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The Fiscal Cliff: Not Sexy but a Big Problem for your Sex Life

Dec 18, 2012 / Choice USA Staff / Our Folks Blog
This post is part of a series from Campus Progress There is nothing sexy about the fiscal showdown in Washington. It’s a complicated mess. Despite that, it’s imperative that our Representatives hear from young people, and critical that they see the connection between sexual and reproductive health and the fiscal cliff. The fiscal cliff is more than a … Read More

Biology v. Sociology: How Traditional Notions of Womanhood Pervade Our Legal System

Dec 17, 2012 / Lydia Stuckey / Our Folks Blog
When a child is born to unmarried parents outside of the United States with one parent being a U.S. citizen and the other not being a U.S. citizen, is it constitutional to have different requirements for said child’s acquisition of citizenship depending on whether the citizen parent is the mother or the father? This question … Read More

The First Same-Sex Wedding at West Point Chapel is a Watershed Moment

Dec 14, 2012 / Lauren / Our Folks Blog
Recently, the first same sex wedding was held at West Point Chapel for the seventeen year sweethearts, Brenda Sue Fulton and Penelope Gnesin. The media responded surprisingly positively. Same-sex marriage and military opposition to open homosexuality are both hot topics for the gay rights movement and media outlets alike. Thusly, the marriage of Fulton and … Read More

How to be an Ally: Notes on Lending a Hand to a Movement which Isn't Yours

Dec 11, 2012 / Sarah / Our Folks Blog
Back in October, my university’s Gay-Straight Alliance hosted a National Coming Out Day panel. Instead of the usual format–which generally entails queer folks sharing their coming out stories– this panel included an equal amount of queer and straight “ally” participants, all from varied backgrounds. After having our interests piqued, several of my Choice USA chapter’s … Read More

Emergency Contraception Should Be Accessible to All!

Dec 07, 2012 / Samantha / Our Folks Blog
Another day, another trip to the pharmacy to get my prescriptions; when I enter there is a flurry of movement and excitement. Here birth control and emergency contraception or EC are just prescriptions easily obtained if necessary. But for young women all over the country, emergency contraception is a necessary medication, and many women don’t … Read More

The Summer of Mercy: Revisiting My Hometown's Dark Anti-Choice History

Dec 06, 2012 / Amanda / Our Folks Blog
Mercy: Compassion or forgiveness shown toward someone whom it is within one’s power to punish or harm The dark side of anti-choice politics hits home no harder than in my hometown Wichita, Kansas. When meeting new people, especially in the reproductive justice movement, there’s always that moment of infamy, “Ah, Wichita.” Now most are aware that … Read More

Anti-Choice Ohio: Stalled But Not Stopped

Dec 04, 2012 / Guest Blogger / Our Folks Blog
By Sarah Bernstein, Oberlin College Agh. Ohio! What are you doinggg? In my past four years of living here, I’ve asked this question a lot, particularly about the state’s attacks on reproductive justice. In the past month, Ohio’s state congress has pushed some extremist conservative legislation. Of course. Ohio just played a huge role in … Read More

“You’re on Your Own:” Assault and Abortion in the Armed Forces

Dec 03, 2012 / Lydia Stuckey / Our Folks Blog
“It is horrible enough to be sexually assaulted; when that assault results in an unwanted pregnancy, it begins the trauma anew.” One rape that goes unpunished in the U.S. military would be wrong, but in our military, there are thousands. There were nearly 3,200 reported cases of sexual assault in the military last year, but … Read More

Environmental Justice and Reproductive Justice: What's the Connection?

Nov 30, 2012 / Samantha / Our Folks Blog
Last Friday, I had the opportunity of attending the One Voice Summit hosted by Advocates for Youth, SIECUS , and the Sierra Club. The panels and the multitude of discussions tied reproductive and environmental justice together in very intricate ways. One of the topics that I believe was especially interesting and relevant was about toxins … Read More

Last Friday, I had the opportunity of attending the One Voice Summit hosted by Advocates for Youth, SIECUS , and the Sierra Club. The panels and the multitude of discussions tied reproductive and environmental justice together in very intricate ways. One of the topics that I believe was especially interesting and relevant was about toxins in the environment panel. It tied products young people use every day and the harmful toxins that may be in them. What made me initially want to write about this is because toxic substances are in everything around us from our chap sticks, to our lotions, our perfumes, and even the receipts we get any time we shop. Seeing the connection with this made me really uncomfortable because I felt overwhelming dread that I really couldn’t escape them.

What really made me stand up and take notice was that it seemed that all these toxins were having affects on our bodies’ right under our noses. This was really discouraging because many of them could be hindering our reproductive health every time we come into contact with them and we wouldn’t even know it!  According to Toxic Zombie, the toolkit created by the Reproductive Health Technologies Project (RHTP), there are between 80-85,000 chemicals used in everyday products, but only 200 have been tested for safety. With numbers like that I don’t know why we aren’t sick all of the time. Then I thought about how diseases like cervical cancer, ovarian cysts, and endometriosis were happening more and more in young women. So, what can we do?

During this panel we had the opportunity to speak with three amazing women battling this issue and creating change in their respective organizations. Jalonne White-Newsome spoke about simple ways not to put yourself at risk including not taking receipts which commonly contain BPA, and not heating your food in plastic containers which might leech chemicals into your food. We also heard from Kimberly Inez McGuire from the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health who discussed how these toxic chemicals were affecting low income individuals and communities of color. She discussed how these women seemed to be most affected because they were in careers that increased their exposure and frequency to the contaminants. Women farm workers, nail technicians, and domestic and hospitality workers are constantly breathing in these chemicals, touching them, and then carrying the residue in their clothes and on their skin back to their homes where they often have young children.

Sara Alad from RHTP, also discussed how contacting our representatives, informing our peers and educating the community at large we can really help those women that are otherwise disenfranchised because of their type of employment. I feel that education like this should be spread like wildfire. I urge all that read this to get up and do something! Now I don’t mean throw everything out that has an ingredient you can’t pronounce because you’d probably have nothing left. But slowly and surely if you stop taking receipts, and cut down the amounts of products you use with harmful ingredients you can make a difference and protect your precious reproductive system from the Toxic Zombies lurking and waiting to harm you. Be informed and don’t just sit there, start doing something! Your vagina will thank you for it! 😉

Go here to find more information from the EPA on the environment and women’s health.

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