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Unclear on the concept

December 13, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin 3 Comments

A review of 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days:

In Romania, under the Ceausescu regime, abortion was banned, and within 20 years some half a million women had died from having botched illegal abortions. This severe thriller from writer-director Christian Mungiu focuses on Gabita (Laura Vasiliu), a pregnant college student, and her friend Otilia (Anamaria Marinca), who finds a man who’ll do the job: a quietly thuggish fellow who calls himself Mr. Bebe (Vlad Ivanov). Remorseless long takes build the suspense as the young women secure a hotel room and, when Bebe explains how they’ll have to pay, question whether it’s worth the price. Strap yourself in for this minimalist, splendidly acted horror film — and count your blessings that you live in a country where choosing an abortion doesn’t mean losing a life.

So right. We live in a country where choosing an abortion means choosing a choice. It’s way better.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: 3 weeks & 2 days, 4 months

Mark Steyn wasn’t kidding, Part II

December 12, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

You’ve perhaps heard of America Alone, demographic decline, the birth dearth, our changing culture. We posted about the changing face of French families here, before. Another photo to highlight the change, from a friend’s friend who lives in Paris. (Who will launch the obligatory complaint about how we can’t wish anyone anything religious ever?)

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Happy Ramadan

Gosh, what a surprise

December 11, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin 3 Comments

Put this one in your “who’d a tunk it” folder. Unicef (the well-known right-wing reactionary outfit) has just released a report saying long hours of formal, institutional child care is detrimental to very young children. Actually, I’m semi-impressed. That Unicef would have the guts to put that sort of thing in print is most commendable. Among other things, it “recommends that all children should where possible be cared for by parents at home during the first 12 months of life.” I especially love this part of the story:

The report has been published at a key point in the childcare debate. Children born today into the rich world are part of the first generation in which a majority will spend a large part of their early childhood in childcare. In Britain about 80 per cent of those aged 3 to 6 are now in some form of formal childcare or education. For those under 3, the proportion is now 25 per cent.

In part, this reflects new opportunities for women to be employed outside the home. But it also reflects new pressures, particularly on the poorest, to return to work as soon as possible after a birth – often to low-paid jobs.

The report notes that high-quality formal childcare can bring huge benefits to children, particularly those from disadvantaged homes, expanding their social and cognitive development and providing them with stimulation that they might not get at home.

But it cites research from Britain and the US suggesting that children who spend too long in formal childcare at too young an age may suffer from long-term effects, including behavioural problems, aggression, antisocial behaviour, depression and an inability to concentrate – although the effects are thought to be relatively small.

Although the effects are thought to be relatively small… You wonder, sometimes, what it would take for some people to get it. This business of sticking very young children – babies – in institutional daycare for many long hours every day of the week is a new and dangerous experiment that goes against everything Mother Nature tells us. But hey, what the heck, effects like antisocial behaviour and aggression and an inability to concentrate “are throught to be relatively small” so who cares! We’ve got jobs to get to, here! Real, meaningful jobs, mark you, not something dull and mindless like looking after our very own babies.

I wonder what Jack Layton will have to say about this report… Think he’ll change his mind about the need for a national child care program? Nah, me neither.

_______________________________

Tanya remarks: “But it also reflects new pressures, particularly on the poorest, to return to work as soon as possible after a birth – often to low-paid jobs.”

Childcare at seven bucks a day in Quebec; you better believe some women feel an absolute obligation to place their tots in daycare and go back to the less than $30K/year job they very likely dislike. It’s not a choice anymore. Women constantly have to fight for their right to stay home with their children. Go women’s lib!

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Jack Layton, Unicef

It’s gonna take time

December 11, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

Got this letter in the Post today, in response to Jon Kay’s piece:

I was taught that abortion was a right through years of schooling. It takes years of reading to discover that offering or withholding an abortion has nothing to do with women’s rights and freedoms at all, and that the mantra “my body, my choice,” isn’t true.

It is my goal to educate on this: Abortion is not a right and it does not enhance women’s lives. Once we disconnect abortion from “rights talk” and other assorted euphemisms about “reproductive choice,” we’ll be able to truly and compassionately assist women who feel trapped in an unwanted pregnancy.

Andrea Mrozek, founding director, ProWomanProLife.org, Ottawa.

Now this education is going to take tons of time, because many of the old guard feminists are still teaching. Hey, that’s OK. Rome wasn’t built in a day.

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Tanya adds: Old guard feminists sure do have a particular point of view. Just today, I was told (by a Baby Boomer), “You can’t know, Tanya, because you weren’t around when women weren’t allowed to open their own bank accounts.” Somehow, to some of them, sexual equality and so-called “reproductive rights” are intrinsically linked. To them, it’s all part of the same fight.

Filed Under: All Posts

Hey, if she does simple household tasks…

December 10, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

The perfect, er, “woman“.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Aiko

Sometimes, I “heart” Jon Stewart…

December 10, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

…like while watching this bit.

I do love my Canada.  I love how polite we are, and I love living in a snow globe.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: coallition, Daily Show, Harper, Jon Stewart, non-confidence, Stephen Harper

The perfect storm

December 10, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

Ottawa transit goes on strike and it snows 25 cm. So I skiied into work today. (Just so I can tell people that!)

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Brigitte fact-checks: According to these guys, it was more like 30 cm in some areas. Which may or may not have included my driveway. In any case, my shoulders would like to say that it was A LOT of snow to shovel.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: winter

Kill some, help others

December 10, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

There’s so much that’s wrong with this plan to broadcast the suicide of an American man on television. I’ll let you come up with your own objections – there are several to choose from. One surprising thing that caught my eye is the ad that ran with the story…

Isn’t that what the pros call cross-scripting?

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: assisted suicide, Craig Ewert, Sky, World Vision

Nothing to add here

December 9, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

Excellent article by Jonathan Kay in today’s Post.

One of the lamentable results of the culture wars is that women have been taught to regard abortion — a medically profound event that either kills, or pre-empts, a unique, genetically determinate human being–as if it were merely an act of feminist self-empowerment. …

A “right to choose” means nothing if women don’t also have a right to be informed.

This is the height of hypocrisy of self-described “women’s rights” advocates who advocate for unfettered access to abortion. I have asked different abortion advocates on three different occasions what precisely abortion does and they avoided the question, defaulting to “I don’t know” or on one radio show simply saying “it is what it is.” Abortion “is what it is”. (Does that depend on your definition of “is”?)

I say hiding behind euphemisms isn’t a way to advance women’s rights. And for that, I’m called a misogynist.

___________________________

Brigitte says ‘me too’: You can call me a misogynist if you want. I’m with Andrea.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Euphemisms, Jon Kay

On social taboos

December 9, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

A woman has a baby at age 70. Bravo?

IVF has revolutionised the way we look at infertility,” said Bishnoi. “Infertility is no longer a social taboo or a divine curse. It can be treated scientifically.”

I disagree. Clearly infertility is still a huge social taboo when you have a woman toughing out IVF at 70–out of sheer desperation for a child she won’t be able to pick up or care for because she is too old. This ain’t no success story, that’s for sure. (And while I’m ranting, neither are the 45-year-old Hollywood types doing the same thing.)

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: in vitro fertilization, IVF, oldest mother, world's oldest mother

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