But news like this is enough to make one wonder:
ALBUQUERQUE (CN) - A clinic nurse first removed her intrauterine birth-control device without permission, the patient claims in a federal action, then told her that "having the IUD come out was a good thing," because "I personally do not like IUDs. I feel they are a type of abortion. I don't know how you feel about abortion, but I am against them."
Yeah...
She feels they are a type of abortion. She, personally, doesn't like IUD's, and it coming out, "accidentally" is a good thing.
Why do I mock the idea of accident? "Defendant Olona stated, 'Everyone in the office always laughs and tells me I pull these out on purpose because I am against them, but it's not true, they accidentally come out when I tug.'
"Everyone in the office always laughs." Makes me wonder how many of these "accidents" she has.
This is, apart from the arrogance of it, a pretty big deal.
IUDs can be difficult to get. When Maia was trying to get one, Kaiser refused. Mirena, which advertises, includes, "have a had a child" in it's list of factors when considering getting one. Because of the Dalkon Shield the public perception of them is less than stellar. Other women I know, who haven't had kids, had to fight to get an IUD.
Which means getting it replaced, after one of these, "accidents" is not trivial. The nurse who removed it... refused to replace it. "Too bad, so sad."
They can be painful to have inserted (esp. if one has not had a child). The insertion ranges from, "felt like an intense PAP" to knock you on your ass, and leave you in bed with horrific cramps for three days.
I've had a couple of partners who used them. Know several more women who got them. By all accounts, it takes more than a "tug" to get them out. One of my partners had to get the strings trimmed. I went in with her, and her GYN was talking about it, manipulating them, so she could get the forceps on them, and the scissors in to snip.
Forceps, compared to, "they accidentally come out when I tug". One wonders why she is tugging in the first place.
Short story, sounds like a revocation of license offense to me.
Long story... This sort of thing is going to continue. The fight for choice isn't about Roe v Wade, not really. It's about Griswold v Connecticutt The "conscience objections" the pharmacists who make enquiries about marital status when filling prescriptions for birth control, the emergency room doctors who won't prescribe EC if someone wasn't raped...
All of that is about the right to privacy.
It's about controlling people (esp. women).
It's about freedom.
ALBUQUERQUE (CN) - A clinic nurse first removed her intrauterine birth-control device without permission, the patient claims in a federal action, then told her that "having the IUD come out was a good thing," because "I personally do not like IUDs. I feel they are a type of abortion. I don't know how you feel about abortion, but I am against them."
Yeah...
She feels they are a type of abortion. She, personally, doesn't like IUD's, and it coming out, "accidentally" is a good thing.
Why do I mock the idea of accident? "Defendant Olona stated, 'Everyone in the office always laughs and tells me I pull these out on purpose because I am against them, but it's not true, they accidentally come out when I tug.'
"Everyone in the office always laughs." Makes me wonder how many of these "accidents" she has.
This is, apart from the arrogance of it, a pretty big deal.
IUDs can be difficult to get. When Maia was trying to get one, Kaiser refused. Mirena, which advertises, includes, "have a had a child" in it's list of factors when considering getting one. Because of the Dalkon Shield the public perception of them is less than stellar. Other women I know, who haven't had kids, had to fight to get an IUD.
Which means getting it replaced, after one of these, "accidents" is not trivial. The nurse who removed it... refused to replace it. "Too bad, so sad."
They can be painful to have inserted (esp. if one has not had a child). The insertion ranges from, "felt like an intense PAP" to knock you on your ass, and leave you in bed with horrific cramps for three days.
I've had a couple of partners who used them. Know several more women who got them. By all accounts, it takes more than a "tug" to get them out. One of my partners had to get the strings trimmed. I went in with her, and her GYN was talking about it, manipulating them, so she could get the forceps on them, and the scissors in to snip.
Forceps, compared to, "they accidentally come out when I tug". One wonders why she is tugging in the first place.
Short story, sounds like a revocation of license offense to me.
Long story... This sort of thing is going to continue. The fight for choice isn't about Roe v Wade, not really. It's about Griswold v Connecticutt The "conscience objections" the pharmacists who make enquiries about marital status when filling prescriptions for birth control, the emergency room doctors who won't prescribe EC if someone wasn't raped...
All of that is about the right to privacy.
It's about controlling people (esp. women).
It's about freedom.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-08 04:44 pm (UTC)When I was looking for good, safe, reliable contraception (because I'd tried every variety of the Pill on the market then, and they all made me puke), no doctor would even discuss an IUD with me because I was (a) unmarried and (b) had not had a child. I wound up getting my tubes tied in an inner-city Detroit clinic that catered to unmarried mothers, because it was the only way I could be certain I would not get pregnant.
But that was *33 years ago*.
I'm bookmarking this for next time someone tells me feminism is passe.