An anti-abortion protester confronts a clergy escort/monitor protecting a Planned Parenthood Clinic. |
It’s
the time of year that the Supreme Court—which
now usually goes by the alias SCOTUS in
the avalanche of words by Court watcher
pundits of every stripe—dumps a
bunch of high profile, potentially controversial cases and then heads for the
hills of summer vacation. See ya in
October…And it is an emotional roller-coaster for progressives who generally fear the worst from the Right wing dominated court.
Lately,
the court has sometimes handed surprising victories to the left like last
year’s Marriage Equality ruling that
opened the floodgates that now seems to add a new state to the rainbow column every week. This year on the Court unanimously ruled that
police will need a warrant to search to search cell phones when citizens are
stopped or arrested by the police, a huge and unexpected victory
for privacy and civil liberties. By a split
decision they upheld the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) right to
regulate greenhouse gasses despite a
well funded full court press by allegedly libertarian
fossil fuel industry fat cats, but also put new limits on the administration’s main program to
control power plant emissions.
On
the other hand the court agreed to allow sectarian
prayer to open the meetings of government
bodies, and struck down cumulative
limits on total campaign contributions by individuals and PACs, a
ruling that will send tsunamis of
new money crashing against the battered beaches of democracy.
The
Supreme Court giveth, and the Supreme Court taketh away.
Angst
rose to new levels Thursday when the court released a unanimous decision in the
case McCullen
v. Coakley, striking down a Massachusetts law requiring protesters to
stay at least 35 feet from abortion
clinics entrances and walkways. And perhaps by implication statues on the books of 12 other states and
the District of Columbia that offer
protection to patients and staff from harassment by anti-abortion protestors. Or
maybe it does not threaten all of them. Defenders
of a woman’s right to choose
including NARWAL Pro-Choice America and
Planned Parenthood, whose clinics
have been the targets of anti-abortion
protests that often amount to near riotous sieges were shocked, not so much
that they lost—that was expected—but by the unanimity of the Court, including
its liberal wing and known supporter
of choice. So were many Unitarian Universalists, a denomination
that has long been committed to choice and safe, easy access to abortion
services.
All
of these organizations reacted with predictable outrage. But a closer examination of the ruling seems
to indicate it is far less sweeping than it seems at first. Only three other
states, Colorado, Montana and New Hampshire, have buffer zone laws on the books, but the
Massachusetts zone was the largest. In 2000, the Supreme Court upheld Colorado’s
8-foot floating buffer zones around
individuals as they walk into and exit an abortion clinic. It is unclear if the new decision reverses
Colorado’s more modest and defensible bubble protecting individuals from direct
confrontation and harm. All of the other
states with clinic protection laws rely on other enforcement mechanisms and are
unaffected by the ruling.
The
news arrived as thousands gathered in Providence,
Rhode Island for the annual General
Assembly (GA) of the Unitarian Universalist Association. The UUA had joined with other religious
groups in filing an amicus curiae brief in support of buffer zones. President Peter Morales was quick to
issue a statement:
…This is a major
defeat in the fight for reproductive rights and may put clinic workers and
individuals seeking pregnancy-related care at great risk. I am disappointed and
deeply troubled by the potential repercussions of such a decision… Just as
citizens have the right to vote or attend religious events of their choosing,
they should have the right to access legal medical services, including
abortions and reproductive counseling, without harassment or violence. These
acts have been effectively protected by buffer zones in the past. They help law
enforcement officers to minimize intimidation and abuse in these public spaces
which are all too often scenes of violence.
I pray that the
harassment and violence endured by the employees and clients of these
healthcare facilities will end. Unitarian Universalists believe that women
possess the dignity and conscience to make their own decisions about
pregnancy-related healthcare in consultation with their family, doctor, and
faith. The government must play a role in helping all people access their
fundamental rights.”
Hard
to disagree with most of that, particularly in light of a frightening history
of intimidation and harassment orchestrated by anti-choice leaders at the highest levels. That has included the mass actions of Randall Terry, founder of Operation Rescue, Joseph Scheidler’s
Pro-Life Action League which resulted in a decade long court case brought
by the National Organization for Women (NOW).
In some cases hundreds of protestors were mobilized at targeted clinics
for months on end, angrily confronting and harassing staff, and especially
frightened patients and their families.
Intimidation including waving gruesome signs, screaming, physical
altercations, and ostentatious displays of surveillance including recording license plates and taking photos and videos that were posted on line.
Some women were injured. Many
more were traumatized. And no one can
ever know how many women were essentially denied their reproductive rights by
fear of these howling mobs.
Violence
was sometimes lethal. UU’s even have our
martyr.
Retired Air Force Lt. Col.
James Barrett, an active and committed member of the Pensacola Unitarian Universalist Fellowship was a volunteer escort at the Ninth Avenue Ladies Center abortion clinic, the site of an earlier
bombing and numerous confrontational protests.
On July 29, 1994 he drove to the clinic with Dr. John Bayard Britton by his side in the passenger seat and his
wife, June, in the back seat. As he stepped out of his pick-up truck, Rev. Paul
Hill, a regular protester at the site known to Barrett, opened fire with a shotgun. Barrett and Dr. Britton were
killed instantly and June was wounded and left for dead.
U.U.s
around the country distinguished themselves as escorts, clinic volunteers, and
visible supporters, often at great risk.
I
know all of that. I understand it with
my head, carry it in my heart, and feel it in my gut. Yet when the news of the Supreme Court ruling
came in, I found my lips moving silently.
“They got it right.”
At
this point you might be as angry with me as with the court. What right have I, who am not a woman whose
life and choice are now endangered have, to dismiss the concerns of those who
are? And perhaps I have no
standing. I have, however, shared
private moments of family and friends, even at the gates of a clinic, that have
given me some small, bitter taste of that reality.
In
a similar situation, when I voiced opposition to a proposed state law to ban protests from the
gates of cemeteries, a knee jerk
reaction to the disgusting shenanigans of the Westboro Baptist Church at the funerals of Iraq and Afghanistan war dead
and any one remotely sympathetic to Gays
and Lesbians an instantly former friend and close
associate in justice work hissed at me with loathing and contempt. “Oh, so you
are a First Amendment Absolutist,”
Yes,
I guess I am.
The
State makes a poor choice as a defender of rights for some at
the expense of others. It often fails to
distinguish between peaceful dissent
and riot or near insurrection. This is particularly true with the
increased militarization of police.
Moreover, if it protects your particular ox from being gored over here, it is likely the gorer over
there. The State tend to reflexively
come to the defense of property and power so that the arguments for “zones
of special protection” extend to labor
disputes, civil protest—think the Occupy
Movement—and peaceful civil
disobedience.
To
protect our own rights of dissent, we must unfortunately defend some one else’s
right to be an asshole.
That
does not mean we have to step back and let wolves lose upon the sheep. It means we have to take action to confront
the wolves ourselves, to offer our bodies, if necessary, in their
protection. It demands a lot from
us. Giving up comfort, giving up
safety. It means, as the theme of this
year’s GA says Reaching Out in Love.
The
battle over abortion rights, once thought won, has been long and
exhausting. Many activists have turned
to other urgent issues, putting that old commitment on the back burner. There is always so much that demands our
attention. Perhaps the muscles for the
old struggle have atrophied a
bit. But if the removal of safety zones
around clinics causes the mobs to reassemble, we will have to get back in the
game.
The
response to all of those funeral protests may show us the way. No protest ban stopped even one. But time after time angels—sometimes with literal
wings—appeared to screen the bereaved from the haters. They were church people, school
children, bad ass looking bikers,
grannies with walkers who stood for Love.
I
know that some of the anti-abortion crowd is much more dangerous than the
pathetic Kansas cult. Extremism swathed in righteousness has festered and grown, seldom denounced or even
isolated from the “respectable” Right to Life people who are, on the whole non-violent
themselves. Now another set of righteous
extremists have arisen—the open carry crowd
who have taken to swaggering around intimidatingly with military style fire arms. Some
of them, as recent events in Las Vegas have
shown, have moved to insurrectionary violence.
There is undoubtedly some overlap between these two far right movements. How
much is anyone’s guess. But it doesn’t
take a vivid imagination to consider armed thugs joining abortion clinic
blockades.
The
arc of the universe may indeed bend long toward justice, but no one ever said
it bent without your back to the bow….
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