Contributors

Wednesday, February 08, 2012

Komen VP Gets Pink Slip

The big flap at Susan G. Komen for Cure, the breast cancer charity, is coming to an end with the resignation of Karen Handel. Last November Handel, the recently hired vice president for public policy, engineered a funding cut for Planned Parenthood through backdoor coordination with Republicans in Congress. Handel proposed, and Komen's board adopted, a policy that would cut off funding for organizations that were "under investigation." That included politically motivated "investigations" launched by partisan Republicans in the US House of Representatives.

As a failed candidate for governor of Georgia and a strong opponent of abortion, Handel's claims that the defunding of Planned Parenthood was apolitical were disingenuous. After a massive protest that sparked a flood of donations directly to Planned Parenthood, Komen's policy was reversed and Handel resigned.

The policy was poorly considered from the get-go. It violated due process because funding would be cut off as soon as an investigation was started, not when any convictions were made or improprieties were found. Since Handel was a former Republican gubernatorial candidate and her policy was so obviously politically motivated, what if the US Senate or the attorney general had started an investigation into the ostensibly non-profit Komen Foundation's ties to overtly political organizations? Would Komen have to stop funding itself?

I'm glad to see this over with, but it stands as stark example of the problems this country faces.

Planned Parenthood and the Komen foundation have similar goals: the improvement of women's health. Komen focuses on breast cancer, while Planned Parenthood focuses on broader women's health issues, and reproductive services in particular. Planned Parenthood is the country's primary abortion provider not because they love abortion, but because they are one of the few organizations brave enough to weather the political attacks and death threats from abortion opponents.

Planned Parenthood, by its very name, shares Karen Handel's goal to reduce the abortion rate. Not by outlawing abortion, but by preventing unwanted pregnancies. Planned Parenthood wants everyone to have free access to reliable birth control and to use it rigorously. They want emergency contraception to be freely and immediately available when condoms break, people get carried away, or rape and incest occur. All these things will reduce the need for abortion, something which everyone can agree is a good thing.

But instead of seeking common ground and working together with Planned Parenthood on shared goals, Karen Handel instead joined forces with religiously motivated ideologues who wish to sabotage and destroy Planned Parenthood.

This heightened polarization in politics and society is extremely corrosive to civil discourse and good government. By eliminating any possibility of working together, compromise that benefits all Americans becomes impossible.

The Founding Fathers were able to write the Constitution not because they agreed on everything -- they disagreed fiercely among themselves. Their genius was their ability to pull together and come to a reasonable accommodation.

Absolutist anti-abortion, anti-birth-control zealots like Karen Handel and Rick Santorum are nothing like the Founding Fathers. They more resemble Jefferson Davis and the southern secessionists who started the Civil War. With their crusade against abortion and birth control, Handel and Santorum wish to take away our hard-won freedoms and force us to be slaves to biology.

1 comment:

J Davis said...

"Jefferson Davis and the southern secessionists who started the Civil War"

Bullshit. Your elementary education lied to you about that one.

The rest of your post?... who knows, I blame Bush.