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Em-URGE-ing Voices

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Climate Change Is Not, and Never Has Been an Elitist Issue

Apr 08, 2019 / Anna Khan / Our Folks Blog
Representative Cortez said it well herself, but I want to dive into more of why climate change is not an elitist issue at all–moreover, why it’s been seen that way for many years. In fact, the pressing realities of climate change will affect the disenfranchised and marginalized groups of the world well before it hits … Read More

Rosie's Law

Apr 01, 2019 / Erica Gonzalez / Our Folks Blog
Rosaura “Rosie” Jimenez was a young woman in the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas who died obtaining an unsafe abortion. She could not afford to pay for one out of pocket and was forced to turn to other unsafe alternatives. Rosie was a scholar and a mother to a 5 year old girl. Rosie … Read More
Deana Ayers

Reproductive Justice, Social Work, and Me

Mar 25, 2019 / Deana Ayers / Our Folks Blog
I struggled to write my first article for this blog, and I think it was because I didn’t take the time to introduce myself and what I want to accomplish before I dived into politics and RJ. While the personal is political, I thought it was important to flesh out who I am and provide … Read More

Remember These Muslims, Remember Islamophobia

Mar 18, 2019 / Anna Khan / Our Folks Blog
Ashraf Ali was known to have a quiet laugh. Husne Ara Parvin was trying to save her husband, Farid Uddin, who was in a wheelchair. Naeem Rashid’s first instinct was to grab the gun from the shooter. Mohammad Imran Kahn owned two restaurants. Linda Armstrong was known for “always being excited to do a good … Read More

Five Movies of 2018 Better Than Green Book

Feb 28, 2019 / Anna Khan / Our Folks Blog
At the Oscars last weekend, there were a lot of historic wins. Black Panther won three Oscars and is the first movie of the Marvel Cinematic Universe to win any. No female directors were nominated in the feature directing category, but for the first time in Oscars history, women won all the best short film categories of the … Read More
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Fast Fashion: Unsustainable, Racist, NOT Cute

Feb 28, 2019 / Erica Gonzalez / Our Folks Blog
I want to stress that all responsibility for climate change should be placed on corporations- not the consumer. This article’s goal is to inform the consumer. Though I believe each person should be conscientious of what/how much they consume and where it comes from, major change will only come when companies are held accountable for … Read More

Pay Your Organizers Please

Feb 26, 2019 / Deana Ayers / Our Folks Blog
For the past 2 weeks, I’ve been seeing an advertisement on Twitter for the same organizing fellowship. The organization promises to “empower young leaders” by teaching various skills, like planning events, building coalitions, and utilizing social media. By the time I got to the bottom of the page the first time, I was excited. The … Read More
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Feminist Theory for Beginners

Feb 25, 2019 / Reilly Wieland / Our Folks Blog
As our movement becomes more accessible and popularized, feminism has found its way outside of the classroom. But with that said, I don’t necessarily agree that feminism is for everybody. Feminism is for everybody who is willing learn– and I think that we’ve forgotten how to be students of its literature and theory. I love … Read More

Everyone Deserves Comprehensive Sexual Education

Feb 15, 2019 / Anna Khan / Our Folks Blog
Sexual education doesn’t tend to stray anywhere past preaching of abstinence accompanied by mortifying stories about sexually transmitted diseases, but for people with disabilities, it’s not always considered a problem. A general idea perpetuated through the media attains that people with disabilities have no interest in sex, thereby making it unnecessary for them to see … Read More

Sexual education doesn’t tend to stray anywhere past preaching of abstinence accompanied by mortifying stories about sexually transmitted diseases, but for people with disabilities, it’s not always considered a problem. A general idea perpetuated through the media attains that people with disabilities have no interest in sex, thereby making it unnecessary for them to see the pictures of people inflicted with chlamydia. Anyone from marginalized groups, including LGBTQ+ people of color, isn’t going to find themselves represented in their high school education classes, but the kids in the special needs program aren’t even given the opportunity to participate at all.

School districts find it difficult to address these issues in sexual education classes. Since there are a variety of disabilities that need a specific method of teaching, teachers feel uncomfortable in handling all the responsibilities. Professionals who understand and are confident in their knowledge must be hired for such classes. Children deserve to receive the best information needed for them to understand their sexual identity, particularly children with disabilities who may not have access to these resources in any other form.

Infantilization by parents of children with disabilities erases those children’s primary source of sexual education. Parents may feel anxious or uncomfortable when it comes to their children growing up and going through changes, so much so that any conversation about sexuality is never on the table. If schools are also not providing that education, children with disabilities will grow up with feelings they don’t understand, potentially harming their sexual identity in the future.

People with disabilities are at a much higher risk for sexual assault as opposed to neurotypical folks. Incidents at care centers aren’t uncommon and are partly attributed to the inability of doctors and nurses to communicate to their patients about sexual issues. Abuse is difficult to name for people who have never been taught to recognize it, and situations can occur right in a center for care if the workers don’t look to catch the signs. Especially when it comes to people who cannot communicate verbally — they must be given the resources to distinguish abuse.

Eugenics and forced sterilization in the past have contributed to present-day ideas on the sexual identities of people with disabilities. Debate arise on whether or not people with disabilities even have the capacity to understand what it is to be in a sexual relationship. Arguments on whether or not they can understand the consequences of sexual activity or what it means to be pregnant are baseless when considering the very real solution to such qualms: give people with disabilities the education that everyone should be awarded.

There are several neurotypical folks who have sexual relationships and get pregnant without a clear understanding of the consequences of those activities. Singling out people with disabilities on these issues is in direct relation with twentieth-century institutionalization’s forcing sterilization even after it was outlawed in 1942. Sexual education is a must in providing a means to understanding sexual identity and thereby an understanding in sexual safety and bodily autonomy. Everyone, but particularly those most vulnerable to harm, must have access to these resources.

 

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