I want to talk about zip code, poverty, abortion access, and the sterilization of black and indigenous women.
So we all know that throughout the 20th century, neighborhoods were segregated. But how does zip code intertwine with employment, poor credit scores, and lack of adequate housing to keep the cycle of poverty thriving today?
And how does that cycle of poverty make it easier to perpetuate racial genocide?
This thread was inspired by all of the wealthy and middle-class black folks looking down on poor people in the hood like they chose to be that way, but also inspired by liberals who think birth control is the key to ending poverty
First of all, quality employment matters. Conservatives have been boasting about low unemployment rates as of late... but of course, that's not the full truth
So you’re underpaid and you need credit. Did you know that 17% of blacks, compared to 5% of whites, use non traditional and high interest lending places, thanks to a history of discrimination by banks?
So if you're living in the hood and have poor employment opportunities and can barely cover the cost of living as it is, where do you live? Lets keep in mind that the Trump Administration is actively slashing public housing budgets
People often tell poor people in crime or poverty ridden neighborhoods with few resources and opportunities to “just move”, but it’s really not that simple
If we don't address stagnant wages in the job market, predatory banks and lending places, and the destruction of welfare programs, cycles of poverty will continue. Crime for survival will continue, inevitably feeding the prison industrial complex
We can't keep telling poor black people to work and save their way out of poverty, when the system is clearly designed to keep them in it.
Because so many black people continue to exist in a cycle of poverty and rely on welfare BECAUSE of the greedy and exploitative upper class, this makes them a very big target for arguments about "population control" and sterilization.
In the latter half of the 20th century, indigenous and black women were sterilized at high rates because they were seen as welfare burdens of the state. They were considered not worthy enough to bear children. #LetsTalkAboutSexHistory
As many as 100-150K poor women, mainly of color, were sterilized a year under federally funded healthcare. Reiterating @DorothyERoberts: "Sterilization was for decades the only publicly funded birth control method readily available to poor women of color."
A lot of liberals talk about reproductive rights but what we need is *Reproductive Justice*. Women, no matter the social or economic status, should have the right to contraceptives, comprehensive sex ed, and a quality environment to raise children in if they choose to procreate.
If reproductive justice is not achieved, sterilization and long term birth control will continue to be used to abuse poor women of color. Let's look back to the 90s to see how Norplant was abused #LetsTalkAboutSexHistory
You can watch the full 12-minute Zip Code, Race, and Class video for free on youtube:
Another important watch is episode two of #LetsTalkAboutSexHistory, where I tackle the history of consensual birth control and abortion. It's free on youtube.
My mom and I were talking about reproductive rape and we both have experienced a man slipping the condom off during sex. She got pregnant and ended up aborting it. The man was disappointed bc he intentionally wanted to impregnate her bc of her “good hair”
That man went on to have children in the double digits. I’m sick at how common this is, and also I wonder how different my moms life would have been if she was unable to access an abortion and carried that rape baby to term
I’m realizing that something socialists and prison abolitionists have in common is a desperate belief in the innate good in people, or the belief that people can change with enough encouragement. I believe hella people are not innately good, not capable of change, & greedy
I was reading some literature about restorative justice (still tryna be convinced on the abolitionist front) and a recurring theme is “making people admit” and “acknowledging that something happened” so ppl can be held accountable and it’s still not clicking for me
In what universe is a sadistic child rapist going to ask for accountability? In what universe do we help him change and trust him to walk the streets?
“Remaining childfree was an easy choice for me, but my decision is often written off as selfish, childish, or premature (I'm only 30). Because of all the good reasons out there not to have kids, one remains taboo: I just don’t want them.”
Just had this conversation with my mother last night. I don’t really want kids unless the situation is perfect (I’m married to the financially savvy love of my life). She doesn’t understand I am 100% ok with the high likelihood of neither of those things happening lmao
Having a child while poor, having a child with no partner, having a child without having traveled the world and achieved my career goals are not things I want. So children are low on the priority list. When I factor in the sheer responsibility....
Salty as fuck because a few months ago the IRS told me they never received my payment check so I sent another one, they cashed it, everything was fine.
I checked my account this morning and they just cashed the original check I sent.
my biggest fear when filing taxes was that my money was going to be lost in the mail and that I’d incur penalties. Wholetime my biggest fear should have been this entire scenario
I went into my account and saw that chunk of cash missing like WTF because I’m on a budget and saving up lmao
Many people believe that pointing out differences among black people is divisive, but there is value in doing so. We can’t keep assuming we all want the same things or even see all the same things as problems. Perspective affects priorities.
I want to look at how diverse the black experience is through six categories: region, occupation and education, class and income, politics and ideology, religion, and lastly, sexuality and gender identity.
First up, region has ALWAYS played a role in shaping the black experience. Blackness is different everywhere you go.