignorant vocal minority. Seriously, Republicans with a brain in your head, please take back your party! These nuts are reflecting badly on you.

And the recent stuff with the occasionally tacky Planned Parenthood, the basic arguments of which have been hashed out here before, is just one more drop of water in the bucket … but it’s a receptacle that’s getting dangerously close to the overflow point.

From NPR:

Just last Friday, for example, Republican Sen. John Kyl of Arizona said on the Senate floor that “if you want an abortion, you go to Planned Parenthood. And that’s well over 90 percent of what Planned Parenthood does.”

In fact, just the opposite is true; well over 90 percent of what Planned Parenthood does is NOT abortion. Kyl’s office later said his …

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