May 052010
 

A big thank you to my friend RJ for the tip on this piece.

Ladies, this proposed Missouri law succinctly reveals where women’s rights fit into the GOP/Theocon agenda.

BarefootPregnant Kansas City Star headlines recently announced what those in the field have long known: a tough economy increases the incidence of domestic violence and depletes the resources available to combat it.

What has received less attention is a new Missouri bill that would make matters worse.

House Bill 1234 claims to promote “heterosexual marriage” by making divorce more difficult; what it really does is to strip away hard-won protections for the victims of domestic violence. Indeed, the bill’s proposals are so one-sided, it should be renamed “The Full Protection of Batterers Act.”

The proposals start by limiting divorce to cases of mutual consent or “marital irresponsibility.” Marital irresponsibility, however, includes domestic abuse only in cases of “serious spousal abuse involving injury to petitioner where petitioner was not the initiator of physical violence” or a “history of serious emotional or physical abuse.”

Consider what this means. Husband and wife argue. Husband threatens to kill the wife, and beats her up so badly she ends up in the hospital. Wife sues for divorce.

The husband insists that the wife slapped him first (a common allegation whether true or not) and that the episode of “serious” abuse was an isolated incident. Wife, in the hospital with a skull fracture, has no grounds for divorce.

The bill gets worse. It mandates that the assertion of domestic violence “shall not be deemed credible in the absence of physical evidence or convincing testimony by parties unrelated to the spouses.”

Consider again what this means. The wife returns home from the hospital. The husband repeatedly threatens her, slaps her without leaving bruises, grabs her and holds her by the neck in front of the teenage children, and tells her in front of his mother and her sister that if she leaves him, she will never see the children again.

This woman has no grounds for divorce. Her testimony, however convincing, is deemed not to be “credible” as a matter of law. The testimony of the children, his mother and her sister (all relatives) do not matter.

The proposed legislation also makes it more difficult to protect children. Impressive empirical evidence demonstrates that exposing children to domestic abuse has lifelong negative consequences even if the abuse is directed only at the spouse.

In response to these studies, every state in the country has expanded the ability of the courts to take domestic violence into account in determining custody. This bill would undo the protections.

It provides that even if a spouse meets the act’s tough standards and proves domestic violence to the satisfaction of the court, “a protective order shall not deny the [abuser] parenting time if the petition for dissolution does not allege child abuse or neglect.”

In other words, if the husband cracks open his wife’s skull, but does not touch the children, he cannot be denied parenting time.

And the new definitions of child abuse are even harder to prove than spousal abuse. Punching and hitting children is not physical abuse unless it causes injury.

Moreover, if repeatedly striking a child causes injury only rarely, it is not abuse where it can be said to be an “infrequent” mistake or a manifestation of parental differences about appropriate discipline.

Yet, interfering with the other spouse’s parenting time because the children are terrified is emotional abuse, while threatening to kill a child becomes abuse only if it is “continuing and chronic.”

Finally, the bill punishes spouses who allege domestic abuse, but fail to prove it under these draconian standards.

To take only one example, the proposed legislation would threaten a spouse who alleges domestic violence with loss of custody if the court does not find in her favor, while a battering spouse who commits perjury is guaranteed continuing contact with the children unless he has been separately found guilty of child abuse… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Kansas City Star>

I checked this out, and the sponsors are Republicans, as if I didn’t know that before I checked.

So there you have it.  Under these GOP family values, women are reduced to chattel.  Ladies, the GOP wants you barefoot and pregnant.  Do you agree with me that you deserve better?

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  8 Responses to “GOP Women’s Rights: Barefoot and Pregnant”

  1. …and the GOP sponsors talking points for the necessity of this law are? What? Them damn women is getting to out of hand and not home from work in time to have the dinner on the table?

  2. This is heartbreaking – especially with domestic abuse on the rise as the economy sours. I should hope that this doesn’t pass, but knowing MO, it probably will. This will be a sad day for women’s rights and makes them no better than the Taliban.

    • Lisa, our best hope is that it will not pass Constitutional muster on 14th Amendment grounds (equal protection under the law).

  3. Damn, the Christian Theocrats keep sinking lower and lower. This new law in Missouri will keep them uppity women from stepping outta line.

    • Uppity? That was one of my father’s favorite terms. Next they will have to walk three feet behind their husbands in public.

  4. and this is a surprise
    where are the chastity belts they will be forced to wear

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