1/5 I’ve done all kinds of volunteer work over the years. I’ve helped teach kids how to read, I’ve given my time to children’s hospitals, and I’ve served meals to people in need. Last year I decided to do something different.
2/5 Last year I volunteered at a crisis pregnancy center. I let them believe that I was a syrupy sweet Christian who loved Jesus and unborn babies, and they put me to work helping pregnant women, every last one of whom were young, poor, and terrified.
3/5 Even though it was explicitly forbidden, I made sure women were aware of all their pregnancy options, including abortion. On several occasions, I secretly directed women to Planned Parenthood. I was, in effect, a saboteur for the cause of women’s reproductive health.
4/5 My time spent volunteering at a crisis pregnancy center was exhausting and infuriating. It was also a deliberate act of resistance. I refused to let those religious zealots spread misinformation, and I did everything I could to help pregnant women make informed decisions.
5/5 The Supreme Court may have ruled that crisis pregnancy centers don’t have to provide abortion information, but that doesn’t mean we have to let those centers get away with harming women thought the deliberate spreading of misinformation. We can resist. I did. So can you.
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I have a voracious appetite for Karen videos. I absolutely love them, and as a cultural phenomenon, we should never stop posting them. Here’s why:
Karens were raised to believe that they are protected, that they are special. They genuinely believe (and not wrongly) that as white, middle-class women, the entire American experiment was designed for their comfort and safety.
Of course, part of the bargain is that Karens had to surrender a great deal of agency to secure their comfort and safety. This is a white-supremacist patriarchy after all, and Karens are only protected to the degree that they are white wives, white mothers, or white daughters.