Why abortion and pregnancy matter

Glosswitch on abortion and pregnancy and women:

Whenever I try to write about abortion, I feel one thing is holding me back: the absence of the perfect analogy. It’s similar to the way I used to think that if only I tried hard enough and spent enough time on social media, I’d conjure up The Tweet That Stops Brexit.

As always with Victoria I had to pause to savor that before I could read on.

The trouble is, pregnancy is not like anything else. If it was, the whole edifice of patriarchy wouldn’t exist. There would be no singling out and controlling of one half of the human race by the other, because we wouldn’t have something that couldn’t be replicated in any way. Attempts to make pregnancy into something else – the equivalent of paid work, or unpaid work, or blood donation, or being a violinist who can’t play due to being hooked up to another human being – never quite succeed. What you demand of someone when you insist that they continue a pregnancy against their will cannot be demanded of another person in any other context, in any other way.

Which is why it’s demanded so ferociously, which explains a lot.

The uniqueness of pregnancy, the fact that it can’t be categorised, makes people uncomfortable around it. Not just your stereotypical anti-abortion right-wingers, but pro-choice left-wingers, too. They will make the abortion debate about anything but pregnancy itself, and what it means for the status of women as a sex class in relation to men…

For several years now, it’s slightly horrified me that liberal feminists in the US have taken to dressing as handmaids in order to protest abortion restrictions, while simultaneously cheering on the rise of commercial surrogacy, ignoring the class exploitation and replication of racialised reproductive injustice, and viewing states which remove the right of surrogates who change their minds after giving birth as more, not less, progressive.

I don’t think it’s possible to understand why abortion is so important without understanding, equally, why pregnancy is. How can you make the case that the alternative to abortion is life-changing if you are also invested in draining it of meaning?

Just read the whole thing.

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