A Visit to the Mississippi Clinic at the Center of the Abortion Case Before the Supreme Court | Race, Disability and Coercive Control: One More Look at the Gabby Petito Case | The Political Case for Childcare Moms Shouldn't Have to Make | Rally for Reproductive Rights: Women’s March Returns Saturday, Oct. 2
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Today at Ms. | October 1, 2021
 

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A Visit to the Mississippi Clinic at the Center of the Abortion Case Before the Supreme Court

BY ANOA CHANGA | Walking up to the Jackson Women’s Health Clinic Organization on an early Thursday morning in August, you see a smiling older woman in a reflective vest stop and greet cars driving by. She stands at the bottom of the hill that leads to the clinic’s parking lot, positioned in a way that makes it seem like you’re supposed to stop and talk to her. It’s not until you reach the front gate of the Pink House, the clinic’s nickname, that it becomes clear she’s simply posing as a volunteer patient escort. The smile and pleasant greeting distract people from realizing her real purpose: taking down the license plates of patients headed into the clinic.


The anti-abortion presence is light that day. Shannon Brewer, the clinic’s longtime director, jokes that the anti-abortion protesters must be on vacation. Sitting in her office explaining the general run of the clinic, Brewer points to several security monitors on the wall. The security presence is, unfortunately, necessary. And the harassment experienced by the staff and patients is real. Brewer says they have regular meetings with the local FBI to deal with threats. Because of the threats and the harassment, the clinic doesn’t even have a doctor who lives in the state.

 

 
 

Race, Disability and Coercive Control: One More Look at the Gabby Petito Case

BY GILLIAN CHADWICK | Two features of Petito’s case have been strikingly absent from media coverage: her disability, and the myriad signs that Petito’s boyfriend was subjecting her to a form of domestic violence known as coercive control.

Yet Petito’s disability was central to how the system failed her prior to her death. Her case also shows what happens when law and society oversimplify domestic violence and overlook coercive control.

 
 
 
 
The Political Case for Childcare Moms Shouldn’t Have to Make

BY RESHMA SAUJANI | For America’s moms, the last 18 months have been a crash course in the five stages of grief.  And yet I was unprepared for a new, sixth stage of grief that hit me this week, as Congress threatens to abandon a once-in-a-generation opportunity to help millions of American families.

 

 

 

 

Rally for Reproductive Rights: Women’s March Returns Saturday, Oct. 2

BY THE TEAM | Tomorrow, the Women's March returns to Washington, D.C. and cities near you to protest the conservative attacks on reproductive rights that have dominated legislatures and the courts this year.

Here's how to find a march near you. 

 

 

Visit link

Tune in for a new episode of Ms. magazine's podcast, On the Issues with Michele Goodwin on Apple Podcasts + Spotify.

Over the past year, the demand for a global reckoning with anti-Blackness has reverberated around the world. How can the international community address slavery’s legacy? Dr. Goodwin is joined by Dr. Amara Enyia to break down the global impacts of antiblackness—from COVID-19 deaths to the effects of the climate crisis—and the importance of international organizing across the African diaspora. 

 

We hope you'll listen, subscribe, rate and review today!

 
 
 
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