Hi John,
Another start to summer and another end of a SCOTUS term. As if the sweltering DC heat (heightened by a heat wave!!!!) wasnāt enough, my stomach has also felt like a pit of acid all month as we waited for and responded to SCOTUS decisions about abortion pill access, emergency abortion care, homelessness, and more.
My first month at the law center was when the official Dobbs decision was released, and I thought that every SCOTUS decision month would get easier from there. It has somehow become more challenging, reconciling that the joys that come with early summer activities and celebrating my NWLC anniversary coincide with more and more of our rights and autonomy being at the hands of the ever-so-accountable, ever-so-just Supreme Court.
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SCOTUS Thinks Thereās ānothing to see hereā on Abortion. Donāt Believe Them. š
We have made it through another season of the Supreme Court with astonishing speed taking away our rights. What can potentially be determined as āwinsā for the gender justice movement are anything but, with SCOTUS still leaving the door open for extremists to continue to take advantage of the legal and judicial systems until they have taken away abortion access from everyone, everywhere.
In Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA ['[link removed]] , SCOTUS ruled that mifepristone can still be on the market for abortion, but the case is not over and is back at the same judge who already tried to take away FDA approval. And the decision does not impact the fact that Louisiana [[link removed]] has classified mifepristone as a controlled substance, making it illegal to access without a prescription.
This weekās ruling on Idaho v. United States and Moyle v. United States allows [[link removed]] emergency abortions in Idaho to continue when a pregnant patientās health is at risk, but has made way for the case to continue to be challenged. We are very relieved that pregnant Idahoans can get the emergency care they need. For not. But the fight is nowhere near over, especially given three of the justices made us painfully aware that they are more than willing to leave patients to bleed in parking lots and force doctors to negotiate with hospital lawyers about whether the loss of one organ is enough harm to get care.
Itās Summer, So Whoās Watching the Kids? š
Until my parents deemed me and my brother old enough to stay home by ourselves, my summers were a hodgepodge of activities, child care centers, summer readings, and workbooks. Both of my parents worked full-time, and we were not our grandparents only grandchildren. My parents wanted us to stay engaged with our studies and other children without going bankrupt, and without having to take time off work. And this was back in the 2000s.
Yet, twenty years later families are still contending with piecing together child care because our country is still not investing the proper resources and funding needed to make it work for parents or early educators. On top of that, a recent CNBC article highlighted [[link removed]] how the pandemic has devastated the child care sector and has drastically impacted family, employers, and child care providers. I am in my early 20s, and I do not have children, and math is not my strong suit, but something is not adding up.
Must Doās and Must Reads ā
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We Have Merch!! And You Can Buy It!! Wow!! š¤øš¾āāļø
nwlcshop.org/ [nwlcshop.org/]
One of the upsides and downsides of being an organization with incredibly stylish employees is *constantly* being asked where our swag and merchandise can be found by non-NWLC staff. There was no such place, UNTIL NOW!!!!!!! Our merch store is officially live [[link removed]] , and you might see a familiar face on the website. š Thereās something for every person in your life, to your edgy friend that is tired of boring merch, to your friendās new baby who you want to be swagged out in the most feminist outfits possible. To sweeten the deal, 100% of your purchase supports the National Women's Law Center's work to achieve gender justice for all. Be sure to take a look and grab a thing or two [[link removed]] , and keep an eye out for more and more merch drops!
Donāt Forget You Can Get Your Donation Matched Today Until June 30!
You have until midnight on June 30 to send a membership gift [[link removed]?] and support NWLCās gender justice work. Sending a membership gift = getting a Title IX tote (aka my favorite bag in our merch store!) Donāt miss out!
Person Who Lived Rent Free in my Head in June: Rachel Chinouriri š§šæāāļøš
June is Black Music Month, and, when I havenāt been watching the Black Music Month performances [[link removed]] from NPR Tiny Desk, Iāve been blasting Rachel Chinouririās album. Rachelās first album, What A Devastating Turn of Events [[link removed]] , has helped to solidify her standing amongst the newest wave of pop stars including Chappell Roan, Normani, and Olivia Rodrigo.
Her strong guitar melodies and powerful voice command attention throughout her discography, uniquely showing her vulnerability and experiences as a Black and British woman. As someone who has been a pop music fan since her first iPod, it warms my heart to see an artist that looks like me making their own way as an artist and musician. I canāt wait to see what she does next (and to see her in concert in September!!!!)
Feminist Moment of Joy š§
With the solstice and the heatwave, it is undeniably, aggressively summer, and I have been desperately searching for ways to stay cool amidst the weather and the hustle and bustle. My freezer is stocked with maybe more ice cream pints than a one-person household should (especially when that person is lactose intolerant), I have been reaching for books from women authors of all genres like Emily Henry, Zora Neale Hurston, and Mikki Kendall, and I have been trying to take advantage of the *breaks* in the heat (aka when temperatures are under 90 degrees) by eating outside and walking around the tree-covered DC streets.
How have you been keeping cool (emotionally and physically) this month? Let me know if you have any tips and tricks, ideally before I start putting ice cubes under my armpits.
Until the next heatwave,
Jessica Baskerville
she/her/hers
Media Associate
National Womenās Law Center
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