As a woman who has seen Santorum's campaigns in action and who lives, works, and raises a family in Pennsylvania, the thought of Santorum as president is scary. If his stances on women's rights and women's health were to prove fruitful during his presidency, I and many other women would be left struggling to gain health insurance, get proper medical care, put food on our tables, and would be unable to get fair and equal treatment in the work place (and that is only if we are allowed to get jobs). Santorum would put the women's rights movement back 50 years.
Santorum told NBC's "Meet the Press" that he believes all abortion is wrong. When questioned on the exceptions of abortion for victims of rape and incest, Santorum said, "That would be taking a life, and I believe that any doctor that performs an abortion, I would advocate that any doctor that performs an abortion, should be criminally charged for doing so. "
Wow. That is a scary thought. The former senator believes that doctors who perform abortions (which is currently legal), even ones done for rape victims, incest victims and in the cases of saving a woman's life, should be criminally charged.
Women, are you listening? If this man gets his way and you are found to be pregnant with your rapist's fetus or you have had a pregnancy which cannot be carried to term, your doctor would be at risk of being criminally charged with murder for protecting and caring for you!
In fact, when criticized and questioned on not having an exception (for rape, incest and when a woman's health is at risk), he called those exceptions "phony." His exact response was: "When I was leading the charge on partial birth abortion, several members came forward and said, 'Why don't we just ban all abortions?' Tom Daschle was one of them, if you remember. And Susan Collins, and others. They wanted a health exception, which of course is a phony exception which would make the ban ineffective."
It is possible that you are a woman who is anti-abortion and you agree with Santorum's sentiments when it comes to the re-victimization of women who have suffered rape, incest or who have had their lives put at risk during pregnancy. That is your right. But Santorum doesn't think women should be in the work place either.
In 2005, Santorum's book, "It Takes a Family: Conservatism and the Common Good," he writes on his feelings about women in the work place. According to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: "In far too many families with young children, both parents are working, when, if they really took an honest look at the budget, they might find they don't both need to."
He goes on to state that women have told him it was, "socially affirming to work outside the home than to give up their careers to take care of their children." And then he places blame on the feminist movement for this aspect of life, not what was and still is a struggling economy: "The radical feminists succeeded in undermining the traditional family and convincing women that professional accomplishments are the key to happiness."
Apparently, Santorum is convinced that women should be happy enough as housewives and mothers. And, if you think that preventing motherhood by the use of contraception would be easy enough, think again. Santorum is against birth control. He says about contraception, "it is harmful to women and harmful to our society -- I don't think it is a healthy thing for our country."
Rick Santorum's stances are against women's health, women's rights and equal treatment for women. He is not a good presidential candidate for women, Republican or Democrat.
Published by Linda StCyr
Linda St.Cyr has been a featured contributor for Associated Content from Yahoo!, she is the author of several short stories including the story "Leaving" published in the anthology collection, Elements of Ti... View profile
Rick Santorum is the Latest Victim of the Democratic Liberal MachineDaily Show host Jon Stewart shown light on a problem with presidential hopeful Rick Santorum's last name. While comedic, this appears to be a continuing trend of the Democratic...- Why Rick Santorum Deserves the Neologism That's Been Attached to His Last NameAfter revealing in an interview that John McCain doesn't understand how "enhanced interrogation" actually works, he proves that Dan Savage was right when he famously created that sexual neologism.
- If Pennsylvania's Rick Santorum is "Conservative" We're in TroubleIn a world where icons and pundits of the modern conservative movement rail against any conservative that think for one second to criticize candidates who have an "R" next to their names it certainly is not popular to...
Santorum "Racial" Comment Nothing but a Calculated Distraction from What...Rick Santorum in an interview with CNS News said "The question is, and this is what Barack Obama didn't want to answer -- is that human life a person under the constitution?- Abortion Doctor George Tiller KilledA target of the extreme right, abortion doctor George Tiller, was shot and killed at his Wichita church Sunday. This is a look at what the death of "Tiller the Baby Killer", as he has become known as, means for the f...
- Rick Santorum Wins South Carolina Straw Poll, a Good Start for Santorum for Presid...
- Rick Santorum the Right Choice for the 2012 Presidential Race
- Onward, Rick Santorum: Pro-Crusade Candidate Staking His Position for Republican P...
- Rick Santorum Sexually Satirized
- Rick Santorum Too Conservative for White House?
- Will President Rick Santorum Seek a Constitutional Ban on RetroActive Abortions?
- Three Reasons Rick Santorum Could Win the GOP Presidential Nomination





1 Comments
Post a CommentMy concern with the author’s article is it is not grounded in reality. First, “If this man gets his way and you are found to be pregnant with your rapist's fetus or you have had a pregnancy which cannot be carried to term, your doctor would be at risk of being criminally charged with murder for protecting and caring for you!” Last time I checked we live in a Constitutional Republic, which has three equal branches of government. Rick Santorum is not running for dictator he is running for President of the United States. Thus, he has no power other then what has been delegated to him in the Constitution to do anything like you have mentioned. Only the Supreme Court can overturn abortion, not the President. Also, the President does not make law, unlike what the current President thinks; the President only enforces the law.
In reference to exceptions to abortion, such as rape or incest, the Senator is right when he says this is an excuse because of all the abortions that take place how many are actually for these reasons? If the only abortions that were happening in this world were for the exceptions that you cited then you would have a good case; however, they are not the only reason. The author also assumes that in every case rape victims want to kill the baby inside of them. That is not always true, and Fox News Anchor Kelly Wright is a perfect example. Not to mention, back to my previous point, the President of the United States does not make laws! He had more of chance of making this a reality when he was a Senator so to be afraid of it when he becomes President is fear mongering at its worst.
Third, “But Santorum doesn't think women should be in the work place either.” This is by far the worst out of context part of the article. Rick Santorum was trying to make the point that a child who is raised by his mother has a better chance of success in this world. He was also pointing out that many women feel they are worthless if they do not have professional accomplishments to point to. He wants women to know that their children should be their most important and proudest accomplishment. How the author spun this into not wanting women to work is absurd. Women have the “choice” as the author and other pro-abortion individuals claim; therefore, they have the “choice” either to work or not to work when they have children. Rick Santorum just feels that it is in the best interest of children to be raised by their mother. This claim is also ludicrous considering the successful working women in Rick Santorum’s life, such as his wife and daughter.
Fourth, pointing to the fact that he does not support contraception as some kind of policy platform is shameful. Rick Santorum’s point and one he has made several times consistently is he does not think it is healthy. So, what does that have to do with what he would do as President of the United States? He would have no control over banning it or making it illegal. After all, I thought the author supports “Women’s health”?