"We are done asking you for our freedom."
Authors speak out on pending Supreme Court cases on Women's Rights and LGBTQI cases
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"Shout Your Abortion embodies everything that society so desperately craves in this moment: compassion over cruelty, fact over fiction, and storytelling over silence. The shared experience of one in four women powerfully illustrated on these pages is tangible evidence of our collective strength when we join hands and speak our truth together."—Ilyse Hogue, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America
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"Brett Kavanaugh was credibly accused of sexual assault, committed perjury on national television, and was subsequently installed on the Supreme Court. Kavanaugh's appointment will allow Republicans to fulfill what they've been promising their evangelical donors for decades: the end of civil and human rights for women and queer people. As these decisions are handed down, we must react in a way that lets SCOTUS and the federal government know: we do not accept these verdicts, we do not find this court to be legitimate, and we are done asking you for our freedom. True freedom is unregulated. The world is queer, we are having abortions, and we will never, ever stop."
—Amelia Bonow, co-author of Shout Your Abortion
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“An astute analysis of power relations not only in the sphere of reproduction but also in the worlds of work, immigration, and government policy as they bear on women's ability to control their bodies. She illuminates the historical context of the writings of Marx and Malthus, the crusades of Comstock, and recurring elite pleas for women to supply more workers and soldiers. Brown lays bare why U.S. women who want to be mothers, and those who don't, have it far worse here than in Europe. Then she tells us how to change that.”
—Jane Slaughter, Labor Notes
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"The Supreme Court never gave us abortion rights, it compromised the the face of a feminist uprising for “free abortion on demand.” Now, as it prepares to undermine abortion rights and protections against job discrimination that the vast majority want, our job is to show how undemocratic and illegitimate it is."
— Jenny Brown, author of Birth Strike: The Hidden Fight over Women’s Work
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“If I had had this coloring book when I was little, I think things would have been a little easier for me, and when you’re little a little easier is a lot.”—Lynda Barry, cartoonist
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“Jacinta and Leela have created a beautiful, fun coloring book which teaches us that everyone is deserving of respect and understanding. I’m only halfway into this thing and I’ve already gone through three tubes of glitter!” —Jon Wurster, Bob Mould Band
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"As moving and funny as Walter the Farting Dog, with pictures you can color however your heart desires, Sometimes the Spoon... is appropriate for children of all ages, especially those who grew up without it."
—Ayun Halliday, Chief Primatologist of The East Village Inky
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"I know some of us rebels, anarchists and revolutionaries don't like the government. But the impact of this Supreme Court decision will have ripples beyond employment issues for LGBTQI+ people. This is so much more gigantic than marriage equality. Not everyone gets married, but nearly everyone at some point in their lives will be employed. We live in a world where an employer can literally say “We want—and I think the consumer out there, families believe that they—a male should look like a particular individual, like a man,” (real quote) and then that employer is backed by law to be able to fire a trans person simply for being trans."—Jacinta Bunnell, author of Sometimes the Spoon Runs Away With Another Spoon, The Big Gay Alphabet, Girls Will Be Boys Will Be Girls Will Be...
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“These are portraits of a revolution. Photographer Rachelle Lee Smith gives lesbian and gay youth an outlet to speak for themselves. Simple, yet powerful photos of queer youth speak reams.” —Advocate
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