We Americans are dancing on the Titanic. Our
iceberg is not far away
Francine
Prose
The greatest shock of all would be to wake up and find
that while we were driving the kids to soccer practice and enjoying cocktails,
autocracy took hold
Mon 27 Jun
2022 11.16 BST
By now the
US supreme court’s overturning of Roe v Wade hardly comes as a surprise. We’ve
known this was imminent since the leak, a month or so ago, of Justice Alito’s
memo. And yet it still delivers a profound shock – in fact, a series of shocks.
Stunned, we ask, how could this happen? as if we hadn’t known, for weeks, that
it was a more or less done deal.
What’s
shocking is the actualization of the scary Handmaid’s Tale scenario: our
growing suspicion that Margaret Atwood’s fictional dystopia – a society in
which women are forced to bear children and brutally punished for disobedience
– is nearer to becoming a reality than we might have imagined. What’s shocking
is this proof of the court’s desire and ability to control and punish women, to
deprive us of our constitutional rights. What’s shocking is the justices’
reckless disregard for the additional suffering that this ruling will cause
poor women, women of color and those living in rural areas. What’s shocking is
the memory of three of the current justices swearing, under oath, to preserve
the precedent established by Roe v Wade.
What’s
shocking is the realization that we are living in a country that now boasts
some of the world’s most misogynist and repressive laws. What’s shocking is the
knowledge that the institution I grew up seeing as committed to the most
precious guarantees of the constitution and to the highest and most sensibly
bipartisan ideals of justice is now in the hands of a powerful faction of
extremists.
But what
shocks me most is the fact that, according to surveys that keep surfacing and
being reported, a substantial majority of Americans support abortion rights and
oppose the outright ban. According to the latest Gallup poll, 85% of the
population believes that abortion should be legal under some circumstances.
What’s noteworthy is not that high number so much as the discrepancy between
that figure and the substance of supreme court ruling. What’s shocking is yet
another fact that we have known or suspected for some time: that we are living
under minority rule, that, in some of the most essential ways, the wishes of
the majority no longer determine government policy, and that it has become a
kind of joke to suggest that our government, at the highest level, is
responding to “the will of the people”.
Meanwhile
these shocks are intensified and amplified by how little we seem willing or
able to do about the slow-motion stealth with which the seeds of autocracy are
being planted. “We’re living under minority rule,” we say, and then go on to
plan the kids’ birthday parties, to try to find a job and pay the bills, to
complain at the gas pump, see our friends, celebrate the good weather and the
new freedom occasioned by the latest downturn in the pandemic. Social media is
abuzz with valuable – and necessary – suggestions for circumventing the new
measures: how to obtain abortion pills from abroad, how to help women travel to
states where abortion is still permitted. But I have yet to see a truly viable
and broad-based plan for influencing the legislators of the so-called “trigger
states” that have outlawed abortion in the immediate wake of the supreme court
ruling.
It’s never been more important to insist on our rights
– not only as women, not only as Americans, but as human beings
It’s hard
not to notice that our passivity is being encouraged by the mainstream media’s
commitment to “fair and balanced” reporting. In the coverage I watched on the
night of the ruling – not only on the primetime channels but on PBS – equal
time was given to the exultation of the “pro-life” (that regrettable term
suggesting that its opponents are anti-life) faction and to the anger and
disappointment of women who wish only to maintain control over our own bodies.
How can it not add to our sense that the country is equally divided, deeply and
hopeless factionalized, and therefore that nothing can be done? In fact the two
sides are not equal, but one side is grievously underrepresented in the places
where it matters most.
It’s never
been more important to insist on our rights – not only as women, not only as
Americans, but as human beings. We need to talk to our friends, make plans,
apply unceasing pressure on our state and local governments, hold every
political candidate accountable. We may need to forget our pressing worries
over inflation and gasoline prices just long enough to take to the streets,
with unceasing frequency and in greater numbers, in order to make our beliefs
and our voices heard.
Because the
greatest shock of all would be to wake up one morning and find that while we
were driving the kids to soccer practice and enjoying that welcome after-work
cocktail, more and more of our rights had been stripped away, as has happened
in so many countries in which democracy vanished, overnight and in darkness
–when, as it were, no one was looking. The overturning of Roe v Wade should
shock us even more than it already does – shock us into looking beyond the
dance floor of the Titanic and spotting that iceberg, looming in our path, not
so very far away.
Francine
Prose is the author, most recently, of The Vixen. She was also the president of
Pen America
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