In Argentina Women Are Fighting for What Women Fought in The US and Might Have to Do Again
Abortion is punishable with a prison sentence in Argentina.
I just got this information on adamfoxie's mail box just now(tuesday late afternoon).The women in the United States have been close to getting (AGAIN) that kind of law sinced the Republicans suppored by the religious right have proposed for years now to have the law we have now allowing abortions to be overturned. But also a chance these women will do what the Women in Argentina are doing and more!
As Trump filled the Supreme court with men that don't think as he does necessarily because he does not do much of that. But a High School jr. could proof that if they follow politics He follows not this conciense but a list of other factors. We could talk about that but I want to concentrate on the women right to control their bodies. And the necesity to have a a child born where he is wanted and can be supported instead of being born to be hungry with no laws of right and wrong and then the same people who wanted him born want to burn him in the electric chair. We in the U.S. Just burnt one a few days ago.
But Trump goes by the poeple that suppport him with money and help him keep power...because he just loves the power!
Trump gets it right when someone gets in the oval offfice with an argument and money for his re-election and something that sounds good and religously accepted as decent, something god will be proud off.
Like is better to jail a mom who could not afford to have a pregnancy do to money or how the embryo was conceived.
These women are united just like in the United States the same type of women and many men are and that is why these heartless laws non sencical and which hurt and does not help because why give live to an embryo who is not wanted at that time. As humans are born they need not just the placenta to keep growing while in the woumb. They will need a lot more once they are formed and who can argue with that?
adamfoxie blog
Down below~ Those are not anything but people which the camera could not catch everyone
on the shot
because of the quantity of humanity, most of them women
Abortion is punishable with a prison sentence in Argentina. Romina wrote:
Translated byStephanie
The below story was published in Global Voices
Thousands protested in front of the Argentine National Congress in the capital Buenos Aires on February 19, 2020, in support of the legalization of abortion.
Abortion is illegal in Argentina, and punishable with a prison sentence, except when the pregnancy is the result of rape or when it poses a risk to the woman's life.
The march was organized by the National Campaign for the Right to Legal, Safe, and Free Abortion and focused on the approval of a bill, proposed in parliament for the ninth time, that would allow the voluntary interruption of pregnancy and put an end to obstruction of access to abortions that are already legal.
The bill nearly passed in 2018 — it was approved by the Chamber of Deputies but rejected in the Senate by 7 votes from conservative senators spanning different political parties. The topic of abortion in Argentina transcends the lines of traditional party politics.
The bill was proposed again in 2019, but politicians refused to consider it at that time because it was an election year and many candidates preferred to avoid controversial issues.
In 2020, women’s rights advocates took to the streets and parliament once more with fresh hopes and the slogan “the bill is on the streets”:
¡Buen díaaaaaaaaa!
¿Cómo estamos de manija?
#19F: bit.ly/36TqEAW
EN EL PAÍS Y EL MUNDO
Por nuestro derecho hoy salimos a las calles, donde está nuestro Proyecto #AbortoLegal2020
Good morningggggggg!How are we handling it? # 19F: http://bit.ly/36TqEAWIN THE COUNTRY AND THE WORLDBy our right today we go out to the streets, where our #LegalAbortion2020 Bill is. #LegalAbortion2020
At the act, which was referred to online as “#19F”, there were additional demands for legal action to also address gender inequality and violence, femicides, homophobia, transphobia, and the Comprehensive Sex Education (ESI) program, which is compulsory in every school in Argentina but has encountered several obstacles to its practical application due to opposition from conservative and religious fundamentalist movements.
On a stage set in front of the Plaza del Congreso in Buenos Aires, speakers commented on the campaign. Also present were three members of the Chilean collective Las Tesis, who performed an adaptation of the well-known anthem “A Rapist in Your Path,” alluding to clandestine abortion and young girls who are forced to become mothers:
Throughout the week, the #19F, #Pañuelazo, and #AbortoLegal2020 (in English, #LegalAbortion2020) tags took social media by storm:
Porque son nuestros cuerpos.
Porque es nuestro derecho.
Porque es legal o clandestino.
Porque más pronto que tarde: será ley #AbortoLegal2020 #19F
Because they are our bodies.
Because it is our right.
Because it is legal or clandestine.
Because sooner rather than later: it will be law 💚 #LegalAbortion2020 #19F
Supporting our Argentine compatriots #panuelazo for Legal Abortion! 💚💚💚
HOY HOY HOY HOY HOY HOY HOY #panuelazo Educación sexual para decidir - Anticonceptivos para no abortar y #AbortoLegalSeguroYGratuito para no morir. #AbortoLegal2020
TODAY TODAY TODAY TODAY TODAY TODAY TODAY #panuelazo Sex education to decide – anticontraceptives to avoid abortion, and #LegalSafeandFreeAbortion to avoid death. #LegalAbortion2020 💚
No queremos leer más estas noticias. No queremos que ninguna mujer tenga que morir en el terror de la clandestinidad.
No sigamos siendo indiferentes. El derecho al #AbortoLegalSeguroYGratuito es una cuestión de salud pública.
Más temprano que tarde, #SeráLey #AbortoLegal2020
We do not want to read news like this anymore. We do not want any woman to have to die in the terror of secrecy. Let's not remain indifferent. The right to #LegalSafeAndFreeAbortion is a matter of public health.Sooner than later, #ItWillBeLaw 💚 LegalAbortion2020
International solidarity
The symbolic green #19F handkerchief (pañuelazo, in Spanish) was used in demonstrations of support in Argentina and beyond in several cities around the world:
Toda mi fuerza para las hermanas argentinas. Siempre lo digo: cuánto aprendo, aprendemos, de vosotras.
Lo vais a conseguir.
#AbortoLegal2020
All my strength for the Argentine sisters. I always say it: how much it is that I learn, we learn, from you. You will achieve it.💚 # LegalAbortion2020
Las mujeres en Colombia abortan, es una realidad, sin importar que sea o no legal.
Buscamos que lo hagan de manera segura, sin que pongan en riesgo su vida.
Educación sexual para decidir, anticonceptivos para no abortar y aborto legal para no morir! #AbortoLegal2020
Women in Colombia abort, it is a reality, regardless of whether or not it is legal.We want them to do it safely, without putting their lives at risk.Sex education to decide, contraceptives to avoid abortion, and legal abortion not to die! #LegalAbortion2020
Hace dos años surgió el #pañuelazo que dio inicio al debate legislativo en 2018 del aborto legal en Argentina.#19F por el Derecho al Aborto Legal, Seguro y Gratuito en toda América Latina.
"Aborto sí, aborto no, eso lo decido yo".
Two years ago, the #pañuelazo emerged that initiated the 2018 legislative debate on legal abortion in Argentina. #19F for the Right to Legal, Safe, and Free Abortion throughout Latin America.“Abortion yes, abortion no, I decide that.” 💚
Nuestras hermanas argentimas necesitan hoy sentir nuestro apoyo en el hastag #AbortoLegal2020 Sabemos que será ley, sigan luchando que no están solas twitter.com/eva_mzmo/statu …
Our Argentine sisters need today to feel our support in the hashtag #LegalAbortion2020 We know it will be law, keep fighting and know that you are not alone
The new president is in favor of decriminalization
In December 2019, when the new government of President Alberto Fernández and Vice President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner of the Frente de Todos coalition took office, the presidency confirmed the bill will be addressed in 2020.
President Fernández has openly stated himself to be in favor of legalizing abortion. This month, he announced that the executive branch will present a bill for its decriminalization. This marks a difference from the previous government of Mauricio Macri (2015-2019), who was the first to address the abortion debate in 2018, but from a politically conservative perspective.
The composition of Argentina’s parliament is the same as two years ago, but many share the hope for changes of opinion in 2020’s new political context. According to polls, the majority of Argentines support the legalization of abortion.
To date, the formal details of each bill and the next steps for their development have not been made public. Whatever happens, Argentine feminists will continue the fight until the right to abortion is enshrined in law.
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