Rachel Farris who writes for the Huffington post also writes a blog entitled Mean Rachel. Her most recent editorial from August 17th, “What a Rick Perry Presidency Would Look Like for Women”, addresses Rick Perry’s record on womens rights and paints a picture of how America will be if Rick Perry runs America as he has Texas. The editorial is primarily directed to women, liberals, and those who oppose Rick Perry, but it is also a good read for those voters who are on the fence.
“Mean Rachel” suggests that Rick Perry intrudes on womens health rights with the bill that made transvaginal sonograms mandatory for women who are 8-10 weeks pregnant and who are seeking abortions. She explains that Rick Perry preaches abstinence only and gives consequences to Rick Perry’s actions that make it harder for women to prevent unwanted pregnancies. Rick Perry has been the governor of Texas for over 10 years and in that time Texas has ranked among the bottom in health issues. It is only natural to assume that if the health record of Texas has been so bad, America will become the same under the presidency of Rick Perry. Rachel supports her claims with much evidence and well thought logic.
Evidence shows that Texas has the 3rd highest teen birth rate in America and that teens are actually having more sex after completing abstinence-only programs. For those girls and women who do get pregnant and seek abortions, Rick Perry tries to guilt them into going through with the pregnancy by making it a requirement for doctors to describe the fetus and play audio of the heartbeat prior to the abortion procedure. If Rick Perry has his way, it will lead to an increase of children not only born into broken homes, but a broken system in Texas that lacks the responsibility of taking care of it’s youth. Rachel backs this theory up by presenting the fact that Texas ranks 1st in the nation in adults without High School diplomas as well as 1st in the nation in percentage of children without health insurance. She shows us that our youth in Texas are already born into a system of poor education and health and that if he is elected to the presidency, then the rest of America will follow.
Rachel reinforces my previous belief on women’s right and the freedom of choice, but helps me to understand the argument more clearly and present facts that I previously did not know. For one, she shows that there are consequences to the governments intrusion of womens rights and secondly that the government should think of these consequences before making decisions instead of backing up their support of an issue “based on their own personal life”.
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